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<ead><eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0"><eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="wauar" encodinganalog="identifier" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv74191" identifier="80444/xv74191">WAUPortraitsPHColl563.xml</eadid><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper>Guide to the Portraits Photograph and Engraving Collection <date encodinganalog="date" era="ce">approximately
		  1851-1999</date></titleproper><titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">Portraits Photograph and Engraving Collection</titleproper></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries</publisher><date normal="2018" encodinganalog="date">© 2018 (Last modified: 10/2/2025)</date><address><addressline>Seattle, WA 98195</addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><langusage>Finding aid written in 
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage><descrules>Finding aid based on DACS (<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Describing Archives: A Content Standard</title>).</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21"><did><repository><corpname>University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections</corpname></repository><unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="wauar">PH0563</unitid><origination><corpname role="compiler" encodinganalog="110">University of Washington. Libraries. Special Collections</corpname></origination><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="collection">Portraits photograph
		  and engraving collection </unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" normal="1851/1999" certainty="approximate">approximately
		  1851-1999</unitdate><physdesc><extent>approximately 3,000 vertical
		  files containing photographic prints</extent></physdesc><langmaterial>Collection materials are in 
		<language langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn" encodinganalog="546">English</language>.</langmaterial><abstract encodinganalog="5203_$a">A collection of
		  portraits mainly of individuals from the Pacific Northwest and Alaska but also
		  includes some famous figures such as presidents, explorers and political
		  leaders</abstract></did><scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_" id="a3"><p>A collection of portraits mainly of individuals from the Pacific
		  Northwest and Alaska but also includes some famous figures such as presidents,
		  explorers and political leaders.</p></scopecontent><altformavail encodinganalog="530" id="a9"><p> <extref show="new" actuate="onrequest" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/PH%20COLL%20563/field/all/mode/exact/conn/and/order/title">View selections from the
			 collection in digital format</extref> </p></altformavail><accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14"><p>The collection is open to the public.</p><p> <extref href="https://uw.aeon.atlas-sys.com/logon/?Action=10&amp;Form=31&amp;Value=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv74191/xml " role="text/html" actuate="onrequest" show="new" id="aeon" linktype="simple">Request at
			 UW</extref></p></accessrestrict><userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15"><p>Restrictions might exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication.
		  Contact the repository for details.</p></userestrict><processinfo encodinganalog="583" id="a20" audience="external"><p>Processed by Susan Peskura, 2013. </p><p/></processinfo><controlaccess><subject source="uwsc">Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Pioneers--Northwest, Pacific--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Presidents--United States--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Politicians--United States--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Explorers--United States--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Families--Northwest, Pacific--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Women--Northwest, Pacific--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Men--Northwest, Pacific--Portraits</subject><subject encodinganalog="650">Persons--Northwest, Pacific--Portraits</subject><geogname encodinganalog="651">Washington (State)--Photographs</geogname><geogname encodinganalog="651">Oregon--Photographs</geogname><geogname encodinganalog="651">Idaho--Photographs</geogname><genreform source="lcgft" encodinganalog="655" altrender="nodisplay">Portraits</genreform><genreform source="lcgft" encodinganalog="655" altrender="nodisplay">Photographs</genreform><genreform source="lcgft" encodinganalog="655" altrender="nodisplay">Engravings</genreform><subject source="archiveswest" encodinganalog="690" altrender="nodisplay">Photographs</subject></controlaccess><dsc type="combined" id="a23"><p> </p><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>Abel - Ayer</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Abel, Donald George (December 23, 1894-July 8,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald George Abel was an American attorney who served as a
				  Washington State Supreme Court Justice from 1946 to 1947. He attended the
				  University of Washington, where he played football under coach Gil Dobie. He
				  received a B.A. degree in 1917. During WWI, Abel served in the 91st Division of
				  the U.S. Army, was decorated for gallantry in the Battle of the Argonne, and
				  rose to the rank of captain. Following his discharge, he returned to the
				  University of Washington School of Law, and was graduated with a LL.B. degree
				  in 1919. After graduation, Abel had a private practice of law in Chehalis and
				  then held a series of government posts. From 1922 to 1926, he served as the
				  Prosecuting Attorney of Lewis County. In 1932 he ran unsuccessfully for the
				  Democratic nomination to Congress in the Third District. From May 1936 to
				  February 1940, Abel was state administrator of the federal Works Progress
				  Administration. In September 1942, he ran unsuccessfully for a position on the
				  state Supreme Court, losing to John S. Robinson. Abel was appointed to Supreme
				  Court as acting Justice in 1946 during the absence of Walter B. Beals, who was
				  Presiding Judge at the International Military Tribunal I in Nuremberg, Germany.
				  Governor Albert D. Rosellini appointed Abel to the State Public Service
				  Commission in 1957 and later to the Washington State Liquor Control Board,
				  where he served as member and chairman. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AbelDG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donald Abel in office talking on the
					 telephone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">c. 1936 to 1940</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Don G. Abel, W.P.A. Administrator</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AbelDG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Donald G. Abel seated, center, with
					 a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">c. 1936 to 1940</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Abernethy, George (October 7, 1807 - May 2,
				  1877)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Abernethy came to Oregon in 1840 as part of the "Great
				  Reinforcement" to the Methodists' endeavors in the Willamette Valley. As the
				  mission's financial manager, he bought out its store when the mission closed in
				  1844 and moved it to Oregon City, the center of Oregon's settlement and trade.
				  Four years later, he built a sawmill. Abernethy became Oregon's first and only
				  provisional governor, winning election in 1845 and 1847. He published Oregon's
				  first newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Oregon Spectator</emph> of Oregon
				  City from 1846 to 1855. In 1849, he was among the major contributors to the
				  Clackamas County Female Seminary, founded in 1850 as the territory's first
				  non-denominational school for women. In 1856, he purchased Portland's first
				  fire engine. His name appears on a school and neighborhood in Portland and a
				  creek and island in Clackamas County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AbernathyG1</container><unittitle>Portrait of George Abernethy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1850s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AbernathyG2</container><unittitle>Portrait of George Abernethy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1850s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adair, George Bancroft (July 13, 1847- July 8,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Bancroft Adair was born in Romulus, New York and
				  graduated from Ames College (now the University of Syracuse). After graduation,
				  he worked in the hardware business. In 1868, he moved to California, and in
				  1883 relocated to Seattle where he established the firm of George B. Adair and
				  Sons. He was a leading member of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce where he
				  fought for lower freight rates for merchants. He was also president of the
				  Seattle Board of Trade. In 1890, he was a member of the commission that
				  produced a charter that continues to be the foundation of Seattle's city
				  government.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdairGB1</container><unittitle>Portrait of George Bancroft Adair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1888</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Printed in April 1888 issue of <emph>The Northwest
						Magazine</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, Brockman "Brock" (January 13, 1927 – September
				  10, 2004) (see also PH Coll 622)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Brockman "Brock" Adams was an American politician and member of
				  Congress. He attended the University of Washington where he was elected
				  president of the student government (ASUW) and was the first student to both
				  serve in that post and receive the President’s Medal of Excellence as the
				  University’s top scholar. He graduated in 1949 and was admitted to Harvard Law
				  School, where he earned his law degree in 1952. Adams was a Democrat from
				  Washington and served as a U.S. Representative, Senator, and United States
				  Secretary of Transportation before retiring in January 1993.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsB1</container><unittitle>Brock Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1987 and 1993</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, Edwin Hubbard (December 28, 1905 - August 19,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Hubbard Adams joined the University of Washington in 1939
				  where he taught English composition. He was a member of the Seattle Committee
				  for Educational Television. He had a radio program, <emph render="italic">Reading for Fun</emph> and also served as a counselor for
				  veterans in the 1940s. He established the Radio Education Department at the
				  University of Washington with the idea of providing practical experience in
				  radio work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH1</container><unittitle>Group photo. Left to right: Edwin Adams and Harold P.
					 Everest, directors of the journalism school; Mrs. Esther Seering, public
					 relations counsel; Mrs. Mary Coyle Osmun, Seattle Times women's editor; Carroll
					 Foster, special events director at KIRO</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Many professional publicity workers turned
					 out for the recent conference on publicity methods, original planned just for
					 amateur publicity chairmen. Due to scores of requests, the conference, first of
					 its kind on campus, will be followed next fall by an expanded series of
					 lectures.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH2</container><unittitle>Edwin Adams in front of radio microphone surrounded by
					 books</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 8, 1954</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH3</container><unittitle>Edwin Adams in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH4</container><unittitle>Adams with Howard Snider, Marine 1st. Lt, Bellingham,
					 Washington, and William R. Tiffany, Signal Corps Sergeant, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH5</container><unittitle>Group photo of the Radio Panel during the Publicity
					 Conference. Adams is standing.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate></did><note><p>Stamped on verso: Office of Public Information, University of
					 Washington, Seattle, Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, George Russell (October 12, 1845 - April 11,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Russell Adams served in the U. S. Army during the
				  American Civil War from 1862 to 1863. He wrote <emph render="italic">A story of
				  the first American exploring expedition to Russian America, 1865-1867</emph>,
				  an account of his experiences as the youngest member of the Western Union
				  Telegraph Company's expedition for the Russian Extension, under the command of
				  Col. Charles S. Bulkley and Maj. Robert Kennicott.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsGR1</container><unittitle>George Russell Adams in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa
					 1862-1863</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, John (October 30, 1735 – July 4,
				  1826)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Adams was the second president of the United States
				  (1797-1801), having earlier served as the first vice president of the United
				  States. Adams was a statesman, diplomat, and a leading advocate of American
				  independence from Great Britain. His son, John Quincy Adams, became the sixth
				  president of the United States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>A copy of a painting by Asher B. Durand painted in 1835</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Gilbert Stuart from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, John Quincy (July 11, 1767 – February 23,
				  1848)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Quincy Adams was the sixth President of the United States
				  (1825–1829). He served as an American diplomat, Senator, and Congressional
				  representative. Adams was the son of former President John Adams and Abigail
				  Adams. As a diplomat, Adams played an important role in negotiating many
				  international treaties, most notably the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the War
				  of 1812. As Secretary of State, he negotiated with the United Kingdom over the
				  United States' northern border with Canada, negotiated with Spain the
				  annexation of Florida, and authored the Monroe Doctrine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsJQ1</container><unittitle>John Quincy Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a portrait</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsJQ2</container><unittitle>John Quincy Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Parker after a portrait by Edward Dalton Marshall
					 from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, Samuel (September 16, 1722 – October 2,
				  1803)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Adams was an American statesman, political philosopher,
				  and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. He was a politician in
				  colonial Massachusetts, a leader of the movement that became the American
				  Revolution, and one of the architects of the principles of American
				  republicanism that shaped the political culture of the United States. He was a
				  second cousin to his fellow Founding Father, President John Adams. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1772</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">John Singleton Copley</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>In this engraving of a portrait by John Singleton Copley,
					 Adams points at the Massachusetts Charter, which he viewed as a constitution
					 that protected the peoples' rights. Printed on front: Engraved for 
					 <emph>Drake's History of Boston</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Adams, William Lysander (February 5, 1821 - April 26,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William L. Adams was born in Ohio and attended Knox College in
				  Galesburg, Ohio and Bethany College in West Virginia. In 1847, he purchased two
				  wagons and traveled to Oregon. He taught school at Carlton, Oregon and in 1849
				  and again in 1852, went to California to pan for gold. He was elected probate
				  judge of Yamhill County and established the newspaper<emph render="italic">The
				  Oregon Argus</emph> early in 1855. He edited the paper for nine years.
				  President Lincoln appointed him as the Collector of Customs at the Port of
				  Astoria in the 1860s. In 1863, he made his home at Forest Grove, practicing
				  self-taught medicine; however, in 1873 he went to Philadelphia and took a
				  course in medicine. He also studied law and received the Doctor of Laws degree
				  from the American University of Pennsylvania. He practiced law and medicine
				  briefly in Portland before moving to Hood River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsWL1</container><unittitle>Portrait of William Lysander Adams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Agnew, Henry Clay (December 26, 1895 - October 13, 1972)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Clay Agnew born in Macomb, Illinois. His father, a county
				  judge, died when Henry was five years old, and Henry came to Seattle with his
				  mother when he was nine. He attended Lincoln High School where he was leader in
				  the school's state championship debate team. After high school, he attended the
				  University of Washington and graduated with a law degree. During World War I,
				  he served in the Coast Artillery at Fort Worden. He began practicing law
				  shortly after the war and was well-known as a trial attorney. He was elected to
				  the Superior Court bench in 1950 and served until the mandatory retirement age
				  of 75. After retirement, he worked as a judge pro tem. His wife endowed a
				  scholarship in his name at the University of Washington Law School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AgnewHC1</container><unittitle>Signed portrait of Henry Clay Agnew in his judge's
					 robes.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ahnlund, Francis (October 4, 1880 - March 10,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Ahnlund was born in Bollnas, Sweden and emigrated to the
				  United States in 1902. He was the pastor of the First Swedish Methodist Church
				  in Seattle. In 1923, he was elected secretary of the Pacific Coast Swedish
				  Mission Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AhnlundF1</container><unittitle>Signed portrait of Francis Ahnlund</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 21, 1936</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ahrens, Donald Campbell (January 6, 1900 - July 8,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald Ahrens was the vice president of the Washington
				  Federation of Labor and the Pacific Coast District Metal Trades Council. He
				  began his union career in Tacoma in 1931where he was a member of Tacoma Local
				  252 and later as an officer of the Tacoma Building Trades Council and the
				  Tacoma Metal Trades Council. In 1965, he retired as the regional manager of the
				  Laborers International Union of North America, representing workers in the
				  western United States and western Canada. He married Dorothy Covalt in Shelton,
				  Washington in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AhrensDC1</container><unittitle>Donald Campbell Ahrens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname>J. J. Kneisle, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ahrens, Russel Frederick (August 5, 1901 - September 28,
				  1987) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Russel Frederick Ahrens graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1925 and started work in 1927 with Boeing Air Transport, which
				  later became United Airlines. He worked in San Francisco from 1927 to 1928, in
				  Chicago from 1928 to 1929, and again in San Francisco in 1930, the year he was
				  appointed district traffic manager for the company in Seattle. After
				  transferring back to United's Chicago office in 1930, he was promoted to
				  personnel director in 1942. He later became vice president, senior vice
				  president of personnel and assistant chairman of the board. He retired in 1965
				  as assistant to the president.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AhrensRF1</container><unittitle>Russel Frederick Ahrens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ainey, Cora (October, 1876 - March 3, 1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cory Ainey was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania and moved to
				  Tacoma in 1903. She worked at Weyerhaeuser for many years as a stenographer and
				  secretary. On May 30, 1945, she became assistant secretary of the corporation
				  and remained in that position until a few months before her death. She was the
				  president of the Washington State Federation of Business and Professional
				  Women, 1920-1921, an organization founded in 1919 with the mission to promote
				  equity for all women in the workplace through advocacy, education and
				  information. She was also the corresponding secretary of the Washington State
				  Historical Society. She married Alex Matthews on April 29, 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AineyC1</container><unittitle>Cora Ainey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Albert, Charles Stanley (July 10, 1872 - May 9,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Stanley Albert was a prominent attorney in Seattle. He
				  was on the legal staff of the Great Northern Railway Company from 1898 until
				  his retirement in 1942. He was appointed general attorney for the railroad in
				  1926. Born in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, he studied at Columbia University and
				  the University of Minnesota, receiving degrees of LL.B. and L.L.M. From 1898
				  until 1911, he was a member of the law firm Brown, Albert &amp; Gueseman in
				  Minneapolis, personally handling Great Northern trial litigation. He moved to
				  Spokane in 1911 and later to Seattle, and was active in the civic affairs of
				  both cities. During World War I, he served on General Pershing’s staff,
				  attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was the director of the Seattle
				  department of Civilian Protection Services during World War II. He married
				  Sarah Truax in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlbertCS1</container><unittitle>Charles Stanley Albert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Colonel Charles S. Albert.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Albert, Sarah Truax (February 12, 1877 - April 25,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Truax was an American actor whose career began in the
				  mid-1890s and lasted well into the twentieth century. Though she appeared in
				  only a handful of Broadway and Hollywood productions over her career, Truax did
				  achieve success throughout America as a star of stock and touring companies.
				  She had starring roles in <emph>The Two Orphans,</emph><emph>The Prince of
				  India</emph> and <emph>The Garden of Allah.</emph> During her later years Truax
				  remained active as an actor and stage director working with community theatres
				  across her adopted state of Washington. Her first appearance in Seattle was in
				  1898 when she was married to her first husband, Guy Bates Post, a Seattle
				  resident. She organized her own theater company, but gave it up when she
				  married her second husband, Charles Stanley Albert in 1908. She returned to the
				  stage in 1911 after the birth of her daughter. In 1912 Truax, her husband and
				  young daughter moved to Spokane, Washington, where Charles Albert served as
				  counsel for the Great Northern Railway Company. She eventually became involved
				  in local theatres in Spokane, Seattle, and a number of other cities and towns
				  throughout the state. During this period Truax supported the Little Theatre
				  Movement where she enjoyed nurturing young talent. In 1927 she and her husband
				  relocated to Seattle. Truax's autobiography,<emph> A Woman of Parts: Memories
				  of a Life on Stage,</emph>was published in 1949. Truax was a supporter of the
				  University of Washington drama program and gave many of her costumes to the UW
				  Drama Department. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlbertST1</container><unittitle>Sarah Truax in costume as Ann in Shaw's play 
					 <emph render="italic">Man and Superman</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlbertST2</container><unittitle>Sarah Truac standing near tree with horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: A sober horse with a skittish lady named
					 Sarah Truax Albert</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Albertson, Robert Brooke (December 21, 1859 - October 3,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Brooke Albertson graduated from the University of North
				  Carolina in 1881 and studied law at the same university. After graduating, he
				  moved to Seattle and initially worked for the Seattle and Commercial Mill
				  Company. He spent six months as city editor of <emph render="italic">The
				  Seattle Morning Chronicle,</emph> and for two years worked as a law clerk. In
				  1885, he entered into a law partnership with George Hyde Preston and later
				  became a member of the firm of Lewis, Hardin &amp; Albertson. In 1889, he was
				  elected corporation counsel of Seattle, was elected a representative from the
				  Forty-Second District of the state legislature in 1895 and re-elected in 1900.
				  He served as Speaker of the House and was also speaker at the special session
				  held in June, 1901. He belonged to the Hook and Ladder Company of the city
				  until a paid fire company was installed. For five years, he was a member of the
				  Washington State Militia and served during the Chinese riots in 1887. He served
				  as a judge from 1903 until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlbertsonRB1</container><unittitle>Robert Brooke Albertson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Albrecht, Francis Bernard "Frank" (September 20, 1912 -
				  November 16, 1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Albrecht was the secretary-treasurer and business
				  representative of Local 186, Packinghouse Workers Union from 1957 until 1971.
				  He also served on the King County Labor Council.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Albright, Horace Marden (January 6, 1890 – March 28,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Albright, after graduating from the University of
				  California Berkeley, worked for the Department of Interior in Washington, D.C.
				  He became a legal assistant to Stephen Mather when Mather became Assistant
				  Secretary in charge of National Parks, and later assisted Mather when the
				  National Park Service (NPS) was established in 1916. As legal assistant, he
				  helped acquire land for several new national parks in the east. When Mather
				  became ill, Albright managed the NPS as acting director. He later served as
				  superintendent of Yellowstone National Park and, for a short time, Yosemite
				  National Park. On January 12, 1929, Albright succeeded Mather as the second
				  director of the NPS and held the post until August 9, 1933. In 1933 Albright
				  resigned to work for the U.S. Potash Corporation and U.S. Borax and Chemical
				  Corporation, serving variously as Director, Vice President, President and
				  General Manager. The nation's highest civilian award, the Presidential Medal of
				  Freedom, was awarded to him by President Jimmy Carter on the 64th Anniversary
				  of the National Park Service. Albright Grove, a grove of old-growth hemlocks
				  and tulip poplars located in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, was named
				  in his honor. The Albright Training Center at Grand Canyon National Park and
				  the Albright Visitor Center at Yellowstone National Park also bear his
				  name.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlbrightHM1</container><unittitle>Horace Marden Albright</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and
					 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alden, James Jr. (March 10, 1810 - February 6,
				  1877)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Alden was a Rear Admiral in the U.S. Navy, serving from
				  1828 until 1873. His ship <emph render="italic">The Active</emph> operated in
				  the headwaters of Puget Sound, where her presence reassured the settlers. In
				  the summer of 1859, during tensions resulting from an American's killing of a
				  Britisher settler's pig on San Juan Island, the ship's timely arrival helped to
				  quiet a potentially dangerous situation in what became later known as the "Pig
				  War." Alden died in San Francisco on February 6, 1877 and was buried in his
				  native Portland, Maine, on February 24, 1877.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AldenJJ1</container><unittitle>Photograph of painting of James Alden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AldenJJ2</container><unittitle>Grave monument for Rear Admiral James Alden, Eastern
					 Cemetery, Portland, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 11, 1923</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W. F. Brewster, Chicago, IL</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: This is an enlargement of a snap shot made
					 with a borrowed Camera by the undersigned, at Portland ME, on August 11, 1923.
					 As this was my first attempt without assistance, and as there were many
					 shadows, allowances must be made.</p><p> In the East Cemetery, at Portland ME, The City's oldest
					 burying ground in which are many stones dating back into the 18th Century there
					 stands a grandly elaborate Monument erected to the memory of Rear Admiral James
					 Alden, U.S.N. it is of beautifully carved and polished Red granite with Gray
					 granite base. My estimate was that the monument is 35 feet high, by about 6
					 feet square at base. On each of the equal four sides are exquisitely designed
					 bronze tablets, each of which is described below.</p><p>On the Front, or East side, in an ornamental circle, a fine
					 portrait of Admiral and below "Read Admiral James Alden, Born in Portland,
					 March 10, 1810. Died in San Francisco, February 6, 1877. On the South Side, in
					 an ornamental circle, Allegorical Ships; and below "Mexican War, New Orleans,
					 Vicksburgh [sic], Port Hudson, Mobile Bay." On the North side, in an ornamental
					 circle Sextant and Nautical Instruments: and below "Intrepid Explorer,
					 Skil(l)ful Hydrographer, Cartographer Western Coast of the United States." On
					 the East Side, in an ornamental circle, the National (or Naval) Coat of Arms
					 and below "Entered Navy April 1, 1828. Rear Admiral June 19, 1871."</p><p>This enlargement was made for Rear Admiral H. W. Lyon, U.S.N.,
					 Retired, who is the nephew of the late Admiral Alden.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AldenJJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the presentation sword Alden received at
					 the National Sailors Fair in Boston in 1864. The sword was manufactured by Ames
					 Mfg. Co., Chicopee, Massachusetts circa 1864.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander family</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">Alexander1</container><unittitle>Portrait of a young woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Abraham Lansdale (November, 1852 - February
				  18, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Lansdale Alexander, the son of John Alexander and
				  Frances Fay Alexander, was born in Washington Territory in 1852. He married
				  Grace Bird in 1879; the couple had five children: Harry Earl, Gracie, Lillie,
				  Abram Lester (Leslie) and Ida May. They had a farm in Coupeville,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderALansdale1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Abraham Lansdale Alexander, his
					 grandchil, Albert Leslie Alexander, and his son, Abraham Lester
					 Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1911</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Abraham (Abram) Lester (Leslie) (September
				  27, 1885 - October 20, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Lester Alexander, who also went by the names "Abram" and
				  "Leslie," was the son of Abraham Lansdale Alexander and Grace Bird Alexander.
				  In 1910, he married Frances Boss. His son, Albert Leslie, was born in 1911.
				  Abraham died in a car accident in 1942.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderALansdale1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Abraham Lansdale Alexander, his
					 grandchild, Albert Leslie Alexander, and his son, Abraham Lester
					 Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Abraham Lansdale Alexander subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Albert Leslie (February 1, 1911- June 1,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Leslie Alexander was the son of Abraham Lester Alexander
				  and Frances Boss Alexander.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderALansdale1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Abraham Lansdale Alexander, his
					 grandchild, Albert Leslie Alexander, and his son, Abraham Lester
					 Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Abraham Lansdale Alexander subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Anna Lanning (December 24, 1851-October 8,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Lanning was born in Illinois and came to Washington in
				  1869. She married John Sharpe Alexander on December 28, 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderALanning1</container><unittitle>Anna Lanning Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jeffers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Frances Sharpe (January 6, 1818 - March 10,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frances Sharpe was born in Ireland and married to John
				  Alexander. She arrived in Washington Territories in 1851, and the family
				  settled in what is now Coupeville, Washington in 1852. John built an inn which
				  went by many names over the years, most famously known as The Block House Inn.
				  His widow ran it for years as Mrs. Fay’s, having married Captain Fay after
				  John’s death; the inn burned in the1960s. The Island County Historic Society
				  Museum is now located where the inn stood.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderFS1</container><unittitle>Frances Sharpe Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, John (October 8, 1805 - December 9,
				  1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Alexander Sr. was born in Ireland in 1805. He and his
				  family sailed to Washington Territories on the schooner <emph>Exact</emph> in
				  1851. On the voyage, the vessel set ashore at Alki Point where the Denny party
				  disembarked. Alexander filed for a Donation Land Claim in what is now
				  Coupeville, Washington, on August 1, 1852. His claim adjoined the claims of
				  Isaac Ebey on one side and Captain Thomas Coupe on the other; the land ran from
				  what is now referred to as Ebey’s Prairie to the water’s edge on Penn Cove.
				  Alexander’s former claim is now home to Prairie Center, the "Big Rock," Main
				  Street and the 1855 Alexander Block House. The blockhouse has been moved from
				  the Alexander property to Coupeville and restored; it now stands next to the
				  Island County Historical Museum. He also built an inn which went by many names
				  over the years, most famously known as The Block House Inn. His widow ran it
				  for years as Mrs. Fay’s, having married Captain Fay after John’s death. The inn
				  burned in the1960s. The Island County Historic Society Museum is now located on
				  the site of the inn.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Alexander and William
					 Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, John Sharpe (July 23, 1836 - August 12,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Sharpe Alexander was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin and
				  crossed the Plains, arriving at Alki Point, Washington Territory on November
				  13, 1851 and Olympia on November 15, 1851 where he worked as a shipbuilder. He
				  married Alice Lanning on December 28, 1870. His parents were John Alexander and
				  Frances Sharpe Alexander. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderJS1</container><unittitle>John Sharpe Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, Moses (November 13, 1853 – January 4,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Moses Alexander was the second elected Jewish governor of a U.S.
				  state and served as the 11th Governor of Idaho from 1915 until 1919. In 1895,
				  he led an effort to build Ahavath Beth Israel synagogue, the first in Idaho;
				  completed in 1896, it is the oldest synagogue in continuous use west of the
				  Mississippi River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderM1</container><unittitle>Moses Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alexander, William (January 3, 1834 -April 13,
				  1872)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Alexander was the son of John and Frances Alexander. He
				  was rumored to have been robbed, murdered and thrown into the Willamette River
				  from Flander’s Wharf in Portland, Oregon, in 1872, leaving his wife and two
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderW1</container><unittitle>William Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlexanderJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Alexander and William
					 Alexander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>File under John Alexander subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Algren, Nelson (March 28, 1909 – May 9,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nelson Algren was an American writer who was best known for 
				  <emph render="italic">The Man with the Golden Arm,</emph>a 1949 novel that won
				  the National Book Award and was adapted as a 1955 film of the same name. </p></bioghist><note><p>Algren spoke at the University of Washington in 1961 at the time
				  his novel, <emph render="italic">A Walk on the Wild Side,</emph> was being made
				  into a motion picture. During his time at the University, he also held a
				  seminar for students interested in his work. A notice from 
				  <emph render="italic">the Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> about his
				  appearance is included with the photo.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlgrenN1</container><unittitle>Nelson Algren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Aliesan, Jody (April 22, 1943-January 14,
				  2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jody Aliesan was an activist in the feminist movement and served
				  as a consultant to the University of Washington Office of Equal Employment
				  Opportunity programs. She also served as coordinator of the Women's Commission
				  and was co-writer and co-researcher of the ASUW Women's Commission report on
				  the status of women faculty, staff and students. In 1971, Mayor Uhlman
				  appointed Aliesan to the new Seattle Women's Commission. She resigned after a
				  year because she believed that the members of the commission were chosen to
				  represent wide social and political interests, but did not have a knowledge or
				  understanding of the problems relevant to women. In 1978, Aliesan was a member
				  of the steering committee for the Citizens to Retain Fair Employment, an
				  organization formed to defeat Initiative 13 which would have allowed
				  discrimination in Seattle on the basis of sexual orientation. In 1979/80, her
				  household was awarded an Urban Homestead grant by the U.S. Dept. of Energy for
				  a demonstration project which sought to educate the public in conservation
				  techniques. Her papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Alexander James</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander James Allen was the last of the four Assistant
				  Surgeons to attend the Royal Marines on San Juan Island. He had nearly nine
				  years of Navy medical experience both ashore and afloat when he arrived in the
				  summer of 1870. He came from a two-year stint at Haulbowline Hospital in Cork.
				  During his station on San Juan Island, he was carried on the books of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Zealous</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Scylla.</emph>While at the English Camp, he may have overseen
				  the construction of a new hospital. He accompanied the Royal Marines when they
				  left in May 1873. By September of the following year, he was assigned as a
				  surgeon aboard the <emph render="italic">H.M.S. Crocodile</emph> and retired
				  with a promotion in 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenAJ1</container><unittitle>Alexander James Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Spencer</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original carte-de-visite portrait</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Clay (August 23, 1875 - January 27,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clay Allen was a King County Superior Court judge from 1929
				  until his retirement in 1949. He attended Baker University in Kansas and
				  graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston. He was a quarterback for
				  both of the universities' football teams and later played for the Medics, a
				  professional team. He graduated from Indiana Law School in 1904. In 1948, he
				  was the judge for the Canwell Committee contempt trial of Burton and Florence
				  Bean James.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenC1</container><unittitle>Clay Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): </p><p>Austin E. Griffiths, William G. Long, Roger J. Meakim,
						Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler, Chester A. Batchelor, Donald
						A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers,
						Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M. Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen,
						Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated (left to right): Charles H.
						Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T. Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce
						Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Edward Tyson (December 26, 1875 - May 28,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Tyson Allen was one of the first United States forest
				  rangers, hired at $50 per month in 1898 by the General Land Office and sent
				  west to Washington State to assume the post of ranger on the Washington Reserve
				  (now the Gifford Pinchot National Forest). He helped set the future trend for
				  rangers by departing for his district and exploring the area until he knew it
				  in detail; he then proceeded to define his job. Later in 1902, he helped the
				  Interior Department prepare a book of regulations that emerged as the Forest
				  Service's first <emph render="italic">Use Book</emph>, the regulations and
				  instruction for the use of the national forests. In 1900, he undertook a
				  cooperative timber survey in Grays Harbor County, the first of its kind in the
				  county. He headed the Pacific Northwest Forest Protection and Conservation
				  Association, whose objective was to protect forests from waste and to safeguard
				  the national forest reserves. He later headed the Western Forestry and
				  Conversation Association. During World War I, he worked with the government to
				  stimulate the production of spruce for use in aircraft. He wrote several books
				  about forestry, including <emph>Practical Forestry In The Pacific
				  Northwest.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenET1</container><unittitle>Edward Tyson Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Edward Weber (May 12, 1884 - March 15,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Weber Allen was an attorney from Seattle, Washington who
				  specialized in fisheries law. Beginning in 1928, he represented Alaska salmon
				  packers in many capacities, including legal affairs, labor matters, lobbying,
				  and as public spokesman for the industry. Allen also used his knowledge of
				  fisheries law to the benefit of various international commissions. He was a
				  member of the International Fisheries Commission (known after 1953 as the
				  International Pacific Halibut Commission) from 1932 to 1955 and also served as
				  its chairman and secretary. The International Fisheries Commission helped
				  restore the depleted halibut stocks in the North Pacific. He served as a
				  commissioner of the International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission from 1937
				  to 1957, which was formed to revive the salmon stock of the Puget Sound and
				  Fraser River. In 1954, he helped create the International North Pacific
				  Fisheries Commission, which was composed of representatives of the United
				  States, Canada, and Japan. The commission met every three years, and Allen
				  served as chairman. He was a long-time member of the U.S. State Department
				  Fishing Industry Advisory Committee. Additionally, Allen was active in the
				  American Bar Association. He chaired its Law of the Sea Committee and served on
				  its International and Comparative Law Section, as well as other committees.
				  During World War II, Allen served in the United States Office of Strategic
				  Services. In 1957, he was named Puget Sound Maritime Man of the Year, and in
				  1959, he received the Raymond J. Huff Memorial Award for service in the field
				  of international affairs. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenEW1</container><unittitle>Edward W. Allen sitting in office with
					 book.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Seattle Times, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenEW2</container><unittitle>Edward W. Allen portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1976?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Frank Phillip (September 28, 1879 - July 5,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Phillips Allen, Jr. was a architect, engineer and
				  landscape designer who played a key part in the construction and design of
				  several major exposition projects in the western United States, including as
				  consulting engineer for Portland's Lewis and Clark Exposition (1905), and
				  Director of Works for Seattle's Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909). Born in
				  Great Rapids, Michigan, he was trained as a architect and contractor, and
				  eventually moved to San Diego to open an independent office. His most
				  prestigious job was Director of Works for San Diego's Panama-California
				  Exposition (1915), for which he oversaw the creation of a number of notable
				  constructions, including the Cabrillo Bridge and the Montezuma Gardens. He
				  moved to Los Angeles in 1932 and died in a car accident in 1943.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenFP1</container><unittitle>Frank Phillip Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edwin Rogers, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, George M. (December 12, 1876- February 28,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George M. Allen was the Deputy Commissioner for the Bureau of
				  Statistics and Immigration for Washington State. During the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, he conducted an information bureau for
				  visitors in the Washington Building, which became a library for the University
				  of Washington after the exposition closed. Acting in his capacity as advertiser
				  for the state, he published <emph render="italic">The Booster Book</emph>, a
				  publication dealing with the natural advantages of Washington. In 1910, he
				  published<emph render="italic">The Irrigated Lands of the State of
				  Washington</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenGM1</container><unittitle>George M. Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Harry Eugene (February 28, 1876 - September 17,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Eugene Allen was born in Burlington, Wisconsin and entered
				  the University of Wisconsin at age 15. He was a surgeon by age 22 and interned
				  at Cook County Hospital. He joined the Army and served during the Boxer
				  Rebellion and the Philippine Insurrection. He resigned from the Army in 1902
				  and moved to Seattle, where he practiced at Pacific Hospital. He was president
				  of the King County Medical Society, Medical Director for the State Department
				  of Labor and Industries (1933-1938) and the assistant chief surgeon for the
				  Milwaukee Railroad's Western Line for 31 years. During World War I, he was the
				  chief surgeon for Eagleson Base Hospital in France and the commanding officer
				  for Base Hospital 50. In 1904, he married Ethel Bagley of the Seattle pioneer
				  family.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenHE1</container><unittitle>Harry Eugene Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Allen, Henry Harrison (November 6, 1839 - August 4,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Harrison Allen was born in Missouri and was an early
				  settler in North Yakima, Washington Territories where he raised cattle. In
				  1887, he built the H. H. Allen Building on the southwest corner of Second
				  Street and Yakima Avenue in Yakima. The building housed the Allen &amp; Chapman
				  Drugstore which he started in partnership with his son-in-law, William
				  Chapman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AllenHE1</container><unittitle>Harry Eugene Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Allen, Raymond Bernard (August 7, 1902 – March 15,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Raymond Bernard Allen was an American educator who served as the
				  president of the University of Washington from 1946 to 1951, and as the first
				  chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles from 1951 to 1959. He
				  attended the University of Minnesota, where he received an MD in 1928 and
				  returned to the University of Minnesota in 1930 for his PhD. He started his
				  career as a general practitioner in Minot, North Dakota. Initially specializing
				  in urology, Allen entered hospital administration after earning his PhD. In
				  1933, he became Director of Graduate Studies at the Columbia University College
				  of Physicians and Surgeons. At the same time, he worked as the associate
				  director of New York Post-Graduate Medical School. He later served as dean of
				  the University of Illinois College of Medicine, dean of the Wayne State
				  University School of Medicine and associate dean for graduate studies at the
				  Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. He served as president
				  of the University of Washington (UW) from 1946 to 1951. As president, Allen
				  oversaw the early years of the University of Washington School of Medicine,
				  which opened the same year Allen took office. In addition to his work for
				  university hospitals, Allen dedicated time to public service. In 1945, he
				  volunteered for the National Commission for Mental Hygiene, and later served on
				  the Hoover Commission. When UCLA was granted co-equal status with UC Berkeley
				  in 1951, Allen became UCLA's first chancellor, a post he held until 1959.
				  During his tenure, the UCLA Medical Center was built and the Schools of
				  Medicine, Dentistry, and Nursing were developed, as well as the
				  Neuropsychiatric Institute. After leaving UCLA, Allen served as director of
				  research and population dynamics for the Pan American Health Organization, as
				  Indonesia director of the International Cooperation Administration, and as a
				  member of the World Health Organization.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW9</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, Dean Herbert T. Condon, Harry C.
					 Bauer, and Raymond B. Allen, with photograph of Charles Smith standing in
					 Suzzallo Library in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Blomdahl, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Allen, Riley Harris (April 30, 1884 - October 2,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Riley Harris Allen graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1903 and was the editor of the <emph>Honolulu Star Bulletin</emph> from 1912
				  until 1960. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH3</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Oscar A. Fechter, Maud Fechter,
					 Riley Harris Allen, and Edith Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Taken in Honolulu on a trip to the South
						Seas, Australia and New Zealand, made by the Fechters and the Suzzallos in
						1927.</p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alman, Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">Alman1</container><unittitle>Mrs. Alman with daughter Annie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Altman, Edwin Norman (August 21, 1918 - December 3,
				  1989) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin N. Altman was born in New York and served in the Merchant
				  Marine during World War II. He moved to Seattle in 1946. He was elected
				  president of the American Maritime Association in 1959 after serving as the
				  secretary of the Marine Engineers Beneficial Association (CIO). He also served
				  as the Seattle Mayor's marine advisor, was the director of United Good
				  Neighbors, vice president of the Seattle King County Community Chest and a
				  member of the steering committee of the Governor's Conference on Mental Health.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AltmanEN1</container><unittitle>Edwin Norman Altman presenting his delegate card,
					 pictured with three unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959?</unitdate><origination><persname>Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Alvarez, Walter Clement (July 22, 1884 – June 18,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Clement Alvarez was an American physician who authored
				  several dozen books on medicine, and wrote introductions and forewords for many
				  others. He was born in San Francisco and spent his childhood in Hawaii, where
				  his father was a government physician. In 1910, after graduating from medical
				  school at Stanford University, he practiced internal medicine in San Francisco
				  and conducted research at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1934, he
				  became Professor of Medicine at the University of Minnesota (Mayo Foundation)
				  and later served as Consultant in Medicine Emeritus. After his retirement in
				  1951, Alvarez began writing a medical column which soon became syndicated
				  throughout North America in hundreds of daily and weekly newspapers. The Walter
				  C. Alvarez Memorial Award is named in his honor and is presented to a member or
				  nonmember of the American Medical Writers Association to honor excellence in
				  communicating health care developments and concepts to the public. Alvarez was
				  the first to investigate electric activity of a stomach and, thereby, became
				  the founder of electrogastrography, a new diagnostic gastroenterology branch.
				  Alvarez' syndrome, a syndrome of hysterical or neurotic abdominal bloating
				  without any excess of gas in the digestive tract, and Alvarez-waves, painless
				  uterine contractions occurring during the length of pregnancy, are named after
				  him. His son, Luis Alvarez, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1968 for
				  his discovery of resonance states in particle physics using the hydrogen bubble
				  chamber.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AlvarezWC1</container><unittitle>Walter Clement Alvarez</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Eugene Cutshall, Rochester, Minnesota</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: To Dr. K. K. Sherwood with kindest regards
					 of Walter C. Alvarez</p><p>K. K. Sherwood (Kenneth Kyler) was a Seattle physician who was
					 Medical Director of Harborview County Hospital and later General Superintendent
					 of the King County Hospital system, retiring in 1963. He was a member of the
					 King County Medical Society, chaired its historical committee, and served on
					 and chaired the Governor’s Council On Aging ca. 1965.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Alvord, Thomas Moody (February 26, 1832 - March 21,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Thomas Moody Alvord was born in New York in 1832. He left New
				  York on board the<emph render="italic">Prometheus,</emph>arriving in San
				  Francisco December 1, 1853. He went to Calaveras County and mined for three and
				  a half years. With the news of the discovery of gold in the Fraser River
				  valley, he went north, but only remained a short time, returning to Olympia in
				  December, 1858. In February, 1859, he bought property along the river and set
				  up a successful ranch and trading business in Pialschie, Washington Territory
				  near the town of Kent.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AltmanTM1</container><unittitle>Thomas M. Alvord</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Americus - see August John Schoenlein</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ames, Anne Beatrice (October 12, 1869 - January 22,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anne Beatrice Shaw was born in Victoria, British Columbia,
				  Canada. She studied in Europe and traveled extensively before marrying Edgar
				  Ames in 1909. She and her husband lived in Paris and then moved to Seattle in
				  1914, where he was general manager of the Seattle and Lake Washington Water Way
				  Company and the founder of Ames Shipbuilding and Dry Dock. She was the
				  co-founder of the Music and Art Foundation and served as its president for 12
				  years. She was the first president of the Board of Cornish School and helped
				  organize the Seattle Symphony Orchestra. One of her projects was a creative
				  school for children which she started at Lowell School. Mark Tobey was a
				  friend, and she put him in charge. He also painted her portrait and conducted
				  art classes at her home.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AmesA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Anne Ames</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914 </unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Field, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AmesA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mrs. Ames sitting against tree in the
					 woods</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1908</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AmesA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar and Anne Ames in the
					 woods</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1908</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerryKAG1</container><unittitle>Katherine Amelia Kerry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The portrait of Katherine Kerry appeared in the May 1926 issue
					 of <emph render="italic">Charmed Land Woman's Magazine</emph>. The reverse side
					 has a portrait of Anne Beatrice Ames. </p><p>See Katherine Amelia Kerry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">1</container><unittitle>Ames, Edgar Semple (February 26, 1868 - June 28,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Ames, a native os St. Louis, Missouri, came to Seattle in
				  1895 after graduating from Yale University. He was instrumental in dredging the
				  Puyallup River and E;lliott Bay, which resulted in the creation of Harbor
				  Island in Seattle. He established the Ames Shipbuilding and Drydock Company
				  which built 25 steel steamships during World War I. In 1929, he established the
				  Ames Terminal near his shipyeard. He was active in civic affairs, including the
				  growth of the Cornish School, the Seattle Symphony and the Seattle Art Museum.
				  He married Anne Shaw in 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AmesA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar and Anne Ames in the
					 woods</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1908</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Anne Ames subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Amphilochius</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amphilochius was the Eastern Orthodox Bishop of Sitka,
				  1923-1933. Born Antony Yakovlevich Vakulsky and given the name Amphilochius
				  when he was tonsured a monk. Amphilochius was a missionary among the Chukchi
				  people in Siberia during the years 1909-1910. After arriving in North America,
				  he continued serving, from 1910 to 1915, the parishes of emigrant Orthodox
				  Christians in Alberta, Canada. Amphilochius was consecrated Bishop of Alaska by
				  the Russian North American mission in 1923, a position he served until 1931.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">Amphilochius1</container><unittitle>Amphilochius</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1931?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Clinton Presba (October 23, 1895 – November
				  11, 1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clinton Presba Anderson was an American politician who
				  represented New Mexico in the United States Senate from 1949 until 1973. A
				  member of the Democratic Party, he previously served as United States Secretary
				  of Agriculture from 1945 until 1948 and represented New Mexico's at-large
				  congressional district from 1941 until 1945.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andersen, Dennis Alan (October 8, 1951- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dennis Andersen was the pastor of Bethany Lutheran Church in the
				  Green Lake neighborhood. Following graduate studies in Germanic languages and
				  literature at the University of Washington and the University of Vienna,
				  Austria, he worked for seven years in charge of photographs and architectural
				  drawings in the Special Collections Division of the University of Washington
				  Libraries. His strong interests in historic preservation and architectural
				  history were expressed through his six-year service on the Seattle Landmarks
				  Preservation Board, including two years as chairman, as well as his essay and
				  editorial contributions to <emph render="italic">Shaping Seattle
				  Architecture.</emph> He co-authored with Jeffrey Ochsner <emph render="italic">Distant Corner: Seattle Architects and the Legacy of H.H.
				  Richardson.</emph> Andersen served on the Board of Governors of the Book Club
				  of Washington, was an adjunct faculty member of the School of Theology and
				  Ministry at Seattle University and a member of the Board of Directors of
				  Partners for Sacred Places, a Philadelphia-based organization dedicated to the
				  preservation and revitalization of historic religious structures and their
				  ministries. He was a member of Historic Seattle's Council from 2004 until
				  2008.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DorpatPL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Dorpat looking in a file cabinet
					 at Special Collections, UW Libraries, possibly with Dennis Anderson, who was in
					 charge of photographs and architectural drawings in Special
					 Collections</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1979</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul Dorpat subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Agnes Bradford Healy (April 4, 1860-April 5,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Agnes Bradford Healy was born in Wisconsin and graduated from
				  Vassar College in 1882. She married Alfred H. Anderson on January 23, 1883, and
				  the couple moved to Shelton, Washington where Alfred had lumber holdings and
				  was later an officer of Simpson Logging. He was credited with acquiring large
				  tracts of timberland for the University of Washington. Mrs. Anderson donated
				  the funds for the University of Washington's School (and later College) of
				  Forest Resources in memory of her husband; it was the first UW building which
				  had its total cost underwritten by one donor. She was the president of Anderson
				  Real Estate Company and a patron of Cornish School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonABH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Agnes Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride &amp; Anderson, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonABH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Agnes Anderson entering her carriage
					 near Frederick &amp; Nelson Department Store in Seattle.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Agnes Anderson was known for using a carriage drawn by two
					 horses for years after automobiles were in general use. In 1925, an ordinance
					 was passed banning the carriage from the downtown streets between the hours of
					 10 AM and 6 PM.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Alexander Jay (November 6, 1832 - March 17,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Anderson was born in Scotland and emigrated with his
				  family to the United States near Joliet, Illinois. He graduated from Knox
				  College in Galesburg, Illinois in 1856. He was the Chair of Mathematics and
				  Dean of Academy at the Pacific University of Forest Grove, Oregon and Principle
				  of Central School in Portland. He was the sixth president of the Territorial
				  University (now the University of Washington), serving from 1877 to 1882;
				  during this time, he reorganized the curriculum and opened all classes to both
				  male and female students. He also strengthened the University's relationship
				  with the city by bringing the city's library to the campus. In 1882 he resigned
				  from his position as UW President to become the first president of Whitman
				  College in Walla Walla. The college opened on September 4, 1882 with an
				  enrollment of 60 students and three senior faculty : Alexander Anderson, Maria
				  Anderson and their son, Louis, who taught at Whitman for fifty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonAJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alexander Jay Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1877 and 1882?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Alfred H. (April 13, 1856-April 20,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred H. Anderson was born in Wisconsin. He married Agnes
				  Bradford Healy on January 23, 1883. The couple moved to Shelton, Washington
				  where Alfred had lumber and railroad holdings and was later an officer of
				  Simpson Logging, acquiring 48 percent of the company. He served in the 1891
				  Washington State Legislature, representing Mason County. According to Edmond
				  Meany, it was his support and influence that was largely responsible for the
				  size of the University of Washington campus; he opposed limiting the area to
				  100 acres, and in 1893, the campus area was restored to its original 355 acres.
				  Mrs. Anderson donated the funds for the University of Washington's School (and
				  later College) of Forest Resources in memory of her husband; it was the first
				  UW building which had its total cost underwritten by one donor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alfred H. Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photograph of a painting.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Donald K. (January 19, 1915-February 28,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald K. Anderson was a 1937 graduate of the University of
				  Michigan and after graduation, was the director of the University of Michigan's
				  news service bureau. He served in the United States Navy as a fighter director
				  officer of two aircraft carriers during World War II. After the war, he was
				  director of public relations at the University of Illinois and the University
				  of California before joining the University of Washington in 1952. He was the
				  director of the Office of Public Relations and Student Affairs. He was later
				  named Dean of Students and was Vice President of Student Affairs from 1963 to
				  1969. He retired in 1972.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonDK1</container><unittitle>Donald K. Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1952 Tyee.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Eva Greenslit (May 20, 1889 - December 15,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eva Greenslit Anderson was born on May 20, 1889, in Surprise,
				  Nebraska. She received a B.A. from Nebraska Wesleyan University in 1910 and in
				  1912 moved to Wenatchee, Washington to teach high school. She married Leonard
				  O. Anderson on June 10, 1915. She was superintendent of the Douglas County
				  School from 1919 to 1921, then superintendent of Waterville Public Schools. She
				  received an M.A. from the University of Washington in 1926 and a PhD from the
				  University in 1937. She was an instructor at the University of Oregon,
				  returning to Wenatchee High School as girls’ advisor. In 1934 she was
				  Washington State Supervisor of Adult Education and was named Washington’s
				  “Woman of Achievement" in 1949. In 1954 she became a member of the Board of
				  Curators of the Washington State Historical Society. She was interested in the
				  history of the Pacific Northwest and wrote more than thirty books on local
				  history; her book<emph render="italic"> Chief Seattle</emph>was rated one of
				  the ten best on Native Americans by the U.S. Department of the Interior. She
				  received the Washington State Press Women’s Pioneer Writers’ Award in 1963, and
				  in 1968, the Social Science Building at Wenatchee Valley College was named
				  Anderson Hall. Her papers are in Central Washington University's Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonEG1</container><unittitle>Eva Greenslit Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonEG2</container><unittitle>Eva Anderson, Chelan/Wenatchee, Regent
					 1942-46</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Wenatchee World</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Frederick Neel (June 4, 1917 - March 12,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Neel Anderson was born in Hunters, Washington and
				  graduated from the University of Washington in 1942. He received his M.F.A.
				  from the University of Minnesota in 1954. He served as a sergeant in the Army
				  during World War II and was a professor of art at the University of
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonFN1</container><unittitle>Frederick Neel Anderson in a classroom with two
					 students</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Guy Irving (November 20, 1906 - April 30,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Guy Anderson was an American Abstract Expressionist painter.
				  Along with Kenneth Callahan, Morris Graves, William Cumming, and Mark Tobey,
				  Anderson was identified in a <emph render="italic">Life Magazine</emph> article
				  as one of the "northwest mystics," also known as the Northwest School. He
				  received many awards and commissions, including the Governor's Art Award, the
				  Guggenheim Fellowship and the Seattle Opera House Commission. He has had
				  exhibitions at the Seattle Art Museum, the Henry Art Gallery, the Bellevue Art
				  Museum, the Tacoma Art Museum, the National Museum of Art in Osaka Japan, and
				  the Northwest Museum of Art in La Conner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">XC3</container><container type="item">WehrWC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wesley Wehr with Guy Anderson and
					 Deryl Walls</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Benham Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>16 x 20 portrait</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Wesley Wehr subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Henrietta Buford Adair (June 3, 1834-February
				  17, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henrietta (Etta) Adair was born in Tompkinsville, Kentucky in
				  1834. She married her cousin, James Patton Anderson, in 1853, and the couple
				  moved to Olympia in Washington Territory where he served as the first United
				  States marshal of the territory. He was offered but declined an appointment as
				  governor of Washington Territory. Instead, in 1857, he and Etta moved to
				  Florida, where they agreed to take over the management of Casa Bianca
				  plantation. With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Anderson joined
				  ardent secessionists and gave his full support to the Confederacy. He entered
				  the Confederate Army as colonel of the 1st Regiment Florida (Infantry),
				  received promotion to brigadier general February 10, 1862 and to major general
				  February 17, 1864. He was wounded at the Battle of Jonesboro, Ga., in August
				  1864 and retired from the field to recuperate. Even after the restoration of
				  the Union, Anderson remained unreconciled to the new order in the South,
				  refusing to countersign his presidential amnesty. His finances were ruined, and
				  he took his family to Memphis, Tennessee, where he earned his living by editing
				  a publication on agriculture, working in insurance, and serving as a collector
				  of delinquent taxes for Shelby County. He died of complications from war-time
				  wounds on September 20, 1872. Etta and their five children returned to Florida
				  in 1883 and settled in Palatka, where Etta became the president of the local J.
				  Patton Anderson Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonHBA1</container><unittitle>Henrietta Buford Adair Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, James Patton (February 16, 1822 – September
				  20, 1872)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> James Patton Anderson was born near Winchester in Franklin
				  County, Tennessee. He moved with his family to Kentucky in 1831, where he lived
				  for most of his childhood, and then to Mississippi in 1838. He attended the
				  medical school of Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania in 1840, before
				  a family financial crisis forced him to withdraw a short time before graduation
				  in 1842; soon after his return home, he began practicing medicine. He studied
				  law at Montrose Law School in Frankfort, Kentucky, and was admitted to the bar
				  in 1843, establishing a practice in Hernando in DeSoto County, Mississippi. He
				  commanded the 2nd Battalion, Mississippi Rifles with the rank of lieutenant
				  colonel during the Mexican-American War. He entered politics, serving in the
				  Mississippi House of Representatives and befriending Jefferson Davis, a fellow
				  former Mississippi volunteer officer in the U.S. Army. When Davis became
				  Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce, he appointed Anderson as U.S.
				  Marshal for the Washington Territory. Anderson married his cousin Henrietta
				  (Etta) Adair in 1853, and the couple moved to Olympia where he served as
				  marshal for several years before being selected to represent the territory in
				  the 34th Congress as a Democrat. He was offered but declined an appointment as
				  governor of Washington Territory. Instead, in 1857, he and Etta moved to
				  Florida, where they agreed to take over the management of Casa Bianca
				  plantation. With the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Anderson joined
				  ardent secessionists and gave his full support to the Confederacy. He entered
				  the Confederate Army as colonel of the 1st Regiment Florida (Infantry),
				  received promotion to brigadier general February 10, 1862 and to major general
				  February 17, 1864. He was wounded at the Battle of Jonesboro, Ga., in August
				  1864 and retired from the field to recuperate. Even after the restoration of
				  the Union, Anderson remained unreconciled to the new order in the South,
				  refusing to countersign his presidential amnesty. His finances were ruined, and
				  he took his family to Memphis, Tennessee, where he earned his living by editing
				  a publication on agriculture, working in insurance, and serving as a collector
				  of delinquent taxes for Shelby County. He died of complications from war-time
				  wounds on September 20, 1872.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonJP1</container><unittitle>James Patton Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, John Alexius (July 17, 1895 - July 27,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Alexius Anderson was born in Tobyn, Mangskog, Sweden to
				  Anders Nilsson and Anna Svedsdotter Skoglund. His mother died in 1905, and he
				  immigrated to Seattle at the age of 14. traveling alone by ship to New York and
				  then by train to Seattle where he lived with his uncle and aunt, John and Anna
				  Nelson. He worked in the lumber industry as a logger and in the mills, working
				  for Everett Lumber Company, Canyon Lumber in Everett, and Waites Mill in
				  Granite Falls. He was an accomplished musician and played the piano, accordion
				  and banjo. He married Mildred Corinne Rupp August 29, 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonJA1</container><unittitle>John Anderson with his aunt, Anna Nelson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonJA2</container><unittitle>John Anderson playing the accordion</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Moved to America at age 14. His nickname was
					 Timber John. He worked in lumber industry, both logging and in the mills.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Maria Louisa Phelps (Mrs. A. J. Anderson) (May
				  27, 1831-September 21, 1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maria Louisa Phelps was born in Mayville, New York. She was the
				  daughter of Luke and Lucinda Phelps and a descendent of George Phelps and
				  Phillury Randall (later George's wife) who were passengers on the advance ship
				  of the Winthrop fleet,<emph render="italic">Mary &amp; John</emph>which landed
				  at Nantasket on May 30, 1630. She graduated from Willoughby Seminary in Ohio in
				  1854 and married Alexander Jay Anderson in 1857. He was the president of the
				  Territorial University (now the University of Washington) from 1877 to 1882.
				  Together they designed and implemented an ambitious curriculum, hired
				  educators, secured funding, established an enrollment open to women on an equal
				  basis with men, and set and enforced a high standard of discipline and academic
				  excellence. Alexander also strengthened the University's relationship with the
				  city by bringing the city's library to the campus. Alexander was the first
				  president of Whitman College, which opened on September 4, 1882 with an
				  enrollment of 60 students and three senior faculty: Alexander Anderson, Maria
				  Anderson and their son, Louis, who taught at Whitman for fifty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonMLP1</container><unittitle>Maria Louisa Phelps Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, Thomas McArthur (January 21, 1836 – May 8,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas McArthur Anderson was a career officer in the United
				  States Army who served as a general in the Spanish-American War and the
				  Philippine-American War. Anderson attended the Cincinnati School of Law and was
				  admitted to the Ohio State bar in 1858. When the Civil War broke out, he
				  enlisted in the Union Army. He received a commission in the Regular Army as
				  second lieutenant and shortly after was promoted to captain. He received brevet
				  promotions to major for the Wilderness and lieutenant colonel for Spotsylvania.
				  He stayed in the regular army after the end of the war, eventually rising to
				  the rank of colonel. In February 1897 Anderson and 100 soldiers of the 14th U.
				  S. Infantry set up a base in Alaska at the start of the Klondike gold rush to
				  protect miners along the trails into Canada as well as to keep watch on the
				  border. At the start of the Spanish-American War, he asked for and received
				  reassignment. He was appointed brigadier general of U.S. Volunteers, and his
				  troops were the first to land in the Philippines following George Dewey's naval
				  victory there. Anderson fought at the battle of Manila against the Spanish and
				  was promoted to major general of U.S. Volunteers in 1898. When the war ended,
				  Anderson stayed in Manila where he was placed in command of the 1st Division,
				  VIII Corps and saw action in the 1899 Battle of Manila during the
				  Philippine-American War. In March 1899, he was promoted to the rank of
				  brigadier general in the Regular Army.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonTM1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Thomas McArthur Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><note><p>Written on front: Commandant of Fort Townsend and of
						Vancouver Bks, Wash., 1886-1898. In Alaska in early 1898 at Skagway
						Barracks.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonTM2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Thomas McArthur Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Albert Salzbrenner</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: "A copy of a photo of Salzbrenner's 1912
						portrait of grandpa. He also painted my father." Maj. Gen. T. Mc. Anderson</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anderson, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonW1</container><unittitle>William Anderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tony Archer, Vancouver, B.C</persname></origination><note><p>Anthony "Tony" Staunton Archer, was a prominent Vancouver
						photographer in the 1950s. His studio was disbanded in 1972. The photograph is
						signed by Archer.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Clarence Ellsworth (August 4, 1879 - May 2,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Ellsworth Andrews was the son of Stephen P. Andrews and
				  Nellie Burnett Andrews and the brother of Stephen Perle Andrews. He worked as a
				  beekeeper, carpenter and plumber, and moved to Nevada in the 1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughJW1</container><unittitle>Jacob Wallace Lough with Stephen Andrews, Sammuel (?)
					 Andrews, Clarence Andrews and Sarah Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken on south bank of Portage Bay Lake, a
					 short way from the shore and about to Dalialand Flower Shop on Boyer Avenue.
					 There was a little stream, came down the valley. Evidently, it was the same
					 valley J. W. Wheeler has park now. We went there in the Andrews' boys clinker
					 built raw boat, taking along a watermelon. I took the picture with a string.
					 Must have been about 1896 as I look to be 16 years old. My first sweater which
					 was quite a favorite acquisition.</p><p>Filed under Jacob W. Lough subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Edward Williamson (January 15, 1853 - August
				  24, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Williamson Andrews was born in Cincinnati, Ohio and
				  graduated from Yale University in 1875. He began his career in banking in Ohio.
				  In 1890, he moved to Olympia, Washington where he started a bank. In 1892, he
				  was the founder and first president of Seattle National Bank. He was the
				  president and chairman of the Seattle Clearing House Association and at the
				  time of his death was the chairman of the Clearing House Association. He was
				  also the vice-president of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AndrewsEW1</container><unittitle>Edward Williamson Andrews</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Andrews, John Robb Tolmie (June 1, 1923 - December 22,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Robb Tolmie Andrews was the son of Leonard Robb Andrews and
				  Jane "Jean" Tolmie Andrews, and the grandson of William Fraser Tolmie and Jane
				  Work Tolmie. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Leonard Robb (August 8, 1890 - October 16,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leonard Robb Andrews, the son of Frederick and Rebecca (Robb)
				  Andrews, was a forest engineer who worked for B. C. Lumber Manufacturers
				  Association. He married Jane "Jean" Tolmie in 1920; they had one son, John.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Ralph Warren (January 12, 1897 - February 11,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Andrews was active in advertising and merchandising in his
				  early career. He became the editor and manager of Superior Publishing and was
				  also an author. He is best known for his pictorial volumes on the early days of
				  the timber industry. In 1966, he received one of the first Governor's Writers
				  Day Awards, now called the Washington State Book Awards.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AndrewsRW1</container><unittitle>Ralph Warren Andrews</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Sammuel (?)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughJW1</container><unittitle>Jacob Wallace Lough with Stephen Andrews, Sammuel (?)
					 Andrews, Clarence Andrews and Sarah Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken on south bank of Portage Bay Lake, a
					 short way from the shore and about to Dalialand Flower Shop on Boyer Avenue.
					 There was a little stream, came down the valley. Evidently, it was the same
					 valley J. W. Wheeler has park now. We went there in the Andrews' boys clinker
					 built raw boat, taking along a watermelon. I took the picture with a string.
					 Must have been about 1896 as I look to be 16 years old. My first sweater which
					 was quite a favorite acquisition.</p><p>Filed under Jacob W. Lough subseries.</p></note><note><p>The photograph is of three young men (Jacob Wallace Lough,
					 Clarence Andrews, Stephen Andrews) and two young women. The young women are
					 identified as Sarah Hill and Sammuel (?) Andrews.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Andrews, Stephen Perle (August 21, 1881 - August 2,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Perle Andrews was the son of Stephen P. Andrews and
				  Nellie Burnett Andrews and the brother of Clarence Ellsworth Andrews. He worked
				  as a carpenter and a nurse.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughJW1</container><unittitle>Jacob Wallace Lough with Stephen Andrews, Sammuel (?)
					 Andrews, Clarence Andrews and Sarah Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken on south bank of Portage Bay Lake, a
					 short way from the shore and about to Dalialand Flower Shop on Boyer Avenue.
					 There was a little stream, came down the valley. Evidently, it was the same
					 valley J. W. Wheeler has park now. We went there in the Andrews' boys clinker
					 built raw boat, taking along a watermelon. I took the picture with a string.
					 Must have been about 1896 as I look to be 16 years old. My first sweater which
					 was quite a favorite acquisition.</p><p>Filed under Jacob W. Lough subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Angle, Grant Colfax (July 24, 1868 - March 10,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grant C. Angle installed a printing press in a small office in
				  Shelton, Washington, and founded the <emph render="italic">Mason County
				  Journal</emph>. The first issue came out on December 31, 1886. In addition to
				  news, Angle published the daily schedule of the steamer that ferried passengers
				  from Shelton to Olympia, Tacoma, and Seattle; he actively managed the paper
				  until 1945. As of 2013, the paper, now the <emph render="italic">Shelton-Mason
				  County Journal</emph>, is the oldest continually operating business in Shelton.
				  He started the Angle Insurance Agency in Shelton and served as state senator
				  from 1901 to 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AngleGC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Grant Colfax Angle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1886 and 1895?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AngleGC2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Grant Colfax Angle wearing
					 eyeglasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1903?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ankeny, Charity Pauline (June 20, 1886-May 22,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charity Ankeny was the daughter of Levi Ankeny, banker and State
				  Senator from Washington. Her sister was Harriet Velina Ankeny. In 1902, she was
				  injured in an elevator accident in Portland, Oregon where she was attending
				  school and never fully recovered from the effects of the accident. She died in
				  1905 following an operation to correct the injury to her ankle. At the time of
				  her death, she was attending Bryn Mawr College with her sister, Harriet.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnkenyCP1</container><unittitle>Charity Pauline Ankeny and Harriet Velina
					 Ankeny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Maxwell, Spokane &amp; Walla Walla, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ankeny, Harriet Velina (October 20, 1889 - September 24,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Harriet Ankeny was the daughter of Levi Ankeny, banker and
				  State Senator from Washington. Her sister was Charity Pauline Ankeny. Harriet
				  was married to Captain Francis H. Pope in 1908 and lived in the Philippines
				  when he was stationed there. She divorced him in 1926 and married John A.
				  Cameron. She lived most of her life in Walla Walla, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnkenyCP1</container><unittitle>Charity Pauline Ankeny and Harriet Velina
					 Ankeny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Maxwell, Spokane &amp; Walla Walla, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charity Pauline Ankeny subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ankeny, Levi Schmidt (August 1, 1844 - March 29,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Levi Ankeny was born in Buchanan County, Missouri near St.
				  Joseph, and crossed the plains to Oregon in 1850 with his parents who settled
				  in Portland. He attended rural schools and later Kingsley Academy in Portland.
				  He was in business in Lewiston, Idaho; Orofino, Idaho; and Florence, Idaho, and
				  became the mayor of Lewiston. He moved to Walla Walla, Washington and was
				  president of seven banks in Washington and Oregon, including the First National
				  Bank of Walla Walla, the First National Bank of Pendleton, Oregon, the First
				  National Bank of Baker City, Oregon, the Columbia National Bank of Dayton,
				  Washington and the Vancouver National Bank of Vancouver, B.C. He was appointed
				  a member of the Pan-American Exposition Commission and became its chairman. In
				  1902, he was elected as a Republican to the United States Senate, and served
				  from March 4, 1903 to March 4, 1909. He was chairman of the Committee on Coast
				  and Insular Survey (Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses). In 1867, he
				  married Pauline Nesmith, daughter of Oregon Senator James W. Nesmith: they had
				  five children. He worked in banking in Walla Walla until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnkenyLS1</container><unittitle>Levi Ankeny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Abell-Herrin Co., Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnkenyLS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Levi Ankeny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ankeny, Mary Jane Nesmith (April 5, 1848 - September 29,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane "Jennie" Nesmith, the daughter of Senator James
				  Nesmith of Oregon, married Levi Ankeny on October 2, 1867. They had five
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnkenyMJN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Jane Nesmith Ankeny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 30, 1899</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Maxwell, Spokane &amp; Walla Walla, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Anthony, Susan B. (February 15, 1820 – March 13,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan B. Anthony was a prominent American civil rights leader
				  who played a pivotal role in the 19th century women's rights movement to
				  introduce women's suffrage into the United States. She was co-founder of the
				  first Women's Temperance Movement with Elizabeth Cady Stanton as President. In
				  1869, Anthony and Stanton founded the National Woman Suffrage Association
				  (NWSA), an organization dedicated to gaining women's suffrage. She also
				  co-founded the women's rights journal, <emph render="italic">The
				  Revolution</emph>She traveled the United States and Europe and averaged 75 to
				  100 speeches per year. She was one of the important advocates in leading the
				  way for women's rights to be acknowledged and instituted in the American
				  government.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnthonySB1</container><unittitle>Group photograph with Susan B. Anthony, Abigail Scott
					 Duniway and Elizabeth Cady Stanton at Anthony's home in upstate New
					 York</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Applegate, Jesse (July 5, 1811 – April 22,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse Applegate was an American pioneer who led a large group of
				  settlers along the Oregon Trail to the Oregon Country. He took part in the
				  early government of Oregon as a member of the provisional legislature and
				  helped establish the Applegate Trail as an alternative route to the Oregon
				  Trail. Along with his brothers Charles and Lindsay and their families, he
				  joined what became known as the "Great Migration of 1843" on the Oregon Trail.
				  After leaving their guide, Marcus Whitman, at his mission and abandoning their
				  wagons at Fort Walla Walla, the Applegate brothers built boats for traveling
				  down the Columbia River to Fort Vancouver. Near The Dalles, Oregon, a boat
				  capsized and Jesse and Lindsay each lost a son to drowning. Recognizing that a
				  safer alternative to boating the Columbia River was needed for settlers wishing
				  to reach the Willamette Valley, Applegate wrote legislation that authorized him
				  to survey a southern route to the Willamette Valley that would avoid the
				  Columbia River. Also known as the South Road, the Applegate Trail started at
				  Fort Hall in present-day Idaho and followed the Humboldt River before crossing
				  the Klamath Basin.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ApplegateJ1</container><unittitle>Jesse Applegate</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="illustrator">George Applegate</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Copy of a sketch.</p></phystech><note><p>Written on verso: Do not reproduce; refer to University of
					 Oregon or Oregon Historical Society." Written on front: "After a unique sketch
					 drawn from memory by Mr. George Applegate. The original is in the possession of
					 Joseph Schafer at the University of Oregon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Appleton, William Greenleaf (April 19, 1870- March 9,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Appleton served as watch officer on the 
				  <emph render="italic"> U.S.C.S. Thomas R. Gedney</emph>, a survey ship in
				  service in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AppletonWG1</container><unittitle>William Greenleaf Appleton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 10, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed "Sincerely, W. G. Appleton"</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Apsler, Alfred (November 13, 1907 - January 2,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Apsler was born in Vienna, Austria and emigrated to the
				  United States on November 4, 1939. He was a reference librarian at Duke
				  University before becoming a history and philosophy professor at Clark College
				  in Vancouver, Washington. He later became the chair of the Social Science
				  Division at the college. At his retirement in 1971, he helped found the Focus
				  on Mature Learning Program for older adults. Full-time college instructors were
				  mixed with professionals in the community to offer and teach courses on local
				  history, interpersonal relationships, current events, psychology, and
				  conversational languages. He and his wife, Dr. Ernestine Apsler, established a
				  scholarship for students at Clark College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ApslerA1</container><unittitle> Alfred Apsler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and
					 1979?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Alfred Apsler, b. Vienna. Chairman, Social
						Science Div., Clark College, Vancouver, Wash.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arestad, Sverre (December 2, 1906 - February 3,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sverre Arestad was a professor of Scandinavian Languages and
				  Literature and chair of the Scandinavian Department at the University of
				  Washington. In 1934, he was appointed a full-time teaching associate at hte
				  University of Washington, and, in 1938, he received his Ph.D. and joined the
				  faculty. Arestad worked primarily with Norwegian languages and literature, but
				  he also taught Danish. Highly respected as a mentor to graduate students,
				  Arestad published several important articles on Norwegian literature,
				  especially the writings of Henrik Ibsen. An immigrant himself, Arestad
				  developed a special interest in, and published several articles on, the history
				  of Scandinavian immigration to the Pacific Northwest. Partly, this interest
				  grew out of Arestad's frequent travelling around the Pacific Northwest giving
				  lectures to all kinds of groups, including Scandinavian ethnic organizations.
				  For a time, the University of Washington gave faculty members extended leave to
				  travel around the State to present lectures, and Arestad was especially active
				  in this regard during the Second World War. In 1943, Arestad was the prime
				  mover behind the establishment of a Scandinavian Historical Research Committee.
				  Although it survived only a few years, it inspired several articles and the
				  collection and preservation of the records of Scandinavians in the Puget Sound
				  Region. Upon retirement from the University in 1972, Arestad established the
				  Sverre Arestad Scandinavian Research Fund to support the publication and
				  dissemination of the history of Scandinavians in the Pacific Northwest.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArestadS1</container><unittitle>Dr. Arestad in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Armand, Adolphe M. (April 25, 1851 - February 23,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adolphe Armand was born in Strasbourg, France and immigrated to
				  the United States in 1873. With Otto Jukeland, a pioneer leader of Spokane’s
				  German immigrant community, he co-founded <emph render="italic">The Washington
				  Spokane Post</emph>, the largest German language newspaper in the Northwest.
				  The newspaper found an eager readership among the city’s growing German
				  community. Armand was the editor and manager of the paper before selling his
				  interest to Jukeland in 1900. He died in Los Angeles in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArmandAM1</container><unittitle>Adolphe M. Armand</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Bertrand's Studio, Spokane, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arntson, Herbert Edward (April 8, 1911 – November 27,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Edward Arntson is known for writing juvenile historical
				  fiction. He was born in Tacoma, Washington and attended the University of Puget
				  Sound for both his undergraduate and Masters degrees in English. He completed
				  his doctoral work at the University of Washington. He taught English at the
				  high school and college level and was head of the creative writing program at
				  Washington State University for 28 years. Many of his stories center in and
				  around Oregon's Willamette Valley in the mid-1800's, reflecting an influence of
				  his early family history. His manuscripts and papers are in the University of
				  Oregon's Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArntsonHE1</container><unittitle>Herbert Edward Arntson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arrasmith, John Wesley (October 11, 1851 - April 26,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Wesley Arrasmith was born in Missouri. Arrasmith was a
				  member of House of Representatives for the last Washington territorial
				  legislature. He married Austa Miller on February 11, 1887 in Umatilla, Oregon.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArrasmithJW1</container><unittitle>John W. Arrasmith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arthur, Chester Alan (October 5, 1829 – November 18,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester Alan Arthur was the 21st President of the United States
				  (1881–85); he succeeded James Garfield upon the latter's assassination. Arthur
				  embraced the cause of civil service reform. His advocacy for, and subsequent
				  enforcement of, the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act was the centerpiece of
				  his administration.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArthurCA1</container><unittitle>Chester Alan Arthur</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1881- 1885?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photograph of painting by George Peter Alexander</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArthurCA2</container><unittitle>Chester Alan Arthur</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1881- 1885?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><phystech><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Bell from <emph>Appleton's
				  Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arthur, John (June 20, 1849 - December 23,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Arthur was born in Ireland, the son of Thomas and Hannah
				  (O'Connor) Arthur. He was educated in Ireland and England, and came to the
				  United States in 1863. He graduated from Columbian (now George Washington)
				  University Law School and was first in his class. He was admitted to the Bar in
				  Erie, Pennsylvania and was law assistant to the U. S. Treasury before entering
				  private practice in Washington, D. C. He came to Puget Sound in April, 1883 as
				  an attorney for the Tacoma Land Company. He then moved to Seattle to open a
				  private practice. He was president of the Washington Bar Association, president
				  pro tem of the State Board of University Land and Building Commission and Grand
				  Master of the Masons in Washington State. He was married to Amy Lane of
				  Philadelphia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArthurJ1</container><unittitle>John Arthur</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Arttazia, Earl Lee (April 18, 1914 - March 14,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Earl Lee Arttazia, the son of Jean and Dora Arttazia, was born
				  in Seattle. He married Shirley Ney in 1938 and worked as a machinist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">ArttaziaEL1</container><unittitle> Earl Lee Arttazia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 18, 1917</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astel, George Bernard (February 28, 1893 - April 24,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Astel was born in Blackville, New Brunswick, Canada. He
				  attended the University of Washington, majoring in journalism. He served in the
				  Navy during World War I, returning to the UW after the war to complete his
				  degree; he graduated in 1922. During his time at the UW, he was editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Daily</emph> and served as vice-president of the
				  ASUW. Before he was 20, he published <emph render="italic">The Stanwood
				  Tidings</emph>, later <emph render="italic">The Twin City News.</emph> He also
				  owned and published <emph render="italic">The Snoqualmie Valley Record, The
				  Anacortes American, the Oak Harbor News, The Island County Times and the
				  Whidbey Island Record.</emph> He was the president of the Washington Newspaper
				  Publishers Association. He returned to the University of Washington as an
				  assistant professor of Journalism and as an advisor to <emph render="italic">The Daily</emph>. He retired from the University in 1958.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstelGB1</container><unittitle>George Astel in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>NIS negative.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstelGB2</container><unittitle>George Astel examining print layout</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate><origination><corpname>Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the 1954 Tyee. </p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstelGB3</container><unittitle>George Astel in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Two copies of the same photo, one cropped.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astley, Theodore Raymond (April 10, 1920 - December 8,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore Raymond Astley was born in Atlanta, Georgia and spent
				  most of his childhood years in Pontiac, Michigan. After obtaining a bachelor of
				  arts in psychology from the University of Michigan in 1943, Astley joined the
				  U.S. Army as a classification specialist and personnel clerk, advancing to the
				  rank of technical sergeant. In 1945 he was sent to Seattle to assist in
				  administering an Army program that provided correspondence courses for overseas
				  personnel. Two weeks after receiving his honorable discharge in 1946, Astley
				  obtained a job at the University of Washington as a career counselor for
				  veterans. In June 1948 he was served a warrant to appear before the Washington
				  Legislature’s Joint Fact Finding Committee on Un-American Activities, dubbed
				  the "Canwell Committee" after its chairperson, Albert F. Canwell. Astley
				  appeared before the Committee and refused to answer its questions regarding
				  whether or not he was a communist or had communist affiliations. In August 1948
				  Astley was fired from his counseling position. The University claimed that
				  there was no correlation between his refusal to cooperate with the committee a
				  month earlier and his dismissal from his job. Astley maintained that his
				  Canwell Committee experience was a direct cause of his firing, along with the
				  fact that he participated in student organizations that were critical of the
				  committee. In June 1954 Astley was called in front of the House Un-American
				  Activities Committee, again refusing to answer questions and citing the Fifth
				  Amendment as the reason for his refusal. In 1962 Astley was awarded a teaching
				  certificate and became a teacher. He worked in education until his retirement,
				  usually teaching social studies and English at the secondary level in the
				  Seattle area. Having been a union member and supporter ever since he worked for
				  General Motors in Pontiac, Astley was active in the Washington Education
				  Association and the Seattle Teachers' Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM1</container><unittitle>John Bunzel, Theodore Astley, Mr. Chinn and Albert
					 Ottenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astor, John Jacob (July 17, 1763 – March 29,
				  1848)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Jacob Astor was a German-American businessman who was the
				  first prominent member of the Astor family and the first multi-millionaire in
				  the United States. He was the creator of the first trust in America, from which
				  he made his fortune in fur trading, real estate and opium. At the time of his
				  death in 1848, he was the wealthiest person in the United States, leaving an
				  estate estimated to be worth at least $20 million. His estimated net worth, if
				  calculated as a fraction of the U.S. gross domestic product at the time, would
				  have been equivalent to $110.1 billion in 2006 U.S. dollars, making him the
				  fifth-richest person in American history. Astoria, Oregon was named for
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstorJJ1</container><unittitle>John Jacob Astor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1795?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photograph by George E. Perine of a painting of
				  Astor</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astrup, Lillie Helvig (November 21, 1897 - February 9,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lillie Helvig Astrup, the daughter of John C. and Elsie Nelson
				  Astrup, was born in Eureka, Wisconsin. She came to Seattle with her parents
				  when she was three. As a young girl, she worked as a helper in a printing
				  company before marrying Deputy Sheriff Harley Kirk in 1920.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstrupLH1</container><unittitle>Sisters Lillie Helvig Astrup, Stella Florence Astrup
					 and Sena Myrtle Astrup</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph printed on postcard.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astrup, Sena Myrtle (October 3, 1899 -January 27,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sena Myrtle Astrup, the daughter of John C. and Elsie Nelson
				  Astrup, was born in Eureka, Wisconsin. She came to Seattle with her parents
				  when she was two. She married Ralph Vernon Clark in 1916, Clarence E. Smith in
				  1930, and Murland Walter Fish.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstrupLH1</container><unittitle>Sisters Lillie Helvig Astrup, Stella Florence Astrup
					 and Sena Myrtle Astrup</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph printed on postcard.</p><p>Filed under Lillie Helvig Astrup subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Astrup, Stella Florence (March 30, 1904 - December 15,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stella Florence Astrup, the daughter of John C. and Elsie Nelson
				  Astrup, was born in Seattle. She worked as a stenographer before she married
				  Roger A. Dudley, a commercial photographer and the first president of the
				  Professional Photographers Association of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AstrupLH1</container><unittitle>Sisters Lillie Helvig Astrup, Stella Florence Astrup
					 and Sena Myrtle Astrup</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph printed on postcard.</p><p>Filed under Lillie Helvig Astrup subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Atkins, Henry Allen (1827-1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry A. Atkins, Seattle's first mayor, was appointed by the
				  Legislature pending the first City election scheduled for July 1870. He served
				  from 1869 until 1871. Born in Vermont, Atkins moved to California in 1850
				  during the gold rush to mine for gold. He arrived in Seattle in 1858, becoming
				  a merchant and businessman. Atkins, along with two partners, owned a
				  steam-driven pile driver that was leased for work throughout the Puget Sound
				  region. He helped clear land for the Territorial University campus in what is
				  now the Metropolitan Tract in Downtown Seattle. Atkins partnered with William
				  H. Shoudy, himself a future mayor, to operate a general store in modern-day
				  Pioneer Square. He also was a partner in the Seattle Gas Company, the Puget
				  Sound Wagon Road Company, and a wharf building business that worked in several
				  ports around the region. Seattle was incorporated by the Washington Territorial
				  Legislature on December 2, 1869, and Atkins was appointed its first mayor. He
				  was elected to the position outright on July 11, 1870, defeating Henry Yesler
				  by sixteen votes, and served until July 1871. He remained involved in civic
				  affairs after his mayoral tenure, later serving as sheriff of King County and
				  as a regent of the Territorial University. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AtkinsHA1</container><unittitle>Henry Allen Atkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p> Written on verso: Compliments of F. R. Atkins to Robt.
					 McDonald, May 8, 1939.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Atkinson, George Henry (May 10, 1819 – February 25,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Henry Atkinson was an American missionary and educator in
				  what would become the state of Oregon. In Oregon, he served as a pastor for
				  several churches, helped found what would become Pacific University, and pushed
				  for legislation to create a public school system in Oregon Territory, earning
				  him the title of “Father of Oregon schools” by educators. He later served as
				  the county schools superintendent in Clackamas and Multnomah counties. In 1872,
				  he left his church to begin missionary work; in 1880, he was named as
				  Superintendent of Missions of Congregational Churches of Oregon and Washington
				  Territory. He traveled throughout the region and is credited with coining the
				  phrase “Inland Empire” to describe eastern regions of Oregon and Washington. In
				  1885, his district was split; he remained in charge of the Oregon section until
				  his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AtkinsonGH1</container><unittitle>George Henry Atkinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1859?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">E. G. Williams &amp; Brothers, N.Y</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Attebery, Betty L. (February, 1869 - April 7,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Betty L. Attebery was born in Missouri and was married to Joseph
				  A. Attebery. She was the mother of Edgar Raymond Attebery; she also had five
				  other sons and two daughters.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AtteberyER1</container><unittitle>Edgar Attebery and mother, Mrs. Betty L. (Joseph)
					 Attebery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edgar Raymond Attebery subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Attebery, Edgar Raymond (Sept. 11, 1895 - May 5,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Raymond Attebery was born in Missouri on Sept. 11, 1895.
				  After graduating from Everett High School, he attended Willamette University in
				  Salem, Oregon, until his studies were interrupted by World War I. In 1917, he
				  joined the Oregon National Guard and served for two years, including 14 months
				  in France. After the war, he earned his B.A. from the University of Washington
				  in 1921, attended Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship, and received his
				  bachelor of theology degree from Harvard Divinity School in 1925. In September
				  1925, he became pastor of Grace Methodist Episcopal Church in Seattle (renamed
				  Grace Methodist Church ca. 1939). He would serve in that post the rest of his
				  life. In addition to his work in the ministry, Attebery was active in a number
				  of civic causes. In 1929 he played an active role in the effort to free
				  Industrial Workers of the World members jailed after the 1919 Armistice Day
				  clash between workers and veterans in Centralia. He was also a vocal advocate
				  of Prohibition and a critic of American isolationism. Attebery joined the
				  Washington National Guard as a chaplain in 1929. He was called to active duty
				  in September 1940, and sent overseas the following year. He died while landing
				  with his division on Biak Island, New Guinea, on May 5, 1944. His papers are
				  held in UW Special Collections. His son, Edgar Raymond Attebery Jr. also served
				  in World War II and died in France on September 27, 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AtteberyER1</container><unittitle>Edgar Attebery and mother, Mrs. Betty L. (Joseph)
					 Attebery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Atwood, Reverend Albert (1832 - October 7,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Atwood was born in New Jersey and married Amanda Robison
				  on May 3, 1860. He arrived in Seattle in 1874 to become the pastor of the First
				  Methodist Church, then located at Second and Columbia. He subsequently served
				  as pastor in Olympia, Washington, Eugene City, Oregon (now Eugene), and several
				  other towns. He served as and was the only chaplain of the Pioneer Association
				  of the State of Washington, a group of early settlers in the territory formed
				  in 1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AtwoodA1</container><unittitle>Reverend Albert Atwood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jacobs Photo Shop, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ault, Erwin Bratton "Harry" (October 30, 1883 - January
				  5, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erwin Bratton "Harry" Ault was an American socialist and trade
				  union activist. He was born in Newport, Kentucky, the son of American-born
				  socialist parents; his father worked as a metal polisher and a wool duster.
				  Anxious to try their hand at establishing a socialist community from the ground
				  up, the Ault family relocated from Kentucky to Washington state in April 1898
				  to join the Equality socialist colony then being launched by the Brotherhood of
				  the Cooperative Commonwealth. The 17-year-old Harry became the editor of the
				  colony's newspaper, <emph render="italic">Industrial Freedom</emph>, which
				  debuted in May of that same year. While the Equality colony at Edison was not a
				  lasting success, its effort at developing self-reliance and its humanitarian
				  and cooperative vision had a lasting impact on Ault's life.</p><p> He participated in the affairs of the Socialist Labor Party
				  from 1892 to 1898; in 1898 he transferred his allegiance to the new Social
				  Democratic Party of America, headed by labor leader Eugene V. Debs and
				  Wisconsin teacher-turned-newspaper publisher Victor L. Berger. This
				  organization was the forerunner of the Socialist Party of America (SPA), a
				  group which Ault joined at its formation. Ault left Industrial Freedom to
				  launch a Seattle paper targeted at radical youth called <emph render="italic">The Young Socialist</emph> in 1900. He later worked in the
				  National Office of the SPA on the staff of <emph render="italic">The
				  Socialist</emph>, the paper which Titus had started in Seattle in the summer of
				  1900. He is best remembered as the editor of the <emph render="italic"> Seattle
				  Union Record</emph>, the long-running labor weekly (turned daily) published
				  from 1912 to 1928. After termination of the <emph render="italic"> Union
				  Record</emph>, he worked as a commercial printer for a number of years before
				  being appointed a deputy U.S. Marshal for Tacoma, Washington, a position which
				  he retained for 15 years. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AultEB1</container><unittitle>Photograph of a cartoon of Harry Ault as a young man,
					 wearing an eight hour day button.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AultEB2</container><unittitle>Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AultEB3</container><unittitle>Portrait at about age 50</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ault, Howard Cleveland (April 3, 1891 - February 8,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Ault was the brother of Erwin "Harry" Ault. He was a
				  member of the Pioneers of Columbia and owned Ault Tire Service in Tacoma for
				  many years before retiring to a small farm in Fife Heights, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AultHC1</container><unittitle>Howard Cleveland Ault</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Alaska Studio, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Austin, Charles G. (March 18, 1846 -October 21,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles G. Austin was born in Cleveland, Ohio. At the age of
				  eighteen, he enlisted in Company G, 1st Minnesota Heavy Artillery and fought in
				  the battles of Nashville, Chattanooga, Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain.
				  He was admitted to the bar in 1869 and moved to Walla Walla, Washington in 1877
				  where he was engaged in the grain business. He moved to Pomeroy, Washington
				  where he was the first wheat buyer in Garfield County and at one time, had
				  thirteen warehouses. In the fall of 1889, he was elected to the first Senate of
				  Washington, representing Garfield, Columbia and Asotin Counties. During his
				  time in the legislature, he aided in obtaining the University of Washington's
				  present site. He arrived in Seattle in 1890, where he organized the Seattle and
				  Terminal Railroad and built a grain elevator in West Seattle; he shipped the
				  first grain from Seattle. He was elected police judge and also Justice of the
				  Peace. He belonged to the Elks, Masons, the GAR, Knights Templar and
				  Shriners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AustinCG1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Charles Austin wearing Shriner lapel pin
					 and Shriner tie pin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Austin, Emma L. Grow (January 11, 1854 - March 31,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma L. Grow Austin was born in Brookfield, Vermont and died in
				  Skagway, Alaska where her daughter lived. She was married to Charles G. Austin.
				  They had three children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AustinELG1</container><unittitle>Emma L. Grow Austin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Austin, Isabella McHugh (December 1, 1872 - August 8,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isabella Austin was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota and graduated
				  from the University of Minnesota in 1895. She did two years of special study at
				  the State Normal School in Winona, Minnesota and then taught for four years in
				  Minnesota schools before being awarded a scholarship to Columbia University
				  where she was a graduate scholar at the Teachers College. She was the
				  supervisor of the primary grades of the Tacoma Public Schools before coming to
				  the University of Washington. She was Dean of Women Students from 1909 until
				  her death from surgical complications resulting from an appendectomy. The
				  Isabella Austin Memorial Scholarship was established in her name, and in 1936,
				  one of the halls of the new women's dorm was named for her.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AustinIM1</container><unittitle>Isabella McHugh Austin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photo which appeared in the Seattle Times, August 9,
					 1915.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Averill, Howard Earl (May 21, 1902 – August 16,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Earl Averill, born in Snohomish, Washington, was an
				  American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a
				  center fielder from 1929 to 1941, including 11 seasons for the Cleveland
				  Indians. He was a six-time All-Star and was elected to the Baseball Hall of
				  Fame in 1975. His son, Earl Douglas Averil, also an American professional
				  baseball player, was a catcher and outfielder in the Major Leagues in 1956 and
				  from 1958 to 1963 for the Cleveland Indians, Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox,
				  Los Angeles Angels and Philadelphia Phillies. He was commonly called Earl
				  Averill Jr. to distinguish him from his father,</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AverillHE1</container><unittitle>Howard Earl Averill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929-1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Moffett Studio, Chicago, Illinois</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Avery, Joseph Conant (June 9, 1817-June 16,
				  1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph C. Avery was one of the earliest settlers in Benton
				  County, Oregon and was the eventual founder of Corvallis. He registered his
				  provisional land claim near the confluence of the Willamette and Marys Rivers
				  on. November 5, 1845. He was prominent in early Oregon politics, serving as a
				  member of the first and second sessions of the territorial legislatures.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AveryJC1</container><unittitle>Joseph Conant Avery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ayer, John Edwin (December 26, 1855 - July 8,
				  1932)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1910</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>John Edwin Ayer was the treasurer of the New England Club of
				  Seattle and a teacher at the Boston College of Vitosophy. He wrote a book 
				  <emph render="italic">Living by Natural Law</emph> in 1909 describing the
				  principles of vitosophy which is based on phrenology and the radiating action
				  of magnetism and electricity. He donated land for a private park in Seattle and
				  suggested the name "Madrona" for the neighborhood where it was located.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AyerJE1</container><unittitle>John Edwin Ayer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1,
					 1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>B</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Babb, Albert Leslie (November 7, 1925- October 22,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. Albert Leslie Babb was an engineer and professor in the
				  fields of chemical and nuclear engineering at the University of Washington for
				  more than four decades. He was known for his pioneering work in the development
				  and commercialization of artificial kidney systems and applications of nuclear
				  energy to medicine. He was the co-creator of the first automated home kidney
				  dialysis machine and was the first chair of the UW Department of Nuclear
				  Engineering, which he chaired from 1965 until 1982. He is the only UW faculty
				  member elected to both the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the
				  Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. His election to the
				  NAE in 1972 was in recognition of his pioneering work in the development and
				  commercialization of artificial kidney systems and his applications of nuclear
				  energy to medicine. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BabbAL1</container><unittitle>Albert Babb with Dean Harold E. Wessman, Henry M.
					 Jackson and UW President Henry Schmitz at the nuclear pile located in Bagley
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1957?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Robert I. Peterson, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The wall behind Babb is a precursor type of reactor known as a
					 graphite pile, which was not a net producer of energy, located in Bagley Hall,
					 the chemistry building. The cylinders sticking out of the graphite pile are
					 fuel rods containing natural uranium. The people in the picture are wearing
					 radiation dose badges, commonly known as dosimeters. The picture was probably
					 taken in 1956 or 1957, shortly after the U.S. Government's announcement of the
					 Atoms for Peace Program. This time frame would be consistent with Henry Schmitz
					 still being UW president; he stepped down in 1958.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BabbAL2</container><unittitle>Albert Babb in front of the UW nuclear
					 reactor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Backus, Elise (August 14, 1860 - October 19,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elise Piutti Backus was born near Erfurt in Saxony, Germany in
				  1860. In 1881 she came to the United States with her brother, Max Piutti, head
				  of the Department of Music at Wells College. At Wells she studied linguistics
				  and was later became the chair of German. She was a teacher there for 15 years
				  and met her future husband, Manson Backus there. During her sabbatical year she
				  returned to Germany to study at the University of Berlin. Upon her return, they
				  became engaged and in 1902 they were married at Green’s Farms in Connecticut.
				  She was a charter member of the Sunset Club and a member of their Board of
				  Directors. She was a member of the Ladies Musical Club and a member of the
				  Ladies’ Relief Society, serving on the Board of Directors and as President for
				  two years. She was a founder of the Rosemary Club for Girls and served as
				  President of the Board. She collected the works of Roy Partridge, a Seattle
				  artist and etcher who became the head of the Art Department at Mills College.
				  She gifted his works to her alma mater, Wells College at Aurora, Illinois in
				  memory of her brothers, Max and William Piutti. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH1</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin with (L to R) Mrs. Manson (Elise) Backus,
					 Mrs. Thomas (Caroline) Burke, Chin's bodyguard, Judge Thomas Burke and Chin's
					 son, Lem Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gee Hee Chin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Backus, Manson Franklin (May 11, 1853 - February 15,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Manson Backus was born in South Livonia, New York. He was
				  educated in the New York public schools and after completing his education,
				  became a cashier in his father's bank, First National Bank, in Union Springs,
				  New York. He then studied law and in 1889 was admitted to the bar at Buffalo,
				  N.Y. Later that year, he moved to Seattle, and with Edward O. Graves, organized
				  the Washington National Bank of Seattle, of which he became president in 1900.
				  A long and successful career in banking and in the financial institutions of
				  Seattle followed. Besides banking and financial concerns, he was a regent of
				  the University of Washington in 1909. He served as president of the Washington
				  Society of the Sons of the Revolution in 1917 and was a member of the Rainier
				  Club and its president in 1922. He supported the Fine Arts Association, was a
				  trustee of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and on the advisory board of
				  Children's Orthopedic Hospital. His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BackusMF1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Manson Backus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BackusMF2</container><unittitle>Cartoon of Manson Backus seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><origination><corpname role="artist">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bacon, John M. (October 27, 1822 - January 10,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John M. Bacon was a native of Buffalo, New York. His father died
				  when he was two, and he lived with his grandfather until he was fourteen years
				  old. When he was seventeen, he shipped from New Bedford in a whaler, spending
				  two years in China. In 1844, he went to Bombay, serving as second mate on an
				  English ship. Returning to the United States, he went first to Illinois with
				  his brother Francis, and in 1845, joined the Barlow train to Oregon. He went to
				  California in 1849 for the gold rush, before returning to Oregon where he
				  located on Elliott’s Prairie, fourteen miles from Oregon City. In 1856, he
				  moved to the town itself, finding employment in the stores of Charman &amp;
				  Warner and Charman &amp; Son. Six years later, he tried his luck at running a
				  store and stock ranch at Lewiston, Idaho, but soon returned. He was elected
				  county clerk, and four years later, city recorder and overseer. He was
				  appointed postmaster in 1868 and served for twenty years, running a book and
				  stationery store in connection with the post office. His wife, Rachael Newman,
				  was also a pioneer of 1845. They had twelve children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaconJM1</container><unittitle>John M. Bacon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Badgley, Franklin Ilsley (December 20, 1914 - April 28,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Franklin Badgley was born in Mansfield, Ohio and spent his early
				  years on a Wisconsin farm. He entered the University of Chicago at age 16.
				  After graduation, he worked as a chemist for Swift &amp; Company where he met
				  his wife of 65 years, Helen Cunningham. He was a proficient pilot, and in 1942,
				  volunteered for the Army Air Corps; he was stationed in the Azores Islands.
				  After the war, he earned his PhD in Meteorology from New York University. In
				  1950, he began a 32-year career as a professor and chairman of the Atmospheric
				  Sciences Department at the University of Washington. He was one of the founders
				  of the Quaternary Research Center.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BadgleyFI1</container><unittitle>Franklin Badgley in a laboratory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baeder, Louis (February 22, 1875 - November 22,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Baeder was born in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin and came to
				  Seattle from Chicago in 1907. He was assistant director of the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in 1907 and practiced architecture in Seattle
				  until his retirement in 1951. He was a member of the Washington State
				  Architecture Examination Board and one of the first members of the National
				  Council of Architectural Registration Board. He married Marjorie Shackelford in
				  1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD3</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD4</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD5</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD6</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox looking at drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD7</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox sitting at a kitchen
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD9</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 and Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Alice J. (November 13, 1852-July 6,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice J. Bagley was the daughter of Ira W. Bagley and Margaret
				  Samantha Hupp Bagley. She married Edward R. Booth.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ira W. Bagley subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Cecil Clarence (July 21, 1888 - January 17,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cecil Bagley was the grandson of Daniel Bagley and the son of
				  Clarence Bagley and Alice Mercer Bagley, all Seattle pioneers. He served in the
				  National Guard during the Mexican Border campaign, World War I and World War
				  II, retiring with the rank of colonel. He worked as a civil engineer with the
				  City Engineering Department, where he supervised the paving and lighting of
				  many Seattle streets.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Clarence Booth (November 30, 1843 - February 26,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Booth Bagley, the only child of Daniel and Susannah
				  Bagley, was born in Troy Grove, Illinois. In 1851, the family traveled overland
				  to Oregon. Clarence attended Willamette Institute, which later became
				  Willamette University. In October 1860, the family moved to Seattle where
				  Clarence cleared timber from the site of the new university and later did
				  painting, carpentry and other jobs for the university. After the university
				  building was in place, both Daniel and Clarence taught there. In 1863, Clarence
				  went east for additional education, studying at Allegheny College in Meadville,
				  Pennsylvania. He returned to Seattle the following year and found work as a
				  painter. He married Alice Mercer, the youngest daughter of Thomas Mercer, on
				  December 24, 1865. Soon after his marriage, he was appointed to a clerk's
				  position in the Surveyor General's office in Olympia where he became involved
				  in printing, publishing and writing. He purchased two newspapers, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Territorial Republican</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Echo</emph> . After selling his interest in those two
				  papers he went to work for <emph render="italic">The Commercial Age</emph> .
				  Clarence helped run the Newcastle coal mines in 1870. He left the private
				  sector in 1871 to return to Olympia as deputy in the office of the Internal
				  Revenue Collector of Washington and was co-owner of another newspaper, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Puget Sound Courier</emph> . He then accepted the
				  position of Territorial Printer. In the 1880s, he and some friends bought the 
				  <emph render="italic"> Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> , and Bagley became
				  its business manager. He also served as an alternate state commissioner for the
				  1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Bagley's collection of regional
				  historical material, including books, pamphlets, and old newspapers, grew into
				  one of the largest such resources in the Pacific Northwest. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">History of Seattle, Washington </emph>and 
				  <emph render="italic">History of King County, Washington </emph>as well as
				  articles for Edmond Meany's <emph render="italic">Washington Historical
				  Quarterly</emph>. His authorship of Seattle and King County histories, three
				  volumes each, was an academic milestone in its time.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Cora Blanche (September 26, 1867 - August 21,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cora Bagley was the daughter of Ira W. Bagley and Margaret
				  Samantha Hupp Bagley. She married Oliver Walker in 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ira W. Bagley subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Herman Beardsley (March 12, 1845 - February 8,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herman Bagley was originally from New York. In 1865, he earned a
				  medicine degree from the Homeopathic Medical College in Cleveland, Ohio. He did
				  post-graduate studies at Bellevue College in New York and then was a professor
				  of surgery at Michigan Medical College. His father, Alvin Bagley, was the first
				  homeopathic physician to locate in what now is the state of Washington. In
				  1875, shortly after Herman Bagley married Katherine "Kitty" Sweet, the couple
				  moved to Seattle to join his father where they built a home at Fourth and
				  Spring. He practiced medicine and dealt in real estate, in addition to serving
				  on the Seattle City Council. He was president of the Seattle Improvement
				  Company, a director of Washington National Bank, president of the Washington
				  State Homeopathic Medical Society and a member of the Lake Washington Canal
				  Association, which raised money to open a channel between Lake Washington and
				  Salmon Bay.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyHB1</container><unittitle>Herman Beardsley Bagley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Dr. H. B. Bagley pioneer physician. Became
					 large owner of real estate. Owned large farm on Black River, near Renton. Not
					 my relative, Clarence Bagley."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Ira W. (1822 - May 21, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Bagley was the brother of Daniel Bagley, an early settler in
				  Seattle who became a key advocate for the Territorial University and its
				  location in Seattle. Ira did not travel west with Daniel and remained in
				  Illinois with his family. He married Riana E. Root (1830 - ?) in 1848 and
				  Samantha Hupp (1833 - 1920) in 1851. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Ira Bagley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bowman, Ottawa, Illinois</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley: family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bagley, John M. (February 24, 1854 - December 24,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John M. Bagley was the son of Ira W. Bagley and Margaret
				  Samantha Hupp Bagley. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ira W. Bagley subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Margaret Samantha Hupp (April 12, 1833 - October
				  13, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Margaret Samantha Hupp married Ira W. Bagley in 1851; the
				  couple had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ira W. Bagley subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Mary Lillian (July 15, 1876 - February 23,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Lillian Bagley was the daughter of Ira W. Bagley and
				  Margaret Samantha Hupp Bagley. She married Ulysses G. Taylor in 1923.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagleyI2</container><unittitle>Ira W. Bagley family portrait of John M. Bagley and
					 Alice Bagley (standing in back), Ira Bagley and Margaret Samantha Bagley
					 (seated), Cora Bagley and Mary Lillian Bagley (standing in front)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ira W. Bagley subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagley, Myrtle Park (October 13, 1889 - July 22,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Myrtle Park Bagley was born in Detroit, Michigan and moved to
				  Seattle in 1900. She married Cecil Bagley in 1912 and was a member of the
				  Ladies Musical Club for over 55 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bagshaw, Enoch William (January 31, 1884 – October 3,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Enoch William Bagshaw was an American football player and coach.
				  Born in Flintshire, Wales, he arrived in Washington with his parents in 1892.
				  After graduating from Broadway High School, he entered the UW in the fall of
				  1903, intent on becoming a mining engineer. Bagshaw, a five-year starter on the
				  football team at Washington, is credited with throwing the first completed
				  forward pass in school history on Oct. 10, 1906. After graduation, he worked as
				  a Snohomish County engineer, surveying roads, before becoming a science
				  instructor at Everett High. He was also assigned the dual duties as head
				  football and basketball coach. Under Bagshaw’s direction, Everett lost just one
				  game in 12 years (1909-20), that by a single point. His teams amassed a
				  collective victory margin of 3,001-375, and his last two clubs (1919-20) won
				  consecutive national high school championships. From 1921 to 1929, he served as
				  the head football coach at the University of Washington, compiling a 63–22–6
				  record. His 1923 and 1926 squads went 10–1–1, equaling the best marks of his
				  career; the team won the Pacific Coast Conference in 1925. Despite his success,
				  Bagshaw was fired in 1929 after his team went 2–6–1. Bagshaw left with a record
				  of 63–22–6.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagshawEW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Enoch Bagshaw in uniform holding
					 football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1922?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagshawEW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Enoch Bagshaw and George Wilson
					 looking at #33 football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1923 and 1925?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster and Stevens, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bahr, Hermann (July 19, 1863 – January 15, 1934)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hermann Bahr was an Austrian writer, playwright, director, and
				  critic who championed naturalism, Romanticism, and Symbolism. After studying at
				  Austrian and German universities, he settled in Vienna, where he worked on a
				  number of newspapers. From 1906-1907, he worked as a director with Max
				  Reinhardt at the German Theater in Berlin, and starting in 1918 he was a
				  Dramaturg with the Vienna Burgtheater. Spokesman for the literary group Young
				  Vienna, Bahr was an active member of the Austrian avant-garde, producing both
				  criticism and Impressionist plays. Bahr was the first critic to apply the label
				  modernism to literary works and was an early observer of the Expressionism
				  movement. His theoretical papers were important in the definition of new
				  literary categories. His later critical works show his interest in the social
				  effect of creative art.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BahrH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hermann Bahr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1922?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bahuyut, Sotero Julao (January 3, 1889 - January 6,
				  1975), </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sotero Julao Baluyut, the son of Leoncio Baluyut and Casimira
				  Julao, was born on January 3, 1889, in San Fernando, Pampanga. In 1904, Baluyut
				  was given the opportunity to study at government expense in the United States.
				  After he studied in Santa Ana Central and High School in California and the
				  University Summer School of Illinois, he obtained a bachelor's degree in civil
				  engineering from the University of Iowa. In 1911, Baluyut returned to the
				  Philippines to work for the Office of Public Works as an assistant engineer in
				  the provinces of Pampanga and Cavite. From 1912 to 1919, he was district
				  engineer for the provinces of Isabela, Antique, Ilocos Norte, Bulacan and
				  Pangasinan. He also worked on the San Jose-Santa Fe Road, and was an engineer
				  for the Pampanga Sugar Development Corporation in 1920. In 1925, Baluyut was
				  elected governor of the province of Pampanga and was re-elected three years
				  later. During his two terms as governor, he was responsible for the
				  construction of many schools, hospitals, roads and bridges. After his second
				  term, Baluyut was elected in 1931 and re-elected in 1934 as a member of Senate
				  from 3rd Senatorial District. In the Senate, among other things, he enacted a
				  law which led to the establishment of National Electric Power and Development
				  Corporation. At the end of 1937, Baluyut was elected governor of the province
				  of Pampanga for a third term. He was appointed as Secretary of Labor from 1938
				  to 1940 while serving as governor. He became Secretary of Public Works and
				  Communications from 1951 to 1952.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BahuyutSJ1</container><unittitle>Bahuyut, Sotero Julao</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930-1940?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Colonel Ralph Wiltamuth, Phoenix, AZ</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bailey, Gayton Scriver (January 24, 1909 -February 24,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gayton Bailey was a graduate of Roosevelt High School, Whitman
				  College (1930) and Harvard Medical School; he served in the Army during World
				  War II. He had a medical practice in Seattle and was president of the King
				  County Medical Society in 1965.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGS1</container><unittitle>Group photo at banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1956</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Olin E. Myers, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Identified on verso: Trevor Kincaid, Milnor Roberts, and
					 Milnora Roberts.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bailey, George Congdon (March 17, 1896 - September 6,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Bailey was a blind musician who played the campus chimes
				  three times a day at the University of Washington. He began three weeks after
				  graduating from the UW School of music and continued until his final concert on
				  the last day of summer quarter in 1960. In 1949, when the old lever-operated
				  bells were destroyed, he went to Princeton to learn to play carillon bells. His
				  concerts were always marked by music appropriate for the time of day. His
				  special song for incoming freshmen was <emph render="italic">Fools rush in
				  where angels fear to tread.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Playing the chimes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Playing the chimes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGC3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Playing the chimes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bailey, Helen Winona (1864-July 15, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Winona Bailey was born in Maine and went to school in
				  Colorado. She graduated from high school in Leadville, where she stayed for two
				  years to teach. She went on to earn a B.A. in Classics from Colorado College.
				  In 1907, she moved to Seattle, where she taught Latin at Queen Anne High
				  School; she was also a grade school principal. She made history as the first
				  woman to climb Greece's Mount Olympus. She joined the Mountaineers in 1907,
				  edited the <emph render="italic">Mountaineer Bulletin</emph> and later headed
				  the Mountaineers' Red Cross activities.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Helen Winona Bailey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bailey, Margaret Jewett (1812 - May, 17,
				  1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Jewett (Smith) Bailey was born in Saugus,
				  Massachusetts. On January 24, 1837, she sailed from Boston in the brig 
				  <emph render="italic">Peru</emph> for Oregon with Captain Kilham, Reverend
				  David Leslie and family and Reverend Mr Perkins of the Maine Conference of the
				  Methodist Episcopal Church. She taught at Willamette Mission until her marriage
				  to Dr. William J. Bailey in 1839. In the early 1840's, they lived on a French
				  Prairie farm. She became a regular contributor of both prose and poetry to the 
				  <emph render="italic">Oregon Spectator</emph>and was the first woman editor of
				  the first women's pages in the paper. Increasing domestic troubles are believed
				  to have encouraged her writing, much of which reflected the loneliness of her
				  life. Her principal literary effort was <emph render="italic">Grains, or
				  Passages in the Life of Ruth Rover, with Occasional Pictures of Oregon, Natural
				  and Moral</emph>, a long novel printed by Carter &amp; Austin, Portland in
				  1854. A personal study of married life, the book disappeared from public
				  attention; only one copy is known to exist. It is considered to be the first
				  novel written in English and published on the Pacific Coast and is believed to
				  be the subject of the first known book review in Oregon. After obtaining a
				  divorce from her husband in 1854, she married Francis Waddell in 1855 and
				  divorced him in 1858. She moved to Washington Territory, where she later
				  died.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyMJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Margaret Jewett Bailey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1854?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the cover page of the novel.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bainbridge, Captain William (May 7, 1774 – July 27,
				  1833)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Bainbridge was born at Princeton, New Jersey and started
				  his life at sea at the age of fourteen. As tensions with France came to head in
				  1798 with the beginning of the Quasi-War, the US Navy quickly expanded and
				  Bainbridge accepted a commission as a lieutenant on August 3, 1798. The
				  following month he received command of the schooner <emph render="italic">USS
				  Retaliation</emph>. In 1800, he was given, with the rank of captain, the
				  command of the frigate <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph> which three
				  years later ran aground near Tripoli and was captured by the Tripolitans, who
				  imprisoned him for about two years. In 1812, he was promoted to the rank of
				  commodore and placed in command of a squadron. In December of the same year, he
				  captured the British frigate <emph render="italic">Java </emph>after a
				  desperate contest and was subsequently given the command of a fleet in the
				  Mediterranean. Bainbridge Island, Washington is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BainbridgeW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Bainbridge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1836</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Photograph of by George Parker after J. W.
					 Jarvis</extent></physdesc><origination><persname role="engraver">George Parker, Philadelphia, PA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baird, Harry W. (December 1, 1915 - June 21,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p/><p>Harry Baird was a member of the Packinghouse Union Local 186. He
				  served on many committees and in nearly all offices of the Union. He became
				  president of the Union in 1948, and in December 1955 was presented a plaque
				  recognizing his long service to the Union at the Union's annual Christmas party
				  by Charles J. Mentrin, the Union's business representative. Baird was seriously
				  injured in the fire at the Frye Packing Company in 1943 when an Army bomber
				  crashed into the plant.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BairdHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry W. Baird with Charles J.
					 Mentrin and Santa Claus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 17, 1955</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baker, Edward Dickinson (February 24, 1811 – October 21,
				  1861)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Dickinson Baker was an English-born American politician,
				  lawyer and military leader. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives from
				  Illinois and later as a U.S. Senator from Oregon. A long-time close friend of
				  U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, he served as U.S. Army colonel during both the
				  Mexican-American War and the American Civil War. He was killed in the Battle of
				  Ball's Bluff while leading a Union Army regiment, becoming the only sitting
				  senator to be killed in the Civil War. Baker City, Oregon and Baker County,
				  Oregon, were created and named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerED1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Copy of photograph</extent></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerED2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baker, Frank Smith (July 27, 1879 - January 21,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Smith Baker was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Elbert
				  H. Baker, the publisher of <emph render="italic">The Cleveland Plain
				  Dealer</emph>. Baker graduated from Adelbert College in Cleveland in 1902. He
				  joined <emph render="italic">The Cleveland Plain Dealer</emph> in 1904 and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Boston Traveler</emph> in 1910. He purchased 
				  <emph render="italic">The Tacoma Tribune</emph> in 1912 and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Tacoma Ledger</emph> and <emph render="italic">Tacoma
				  Evening News</emph> in 1918. He merged <emph render="italic">the News and the
				  Tribune</emph> into an afternoon paper and continued <emph render="italic">The
				  Ledger</emph> as a morning daily until 1937, when it became the Sunday edition
				  of <emph render="italic">The Tacoma News Tribune</emph>. He was also the
				  president of KTNT-TV, a trustee of the University of Puget Sound and a member
				  of the American Society of News Editors. He was known as the godfather of Fort
				  Lewis for his efforts in having the Army post established in 1916.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerFS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Smith Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baker, Frank Whitney (September 19, 1852 - March 13,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Whitney Baker was born in Youngstown, N. Y. He attended
				  Eastman's Business College at Poughkeepsie and the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary at
				  Lima, N. Y. He began his business career in the hardware business in
				  Greenville, Michigan and was later associated with the Black Hardware Co. in
				  Detroit. In 1890 he moved to Seattle. He was the president of the Title Trust
				  Company, the treasurer of the L. L. Moore Jewelry Company, a director of the
				  Seattle National Bank, treasurer of the Seattle Hardware Company and a director
				  of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. He was a member of the Rainier Club,
				  Seattle Athletic Club and the Masons. He gave money to build the annex for the
				  Seattle Children's Home and provided funds in his will for the work to continue
				  as well as providing for an annual outing for the children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerFW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait at time of AYP
					 Exposition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle &amp; Tacoma</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerFW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Halftone reproduction</extent></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerFW3</container><unittitle>Copy of a photograph of Frank Baker's home at 1212
					 Highland Place in Seattle.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Baker, George</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Baker was a Seattle realtor and a member of the Seattle
				  Real Estate Board.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Baker, Glenn Frederic (December 24, 1909 - March 23,
				  2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Glenn Frederic Baker, the son of Alfred Martin Baker and Ruth
				  Gordon Baker, was born in South Bend, Pacific County, Washington. The family
				  moved to Seattle a few years later. He graduated with a B.A. from the
				  University of Washington and taught English for some years in Japan before
				  World War II, traveling widely and becoming proficient in Japanese. Alerted to
				  the threat of the coming war, he left for Hawaii in the summer of 1940.
				  Returning to Hawaii, after a few years in the U.S. Civil Service, he worked for
				  the Navy at the air station in Kaneohe as an efficiency expert. Afterwards, he
				  taught English at the Commerce College in Honolulu and in 1972 became a copy
				  editor at the University of Hawaii Press. He was the great-grandson of John
				  Nathan Skidmore and Sidney Lambert Skidmore.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN2</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore, Sidney Lambert Skidmore, Mary
					 Caroline Gordon, Ruth Gordon Baker, Glenn Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912-1913</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Photograph of John N. Skidmore of South
					 Bend, Wash, &amp; wife &amp; daughters Mrs. Charles Gordon, Mrs. Alfred Baker,
					 &amp; Glen (sic) Baker.</p><p>Filed under John Nathan Skidmore subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baker, Micajah (March 29, 1831 - August 30,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Micajah Baker was born in Caledonia, Kentucky. He served in
				  Company L, Iowa 3rd Cavalry from August 15, 1861 until February 3, 1862. In
				  1862, he led what was called the Iowa wagon train to Oregon. He settled in
				  Union County and became La Grande's first attorney. He was a Republican from
				  the foundation of the party and in 1860 was a delegate from Ohio to the
				  national convention. He was a delegate to county and state conventions during
				  his years in Oregon as well as chairman of the county central committee and
				  member of the state central committee. He was a delegate to the National
				  Republican League in 1895.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerM1</container><unittitle>Micajah Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Baker, Ruth Gordon (July 6, 1888 - August 10,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth Gordon, the daughter of Charles Gordon and Mary Caroline
				  Skidmore Gordon, was born in South Bend, Pacific County, Washington. She
				  married Alfred Martin Baker (1888-1925) in 1907. She was the granddaughter of
				  John Nathan Skidmore and Sidney Lambert Skidmore.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN2</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore, Sidney Lambert Skidmore, Mary
					 Caroline Gordon, Ruth Gordon Baker, Glenn Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912-1913</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Photograph of John N. Skidmore of South
					 Bend, Wash, &amp; wife &amp; daughters Mrs. Charles Gordon, Mrs. Alfred Baker,
					 &amp; Glen (sic) Baker.</p><p>Filed under John Nathan Skidmore subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baker, Willie May (April 17, 1884 - March 24,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>On July 9, 1902, Willie May Baker, Mrs. W. J. McKinney and
				  Charles Jerrolls were taken hostage by Harry Tracy, who had escaped from an
				  Oregon prison after killing three guards and wounding a fourth. Tracy had been
				  serving a 20 year sentence for assault and robbery when he escaped with David
				  Merrill, his brother-in-law, whom he later killed. He was the subject of the
				  most famous manhunt in the Pacific Northwest in the spring and summer of 1902.
				  Baker later appeared in a play about Tracy, entitled <emph render="italic">Tracy-Merrill</emph>. She married James Lee McKinney, the son
				  of the woman with whom she was walking when taken hostage.</p></bioghist><note><p>Willie May Baker's name is also listed as Willa Mae and Willia
				  May.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BakerWM1</container><unittitle>Willie May Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bakken, Richard (August 1, 1941- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Bakken is primarily known as a performance poet and
				  organizer of poetry festivals. In the 1960s, Bakken gave up a tenured job as an
				  English professor at Washington State University and began touring the country
				  chanting and reciting his work. He is the founder of the Portland and National
				  Poetry Festivals and edited <emph render="italic">Salty Feathers</emph>, a
				  poetry magazine from 1966 to 1969. He also taught at Pacific Lutheran
				  University (Parkland, Washington), 1966-1967; Portland State University
				  (Oregon), ca 1968-1970; and was poet in residence at Jefferson College,
				  Allendale, Michigan, circa1976. He sometimes appeared in costume as the "Poetry
				  Chicken." His papers are held in the UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">At draft resistance service, St.
					 Stephens Episcopal Church, Portland, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 4, 1967</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: 'Reading "Hymn" just before turning in my
					 draft card.'</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Bakken and Susan Vernier in
					 front of house, both wearing hats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 15, 1972</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Yes-here-in a same shine, on a same
					 doorstep, at a same blink-flesh and flesh, wed by the day by day, haloed with
					 roses and desire. Dust on our faces! Our whole rosy earth! Odors and
					 butterflies! Wine to the taste, to the last quaff. Break the bottle and kiss!
					 Even in trousers! O we do have our day."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR3</container><unittitle>Richard Bakken with Susan Vernier in front of house,
					 without hats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 15, 1972</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">In a chicken costume holding baby,
					 Harmony</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 19, 1972</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso: "Chicken costume worn to CCLM conference,
					 Portland, 11/15/72."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : newspaper clipping</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Balch, Frank True (March 24, 1845 - June 19,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Balch, the son of Jacob William Balch and Sarah Ann
				  Bradbury Balch, was born in Maine. He was an early settler in Washington
				  Territory, arriving before 1870. He married Sarah Esther Smith on January 15,
				  1887 and was a merchant and state legislator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BalchFT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank True Balch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McKissick, Dungeness, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Balch, Sarah Esther (Feb. 19, 1851 - February 17,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Esther Smith was the daughter of Alanson Bruce and Matilda
				  Bush Smith. She was born in Ulster, Bradford County, Pennsylvania and married
				  Frank True Balch on January 15, 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BalchSE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sarah Esther Balch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McKissick, Dungeness, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baldwin, Myrtle</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaldwinM1</container><unittitle>Myrtle Baldwin with reindeer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1928</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Pacific &amp; Atlantic Photos, Inc., New York, N.Y</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: "A Dear Among Deer!: Miss Myrtle Baldwin is
					 a Puget Sound Washington lover of animals. She immediately made friends with a
					 herd of 250 Alaska reindeer that arrived at Seattle, Washington the other day.
					 They are resting on their voyage from Santa Claus' country before being shipped
					 all over the nation to serve as Santa Claus teams during Christmas time. They
					 are feeding on Arctic moss which was brought along for their daily diet."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaldwinM2</container><unittitle>Myrtle Baldwin feeding reindeer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1928</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Pacific &amp; Atlantic Photos, Inc., New York, N.Y</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ball, Jesse Beriah (1827 -February 5, 1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Jesse Ball crossed the plains in 1853, the year that Washington
				  was declared a territory. He headed first for the gold fields in California,
				  where he worked briefly for wages. He prospected and mined for two years and
				  then went into the stock business in Oroville, near Chico, for nine years. He
				  moved to the Nisqually area near Olympia, the territorial capital, in the early
				  1870s and started a logging camp. By the mid-1870s, the Ball family resided
				  near Castlenook on Fox Island across from Steilacoom. By the late 1870s, he had
				  moved to the Skagit area where he owned a store, choosing the area because it
				  was on the bend of the river. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallJB1</container><unittitle>Jesse Beriah Ball</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ball, John (November 12, 1794 – February 5,
				  1884)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Ball spent just one of his eighty-nine years in Oregon but
				  has been widely recognized as the first school teacher in the Oregon Country.
				  He was born to a farming couple in Grafton County, New Hampshire, the youngest
				  of ten children. He graduated from Dartmouth College at the age of twenty-five
				  and then moved to New York, where he taught school and studied law before
				  becoming an attorney and helping to operate his sister's oil-cloth factory. In
				  1832, in his late thirties, he joined Nathaniel Wyeth's cross-country journey
				  to Oregon. During a difficult journey that lasted from March through October
				  1832, Ball recorded desertions, hunger and thirst, and the loss of critical
				  equipment. Wyeth had aspired to run the Hudson's Bay Company out of business
				  once in Oregon. Instead, he found himself and the remnant of his party
				  dependent on John McLoughlin's hospitality at Fort Vancouver. Ball decided to
				  stay there, and McLaughlin asked him to teach the boys at the fort. Using
				  implements and seed loaned him by McLoughlin, Ball took up farming the
				  following spring, moving south to French Prairie, where several families who
				  had retired from the fur trade resided. He and another survivor of the Wyeth
				  expedition planted and harvested a crop of potatoes and wheat. Both men
				  struggled with illness, and Ball became lonely. In late 1833, he traded his
				  harvested crop for passage on a ship bound for San Francisco Bay and the
				  Sandwich Islands, and eventually reached Norfolk, Virginia. He reported that he
				  missed Oregon's scenery more than its populace: "The grandeur of these
				  beautiful mountains, Hood and Jefferson, . . . as seen from the fort and my
				  farm, were the hardest to leave." After practicing law in Virginia for two
				  years, Ball moved to Michigan, where he speculated in land, practiced law,
				  married, and became a prominent citizen and advocate of public education in
				  Grand Rapids.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallJ1</container><unittitle>John Ball</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1884?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Eaton, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ballard, Levi W. (December 21, 1815 - January 28,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Levi Ballard was born in Petersburg, New Hampshire, the son of
				  William and T.B. Downing Ballard. He went to Hancock Academy in Hancock for two
				  years, after which he taught school in New Jersey for three years. He moved to
				  Ohio and tried different occupations before taking up the study of medicine. He
				  entered Cleveland Medical College, graduating as an M.D. in 1848. He practiced
				  medicine in the area until the death of his wife in 1852. He left for
				  California, where he tried mining. Finding no success, he returned to Ohio to
				  settle up his business before starting again for California. On the way, he was
				  persuaded to go to Oregon, arriving at The Dalles on July 14, 1853. He moved to
				  Umpqua County in 1854 where he practiced his profession and also raised stock.
				  When the Rogue River war started, he gave his services as surgeon and remained
				  until the close of hostilities. In 1857, he returned to Ohio where he married a
				  second time. In the spring of 1865 he moved to Washington Territory with his
				  family, homesteading one hundred and sixty acres where the town of Auburn,
				  Washington is today. In 1886, he gave part of his claim to establish town of
				  Slaughter, naming it after Lieutenant Slaughter, who was killed by the Indians
				  in 1856. He took an active part in educational and religious institutions and
				  was the first elder in the First Presbyterian Church on White River. In 1893,
				  citizens successfully petitioned the Washington State Legislature to change
				  name of Slaughter to Auburn.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallardLW1</container><unittitle>Levi W. Ballard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ballard, Captain William Rankin (August 12, 1847 –
				  February 4, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Rankin Ballard was a Seattle pioneer, banker, and land
				  developer and the son of Levi W. Ballard, the founder of Auburn, Washington.
				  William Ballard was one of the founders of the city of Ballard, Washington
				  (incorporated in 1890) which was later annexed to the growing city of Seattle,
				  Washington in 1907. The title of Captain derives from his command of the boat 
				  <emph render="italic"> Zephyr</emph> that operated between Seattle and Olympia
				  to the south. He became one of the organizers of the Seattle National Bank in
				  1889, and the Seattle Savings Bank, serving as its president until 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E.W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ballinger, Richard Achilles (July 9, 1858 – June 6,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>As the reform mayor of Seattle (1904–06),Richard Achilles
				  Ballinger attracted the attention of the Theodore Roosevelt administration, and
				  in 1907 he was appointed commissioner of the General Land Office. In 1909 he
				  became Secretary of the Interior in the cabinet of President William Howard
				  Taft. During his two years in that post, Ballinger sought to make public
				  resources more available for private exploitation and became embroiled in a
				  highly publicized controversy with Gifford Pinchot, chief of the Division of
				  Forestry in the Department of Agriculture. Pinchot, citing allegations brought
				  by a public-land inspector, charged that Ballinger had cooperated with private
				  interests in a fraudulent scheme to plunder coal reserves in Alaska. Taft
				  supported his secretary and dismissed both Pinchot and his informant, Louis
				  Glavis. Although a congressional investigation exonerated Ballinger, the
				  episode left a residue of bitterness between the conservative Republicans led
				  by Taft and the progressives loyal to Theodore Roosevelt. The questioning of
				  committee counsel Louis D. Brandeis made Ballinger's anti-conservationism
				  clear, and Ballinger resigned in March, 1911. The incident split the Republican
				  Party and helped turn the election of 1912 against Taft. The Ballinger-Pinchot
				  scandal reflected the ongoing tension between those who emphasized the
				  immediate use of natural resources and those who wanted them conserved for the
				  future.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallingerRA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of cartoon of Ballinger on
					 a seesaw with President Taft and Gifford Pinchot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallingerRA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Balimier, Mrs. Thomas</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallahanHS2</container><unittitle>Harlan Callahan with (from left to right) Mrs. Marie
					 Lafty, Percy Pratt Bliss and Mrs. Thomas Balimier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1950?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford &amp; Carter, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photo may have been taken at the retirement of Bliss after 40
					 years as a King County employee.</p><p>Filed under Harlan S. Callahan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ballou, Orlando Ralph (December 19,
				  1833 - July 14, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orlando Ralph Ballou was born in Cuyahoga, Ohio. He was an early
				  settler in Walla Walla, Washington where he had numerous agricultural
				  interests. He was one of the first to see the possibilities of an interurban
				  railroad between Walla Walla and Milton-Freewater, providing instrumental
				  support for the building of the railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallouOR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Orlando Ralph Ballou</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Maxwell, Walla Walla, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baluyut, Sotero Julao (January 3, 1889 - January 6,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sotero Julao Baluyut, the son of Leoncio Baluyut and Casimira
				  Julao, was born on January 3, 1889 in San Fernando, Pampanga, in the
				  Philippines. In 1904, he was given a scholarship from the government to study
				  in the United States. He attended Santa Ana High School in California and
				  obtained a bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Iowa.
				  In 1911, Baluyut returned to the Philippines where he went to work for the
				  Office of Public Works as an assistant engineer in the provinces of Pampanga
				  and Cavite. From 1912 to 1919, he was district engineer for the provinces of
				  Isabela, Antique, Ilocos Norte, Bulacan and Pangasinan. He also worked on the
				  San Jose-Santa Fe Road. In 1920, he became an engineer for the Pampanga Sugar
				  Development Corporation. He was elected governor of the province of Pampanga in
				  1925 and re-elected three years later. As governor, he was responsible for the
				  construction of many schools, hospitals, roads and bridges. In 1931, Baluyut
				  won election as a member of Senate from 3rd Senatorial District. As senator, he
				  enacted the law which led to the establishment of National Electric Power and
				  Development Corporation. At the end of 1937, Baluyut was elected governor of
				  the province of Pampanga for a third term. He was appointed as Secretary of
				  Labor from 1938 to 1940 while serving as governor. He became Secretary of
				  Public Works and Communications from 1951 to 1952. He died in Manila in 1975.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaluyutSJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Soltero Julao Baluyut</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bancroft, George (October 3, 1800 – January 17,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Bancroft was an American historian, statesman and
				  Democratic politician who was prominent in promoting secondary education both
				  in his home state and at the national and international levels. During his
				  tenure as U.S. Secretary of the Navy, he established the United States Naval
				  Academy at Annapolis. He was a senior American diplomat in Europe, leading
				  diplomatic missions to Britain and Germany. Among his best-known writings is 
				  <emph>History of the United States, from the Discovery of the American
				  Continent.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">3</container><container type="item">BancroftG1</container><unittitle>George Bancroft</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1891?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Richter from 
						<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Banham, Dr. (missing)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">Banham1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Banham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Banker, Ed</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BankerE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ed Banker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McMillan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baranov, Alexander Andreyevich (February 3, 1746 – April
				  16, 1819)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Andreyevich Baranov (Aleksandr Baranof) was born in
				  1746 in Kargopol, St. Petersburg Governorate of the Russian Empire. He became a
				  successful merchant in Irkutsk, Siberia before moving to Russian America and
				  becoming a successful fur trader there. He became the chief manager for the
				  influential Russian-American Company, managing all of the company's interests
				  in Russian America and eventually became the first governor of Russian Alaska.
				  Baranov convinced native hunters to expand their range to include the coasts of
				  California and also advocated more educational opportunities for them. Under
				  his leadership, schools were created and frontier communities became less
				  isolated. Baranof Island in Alaska is named after Baranov.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaranovAA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alexander Baranov</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Copy of a painting</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bard, William Harrison (February 13, 1860 - December 16,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Bard was born in Genesee, Illinois. When he was
				  sixteen, he went to the Black Hills, where he served as a courier of the U. S.
				  Scouts under Captain Jack. In 1878, he moved to Denver, working in the freight
				  business, driving one of the first mule trains from Denver to Leadville. He was
				  the discoverer of the Little Florence Silver Mine, which he sold for $3,000,
				  using the money to go to Europe; the mine was re-sold for $60,000. Returning to
				  Chicago, he studied law, receiving his degree from Ann Arbor University. In
				  1897, he went over White Pass to the Klondike. He was one of the first
				  attorneys in Dawson and practiced law; however, he devoted most of his time to
				  mining. He was the first discoverer of gold in the benches of the Lower
				  Bonanza, selling his interest for $8,000; over $500,000 in gold was later taken
				  out of the mine. Hearing favorable reports of gold in Nome, he moved there and
				  was named U. S. Attorney, prosecuting over 110 cases in the only court in the
				  area at that time. In 1903, he was elected mayor of Nome. He eventually moved
				  to Seattle, where he started the Washington-Alaska Company, a real estate firm.
				  He moved to Portland, Oregon in 1910 where he established a law practice. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BardWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Harrison Bard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barlow, Calvin Samuel (May 13, 1856 - April 5,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Calvin Samuel Barlow was born on the Barlow Donation Land Claim
				  on the Columbia River. His parents were pioneers in the Cowlitz Valley,
				  arriving in 1852. He moved to Tacoma in 1879 and became one of its leading
				  citizens, serving in both state and city legislative positions. His first
				  legislative term began in 1897, and he served again from his own district in
				  1913. He was one of the fifteen members of the Tacoma city charter committee
				  and was a member of the State Board of Visitation. He also served on the
				  building committee of the First Methodist Church in Tacoma. He started Tacoma
				  Trading and Transportation Company in 1892; its business was trading, building
				  supplies and maritime commerce. He changed the name of the company to C. S.
				  Barlow &amp; Sons when he sold off its shipping interests. When the company was
				  acquired by Graystone, Inc. of Seattle in 1959, it was the oldest company in
				  Tacoma still under the original ownership.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarlowCS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Calvin S. Barlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jeffers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barlow, Samuel Kimbrough (December 7, 1795 – July 14,
				  1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Kimbrough Barlow, the son of William Henry Harrison
				  Barlow and Sarah Kimbrough, was born in Nicholas County, Kentucky. He trained
				  as a tailor and in 1818 moved to Bloomington, Indiana, where he married and
				  started a family. Barlow was convicted of manslaughter in August 1827 for
				  killing George Matlock with an ax on October 16, 1826 and was sentenced to one
				  year of hard labor. Scores of people, including the victim's brother, pleaded
				  for Barlow's pardon and quashing of his sentence since he did it to prevent
				  harm to his wife and children. Indiana Governor James B. Ray pardoned him on
				  December 6, 1827. In 1845, when he was 53, he moved with his family to Oregon.
				  His party of seven wagons joined Joel Palmer's group of 23 wagons and, after
				  considerable difficulty, blazed a wagon trail over the Cascade Range, which
				  later was named the Barlow Road. Along the way, on October 7, 1845, Barlow made
				  an early ascent of Mount Hood, though he did not reach the summit; he and
				  Palmer were scouting a way for their wagon train to cross what is now Barlow
				  Pass. In the summer of 1850, Barlow was appointed Justice of the Peace for
				  Clackamas County by acting Governor Kintzing Prichette. On September 17, 1850,
				  he purchased the donation land claim of Thomas McKay, which he later sold to
				  his son William; the land eventually became the town of Barlow, Oregon, named
				  for William. In 1854, Barlow, along with Cyrus Olney, Granville O. Haller,
				  Thomas J. Dryer, Wells Lake, and T.O. Travailliot, were reported as making the
				  first ascent of Mount Hood, though the report has been disputed. Sam Barlow
				  High School in Gresham, Oregon, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarlowSK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel K. Barlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barnard, William Edward (June 16, 1834 - July 11,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Edward Barnard was born in Boston, Massachusetts and
				  graduated from Dartmouth College. He served as president of the Territorial
				  University of Washington from 1863 to 1866, having previously served as
				  president of Willamette University in Salem, Oregon. He was also a successful
				  lumberman. He died on the steamship <emph render="italic">Magnolia</emph> while
				  en route from China to Japan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarnardWE1</container><unittitle>William Edward Barnard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><origination><persname role="lithographer">Leopold Grozelier, Boston, MA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarnardWE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of William Edward Barnard
					 made while at Dartmouth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1852 and 1856?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarnardWE3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of William Edward
					 Barnard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barnes, Clare Louise (April 29, 1883 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clare Louise Barnes married William J. Keating in Victor,
				  Colorado on November 16, 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarnesCL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clare Louise Barnes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 27, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Trost (?), Denver, Colorado</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barnes, John S. (1856 - February 16, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John S. Barnes was born in Chickasaw, Iowa. In 1878, he
				  homesteaded three miles from the present site of Enumclaw and worked as a
				  farmer and lumberman. He married Julia Ramsdell in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarnesJS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John S. Barnes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "This method of felling large trees was
					 prevalent in early days, but now obsolete."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barr, Eric Lloyd (September 4, 1887 - March 25,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eric Lloyd Barr was born in Huron, South Dakota and graduated
				  from the U. S. Naval Academy in 1911. During World War I, he was on the first
				  submarine to cross the Atlantic Ocean under its own power. He earned the Naval
				  Cross during the war and retired as a captain. He established the ROTC program
				  at the University of Washington in 1926. During World War II, he was the
				  executive officer and head of training Naval Sciences and Tactics. After the
				  war, he was the director of the UW Summer Quarter. He is buried in Arlington
				  Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrEL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eric Lloyd Barr in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">ASU Photograph</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph of Barr in his office appeared in the 1957
					 Tyee.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barr, John A.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Barr received his PhD from the University of Washington in
				  February 1949 and was an assistant professor of guidance and education at the
				  University. He was the program chair of the Seattle Chapter of the National
				  Vocational Guidance Association during the 1950s. In 1955, he moved to San
				  Jose, California to teach at San Jose State University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Barr watching Dr. Edward A. Rowe
					 look in microscope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 27, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tom Cohen, The Daily</persname></origination></did><note><p>NIS negative.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrJA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Close view of John Barr watching Dr.
					 Edward A. Rowe look in microscope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 27, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tom Cohen, The Daily</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barrera, Jose (1876 - November 17, 1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jose Barrera became famous as Wild West showman "Mexican Joe".
				  In 1897, Pawnee Bill's Wild West Show was the first to hire Jose as a
				  performer; billing him as the greatest trick roper in the world. He toured
				  throughout the United States and Europe with Pawnee Bill, Buffalo Bill Cody,
				  and the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Show. He and other performers executed the
				  spectacular "Bailable a Caballo" in which riders and horses danced in pairs to
				  the music of a twelve piece band. In later life, he worked as the Pawnee Bill
				  Ranch foreman, overseeing livestock and agricultural activities.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>Bill Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma with Major John Burke,
					 Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill) Lillie, and Jose
					 Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p><p>Filed under William F. Cody subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barrett, Charles A. (June 21, 1852-May 28,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles A. Barrett was born in Maine. He arrived in Umatilla
				  County, Oregon in 1872 and spent six years as an employee of J. F. Adams on
				  Wild Horse Creek, helping drive cattle east. He married Jennie Mays in 1877;
				  they had two children, Areta and Henry. In 1880, he arrived in Centerville,
				  where he raised horses and sheep. In 1883, he started a hardware and implement
				  store.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrettCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles A. Barrett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barrett, Ford Slocum (May 14, 1871 - April 16,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ford Slocum Barrett was born in Oakland County, Michigan. His
				  parents, Daniel and Louise (Woodman) Barrett were also natives of that state.
				  Barrett came west alone in 1889, arriving in Seattle soon after the fire. After
				  six months of study at Queen City Business College, he was hired as a
				  stenographer at Solicitors Loan &amp; Trust of Seattle. In 1892, he was
				  transferred to Walla Walla, Washington where he worked for the same company as
				  secretary to the manager until December 1893 when he was transferred to the
				  Seattle branch as manager and traveling examiner. He was sent to Spokane in
				  1895 as manager for the company. In 1898, he opened a real estate and rental
				  office, conducting general real estate, rental, loan and insurance business.
				  His real estate operations in the Grand View, Hills, Front and Second additions
				  contributed to the growth of Spokane. He married Minnie Ehlers on November 19,
				  1896; the couple had three children. He was elected president of the Northwest
				  Real Estate Association in 1923, succeeding Albert R. Ritter. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Barry, Helen M. (August 10, 1847 - December 10,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen M. Barry was born in Maine. In 1870, she married Jerome N.
				  Barry, who worked in agriculture in Olympia; they had two children, Roy and
				  Earl.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarryHM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Helen M. Barry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bartz, Allan Emil F. (October 14, 1858-April 7,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allan Emil F. Bartz was born in Germany. He emigrated to the
				  United States in 1877 and served in the U. S. Army from 1878 to 1880. He
				  settled in Stanwood, Washington where he owned a hotel and candy store.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BartzAEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Emil F. Bartz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wagness, Stanwood, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Batchelor, Chester A. (March 23, 1882 - June 2,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester A. Batchelor was born in Vernon, Indiana; his father was
				  a circuit court judge in southern Indiana. Batchelor graduated from the
				  University of Indiana and the Illinois College of Law. He served as prosecuting
				  attorney of Jennings County, Indiana and practiced law there before moving to
				  Seattle in 1909. He practiced law in Seattle from 1909 until 1919 when he
				  became deputy prosecuting attorney. In 1926, he was appointed Justice of the
				  Peace and in 1929 was elected to the King County Superior Court bench, serving
				  until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bates, James Hervey Simpson (August 28, 1863-March 10,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Hervey Simpson Bates was born in Ohio and attended the
				  Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was named after James Hervey Simpson,
				  the chief engineer of the Interior Department who oversaw the construction of
				  the Transcontinental Railroad. He married Kate Stevens Bingham on February 14,
				  1913. After their marriage, they lived in Massachusetts and after 1918, at
				  Cloverfields Farm near Olympia, Washington. Cloverfields Dairy Farm was a model
				  dairy farm located in Olympia, Washington built by Washington State pioneer
				  Hazard Stevens, Kate Stevens' brother. After long careers in politics and the
				  military, Stevens returned to Olympia from Boston, Massachusetts in 1914,
				  determined to develop a large tract of land his father purchased in the 1850s.
				  The first commission in Olympia for architect Joseph Wohleb, the Cloverfields
				  farmhouse still stands today at 1100 Carlyon Avenue SE. It was built in the
				  Dutch Colonial Revival Style and is listed on the National Register of Historic
				  Places. In addition to the house, Cloverfields originally included a large barn
				  and two silos. As the president of the Olympia Light and Power Company, Stevens
				  utilized electricity extensively throughout Cloverfields, particularly in the
				  electrified barn and milking machines. The Holstein cows he used were anomaly
				  in the area and were complemented by extensive orchard and angora goats. In
				  1949, 40 acres of the Cloverfields Dairy Farm in Southeast Olympia was
				  purchased by the Olympia School District. Today it is the location of the
				  current Olympia High School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BatesJHS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Hervey Simpson Bates and Mrs.
					 Kate Stevens Bates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1932 and 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Christmas card with photograph. Written on verso: To Mrs.
					 Miller and family from her sincere friends, Kate Stevens Bates and James Hervey
					 Simpson Bates. Cloverfields Farm, Olympia, 1932-1933. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bates, Kate Stevens Bingham (November, 1852-November 25,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kate Stevens Bingham Bates grew up in Newport, Rhode Island, and
				  Dorchester, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Isaac Ingalls Stevens, the
				  governor of the Washington Territory from 1853 to 1857, who later served in the
				  U. S. Congress and as a Brigadier General in the Union Army during the Civil
				  War. She married Edward Wingard Bingham on February 15, 1886; the couple moved
				  to Portland, Oregon, where her husband had a home. E. W. Bingham and his
				  brother John invented an improved horseshoe and founded the Bingham Sectional
				  Horseshoe Company. When the horseshoe business failed, Bingham practiced law.
				  Mrs. Bingham was a member of the Unitarian Society in Portland, prominent
				  socially and wrote for newspapers and magazines. Edward Bingham died in 1904;
				  on February 14, 1913, she married James H. S. Bates. After her second marriage,
				  she and her husband lived in Massachusetts and after 1918, at Cloverfield Farms
				  near Olympia, Washington. Her papers are at the University of Oregon Libraries
				  in Eugene, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BatesJHS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Hervey Simpson Bates and Mrs.
					 Kate Stevens Bates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1932 and 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Christmas card with photograph. Written on verso: To Mrs.
					 Miller and family from her sincere friends, Kate Stevens Bates and James Hervey
					 Simpson Bates. Cloverfields Farm, Olympia, 1932-1933.</p><p>Filed under James Hervey Simpson Bates subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bates, Harry C. (November 22, 1882 - April 4,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry C. Bates was the president of the Bricklayers
				  International Union and played a major role in the merger of AFL and CIO in
				  1955, serving as Chair of the Unity Committee. The Bricklayers and Allied
				  Craftworks Union has established a scholarship in his name. He wrote 
				  <emph>Bricklayers' Century of Craftsmanship; a History of the Bricklayers,
				  Masons and Plasterers' International Union of America.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BatesHC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Harry C. Bates seated at desk with
					 three unidentified men standing behind him</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Chase Studios Ltd, Washington D. C.</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Battle, Alfred (March 22, 1858-March 20,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Battle was born in Waco, Texas and graduated from Baylor
				  University as the valedictorian of his class. After graduating from Vanderbilt
				  Law School, he came to Seattle in 1888 to practice law with his father,
				  Nicholas Battle. When their office and law library were lost in the Seattle
				  fire of 1889, he was hired by the city to assist with the litigation resulting
				  from the fire. He was a partner in the firm of Ballinger, Ronald &amp; Battle
				  and was later appointed Judge in the Washington Supreme Court.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BattleA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alfred Battle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bauer, Harry Charles (July 22, 1902 - September 4,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Charles Bauer was born in St. Louis, Mo., on July 22,
				  1902. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees from Washington University,
				  and graduated from the St. Louis Library School in 1931. During World War II,
				  he was a combat intelligence officer for the United States Air Force and earned
				  a Bronze Star, Purple Heart, and Air Medal. Bauer was the assistant library
				  director at the University of Washington from 1945 to 1947 and director of the
				  Library from 1947 to 1959. He then served as a professor of library science
				  until 1967. Bauer retired from the Army Reserves as a colonel and was a Mason,
				  a Shriner, and a member of the American Legion and Kiwanis Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BauerHC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Harry Charles Bauer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>moved to PH Coll 599</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW9</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, Dean Herbert T. Condon, Harry C.
					 Bauer, and Raymond B. Allen, with photograph of Charles Smith standing in
					 Suzzallo Library in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Blomdahl, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baum, Frank P.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank P. Baum established <emph render="italic">The San Juan
				  Graphic</emph> in Friday Harbor, Washington in 1890. He later moved to Lopez
				  Island, Washington where he was involved in real estate near Port Stanley and
				  served as that community's postmaster. He was elected to the Washington Press
				  Association in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaumFP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Frank P. Baum </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1885 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Baxter, Portus B. (October 7, 1869-December 21,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Portus Baxter was born in Derby Line, Vermont and attended Tufts
				  University. He arrived in Seattle in 1889, a few days before Washington became
				  a state. He worked as a reporter and sports editor for the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> from 1890 to 1918;
				  after his retirement, he was kept on the payroll at $5 per week by his
				  replacement, Royal Brougham. He scored the first professional baseball game
				  ever played in Seattle, and his baseball experience dated back to the days of
				  Bill Lange and Charley Irwin. He became the official statistician of the
				  Northwestern League in 1914. When he died, he left the bulk of his estate to
				  Brougham, who used it to establish a charity foundation for needy students.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BaxterPB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portus B. Baxter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bayley, Elizabeth Harpole (February 2, 1834-May 8,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Harpole Bayley was the wife of James Riley Bayley,
				  whom she married in 1852. They moved to Oregon in 1855, settling in Lafayette,
				  Oregon and later in Corvallis, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BayleyEH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Harpole Bayley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bayley, James Riley (October 20, 1820-May 24,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Riley Bayley was born in Clark County, Ohio and graduated
				  from Ohio Medical College in 1851. He married Elizabeth Harpole in 1852, and
				  they moved to Lafayette, Oregon in May, 1855 and later to Corvallis, Oregon. In
				  1856 and 1857, he was a member of the Territorial Council and was twice elected
				  Judge of Benton County. He sponsored and helped pass a bill through Congress
				  that opened a part of the Siletz Indian Reservation for white settlement. He
				  also secured a land grant for a military road from Corvallis to Elk City, the
				  head of navigation on Yaquina Bay. He served as State Senator from Benton
				  County in 1868 and 1869 and was the Supervisor of Internal Revenue from 1869 to
				  1873. Bayley built Ocean House, probably the first resort hotel on Oregon's
				  coast, on the site of the current Coast Guard station in Newport. He was a 32nd
				  Degree Mason &amp; Grand High Priest &amp; Grand Master of the Masonic
				  jurisdiction of Oregon and was a prominent Odd Fellow.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BayleyJR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Riley Bayley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bayne, Reverend Stephen Fielding (May 11, 1908-Jan. 18,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Bayne was born in New York City and educated at Trinity
				  School and Amherst College. Following his graduation from General Seminary in
				  1932, he remained there as fellow and tutor until 1934. He served as parish
				  priest in St. Louis, Missouri, and Northampton, Massachusetts until his
				  appointment in 1941 as chaplain of Columbia University and chairman of the
				  department of religion. He remained there until 1947 except for two years on
				  leave as a naval chaplain during World War II. In 1946 he was elected bishop of
				  the Diocese of Olympia and served as diocesan bishop until December 31, 1959,
				  when he resigned in order to accept appointment by the Archbishop of Canterbury
				  as the Anglican Communion's first executive officer. He became First
				  Vice-President of the Executive Council and director of the Overseas Department
				  in 1964. In a reorganization of the Council in 1968, he was made First
				  Vice-President and Deputy for Program, responsible for the Council's central
				  planning and the design and execution of the Church's national programs. Bishop
				  Bayne resigned from this post in the summer of 1970 to return to General
				  Seminary as professor of Christian Mission and Ascetical Theology. Later he was
				  acting dean and then dean of the seminary until his retirement at the end of
				  the academic year in 1973. He was the author of several books.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BayneSF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Bayne with two unidentified
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1947 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BayneSF2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Bishop Stephen Bayne
					 wearing regalia and holding the staff of his office as bishop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Charles Pearson, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BayneSF3</container><unittitle>Portrait wearing regalia and holding the staff of his
					 office as bishop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Charles Pearson, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in<emph render="italic">The Olympia
					 Churchman</emph> in December 1959 with the title "The Rt. Rev. Stephen Fielding
					 Bayne, Jr., Bishop of Olympia, 1947-1959." Written on the front: "With a
					 blessing always, to dear companions."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beach, Lewis Philo (July 15, 1833 - April 29,
				  1873)-Moved to PH Coll 1034.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Philo Beach was born in Seneca Falls, New York and went to
				  California in 1849. In 1861, he went to Olympia, Washington Territory where he
				  worked as a printer. In later years, he was engaged in surveying and was
				  Surveyor General of Washington Territory from 1872 until his death. In 1871,
				  Beach and Governor Elisha Ferry brought the printing plant of the <emph>Puget
				  Sound Courier</emph> from Port Townsend to Olympia. Beach, although a printer,
				  was not a newspaperman, and F. D. Loveridge of Chicago was imported to do the
				  editorial work. Loveridge’s management of the paper was short, and he soon
				  returned east. Beach ran the paper for a year and then sold it to Clarence
				  Bagley. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="item">BeachLP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lewis Philo Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850-1860?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Moved to PH Coll 1034</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beach, Luman E. (September 9, 1845-October 25,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Luman Beach was 19 years old when he enlisted on January 1, 1865
				  as a private and was mustered into "B" Co. OH 186th Infantry. He was mustered
				  out on September 18, 1865 in Nashville, Tennessee. After the war, he moved to
				  Washington Territory where he worked as a farmer and miner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BeachLE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Luman E. Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1924?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on front: "Speak to (illegible) oldness? and do it
						now. See?"</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beach, Nellie Louise (May 23, 1882-February 9,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nellie Beach was the daughter of Alexander Lyman Beach and Sarah
				  Jane Bonham Beach. She was born in Alton, Iowa and moved with her parents to
				  Seattle at a young age. The family lived in a row house on Fifth and Madison.
				  Beach was a member of the Seattle Ladies Musical Club and taught piano in
				  Seattle for over forty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BeachNL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Nellie Louise Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Beach, Rex Ellingwood (September 1, 1877 -December 7,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rex Ellingwood Beach was an American novelist, playwright, and
				  Olympic water polo player. He was born in Atwood, Michigan and grew up in
				  Tampa, Florida where his father grew fruit trees. Beach studied at Rollins
				  College, Florida (1891–1896), the Chicago College of Law (1896–97), and Kent
				  College of Law, Chicago (1899–1900). In1900 he was drawn to Alaska at the time
				  of the Klondike Gold Rush. After five years of unsuccessful prospecting, he
				  turned to writing. His second novel <emph>The Spoilers</emph> (1906) was based
				  on a true story of corrupt government officials stealing gold mines from
				  prospectors, which he witnessed while he was prospecting in Nome, Alaska.. It
				  became one of the best selling novels of 1906. It ecame a stage play and then
				  was remade into movies five times from 1914 to 1955. His adventure novels were
				  immensely popular throughout the early 1900s. Beach was a member of the
				  American water polo team which won the silver medal in the 1904 Summer Olympics
				  in St. Louis.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW2</container><unittitle>Will Rogers with Isadore Goldstein, Wiley Post, Rex
					 Beach and Joe Crosson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under William "Will" Rogers subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beals, Alice Ethel (July 30, 1909 - November 11,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Beals , a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971, served for 27 years as an official with the Waitresses Union and its two
				  successor organizations. She became te business agent for the union in 1951 and
				  served on the King County Labor Council. She was the secretary-treasurer for
				  Local 8, Hotel, Motel, Restaurant Workers and Bartenders.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Beals, Walter Burges (July 21, 1877 - September 18,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Burges Beals was born in St. Paul, Minnesota and attended
				  public schools in St. Paul. He began law studies under an attorney’s
				  supervision, but ill health prompted his move to Bellingham, Washington. Within
				  a year, he became strong enough to work in a saw mill as a shingle weaver. In
				  1899, he entered the first class at the University of Washington Law School,
				  graduating with a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1901. His first law practice was
				  in partnership with Fred Rice Power. After the latter’s death, Beals continued
				  in solo practice. A member of the Washington National Guard from 1909, he rose
				  from infantry private to the rank of major. He entered the U. S. Army in August
				  1917, serving in the judge advocate’s division. Beals spent sixteen months in
				  France and saw action in the Meuse-Argonne offensive with the American
				  expeditionary forces. Promoted to lieutenant colonel and decorated with the
				  Legion of Honor by France, he became one of the founders of the American
				  Legion. Fluent in French, he remained in Europe for several months after the
				  armistice as a liaison office with the French government. During his career,
				  Beals served as Seattle corporate counsel from 1923 to 1926, a King County
				  Superior Court judge from 1926 to 1928, and as a Washington State Supreme Court
				  judge from 1928 to 1946 and again from 1947 to 1951. He served as the chief
				  justice of the Washington Supreme Court from 1933 to 1935 and from 1945 to
				  1946. From 1946 to 1947, Beals was the presiding judge at the Internal Military
				  Tribunal I in Nuremberg, Germany, He retired in 1951. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bean, Mary Frances (February 27, 1858- February 17,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Frances Meeker was the daughter of John V. Meeker, who
				  traveled to Washington Territory by ship in 1859 and settled in the Puyallup
				  Valley. Mary Meeker married Clarence Bean, a civil engineer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BeanMF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Frances Bean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. W. Lee, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beard, Charles Austin (November 27, 1874 – September 1,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles A. Beard was one of the most influential American
				  historians of the first half of the 20th century. He published hundreds of
				  monographs, textbooks and interpretive studies in both history and political
				  science. His works included a radical re-evaluation of the founding fathers of
				  the United States, who he believed were motivated more by economics than by
				  philosophical principles. Beard's most influential book, written with his wife
				  Mary Beard, was the wide-ranging and best-selling 1927<emph render="italic">The
				  Rise of American Civilization</emph> which had a major influence on American
				  historians.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BeardCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Austin Beard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 111 of the July, 1961 issue of
					 <emph render="italic">The Pacific Northwest Quarterly</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beattie, Joene (July 2, 1906 - April 25,
				  1992)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Joene Beattie was born in Seattle and married Samuel K.
				  Keeland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E.W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bebb, Charles Herbert (April 10, 1856 – June 21,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Bebb was a prominent Seattle architect who participated
				  in two of the city's most important partnerships, <emph render="italic">Bebb
				  and Mendel </emph>(with Louis L. Mendel) from 1901 to 1914, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Bebb and Gould</emph> (with Carl F. Gould) from 1914 to
				  1939. He designed the UW campus with his partner, Carl Gould. In 1911, he was
				  an architectural adviser to the State of Washington for the State Capitol
				  competition and was associated with Wilder and White on this project. He was
				  also important in the development of the architectural terra cotta industry in
				  Washington State and was an early participant in the Washington State Chapter
				  of the American Institute of Architects (predecessor to today's AIA Seattle
				  Chapter). Bebb was never directly involved in architectural education, but
				  several years after Carl F. Gould became head of the architecture program at
				  the University of Washington, Bebb provided funds for an award for an annual
				  student competition called the "Bebb Prize." His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BebbCH1</container><unittitle>Cartoon drawing showing Bebb shooting a rifle at
					 flying houses with wings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Bobbett</persname></origination></did><note><p>Cartoon drawing from <emph render="italic">Cartoons and
					 caricatures of Seattle citizens</emph> .</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bechdolt, Frederick Ritchie (July 27, 1874 - April 13,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick R. Bechdolt was born in Pennsylvania and attended the
				  Universities of North Dakota and Washington. He graduated from the University
				  of Washington in 1896. He worked on odd jobs in the west for several years,
				  including gold mining in Alaska, driving sled dogs, and helping drill the
				  Cascade tunnel, before becoming a journalist in California. He later wrote
				  fiction and non-fiction with western themes and settings, including novels,
				  stories, fact-based collections of tales, and articles. He settled in Carmel,
				  California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beck, Clarence Francis (January 19. 1925 - October 29,
				  2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Francis Beck, the son of Theodore and Anna Beck,
				  married Wilda Wolfkill in 1949. He was the brother of Delores A. Beck
				  Carsensen.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckCF1</container><unittitle>Clarence Francis Beck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1940?</unitdate></did><note><p>The folder contains a letter from Clarence's grandmother, Anna
					 Beck, written May 29, 1940.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beck, David Daniel (Dave) (June 16, 1894 – December 26,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dave Beck was an American labor leader and was president of the
				  International Brotherhood of Teamsters from 1952 to 1957. He helped found the
				  "Conference" system of organization in the Teamsters Union and would become a
				  key leader of the Teamster's Union on the West Coast for some 40 years, from
				  the late 1920s to the early 1960s. He rose to national prominence in 1957 by
				  repeatedly invoking his right against self-incrimination before a United States
				  Senate committee investigating labor racketeering.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">4</container><container type="item">BeckDD1</container><unittitle>Dave Beck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1930</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beck, Delores Amber (1934 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Delores Amber Beck, the youngest of five children, was born in
				  Walla Walla, Washington, on November 23, 1933. Her parents, Theodore and Anna,
				  were in the hotel business, and the family moved frequently when she was a
				  child. She spent part of her high school years in Seattle where she attended
				  Ballard High School before graduating from high school in Walla Walla. She
				  graduated from Pacific Luther University in 1956 with a Bachelor of Arts Degree
				  in Education. Delores married Richard Carstensen on May 1, 1956 shortly before
				  Richard shipped out for the Army. The Carstensens farmed in Almira, Washington
				  for over 40 years. She was the sister of Clarence F. Beck. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckDA1</container><unittitle>Delores Beck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1940</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Delores Beck, age 6 yrs</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Becker, Ethel Anderson (January 26, 1893 - June 15,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Anderson Becker was born in Bellingham, Washington and
				  moved to Dawson, Yukon Territory with her family in 1898 when she was five. Her
				  father, Peter B. Anderson, built the boat that the photographer, E. A. Hegg
				  used to go into the gold fields. Hegg took over 4,000 photographs of the Gold
				  Rush, and Becker was later instrumental in collecting and saving them. She was
				  a writer who wrote books about the Klondike Gold Rush, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Klondike '98</emph> (1949) which featured Hegg's
				  photographs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckerEA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Becker as a child on a sled pulled by
					 a dog</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1898 and 1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: (Ethel is) the smallest child in the
					 sled</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckerEA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Becker as older
					 woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph appeared in the October 22, 1967 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Becker, Robert McClellan (October 22, 1833-January 31,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert M. Becker was born in New York and moved to Washington
				  Territory. In March 1877, he married Eliza Emmeline Woodcock in King County,
				  Washington; they later moved to Whatcom County where they had a farm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckerRM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert M. Becker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><origination><corpname>James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beckman, Marvin Elsmer (August 25, 1930- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marvin E. Beckman graduated from University of Washington in
				  1953 with a degree in Political Science. He was as an officer in the United
				  States Air Force from 1953 to 1957 and earned his J.D. from University of
				  Washington in 1960. He served as an Assistant United States Attorney in the
				  State of Washington from 1960 to 1962 and was in private practice from 1962 to
				  1965. During 1965 to 1966, he served as a District Court Judge in the State of
				  Washington. In 1966, he accepted the position of General Counsel of The Moody
				  Bible Institute of Chicago. He served in that capacity from 1966 to 1996, and
				  again from 2007 to 2009.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckerME1</container><unittitle>Marvin Beckman sitting in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Photo Lab</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckerME2</container><unittitle>Marvin Beckman sitting in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Photo Lab</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beckwourth, James P. (April 6, 1798-October 29,
				  1866)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James P. Beckwourth was an American mountain man, fur trader and
				  explorer who played a major role in the early exploration and settlement of the
				  American West. An African-American born into slavery in Virginia, he was freed
				  by his father (and master) and apprenticed to a blacksmith; he later moved to
				  the American West. As a fur trapper, he lived with the Crow Nation for years.
				  He is credited with the discovery of Beckwourth Pass through the Sierra Nevada
				  (U.S.) Mountains between present-day Reno, Nevada and Portola, California
				  during the California Gold Rush years. He improved a Native American path to
				  create what became known as the Beckwourth Trail through Plumas, Butte and Yuba
				  counties, which thousands of settlers followed to central California. In August
				  1851, he led the first intact wagon train into the burgeoning Gold Rush city of
				  Marysville, California. He narrated his life story to Thomas D. Bonner, which
				  was published as <emph render="italic">The Life and Adventures of James P.
				  Beckwourth: Mountaineer, Scout and Pioneer, and Chief of the Crow Nation of
				  Indians</emph> (1856).</p></bioghist><c03><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckwourthJP1</container><unittitle>James P. Beckwourth in hunter's costume</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeckwourthJP2</container><unittitle>James P. Beckwourth in citizen's dress</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Beeler, Adam Madison (October 11, 1879 - March 25,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adam Madison Beeler was born and raised on a farm in Indiana. He
				  worked his way through George Washington University Law School and for a time
				  practiced in Indiana. He came to Seattle in 1906 and established the law firm
				  of Beeler and Sullivan. Beeler served King County as a representative for three
				  sessions in the legislature. He was appointed King County Superior Court judge
				  in 1928 to succeed Walter Beals when the latter was named a Supreme Court
				  justice. Beeler was elevated to the Supreme Court bench in 1930. Resigning from
				  the Supreme Court in 1932, he formed a law partnership with John Dore, former
				  Seattle mayor, and Louis Haven. The firm was dissolved in 1934, and Beeler was
				  in solo practice until 1941, when he formed a partnership with Edward
				  Merges.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beezley, Joseph (May 11, 1819-November 9,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Beezley, an Oregon pioneer, was born in Springfield, Ohio
				  and later moved with his family first to Indiana and then Illinois. He married
				  Mary Jane Barr, in 1842 and moved to Fairfield, Iowa where he was elected
				  sheriff. In 1851, after the death of his parents, he and his wife and children
				  set off for Oregon in the company Colonel I. R. Moores. They arrived in The
				  Dalles October 18, 1852, after seven months of continuous travel; during the
				  trip, one son died. The winter of 1852-53 proved very severe, and all of his
				  cattle perished. In September, 1853, he went down to Clatsop Plains, shipped a
				  hundred head of cattle in a boat sixty miles up the Columbia River and drove
				  them to the Umpqua Valley. He lost his property by endorsing a note and
				  subsequently moved to Benton County in July, 1862. After three years, he went
				  east, moving his family in wagons across the Cascade Range to Wasco County
				  where he bought a homestead and started raising horses and sheep. He sold his
				  homestead in 1879 and moved his family back to The Dalles.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeezleyJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Beezley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beezley, Mary Jane (December 11, 1822 - November 22,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane Barr, the daughter of William Wilson Barr and Mildred
				  Carter Barr, was born in Edgar, Illinois. In 1842, she married Joseph Beezley.
				  In 1851, following the death of his parents, the couple moved to Oregon,
				  arriving in The Dalles in 1852 after seven months of travel.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeezleyMJ1</container><unittitle>Mary Jane Beezley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Beggs, Sarah R. (January 1, 1816-January 8,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Rumaha DeBell married Joseph H. Frost, a Methodist
				  minister, in 1834. They were pioneer Methodist missionaries in the Oregon
				  Territory in 1839-1843, and their first mission was amongst the Clatsop Indians
				  near Astoria, Oregon. The Frosts helped the crew of the US Navy <emph>USS
				  Peacock</emph> (part of the US Exploring Expedition) when it was shipwrecked
				  near the mouth of the Columbia River on July 18, 1841 Her husband’s ministry to
				  the Native Americans was not successful; he lamented the lack of support from
				  the church, the isolation, and his poor health and that of Sarah. In 1843, the
				  Frosts left Oregon to return to a ministry in New York. After Frost’s death,
				  Sarah married Stephen R. Beggs, who was also a Methodist minister, on January
				  1, 1866. During her marriages, Sarah organized a number of Woman’s Foreign
				  Missionary Societies. She lived with her nephew, Dr. E. F. DeBell, a physician
				  on the Rosebud Reservation after the death of her second husband. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BeggsSR1</container><unittitle>Sarah R. Beggs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1872</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is a later copy of a picture taken in 1872. The
					 copy photograph was made by 
					 <origination><persname role="photographer">Heyn, Omaha, Nebraska</persname>Heyn Photo was a photography studio in Omaha, Nebraska
						established by Herman Heyn in the 1880s.</origination></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bell, Edwin Quimby (April 25, 1870-April 30,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Bell was a First Lieutenant in the 8th Infantry, arriving
				  in Rampart City, Alaska in 1898. He established Camp Rampart and paid $6,000
				  for a building that would serve as a barracks. He gradually assumed the lead
				  role in governing the town, including continuing the series of public auctions
				  of town lots and setting up a free hospital, staffed by an Army doctor. In
				  1899, he received orders assigning him to the Manila, Philippines. He served in
				  the Spanish-American War and retired as a Colonel. He is buried in Arlington
				  Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BellEQ1</container><unittitle>Edwin Quimby Bell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1897 and 1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Made by the McGraw Party 1897? C. H.
					 Andrews" and "Lieut. Edwin Bell at Ramparts, 1898." </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bell, John Colgate (February 24, 1814-October 22,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Bell was born in Mount Sterling, Montgomery County,
				  Kentucky. At the age of 20, he moved to Missouri with his parents where he
				  purchased a farm and raised of tobacco. After spending five years in Missouri,
				  he went to New Orleans for two years before returning to Missouri. In 1845, he
				  married Sarah E. Ward, the daughter of General Thompson Ward. In 1847 he was
				  engaged by the General to organize the regiments of Generals Donovan and Price
				  and the battalion of Major Powell being sent to Fort Kearney for the protection
				  of emigrants. It was in these operations that he received his military rank of
				  colonel. In 1850, Bell crossed the plains to Oregon, leaving his family in
				  Missouri. From Oregon he went to the goldfields of California and later
				  conducted a packtrain from Salem to Yreka, California. He operated a store in
				  The Dalles for one year and built the first house there before the Government
				  forts were constructed. In 1854 he returned to Missouri to bring his family to
				  Oregon. On his return to Oregon, he opened a general merchandise store in
				  Salem, remaining there until 1870. After selling his business in Salem, he
				  retired from active life until his appointment by President Cleveland as
				  postmaster of Astoria.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BellJC1</container><unittitle>John Colgate Bell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Bell, Sarah E. (May 7, 1829-September 2,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah E. Ward, the daughter of General Thompson Ward, married
				  John Colgate Bell in 1845 and later emigrated with him to Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BellSE1</container><unittitle>Sarah E. Bell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bell, Theodore Baker "Ted" (May 24, 1911-June 4,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ted Bell was born in Puyallup and graduated from Broadway High
				  School, where his father, Anthony, was the football coach. Bell competed in
				  track and held the city high school record for the shot put. He attended the
				  University of Washington, where he competed in track and was on the football
				  team. After graduation, he was a professor at the University in the
				  Communications and Radio Education Department. He was the program director for
				  KRSC, an early radio station that later became KING. He also had a radio show
				  for many years, focusing on sports.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BellTB1</container><unittitle>Ted Bell with two students</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>NIS negative?</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bellow, Saul (June 10, 1915 – April 5, 2005)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Saul Bellow was a Canadian-born American writer. For his
				  literary contributions, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the Nobel Prize for
				  Literature, and the National Medal of Arts. He is the only writer to win the
				  National Book Award for Fiction three times. He received the Foundation's
				  lifetime Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters in 1990. On
				  April 9, 1952, he gave a lecture on "The stature of the hero in modern fiction"
				  at Parrington Hall on the University of Washington campus.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BellowS1</container><unittitle>Saul Bellow lecturing to group of students on
					 campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate></did><note><p>NIS negative?</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Benedict, William Harrison (December 14, 1922 - April
				  27, 2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Harrison Benedict was born in Bar Harbor, ME and served
				  in the U. S. Navy during World War II. He sold cars for 16 years and operated a
				  home improvement business for a short time. In 1961, he was hired by the
				  National Broadcasting Company as a film editor for the “Today” show. He worked
				  for the “Today” show and “NBC Nightly News” before retiring in 1987.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">BenedictWH1</container><unittitle>Signed photo of Benedict in an
					 advertisement</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: As seen in DuPont Zelan "Spot News".</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Benham, Allen Rogers (January 1, 1879 - July 30,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allen Benham was born in St. Peter, Minnesota and graduated from
				  the University of Minnesota in 1900 with quadruple honors in Latin, Greek,
				  German and English. He was a high school principal for one year before
				  receiving his Masters degree. In 1905, he was awarded a PhD in English from
				  Yale University and joined the University of Washington the same year as the
				  second member of the English faculty. An avid book collector, he considered his
				  library to be an extra educational facility of the University's, often
				  purchasing books on behalf of the UW Library. His office, in Parrington Hall
				  (first floor, last room on the left) housed his 20,000-book collection. He gave
				  the collection to the University on the UW's Centennial Anniversary; at the
				  time, the collection represented 2 percent of the Library's collection.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BenhamAR1</container><unittitle>Dr. Allen Benham in his office surrounded by
					 books</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the <emph render="italic"> Seattle
					 Times </emph> on April 30, 1961.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr3</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr. with Leslie Ford (Zenith
					 Jones Brown) and Allen Benham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930-1939</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken before 1950. In the 1930's, I guess.
					 Leslie Ford's real name Zenith Jones Brown, married to Ford Brown.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Jr. subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Benn, Leta (January 24, 1884 - December 5,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leta Benn, the daughter of Samuel and Martha Benn, was born in
				  Aberdeen, Washington. She married Raymond Brasfield in 1920.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennS3</container><unittitle>Samuel Benn with daughter Leta (Benn) Brasfield,
					 grandchildren and great-grandchild</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 2, 1932</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jones, Aberdeen, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Samuel Benn subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Benn, Samuel (July 2, 1832-September 16,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Benn was born in Ireland; his parents emigrated to the
				  United States shortly after his birth. He worked as a carpenter in New York
				  before sailing for the California gold fields in 1856. He and his cousin worked
				  in the gold fields for three years before moving north. He homesteaded in the
				  Chehalis Valley in 1859. In 1868, he traded his homestead for land that
				  eventually became the city of Aberdeen. As more people came into the area, he
				  gave away some of his land to encourage the building of a mill and a railroad.
				  He also gave land to workers to encourage them to settle in the area. In 1883,
				  he had the land surveyed, and in 1884, the town of Aberdeen was officially
				  recorded. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Benn at one
					 hundred</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 2, 1932</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Flowers Studio, Aberdeen, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Benn with
					 great-grandchild</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 2, 1932</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jones, Aberdeen, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennS3</container><unittitle>Samuel Benn with daughter Leta (Benn) Brasfield,
					 grandchildren and great-grandchild</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 2, 1932</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jones, Aberdeen, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bennett, Ceta Woodland (October 22, 1884-August 22,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ceta (née Sheila) Woodland Bennett was born in Keswick, Ontario,
				  Canada to Nelson and Lottie Bennett. She married Brackett True Munsey; they had
				  two children. She was an actor in the early 1900s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettCW1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Ceta Woodland Bennett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Frank C. Bangs Co., New York, NY</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on front: "To Dr. Smith with my sincere love and
						best wishes, Ceta Woodland Bennett." Dr. Smith was Dr. Alice Smith, a
						playwright.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettCW2</container><unittitle> Ceta Woodland Bennett sitting in chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To my very 'bestest,' Ceta Woodland
					 Bennett.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bennett, James Abner (March 17, 1808-April 24,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Abner Bennett was born in Bracken County, Kentucky. As an
				  adult, he moved to Missouri where he worked as a blacksmith and operated a
				  livery stable. In 1840, he married Louisa E. R. Bane. With the news of the
				  California Gold Rush, he went to California in 1849, returning to Missouri with
				  the intention of moving West. On May 9, 1850, he and his wife joined a wagon
				  train going to Oregon, arriving on October 2, 1850; he was elected the captain
				  of the train. He and his family settled near Corvallis. He was elected senator
				  from Benton County for the territorial legislature. He also served as assessor
				  and sheriff. In 1865, he moved stock to Idaho to supply the mines, and he and
				  his wife operated a dairy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettJA1</container><unittitle>James Abner Bennett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 an 1885?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bennett, Louisa E. R. (March 15, 1823-1900?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louisa E. R. Bane was born to Baldwin and Nancy Bane in Lewis
				  County, Kentucky. She married James Abner Bennett on June 18, 1840. In 1850,
				  they moved to Oregon where she and her husband had a homestead. In 1864, they
				  moved to Ada County, Idaho, where they supplied stock to the miners and
				  established a dairy. When her husband fell ill, in 1870, she took over the
				  operation and continued it until his death in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettLER1</container><unittitle>Louisa E. R. Bennett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 an 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphotos">Bennett, Nelson (October 14, 1843-July
				  20, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nelson Bennett was born in Toronto, Canada and left fatherless
				  at six. He quit school at fourteen to work on a farm. He emigrated to the
				  United States during the Civil War, helping to build Army barracks and worked
				  as a brakeman on the Dixon Air Line. He joined one his brothers in Pennsylvania
				  where they drilled for oil, sinking twenty-seven wells before the boom tapered
				  off. He took his small fortune west, but lost it in land speculation in
				  Missouri and Iowa. He then taught school in Missouri, even though he had only
				  gone through the sixth grade, fought Indians, prospected in the Dakotas and
				  organized a mule-train freight service in the Southwest. When the copper rush
				  in Montana began, he contracted to move a quartz mill from Ophir, Utah, to
				  Butte, six hundred miles, on mule back, and did it. He put the profits into
				  building Butte's first street railway and the profits from that into moving a
				  steam sawmill into the Lost River region of Idaho. His Rocky Mountain
				  activities brought Bennett into contact with Washington Dunn, who was building
				  the Utah and Northern for Jay Gould. Bennett teamed up with Dunn, digging a
				  thirty-five mile irrigation ditch in Idaho. The job required six hundred men,
				  twelve hundred horses, and an arsenal of drilling and blasting equipment. After
				  Dunn's death, Nelson and his brother Sidney won the contract for building the
				  first 134 miles of the Cascade Division, Pasco to Ellensburg, before securing
				  the Stampede Pass assignment. They completed the tunnel on May 3, 1888. When
				  the Cascade Tunnel was completed, Nelson Bennett brought the first railroad to
				  the Fairhaven and Sedro-Woolley areas of Washington and was the first to
				  efficiently extract and ship coal from the area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettN1</container><unittitle>Nelson Bennett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 an 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bennett, Theron G. (April 24,1907- November 9,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theron G. Bennett was born in Chehalis and graduated from
				  Chehalis High School. He worked as a lumberman and later as a bookkeeper. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BennettTG1</container><unittitle>Group photo of Theron Bennett on his 13th
					 birthday</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 24, 1920</unitdate><note><p>The other children in the photograph are not identified.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Benson, George (January 10, 1919 - October 22,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Benson was a popular Capitol Hill druggist and five-term
				  member of the Seattle City Council (1974 to 1994). A native of Minnesota,
				  Benson moved to Seattle in 1938 and earned a degree in pharmacy at the
				  University of Washington. He served in the United States Navy during World War
				  II and returned to Seattle to run the Mission Street Pharmacy with his wife
				  Evelyn. Best known for spearheading the creation of the Seattle Waterfront
				  Streetcar, Benson was a leader for mass transit, community crime programs,
				  utility improvements, and gun control. He died at the age of 85 on October 25,
				  2004.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Benson, Henry Kreitzer (January 3, 1877 - September 27,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Kreitzer Benson was a professor of chemical engineering at
				  the University of Washington from 1904 to 1947. He received his B.A. and M.A.
				  from Franklin and Marshall College in 1899 and 1902, respectively, and his
				  Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1907. When Benson joined the UW faculty, he
				  was asked to design the program and curriculum for a chemical engineering
				  department, and for this he was known as the "Father of Chemical Engineering at
				  the University of Washington." Benson was made head of chemistry in 1919 and
				  became chief executive officer of the dual Departments of Chemistry and
				  Chemical Engineering between 1925 and 1947. His research interests included
				  chemical engineering, the chemistry of soil, and work with the by-products and
				  industrial waste of the pulp and paper industry. The Department of Chemical
				  Engineering is now housed in a building named in Benson's honor. Author of 
				  <emph render="italic"> Industrial Chemistry for Engineering Students</emph>
				  (1913). His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BensonHK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Henry Benson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 15, 1918</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Benson, Merritt Elihu (July 17, 1902-April 14,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Merritt Benson was born in Kansas and graduated from the
				  University of Washington. He also had a law degree from the University of
				  Minnesota and an advanced degree from Stanford. He joined the UW faculty in
				  1931 and taught journalism for 36 years, serving as professor, assistant
				  director and acting director in the School of Journalism. He worked at 
				  <emph render="italic"> The Chicago Herald-Examiner</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Columbus Telegram</emph>. After retirement, he
				  published <emph render="italic">The Ranger</emph> for Army personnel at Fort
				  Lewis, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BensonME1</container><unittitle>Merritt Benson teaching class in the Fred W. Kennedy
					 room of the University of Washington School of Journalism</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bentley, Beth Singer (October 7, 1921-February 11,
				  2021)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Beth Singer was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. She attended the
				  University of Minnesota and received an MFA in creative writing from the
				  University of Michigan. She won the Hopwood Award for fiction in 1948 while
				  continuing graduate studies in Michigan. She moved to Seattle in 1952 where she
				  married Nelson Bentley, a professor at the University of Washington. She taught
				  poetry in the Northwest and elsewhere for over thirty years, including at the
				  UW from 1980 to 1992. She founded and directed the Northwest Poets Reading
				  Series at Seattle Public Library from 1960 to 1974 and taught poetry to
				  children in the Tacoma Public Schools, Lake Washington Schools District and at
				  Cornish College of the Arts. Her work was widely published, and she received
				  numerous awards. She was a fellow at the National Endowment for the Arts in
				  1978. Her collections include<emph>Little Fires</emph> and <emph>Phone Calls
				  from the Dead</emph> which won the Washington State Governor's Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BentleyBS1</container><unittitle>Beth Singer Bentley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Writing Shop, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bentley Jr., George Nelson (October 1, 1918 -December
				  27, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Nelson Bentley was born in Elm, Michigan and studied at
				  the University of Michigan under W. H. Auden in the 1940s. He left Michigan in
				  1952 to teach at the University of Washington and to work with Theodore
				  Roethke, who was on the UW faculty at the time. Bentley taught English and
				  poetry at the UW for 37 years, retiring in 1989. During his career he started
				  the weekly Castalia Readings, during which students publicly read from their
				  work; was a co-founder of <emph render="italic">Poetry Northwest</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Seattle Review</emph>; promoted the inclusion of
				  poetry in programs on public radio and television; and was poetry editor of the
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Times' Pacific Magazine</emph>. He won the
				  University of Michigan's Hopwood Awards in 1942 and 1949, the Washington State
				  Governor's Arts Award in 1987 and the Governor's Book Award in 1967. Several of
				  his books and hundreds of poems are still in print. He was married to Beth
				  Bentley, who was also a poet.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BentleyGN1</container><unittitle>George Nelson Bentley with son, Sean
					 Bentley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1955</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bentley, Sean (April 15, 1954- )</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BentleyGN1</container><unittitle>George Nelson Bentley with son, Sean
					 Bentley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1955</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Nelson Bentley Jr. subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itempohto">Benton, Sidney Smith (May 15, 1838-
				  November 11, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sidney Smith Benton was born in Galena, Illinois to Addison and
				  Carlottie Benton. His father went to California in 1849 during the gold rush,
				  and Sidney followed him in 1856. Sidney mined in California until 1861 when he
				  moved to Nevada and became the underground foreman of the Savage Mine. He
				  married Martha Estella Bowmer in 1863; they moved to the Colfax, Washington
				  area in 1878 where he raised cattle and invested in property. At the time of
				  his death he was the proprietor of the "U and I" saloon on Main Street in
				  Colfax.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BentonSS1</container><unittitle>Sidney Smith Benton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Benton, Thomas Hart (March 14, 1782 – April 10,
				  1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Hart Benton was a United States Senator from Missouri. A
				  member of the Democratic Party, he was an architect and champion of westward
				  expansion by the United States, a cause that became known as Manifest Destiny.
				  Benton served in the Senate from 1821 to 1851, becoming the first member of
				  that body to serve five terms. Benton's prime concern was the westward
				  expansion of the United States. He called for the annexation of the Republic of
				  Texas, which was accomplished in 1845. He pushed for compromise in the
				  partition of Oregon Country with the British and supported the 1846 Oregon
				  Treaty, which divided the territory along the 49th parallel. He also authored
				  the first Homestead Act, which granted land to settlers willing to farm it.
				  Though he owned slaves, Benton came to oppose the institution of slavery after
				  the Mexican–American War, and he opposed the Compromise of 1850 as too
				  favorable to pro-slavery interests. He pushed hard for public support of the
				  intercontinental railway and advocated greater use of the telegraph for
				  long-distance communication. He was also a staunch advocate of the
				  disenfranchisement and displacement of Native Americans in favor of European
				  settlers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">4</container><container type="item">BentonTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas Hart Benton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Engraving by Rogers after a portrait by Freiderichs from 
						<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Berger, Barbara Helen (March 1, 1945 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Barbara Helen Berger grew up in Seattle and worked as a painter
				  with gallery shows in the Seattle area. She attended Yale University, 1966, and
				  Temple University's Tyler School of Art (Rome, Italy), 1966-67, She graduated
				  from the University of Washington with a B.F.A. in painting. In1980 she turned
				  her focus to children’s books. She wrote and illustrated ten books and was the
				  recipient of numerous awards, including the Washington State Governor’s Writers
				  Award in 1985 and 1991. She wrote<emph>Grandfather Twilight,</emph> and<emph> A
				  Lot of Otters</emph> which won a 1998 PNBA Award. Berger’s personal essays and
				  memoirs appeared in <emph>Exhibition,</emph><emph>Crone Chronicles.</emph><emph>Snowy Egret</emph><emph>Parabola,</emph>and in two anthologies. Her
				  artwork has been featured at the Bainbridge Island Art Museum.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bernard, Joseph (1875 - 1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Bernard was born in France in 1875 and while a student at
				  Jersey, England was recruited as a missionary to the Nome mission by Father De
				  La Motte. In 1903, he arrived in the United States and worked at the St.
				  Ignatius Mission near Missoula, Montana before being ordained a priest in 1906
				  at Gonzaga University. Father Bernard arrived in Nome on August 2, 1906 and
				  after a brief training period was assigned to Mary's Igloo. From there he
				  traveled by dog team to gold camps and Eskimo camps on the Seward Peninsula,
				  including Nome and Teller. In 1909 he left Alaska for further studies at
				  Canterbury, England; while there he held lectures about the Alaska Missions,
				  using 120 glass-slides to illustrate the talks. He returned to Alaska and
				  Mary's Igloo in 1911 and remained there until called to military duty during
				  World War I. He served as an interpreter and orderly officer for 3 ½ years.
				  After his discharge from the armed forces, he petitioned the Society of Jesus
				  superiors for permission to return to Alaska; instead, he was assigned to work
				  as a retreat master in France and Switzerland, a position he held for 32 years.
				  His photography collection is held in the Alaska State Library.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BernardJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Bernard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: United in friendship and daily prayer until
					 we meet in Heaven forever.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bernstein, Steven Jay "Jessie" (December 4, 1950 –
				  October 22, 1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Steven "Jessie" Bernstein was a poet, musician, playwright and
				  performance artist who is most famous for his recordings with Sub Pop records
				  and his close relationship with William S. Burroughs. He was born in Los
				  Angeles, California and moved to Seattle, Washington in January 1967, where he
				  adopted the name Jesse, and began performing and self-publishing chapbooks of
				  his poetry. The first was <emph render="italic">Choking On Sixth</emph> in
				  1979. He become an icon in Seattle's underground music scene and opened for
				  many local bands. Although known for his connection to grunge and punk rock, he
				  saw himself primarily as a poet, and his live performances were influential. He
				  is credited as a major influence by many local poets from his era. The concept
				  for the album<emph render="italic"> Prison</emph> was for him to do a raw, live
				  performance at the State Penitentiary Special Offenders unit in Monroe,
				  Washington in 1991. The album was only partially completed by the time of
				  Bernstein's death by suicide. After his death, he was honored by a Sub Pop
				  album and an exhibit at the Experience Music Project. His song 
				  <emph render="italic">A Little Bit Of Everything (That Brought Me Down To
				  This)</emph> was included on the two-CD set <emph render="italic">Home
				  Alive</emph>, the proceeds from which benefitted women's self-defense groups in
				  the Seattle area. A documentary about him,<emph render="italic">I Am Secretly
				  An Important Man</emph> premiered in 2010 at the Moore Theater in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BernsteinSJ1</container><unittitle>Jessie Bernstein at the Scargo Hotel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1986</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alice Wheeler, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bertram, Florence Alice Baker (May 12, 1918-December 21,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Florence Alice Baker was born in Berryville, Arkansas and moved
				  with her parents to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. She wrote two books of juvenile
				  fiction with his sister, Gladys Baker Bond, <emph render="italic">The Mystery
				  at Far Reach</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Secret of Rocky
				  Ridge</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BertramFAB1</container><unittitle>Florence Alice Baker Bertram</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Best, Samuel Benjamin (October 3, 1831 - July 25,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Benjamin Best was born in Tennessee. He married Elizabeth
				  Cline in 1867, and they moved to Washington Territory where they were early
				  settlers and farmers in Anacortes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BestSB1</container><unittitle>Samuel Benjamin Best</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bethel, Charles W. (January 26, 1857-June 10,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles W. Bethel was born in Illinois and moved to Washington
				  in 1883 where he started a farm in Harrington. In 1912, he was elected Senator
				  for the 14th District, Lincoln County, Harrington, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BethelCW1</container><unittitle>Charles W. Bethel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bigelow, Ann Elizabeth White (November 3, 1836-February
				  8, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ann Elizabeth White was only 14 years old when her family came
				  west from Wisconsin in 1851. They settled on Chambers Prairie southeast of
				  Olympia. By 1853, Ann was employed as a school teacher in the Packwood home in
				  the Nisqually Delta area near Olympia. She married Daniel Richardson Bigelow on
				  June 18, 1854. She and her husband were devout Methodists and helped organize
				  the Methodist Episcopal Church in Olympia. They were also active proponents of
				  public education, rights for non-whites, women’s suffrage and temperance. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BigelowAEW1</container><unittitle>Ann Elizabeth White Bigelow on porch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bigelow, Daniel Richardson (March 21, 1824-September 15,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Richardson Bigelow was born in New York State. In 1851,
				  two years after reading law at Harvard, he crossed the Oregon Trail. After a
				  short stay in Portland, he traveled to the pioneer settlement of Olympia in
				  late 1851. He soon established a law practice, filed a 160 acre Donation Land
				  Claim east of town, and involved himself in local politics. Daniel married Ann
				  Elizabeth White in 1854 and began married life in a two-room cabin he built on
				  his land claim just east of downtown Olympia. Soon afterwards they built a
				  two-story Carpenter Gothic home where they raised their eight children. Daniel
				  was among the first settlers to call for the separation of Washington from
				  Oregon Territory. He served as a Councilman representing Thurston County in the
				  Washington Territorial legislature from 1854-56 and as a Representative in
				  1871. He also held a number of other public offices during his long career. He
				  and Elizabeth were devout Methodists and helped organize the Methodist
				  Episcopal Church in Olympia. They were also active proponents of public
				  education, rights for non whites, women’s suffrage and temperance.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BigelowDR1</container><unittitle>Daniel Richardson Bigelow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bigelow, Isaac Newton (May 16, 1838-June 27,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Newton Bigelow was born in Kingsport, Nova Scotia and
				  moved to Seattle in 1875. He was a carpenter and contractor who started the
				  Mechanics Mill and Lumber Company. He invested in real estate, purchasing land
				  which he platted and sold. He built the Bigelow Block on Fourth and Pike,
				  obtained the first street railway franchise and initiated the paving of Pike
				  Street. He founded and was president of the Seattle Dime Savings and Loan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BigelowIN1</container><unittitle>Isaac Newton Bigelow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">La Roche &amp; Company, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Biles, Phoebe Louisa (October 3, 1844-December 25,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phoebe Louisa Crosby was born in Massachusetts and, with her
				  parents, arrived in Portland, Oregon in 1850. She married George Wiley Biles,
				  who was also the son of pioneers, in 1864. They lived in Olympia, where George
				  was a retail merchant and the postmaster.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BilesPL1</container><unittitle>Phoebe Louisa Biles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Billings, Judith (December 29, 1939 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judith Billings is a native of Montana, with degrees from
				  Pacific Lutheran University, the University of New Mexico, and Seattle
				  University School of Law. She was Washington's thirteenth Superintendent of
				  Public Instruction, elected in 1988 and re-elected in 1992. Prior to being
				  elected, she worked as an educator at junior and senior high schools, as well
				  as colleges and universities. In 1979, she joined the office of the
				  Superintendent of Public Instruction as the State Director of federally funded
				  programs for disadvantaged children. She also worked as an advisor to the US
				  House of Representatives Education Committee in the years directly preceding
				  her first election as Washington SPI. In her work as Superintendent of Public
				  Instruction, she advocated for increased funding for public education and
				  creation of support programs for high risk children. Since retiring from office
				  in 1997, Billings has served on numerous regional and national educational
				  organizations and has been active in HIV/AIDS-related issues. She made a
				  comeback run for Superintendent of Public Instruction in 2004, but lost to
				  incumbent and fellow Democrat Terry Bergeson.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BillingsJ1</container><unittitle>Judith Billings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1990?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itempohoto">Billings, William (October 27,
				  1827-January 17, 1909)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>William Billings was born in Vermont and left home in 1846 as a
				  hand on a sailing ship that went around Cape Horn on its way to the Sandwich
				  Islands (Hawaii). He stayed in the islands until 1849 when he learned gold had
				  been discovered in California. He stayed a short time in California before
				  moving north, first to Portland and then to Olympia. He joined the volunteers
				  during the Indian War of 1855. He was elected Sheriff of Thurston County in
				  1860 and served until 1881. In 1877 he contracted with the Territory to build a
				  jail at his own expense. He built his jail at Seatco, started a cooper
				  establishment, developed a coal mine and organized the Seatco Manufacturing
				  Company for making sash, doors and blinds. He served as Superintendent of the
				  Puyallup Indian reservation for five years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BillingsW1</container><unittitle>William Billings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bird, John (April 18, 1810-May 12, 1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Bird was born in Kentucky and joined Captain Sawyer's wagon
				  train in May, 1847, arriving in Linn City, Oregon in October. He went to
				  California in 1849 during the gold rush, but soon returned to Lafayette, Oregon
				  where he farmed, kept a tin and stove store and served four years as county
				  treasurer. A veteran of the Black Hawk war, he was a volunteer during the
				  Indian War of 1855-56.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BirdJ1</container><unittitle>John Bird</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Birkeland, Torger T. (July 29, 1893 - March 16,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Torger Birkeland was born in Norway and emigrated with his
				  parents, Ole and Olina Birkeland, to the United States while still an infant.
				  The family homesteaded in Hood Canal, Washington in 1903. At age 11, he started
				  working as a "whistle punk"(the person who operates a steam whistle as a means
				  of communication during logging operations) to support his family. When he was
				  16, he went to work as a deck hand on a fish carrier. A turning point in his
				  career was when he was offered a job as a cabin boy on the 
				  <emph render="italic">Hyak</emph>, part of Puget Sound's 'mosquito fleet." He
				  worked his way up the ranks, earning a mate's license and eventually his
				  captain's papers in 1920. His first command was the <emph render="italic">Verona</emph> of the Poulsbo Transportation Company. He retired
				  as captain of the <emph render="italic">Evergreen State</emph>, the largest
				  Washington State ferry at the time. After retirement, he wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Echoes of Puget Sound: Fifty years of logging and
				  steamboating</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BirkelandTT1</container><unittitle>Torger T. Birkeland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Birnie, James (December 18, 1796-December 21,
				  1854)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Birnie was born in Aberdeen, Scotland and joined the
				  Northwest Company in Montreal in 1818 as a as a trading clerk. In 1824, when
				  the Northwest Company became part of the Hudson's Bay Company, he was sent to
				  the Columbia River, where he was one of the founders of Fort Vancouver and
				  later Fort George (now Astoria, Oregon). He married, Charlot Beaulieu, the
				  daughter of a French voyager and a princess of the Kootenai tribe in 1838; her
				  skill with native languages and his personality were said to have contributed
				  to their excellent relations with local Indian tribes. Most of his appointments
				  were in the Columbia River Valley. He settled in the valley, where he operated
				  a trading post, and founded the village of Birnie's Retreat, in what is now
				  Cathlamet, Washington. Birnie Island, British Columbia was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BirnieJ1</container><unittitle>James Birnie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bishop, Elizabeth (February 8, 1911 – October 6,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Bishop was an American poet and short-story writer.
				  She was the Poet Laureate of the United States from 1949 to 1950, the Pulitzer
				  Prize winner for Poetry in 1956, the National Book Award winner in 1970, and
				  the recipient of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1976, the
				  only American to have won that prize. In 1966, she spent two semesters as poet
				  in residence at the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BishopE1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Bishop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Spring 1966</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "For Wesley Wehr-This slightly old (&amp;
					 old) picture of his grateful friend, Elizabeth Bishop." Wesley Wehr was an
					 American paleontologist and artist best known for his studies of Cenozoic
					 fossil floras in western North America. Wehr was a student of Bishop's; in
					 1967, she wrote a gallery note for a showing of Wehr's paintings.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphotos">Blaauw, Dirk (March 28, 1859-July 26,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dirk Blaauw, a Norwegian of Dutch descent, was the editor and
				  publisher of <emph render="italic">Tacoma Tidende</emph>, the most widely
				  circulating Scandinavian newspaper in the Northwest at the time. The paper was
				  a 6-column, 8-page weekly which took a conservative position in politics and
				  was a spokesman for business; it was published from 1889 until 1899. Blaauw
				  also had business interests in Tacoma, including owning a cannery that supplied
				  food to the Klondike miners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaauwD1</container><unittitle>Dirk Blaauw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wagness, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Black, Henry Moore (January 15, 1827-August 5,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Colonel Henry Moore Black served at Fort Simcoe, Washington
				  Territory in 1857-58 while a 1st Lieutenant in the 9th Infantry. During the
				  American Civil War, he was on the Pacific Coast, assuming command of the Army's
				  Fort Vancouver in 1861. He was later a Commandant of Cadets at West Point.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackHM1</container><unittitle>Henry Moore Black</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture secured from a copy he was
					 permitted to make of a family portrait, by Brig. Gen. Russell C. Langdon, U. S.
					 Army, my brother-in-law. Col. Black was an instructor at West Point when Gen.
					 Langdon was a cadet there, and he told one several amusing stories of him.
					 Presented to the Fort Simcoe Restoration, with which I have been associated
					 since 1930. Ethel Semple Swanstrom, 1955.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackburn, John T. (August 14, 1844-June 3,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Blackburn was born in England and emigrated to the United
				  States at an early age. He lived on Vashon Island in King County, WA in the
				  1880s and served as postmaster.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackburnJT1</container><unittitle>John T. Blackburn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: Yours Always, John T. Blackburn, Vashon,
						King Co., Wash.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackfan, Charles T. (March, 1848-February 28,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Blackfan was born in Illinois and enlisted in the 102
				  Regiment, Illinois Infantry on Octobrt 7, 1864, serving until July 8, 1865.
				  After the war, he married Minnie Cook, and they moved to Sherman, Lincoln
				  County, Washington where they had a farm. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackfanCT1</container><unittitle>Charles T. Blackfan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 24, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackman, Alanson A. (May 26, 1840-July 20,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alanson Blackman was a prominent businessman and lumber merchant
				  who migrated with his two brothers, Elhanan and Hyrcanus, from their native
				  Maine to the Washington Territory in 1872, eventually settling in the county of
				  Snohomish where they built a lumber and logging business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackmanAA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Alanson, Elhanan and Hyrcanus
					 Blackman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackman, Elhanan W. (May 10, 1844-June 22,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elhanan Blackman was a prominent businessman and lumber merchant
				  who migrated with his two brothers, Alanson and Hyrcanus, from their native
				  Maine to the Washington Territory in 1872, eventually settling in the county of
				  Snohomish where they built a lumber and logging business. He invented the
				  tripper shingle machine in which a carriage holding a block of cedar is tripped
				  by a ratchet action, moving the block in and out of the saw, creating a shingle
				  with each pass. With his brothers, he patented a geared logging locomotive in
				  1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackmanAA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Alanson, Elhanan and Hyrcanus
					 Blackman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Alanson A. Blackman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackman, Henry (September, 1848 - May 28,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Blackman was born in New York. In 1850, his mother moved
				  with him to San Francisco where he attended school. After marrying Fannie
				  Heppner in 1878, he and his wife moved to Heppner, Oregon, a town founded by
				  Fannie's brother, Henry. Blackman went into business withhis brother-in-law,
				  later buying out his interest and starting H. Blackman &amp; Company. He was
				  the director of the First National Bank of Heppner, established the Park Hotel
				  and was the first mayor of the town, serving three terms. He was elected to the
				  Oregon Senate in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackmanH1</container><unittitle>Henry Blackman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackman, Hyrcanus (January 4, 1847-June 1,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hyrcanus Blackman was a prominent businessman, political figure
				  and lumber merchant active in the Washington Territory. Born into a family long
				  active in the Maine lumber industry, Hyrcanus and his two brothers, Alanson and
				  Elhanan, migrated from their native Maine to the Washington Territory in 1872,
				  eventually settling in the county of Snohomish where they built a lumber and
				  logging business. He had a general store in the mid-1880s and constructed the
				  Penobscot Hotel in 1888. He was elected to the Washington Territorial
				  Legislature in 1878 and 1880 and was elected as the first mayor of the newly
				  incorporated city of Snohomish in 1890. later serving as chief of police and on
				  the school board. His home in Snohomish is now a museum.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlackmanAA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Alanson, Elhanan and Hyrcanus
					 Blackman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Alanson A. Blackman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blackmar, Dighton H. (September 29, 1858 - July 4, 1924)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dighton H. Blackmar played center field for the Seattle Reds
				  baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington
				  Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. In the 1890s, he worked
				  as a notary public and real estate agent.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blaine, Catharine Paine (December 14, 1829- March 9,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catharine Paine Blaine, with her husband David, came to Seattle
				  from Seneca Falls, New York, the site of America's first women's rights
				  convention in which she participated. She was one of the 100 signers of the
				  historic Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions that launched the women's
				  rights movement. The Blaines were Methodist missionaries who arrived in Seattle
				  in 1853 via the Isthmus of Panama sea route. Catharine became Seattle's first
				  teacher and school administrator and voted in Washington Territory in 1884. Her
				  role as the community's first schoolteacher is remembered today in the
				  Catharine Blaine Elementary School in Magnolia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineDE2</container><unittitle>David and Catharine Blaine as a young
					 couple</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1853?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under David Edward Blaine subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blaine, David Edward (March 5, 1824-November 26,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> David Blaine and Catharine Paine Blaine were Methodist
				  missionaries who arrived in Seattle in 1853 via the Isthmus of Panama sea
				  route. David founded Seattle's first church, called the "Little White Church,"
				  at Second and Columbia. After the January 1856 Battle of Seattle (a conflict
				  with Indians), the Blaines left for missionary duty in Portland. They returned
				  to Seattle in retirement in 1882.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineDE1</container><unittitle>David Edward Blaine as a young man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1850?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineDE2</container><unittitle>David and Catharine Blaine as a young
					 couple</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1853?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineDE3</container><unittitle>Portrait of David Blaine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1875?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineDE4</container><unittitle>Portrait of David Blaine with glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blaine, Elbert F. (June 26, 1857-January 16,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elbert Blaine was an attorney and manager of the Washington
				  Irrigation Company who was interested in the reclamation of arid land. In 1910,
				  he and Charles L. Denny started subdividing the area in east central Seattle;
				  it is now named Denny-Blaine for its developers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineEF1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Elbert Blaine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on front by Braas and on verso by E. F. Blaine</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineEF2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Elbert Blaine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blaine, James Gillespie (January 31, 1830 – January 27,
				  1893</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James G. Blaine was an American Republican politician who served
				  as United States Representative, Speaker of the United States House of
				  Representatives, U.S. Senator from Maine, and twice as Secretary of State. He
				  was nominated for President in 1884, but was narrowly defeated by Democrat
				  Grover Cleveland. Blaine was one of the late 19th century's leading Republicans
				  and champion of the moderate reformist faction of the party.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlaineJG1</container><unittitle>James Gillespie Blaine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">Cross &amp; Company, Philadelphia</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blair, Homer Orrin (March 8, 1882-July 19,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Homer Blair graduated from the University of Washington with a
				  degree in electrical engineering. He was a member of Theta Chi and the Tacoma
				  Club while at the University. His cousin, Nathan Blair, also attended the UW.
				  Homer invented a field telephone for use in mine rescue. Homer's son, also
				  named Homer, had degrees in chemistry, physics and law from the University of
				  Washington and worked in the patent, trademark, licensing and technology
				  transfer fields; he played a significant role in the legislation that created
				  the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO1</container><unittitle>Homer Blair (left) and Nathan Blair (right) on the
					 University of Washington campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO2</container><unittitle>Wendell Nelson, Nathan (Nate) Blair, Homer Blair and
					 Horace H. Crary at Rees's Camp, later the site of Paradise Inn on Mount
					 Rainier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1911</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blair, Nathan Doud (November 7, 1889- May 13, 1918)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan Blair was the cousin of Homer O. Blair; he graduated from
				  the University of Washington with a degree in electrical engineering.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO1</container><unittitle>Homer Blair (left) and Nathan Blair (right) on the
					 University of Washington campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Homer Orrin Blair subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO2</container><unittitle>Wendell Nelson, Nathan (Nate) Blair, Homer Blair and
					 Horace H. Crary at Rees's Camp, later the site of Paradise Inn on Mount
					 Rainier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Homer Orrin Blair subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blake, Alice Rufie Jordan (October 10, 1864-October 29,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Rufie Jordan Blake was born in Michigan in 1864. She
				  entered the University of Michigan at age 16, earning her bachelor's degree in
				  1884 at the age of 20. She attended the University of Michigan's law school for
				  one year and passed the Michigan bar the following year. She decided to further
				  her legal education, but was turned down by Columbia and Harvard because of her
				  gender. Blake applied in person to Yale Law School. The registrar attempted to
				  turn her away, explaining that women were not admitted. Rather than accept his
				  answer, Blake pointed out that the school's rules stated that "Attorneys at law
				  of any state are entitled to admission to the Senior Class without
				  examination." Since she was an attorney in Michigan, she qualified. Following
				  Blake's 1886 graduation, the governing body of Yale made an addendum to the
				  school's catalog barring women from future enrollment except in programs
				  specifically designed to include women. Yale would not graduate another woman
				  until 1920. In 1888, she married George D. Blake, an attorney and former
				  classmate. They moved to Seattle, where she served as the second president of
				  the Women's Century Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlakeARJ1</container><unittitle>Alice Rufie Jordan Blake</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1890?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Blake, Bruce (February 17, 1881 - January 6,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bruce Blake was born in Danville, Indiana; his family moved to
				  Spokane, Washington in 1888. He attended the University of Chicago and the
				  University of Michigan and was admitted to the Washington State bar in 1905. He
				  began his law practice in Spokane. Blake served as assistance corporate counsel
				  and as a municipal police judge. In 1912 he was elected as a Washington
				  Superior Court judge at the age of 31, then the youngest person ever elected to
				  that office. He was re-elected in 1916 and 1920, and in 1932 was elected to the
				  State Supreme Court. He served on the Supreme Court bench until his retirement
				  in 1946. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blalock, Nelson Gales (February 17, 1836-March 4,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nelson Gales Blalock was born in North Carolina and graduated
				  from Jefferson Medical College in 1861. He served as regimental surgeon for the
				  115th Illinois Infantry during the Civil War. After the war, he practiced
				  medicine in Illinois before moving to Walla Walla in 1872. He continued to
				  practice medicine while cultivating land, growing fruit and grain. He was the
				  surgeon for the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, served as Mayor of
				  Walla Walla, was a member of the State Constitutional Committee and served as
				  director of Whitman College. In 1892, he donated 40 acres to the Seventh Day
				  Adventist Church for the establishment of a school in College Place. The
				  Blalock Islands and Blalock Canyon along the Columbia River are named for him.
				  He purchased Blalock Island in 1899, built a pumping plant on the southeastern
				  shore to be used for irrigation and planted extensive orchards on the island.
				  Downstream of the Blalock Islands is Blalock Canyon, a location which .he had
				  hoped to develop into another agricultural center. Today the original large
				  "Blalock Island" is under the waters of Lake Umatilla, the reservoir behind the
				  John Day Dam, and only small islands, now known as "Blalock Islands," are
				  left.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlalockNG1</container><unittitle>Nelson Gales Blalock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1880?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blanchet, Bishop Augustin Magloire Alexandre (August 22,
				  1797 – February 25, 1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Augustin Magloire Blanchet was born in the village of St. Pierre
				  Riviere de Sud, in present-day Quebec. The younger brother of François Norbert
				  Blanchet, Augustin Blanchet studied at Le Petit Séminaire de Québec and then at
				  the Grand Seminary of Quebec. He was ordained to the priesthood on 3 June 1821
				  in the Archdiocese of Quebec and held several church positions in Quebec and
				  Nova Scotia, mainly around the Montreal area. On 28 July 1846, while a canon in
				  Montreal, Blanchet was appointed bishop of the new Diocese of Walla Walla in
				  the Oregon Country (now in the U.S. state of Washington) where he served as the
				  first bishop. On 31 May 1850, the Holy See under Pope Pius IX established the
				  Diocese of Nesqually (later spelled "Nisqually"), with its episcopal see in
				  Vancouver in what was by then known as the Oregon Territory, and named Blanchet
				  bishop of the new diocese. Three years later, the Walla Walla diocese was
				  completely eliminated and much of its territory transferred to the new
				  Nesqually diocese (now known as the Archdiocese of Seattle). Along with his
				  elder brother and several other fellow French Canadian missionaries, Blanchet
				  was instrumental in establishing the Catholic Church presence in the
				  present-day U.S. state of Washington. On January 2, 1848, he ordained Oblate
				  Missionaries Eugene Casmire Chirouse and Charles M. Pandosy as Catholic priests
				  at Fort Walla Walla, the first Catholic ordination in the Washington Territory.
				  Bishop Blanchet High School in Seattle is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlanchetAMA1</container><unittitle>Bishop Blanchet standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: 1st Ev(eque) de Nesqualy, Ne le 22 d'Aout
					 1797, Pretre le 3 Juin 1821, Eveque consacre 6-27-1866.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlanchetAMA2</container><unittitle>Bishop Blanchet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blanchet, Archbishop Francois Norbert (September 30,
				  1795 – June 18, 1883)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>François Norbert Blanchet was born near Saint-Pierre, Rivière du
				  Sud in Lower Canada (present-day Quebec). Along with his younger brother
				  Augustin-Magloire Blanchet, he entered the Seminary of Quebec and was ordained
				  a priest in 1819. Blanchet spent a year working at the cathedral in Quebec
				  before being sent to do missionary work with the Micmac and Acadian people in
				  present-day New Brunswick. In 1827 he was summoned back to Montreal and became
				  a pastor. In the 1830s, French Canadian Catholic employees of the Hudson's Bay
				  Company petitioned the bishop in their native Quebec to send priests to what
				  was then known as the Oregon Country. Blanchet was appointed the Vicar General
				  of the Oregon Country and left Quebec on May 3, 1838. Blanchet was selected to
				  help draft the laws of a new government in Oregon at a February 18, 1841,
				  meeting; two years later these meetings would culminate in the formation of the
				  Provisional Government of Oregon. On December 1, 1843, the Vatican under Pope
				  Gregory XVI established the Vicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory, and
				  named Blanchet its vicar apostolic. Then on July 24, 1846, the Vatican under
				  Pope Pius IX divided the vicariate apostolic into three dioceses: Oregon City,
				  Vancouver Island, and Walla Walla. Blanchet was named bishop of Oregon City,
				  and his brother, Augustin Blanchet, bishop of Walla Walla. The Diocese of
				  Oregon City was elevated to an archdiocese on July 29, 1850, and François
				  Blanchet was elevated to archbishop. He was instrumental in establishing the
				  Catholic Church presence in the Pacific Northwest. Blanchet Catholic School in
				  Salem, Oregon is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlanchetFN1</container><unittitle>Archbishop Francois Norbert Blanchet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Blethen, Alden J. (December 27, 1845 – July 12,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alden Blethen was born in rural (Knox County) Maine. He first
				  became a schoolteacher and then a lawyer. At age 34, he moved his family to
				  Kansas City and purchased part interest in the <emph render="italic">Kansas
				  City Journal</emph>. He then moved to Minneapolis and became part owner of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Minneapolis Tribune</emph>. For the next 12 years, he
				  operated the paper successfully and began to be called "Colonel," an
				  appellation he preferred for the rest of his life. In 1896, a newspaper known
				  as <emph render="italic">The Seattle Daily Times</emph> published an item
				  announcing Blethen's trip to the area to visit relatives. Three weeks later, he
				  bought the paper, which he quickly renamed <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Evening Times</emph> and went to work introducing an element of drama in news
				  coverage that helped the paper to increase circulation. After his death in
				  1913, the Blethen family continued to run the newspaper, now called 
				  <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlethenAJ1</container><unittitle>Three quarter portrait of Al;den Blethen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1890?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlethenAJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Alden Blethen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlethenAJ3</container><unittitle>Photo of the Blethen home</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subgrp"><did><unittitle>Bliss, Percy Pratt (July 18, 1881 - January 24,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Percy Pratt Bliss was born in Ionia, Michigan. In 1891, his
				  family moved to Anacortes, WA. He was clerk of the Board of King County
				  Commissioners in 1912 and was later a land appraiser for the King County
				  Assessors Office. In 1934, he went to work in the King County Sheriff's office,
				  retiring as deputy sheriff in 1950, having served 40 years as a King County
				  employee. He gained fame for a long distance chess game with King Abdullah of
				  Jordan; the match was carried on by mail and lasted three years. He married
				  Mary Ellen Amsberry of Anacortes in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallahanHS2</container><unittitle>Harlan Callahan with (from left to right) Mrs. Marie
					 Lafty, Percy Pratt Bliss and Mrs. Thomas Balimier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1950?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford &amp; Carter, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photo may have been taken at the retirement of Bliss after 40
					 years as a King County employee.</p><p>Filed under Harlan S. Callahan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bloch, Lucienne (January 5, 1909 – March 13,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucienne Bloch was a Switzerland-born American artist. She was
				  best known for her murals and for her association with the Mexican artist Diego
				  Rivera, for whom she produced the only existing photographs of Rivera's mural 
				  <emph render="italic">Man at the Crossroads</emph>, painted in 1933 and
				  destroyed in January 1934 at Rockefeller Center in New York City. From 1935 to
				  1939, Bloch was employed by the WPA/FAP (Works Progress Administration/Federal
				  Arts Project). She also worked free-lance as a photographer for 
				  <emph render="italic">Life Magazine</emph> , recording the desperate conditions
				  of autoworkers during labor strikes and protests that occurred throughout the
				  U.S. during the formation of automobile workers unions. She created nearly 50
				  murals across the United States for religious institutions, schools, hospitals,
				  and businesses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlochL1</container><unittitle>Lucienne Bloch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 2, 1995</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Arnis Sarma, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Fifteen photographs from a reception at the Benham Gallery.
					 Reproduce for scholarly research only. Copyright retained by photographer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bloody Knife (ca. 1840 – June 25, 1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bloody Knife (Sioux: Tamena Way Way or Tamina WeWe; Arikara: Nes
				  I Ri Pat or Nee si Ra Pat) was a Native American who served as a scout and
				  guide for the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment. He was the favorite scout of
				  Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and died during the Battle of the
				  Little Bighorn.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Armstrong Custer and staff,
					 7th Cavalry in the Black Hills of South Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William H. Illingworth, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Included in the photograph are Captain Tom Custer, Marcus A.
					 Reno, Bloody Knife and Colonel Fred Grant.</p><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p><p>Filed under George Armstrong Custer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bloyd, Marjorie C. (December 11, 1897- April 23,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>MarjorieC. Bloyd, the daughter of Leander and Sarah Bloyd, was
				  born in California. She was a student at the State Normal School in Cheney,
				  Washington. She attended one year of college in Walla Walla, Washington before
				  marrying Francis Clyde Fender on June 20, 1916 and moving to Prescott,
				  Washington with her husband. She later moved to Seattle where she worked in
				  sales for MacDougall's Department Store. She married Harold W. Boehme, a motion
				  picture salesman, in 1955.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard W. Peterson with Sadie Michael, Martin
					 Deggeller, Marjorie Bloyd and Frank Michael</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under H. W. "Pete" Peterson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boblett, Lois Almena Whitcomb (February 1, 1844 - March
				  14, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lois A. Whitcomb was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and moved with
				  her family by ox team to Iowa in 1851. The family later moved to Nebraska and
				  then to Colorado, where she married Edward A. Boblett. In November, 1869, they
				  left Prescott, Arizona on a government train for California and then traveled
				  by boat to Seattle. In 1870, they arrived in Semiahmoo on the steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">Libby</emph>.The couple homesteaded where Blaine,
				  Washington now stands; Boblett Street was named for them. In 1922, she wrote a
				  memoir, <emph render="italic">A Fair Distance</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BoblettLAW1</container><unittitle>Lois Almena Whitcomb Boblett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boeing, William Edward (October 1, 1881 – September 28,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Edward Boeing was an American aviation pioneer who
				  founded The Boeing Company in 1916. He was posthumously inducted into the
				  Aviation Hall of Fame in Dayton, Ohio, in 1966 and into the International Air
				  &amp; Space Hall of Fame at the San Diego Air &amp; Space Museum in 1984.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamsayCC1</container><unittitle> Claude Ramsay with Thomas Dobson, L. C. Smith and
					 William E. Boeing at the dedicatory exercises at Sandpoint</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 19, 1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: In the presence of a gathering of
					 distinguished citizens representative of the army, navy and air service of the
					 United States Government, Claude C. Ramsay, chairman of the Board of King
					 County Commissioners, in turning the first shovelful of earth declared: "I
					 hereby dedicate this field to the service of our country."</p><p>Filed under Claude C. Ramsay subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boetzkes, Harry W. (July 11, 1879-November 28,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry W. Boetzkes was born in Wurzburg, Germany and moved to the
				  United States at an early age. He graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1902 with a degree in civil engineering. While at the University, he was on
				  the track team and in student government. After graduatioin, he worked on
				  irrigation, highway and extracting projects in the Northwest. During World War
				  I, he served as a captain with the U. S. Engineers in France and the Balkens.
				  He served on a mission for the Romanian Government in 1919, working with the
				  Romanian Bridge Commission, and on post-war recovery in Warsaw, Poland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BoetzkesHW1</container><unittitle>Harry W. Boetzkes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bogue, Virgil Gay (July 20, 1846-October 14,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Virgil Bogue was born in Canton, St. Lawrence, N. Y. and
				  graduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1868. One of the foremost
				  planners and developers of the time, he was hired in 1911 by Seattle planners
				  to design a "city for the future" which could be occupied by one million
				  people. His designs included harbor development, parks, rapid rail
				  transportation and a downtown civic center to be located in the Denny Regrade
				  area. The civic center was based on a European city model and would have
				  provided an open mall surrounded by government buildings, museums and
				  libraries, connected to the rest of the city by wide boulevards. He warned
				  against tall buildings that would make the city streets too dark and also
				  against building any roadway that would cut off the city from the waterfront.
				  Put to a vote, the plan was defeated. He also planned the completion of the
				  Northern Pacific Railroad through the Cascade Mountains to Tacoma and
				  completion of the line from Portland to Tacoma. He constructed the trans-Andean
				  railway system in Peru and solved the problem of bringing water to San
				  Francisco from the Hetch Hetchy Valley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BogueVG1</container><unittitle>Virgil Gay Bogue</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of his portrait on the cover of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Town Crier</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bolcom, William (May 26, 1938- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Bolcom was born in Seattle, Washington. At the age of
				  11, he entered the University of Washington to study composition privately with
				  George Frederick McKay and John Verrall and piano with Madame Berthe Poncy
				  Jacobson. He later studied with Darius Milhaud. While at the Paris
				  Conservatoire, he received the 2ème Prix de Composition. Bolcom won the
				  Pulitzer Prize for music in 1988, the National Medal of Arts, two Grammy
				  Awards, the Detroit Music Award and was named 2007 Composer of the Year by
				  Musical America. He taught composition at the University of Michigan from 1973
				  until 2008.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BolcomW1</container><unittitle>William Bolcom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Office of News Services, University of Washington, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Boleyn, Anne ( c. 1501 – May 19, 1536) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anne Boleyn was Queen of England from 1533 to 1536, as the
				  second wife of King Henry VIII. The circumstances of her marriage and of her
				  execution by beheading for treason and other charges made her a key figure in
				  the political and religious upheaval that marked the start of the English
				  Reformation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">4</container><container type="item">BoleynA1</container><unittitle>Anne Boleyn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bolinger, Walter A. (November 3, 1863 - April 20,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter A. Bolinger was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas and came
				  to Washington State in 1889. He was an apple orchardist in the Methow
				  Valley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bolles, Thomas (September 25, 1902-December 17,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas (Tom) Bolles graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1926. He rowed for the UW 1924 to 1926 and later was the coach of the UW
				  freshman crew, coaching them to four national freshman titles. His last year of
				  coaching at the UW was 1936, the year the UW Crew won Olympic gold. After the
				  Olympics he accepted the head coaching position at Harvard. He coached there
				  until retirement in 1951 and is credited with the resurgence of the Harvard
				  program; his crews won the Harvard-Yale race in all but two of the years he
				  coached. After retirement from coaching, he was Director of Athletics for
				  Harvard until 1963.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BollesT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Full-length view of Bolles standing
					 in front of boathouse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BollesT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Three-quarters view of Bolles in
					 front of boathouse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bolling, George Melville (April 13, 1871-June 1,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Melville Bolling was born in Baltimore, MD and educated
				  at Loyola College in Baltimore and Johns Hopkins. After graduation, he taught
				  Greek Languages and Literature as well as Sanskrit at Ohio State University
				  until his retirement in 1943. He was one of the founders of the Linguistic
				  Society of America and was its editor during the first fifteen years of its
				  existence. He served as president of the society in 1930. He wrote several
				  books, including<emph render="italic">Ilias Atheniensium</emph>. In 1920, the
				  Greek government awarded him the Cross of Gold of the Knights of the Redeemer.
				  His papers are held at the State Historical Society of Missouri.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BollingGM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Melville Bolling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">O. M. Kiefar Studio</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bolton, Frederick Elmer (May 9, 1866-March 10,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Elmer Bolton grew up on a small frontier farm near
				  Tomah in southern Wisconsin. He became interested in education early in his
				  life and worked as a teacher, principle or superintendent for various two room
				  schools, high schools, and normal schools in Wisconsin. Later he served as dean
				  of the College of Education at the University of Iowa. In 1912, Bolton moved to
				  Seattle, where he was the dean of the College of Education at the University of
				  Washington. Bolton authored or co-authored a number of books including 
				  <emph render="italic">The Beginning Superintendent</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">History of Education in Washington</emph>. During his
				  career, Bolton was active in the Progressive Movement. He was a strong advocate
				  for the development of junior colleges in Washington State and played a key
				  role in the organization and success of the Northwest Association of Secondary
				  and Higher Schools. His collection of photographs of public schools and school
				  buses is held at the University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BoltonFE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Elmer Bolton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1941</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">La Pine, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bond, Carrie Minetta Jacobs (August 11, 1862 – December
				  28, 1946)- see Carrie Jacobs-Bond</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bond, Gladys Baker (May 7, 1912 -August 13, 1985)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gladys Baker Bond was born in Berryville, Arkansas; her
				  childhood years were spent in the Ozarks of Arkansas. On September 2, 1934, she
				  married Floyd James Bond and had one son, Nicholas Peter. She lived in Idaho
				  and Washington all of her adult life and was an officer of the Idaho Writers
				  League between 1952 and 1954. Bond's books for children cover a wide range of
				  subjects and are often autobiographical. She wrote under the pseudonyms Jo
				  Mendel (The Tucker series) and Holly Beth Walker (the Meg series), as well as
				  her own name. She is credited with writing <emph render="italic">The Mystery of
				  the Uninvited Guest </emph>(1977), <emph render="italic">The Mystery of the
				  Castaway Children</emph> (1978), and <emph render="italic">The Sasquatch
				  Mystery</emph> (1979). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BondGB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gladys Baker Bond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fran Rader, Lewiston, ID</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bone, Homer Truett (January 25, 1883 – March 11, 1970)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Franklin, Indiana, Bone and his family moved to Tacoma,
				  Washington in 1899. He attended Tacoma Law School and was admitted to the Bar
				  in 1911. He specialized in labor law and served as an assistant special
				  prosecutor for Pierce County in 1912, as the Corporate Counsel for the Port of
				  Tacoma from 1918 to 1932, and as an attorney for Tacoma City Light. Bone ran
				  unsuccessfully for prosecuting attorney and Mayor of Tacoma as a Socialist, and
				  for the Third District Congressional seat as a Farmer-Labor candidate. In 1922
				  he served in the Washington State House, where he advocated for the ability of
				  local government to form public utility districts. In 1928, Bone again ran
				  unsuccessfully for Congress as a Republican. In 1932, he won election to the
				  United States Senate, this time as a Democrat, and served from 1933-1944. He
				  continued his advocacy for public owned power and other progressive causes,
				  supporting creation of the Bonneville Dam and the Grand Coulee Dam. Bone, along
				  with Senator Matthew Neely and Representative Warren Magnuson, wrote the
				  legislation which created the National Cancer Institute. On April 1, 1944, Bone
				  was nominated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to a seat on the United States
				  Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, was confirmed by the United States
				  Senate on April 1, 1944, and received his commission the same day. He returned
				  to the private practice of law in San Francisco, California, from 1956 to 1968.
				  His cousin was the Governor of Alaska, Scott C. Bone.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Senator Homer Bone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1933 and 1944</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Senator Bone giving the opening
					 address at the Democratic convention in Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 14, 1938</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Senator Homer Bone in his office when
					 he was named as a U.S. Appellate Judge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 2, 1944</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">A.P. Wirephoto</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Senator Homer Bone in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographe">A.P. Wirephoto</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was sent by Bone to P- I July
					 19, 1943 with U. S. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs letterhead.</p></note><note><p>P-I in the previous note refers to the <emph>Seattle
					 Post-Intelligencer</emph></p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT5</container><unittitle>Portrait of Homer Bone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943?</unitdate></did><note><p>This appears to be a cropped version of the previous photo
					 used in a publication; it has halftone screening.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHT6</container><unittitle>Homer Bone at a campaign speech in Wenatchee
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on front: Homer T. Bone, democratic canditate (sic)
					 for U. S. Senator, in a campaign speech at Wenatchee in 1932 blasted the Power
					 Trust and Insull interests.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bone, Hugh Alvin Jr. (January 14, 1909-February 5,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Bone was born in Illinois and earned his Ph.D. at
				  Northwestern University; he taught there and at the University of Maryland
				  before joining the UW faculty in 1948. Adviser to politicians such as
				  Washington Governor Dan Evans, he lectured at universities throughout the
				  United States and wrote several books including <emph render="italic">Smear
				  Politics: Analysis of 1940 Campaign Literature</emph>and <emph render="italic">American Politics and the Party System</emph>. He was the
				  chairman of the University of Washington Political Science department from 1959
				  until 1968. In 1956, aided by a Ford Foundation grant, he established one of
				  the nation's first legislative-internship programs for college students. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHA1</container><unittitle>Hugh Bone at podium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneHA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hugh Bone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John A. Moore, Office of News Services, University of Washington, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD14</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, Professor Hugh Bone,
					 Wing Luke, Alex Gottfried and internship class</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Professor Hugh Bone's (Pol. Sci.) first
						internship class in Olympia. Far right (w/ cigarette) is Alex Gottfried who
						later became a faculty member in Pol. Sci. Wing Luke is in front row to the
						Gov.'s right.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bone, Scott Cardelle (February 15, 1860-January 27,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Scott C. Bone was the third Territorial Governor of Alaska,
				  serving from 1921 to 1925, appointed by President Warren G. Harding. It was
				  Governor Bone who ordered a relay of dog teams to transport diphtheria
				  antitoxin to Nome in 1925 to thwart a threatened epidemic, a mission now
				  memorialized by the Iditarod sled dog race. He belonged to numerous
				  organizations and held many positions, including chairman of the Alaska Bureau
				  of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, delegate-at-large to the Republican
				  National Convention, member (and at one time president of) the Gridiron Club,
				  member of the National Press Association, director of publicity for the
				  Republican National Committee, life member of the Red Cross, and the Decorated
				  Order of Sacred Treasure of Japan. He was the editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Washington Post</emph>, founded the <emph render="italic">Washington Herald</emph> and later was the editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>. His cousin was Senator
				  and later Judge Homer Truett Bone.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoneSC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Scott Cardelle Bone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 25, 1922</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Harris &amp; Ewing, Washington, D.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: To my good friend, Mr. J. R. Fowle, whose
					 attractive home I occupied on a memorable visit to Fairbanks in July, 1921, and
					 with abiding appreciation of his fine hospitality. Sincerely, Scott C.
					 Bone.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bong, Mary (1880-1958) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in China as Sing Deuh, Ah Fuh/Fur, or Qui Fah, Mary Bong
				  was also known as "China Mary." She came to America at age nine, first landing
				  in Victoria, B.C. where she met her first husband, Ah Bong. He owned the Sang
				  Wo Bakery and Restaurant in Sitka, Alaska. She learned to speak both English
				  and Tlingit and acted as a midwife for women in Sitka. After the death of her
				  first husband, she married Sing Lee and worked in his laundry. In 1909, having
				  divorced Lee, she married Fred Johnson and worked with him in a variety of
				  occupations including dairy farming, fox farming, prospecting and fishing. She
				  was the first woman troller in the area, earning the reputation for good
				  catches, even in stormy weather. After Johnson died, she worked as the matron
				  of the federal jail in Sitka.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BongM1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Mary Bong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bonker, Don Leroy (March 7, 1937- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Don Bonker is an American former congressman for the state of
				  Washington and a Democrat. He served as a member of the United States House of
				  Representatives from 1975 to 1989, representing Washington's third
				  Congressional district. He did not run for reelection in 1988 so he could run
				  for nomination to the United States Senate, where he narrowly lost in the
				  primary to Democrat Mike Lowry, who was defeated in the general election by
				  Republican Slade Gorton. During his time in the House, Bonker was a senior
				  member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and chairman of the Subcommittee
				  on International Economic Policy and Trade. He also served on the President's
				  Export Council and headed former House Speaker Tip O'Neill's Trade Task Force,
				  which led to passage of the 1988 Omnibus Trade Act. During his tenure in
				  Congress, Bonker authored and was a principal sponsor of significant trade
				  legislation, such as the Export Trading Company Act and the Export
				  Administration Act. He helped establish the Grays Harbor National Wildlife
				  Refuge and the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, added Protection
				  Island to the National Wildlife Refuge system, preserved the Point of Arches in
				  the Olympic National Park, added 250,000 acres to the 1984 Washington
				  Wilderness Act, and banned the export of Western red cedar. Bonker is now the
				  president and CEO of the International Management and Development Institute, on
				  the board of the Foundation for U.S.-Russia Business Cooperation, and is
				  executive vice president of APCO Worldwide. He is the author of 
				  <emph render="italic">America's Trade Crisis</emph>and is a writer and speaker
				  on U.S. trade policy. His monthly column on trade policy appears in a number of
				  newspapers around the country. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BonkerDL1</container><unittitle> Don Leroy Bonker in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1975 and 1985?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bonneville, General Benjamin Louis Eulalie (April 14,
				  1796 – June 12, 1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Louis Eulalie de Bonneville was a French-born officer
				  in the United States Army, fur trapper, and explorer in the American West. He
				  is noted for his expeditions to the Oregon Country and the Great Basin, and in
				  particular for blazing portions of the Oregon Trail. During his lifetime,
				  Bonneville was made famous by an account of his explorations in the west
				  written by Washington Irving, <emph render="italic">The Adventures of Captain
				  Bonneville</emph>, published in 1837. Bonneville Salt Flats and Bonneville Dam
				  are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BonnevilleBLE1</container><unittitle>General Bonneville</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1873</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">C.A. Zimmerman, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>This photograph is a later copy of the photograph made in
					 1873. The photographer, Zimmerman, did not make the original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bonney, Lyman Walter (March 17, 1843-July 18,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lyman Walter Bonney was born in Iowa and in 1852, crossed the
				  plains by ox team with his family. The family went first to Salem, Oregon and
				  later settled near Steilacoom, Washington. Bonney left home in 1859, working as
				  a carpenter and eventually owning a sash and door factory in Idaho. After
				  selling that business, he went to San Francisco where he traded in mining
				  stocks. He returned to Seattle in 1880 and purchased an interest in a cabinet
				  shop and undertaking business that O. C. Shorey, his brother-in-law, had
				  started in 1868. Shorey's interest was eventually purchased by George Stewart;
				  when Stewart became Seattle's postmaster, Bonney brought in Henry Watson to
				  manage the business. Watson was made a partner, and the firm became
				  Bonney-Watson Company, one of Seattle's oldest businesses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BonneyLW1</container><unittitle>Lyman Walter Bonney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of Curtis Studio Arctic Club photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bonney, William Pierce (April 24, 1856-January 28,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Pierce Bonney was born in Steliacoom, Washington. His
				  father had crossed the plains by ox team in 1852, arriving first in Salem,
				  Oregon and then moving to Steilacoom. During the trip west, Sherwood Bonney's
				  wife, Elizabeth, his son, Alvin, and his brother, Timothy, died. In 1853,
				  Sherwood married his sister-in-law Lydia; William's half-brother was Lyman
				  Bonney. William Bonney was active in Tacoma business and civic affairs. He was
				  a member of the first Tacoma Council in 1884 and established a drugstore on
				  Pacific Avenue and Eighth Street. He was the Secretary of the Washington State
				  Historical Society for many years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BonneyWP1</container><unittitle>William Pierce Bonney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. M. Lunn, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boole, George D. (October,1858 - May 27,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Boole was born in Massachusetts. He was president of
				  Western Hardware and Metal Company and was on the executive committee of the
				  Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition in 1909. He gained control of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>shortly before its sale
				  to the Hearst Corporation in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BooleGD1</container><unittitle>George Boole</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso: "Seattle, Alaska Yukon Pacific Exp[osition],
					 1909"</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boose, John Arthur (March 12, 1878-October 1, 1959) -
				  See Stewart Hall Holbrook collection</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1940</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>John Arthur Boose was a soapbox speaker and an IWW leader in
				  both Duluth, Minnesota and Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1922, he was convicted under the
				  Espionage Act and sentenced to five years in prison at Leavenworth, Kansas.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Booth, Laurence Stephen (March 27, 1861 - April 3,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laurence S. Booth was born at Battle Creek, Michigan and came to
				  the Northwest with his parents at the age of 2. He attended the University of
				  Washington. At the age of 26, he became a partner in the pioneer abstract firm
				  of Booth &amp; Briscoe, which in the course of the years became successively
				  the Booth &amp; Hanford Abstract Co., the Booth Whitlesey Hanford Abstract Co.
				  and finally the Washington Title Insurance Co., with statewide subsidiary
				  companies. He was president and chairman of the Board of the latter company. He
				  was a trustee of the Seattle Community Fund from its inception, Deputy Auditor
				  of King County from 1880 to 1887, a member of the National Association of Real
				  Estate Boards, the Seattle Real Estate Board, the Northwest Real Estate Board,
				  the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and the Municipal League, a former President of
				  the National Association of Title Men and a former Chairman of the State
				  Taxation Committee of the National Association of Real Estate Boards. He was
				  also a member of the first amateur baseball organization in Seattle, the first
				  athletic association and the first association for protection of game, the old
				  Volunteer Fire Department and the National Guard, in which he was a Commander
				  of Company B of the 1st Regiment. He was one of the two or three men who first
				  purposed the $40 million tax limitation. He was the grandfather of Washington
				  Governor (1985-1993) Booth Gardner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E.W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonFC1</container><unittitle>Frank Cline Jackson standing near stack of papers with
					 J. W. Wheeler and Laurence S. Booth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Frank Cline Jackson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD3</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with stack of petitions containing
					 125,000 signatures for Initiative 141 40 mill limit, presented by Laurence S.
					 Booth and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>The Washington Property Tax Levy Limits Initiative, also known
					 as Initiative 114, was on the November 3, 1936 ballot in Washington as an
					 Initiative to the People, where it was approved. The measure limited the
					 aggregate annual rate of levy on real and personal property for state, county,
					 city, school district and road districts to forty mills and limited the tax
					 levy for public universities to two mills.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borah, William Edgar (June 29, 1865-January 19,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Borah was a prominent Republican attorney and longtime
				  United States Senator from Idaho, noted for his oratorical skills and
				  isolationist views. Progressive, independent, and often outspoken, he was known
				  as "The Lion of Idaho." He was in office from 1907 until his death in 1940.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorahWE1</container><unittitle>William Borah in kitchen of the Mayflower Hotel in
					 Washington, D.C. with chef Nicholas Sabatini and former Senator Fred T. Dubois,
					 inspecting potatoes for the Idaho State Society banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tucker Photography, Boise, ID</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The banquet was held March 3, 1926. The photo was taken in
					 February.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bordeaux, Thomas (June 10, 1852-June 13,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Bordeaux was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and moved
				  to Washington State in 1875. He was active in developing the Northwest lumber
				  industry, and with his brother Joseph, was the founder of the Mason County
				  Logging Company and the Mumby Lumber and Shingle Company. He was also the
				  vice-president of the Washington Forest Fire Association. The town of Bordeaux,
				  a community southwest of Olympia in southwest Thurston County, was named for
				  him and his brother. The town, established in 1900, was once a logging and
				  sawmill town, but suffered from the depletion of local timber resources. During
				  Bordeaux's boom between World War I and 1930, it had two hotels, school,
				  numerous saloons, banks, and large residential area. In addition to the town of
				  Bordeaux, the brothers also owned a twin timber town across the hills south of
				  McCleary at Malone. The employment in both towns shrank throughout the 1930s
				  with each closing within a few years of each other.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BordeauxT1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Thomas Bordeaux</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Gift of Mrs. Kellogg and Mrs. Hallgreen,
					 1974.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BordeauxT2</container><unittitle>Copy of a photograph of Thomas Bordeaux's home at 14th
					 and Aloha on Capitol Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borst, Jeremiah William (September 23, 1829 -June 23,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jeremiah W. Borst was born and raised in Tioga County, New York.
				  He traveled west by ox team in 1850 to seek gold in California. Finding gold,
				  he used it to rent a farm near Sacramento. By 1858, he had made $8,000 from
				  raising barley and decided to move north to Seattle. He settled in what was
				  left of Fort Alden, a blockhouse that had been abandoned the previous year
				  where the towns of Snoqualmie and North Bend are today. He was the first
				  permanent non-Native American settler in the area. He planted an orchard,
				  raised onions and potatoes, grazed cattle, and eventually went into hop
				  farming. In 1865, Borst accompanied Seattle pioneer Arthur Denny, William
				  Perkins and a guide from the Snoqualmie tribe on an exploration trip where they
				  made a plan to widen the trail and create a wagon road through Snoqualmie Pass.
				  In 1868, he took charge of building the first road through the pass. Sometime
				  in the mid-1880s, Borst and his wife, Kate, moved to Fall City where he hired
				  B.C. Majors to survey and plat the town of Fall City, anticipating the Seattle,
				  Lake Shore &amp; Eastern Railroad coming through the property. The plat was
				  recorded in 1887; however, to Borst's disappointment, the railroad missed the
				  town by a mile when the tracks finally arrived in 1889. He operated the trading
				  post nearest to the pass and owned almost all the land in the prairie. Eager to
				  have more people move into the valley, he aided many of them financially. He
				  paid the salaries of the first schoolteachers, and later served on the first
				  school board. He also served two terms as King County commissioner. He is
				  considered to be the father of the Snoqualmie Valley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorstJeremiah1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Jeremiah Borst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is a modern (20th century) copy with the
					 background airbrushed out for publication purposes. The possible date of the
					 original photograph is determined by the use of it to create the below.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorstJeremiah2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Jeremiah Borst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>This is copied from the portrait listed above.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borst, Joseph (October 15, 1822-October 29,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Borst was born in New York State. He came west in an ox
				  team train when he was 25, following the Oregon Trail to Oregon City where he
				  wintered. In the spring of 1846, he continued his journey to the Puget Sound
				  country in Washington, where he was among the very first settlers of what is
				  now Centralia, Lewis County. In November 1846, he registered his donation land
				  claim of 320 acres on the north side of the Chehalis River and prepared the
				  land for crops. On October 15, 1854, he married Mary Adeline Roundtree whose
				  father was a doctor and the doorkeeper of the Washington Territory's first
				  House of Representatives. They lived first in a small cabin and later in a
				  blockhouse that Joseph built during the Indian Wars of 1855-56. In 1860, Joseph
				  began construction of a new home; at the time the house and barn were
				  completed, Joseph said that they were so well built, they would last for 80
				  years. The house is still standing and open to the public. He was a successful
				  farmer and stock-raiser, also owning a ranch in Ellensburg, Eastern Washington,
				  which he devoted to cattle growing.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorstJoseph1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Joseph Borst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Halftone reproduction</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borst, Mary Adeline (June 1, 1838-February 18,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Adeline Roundtree was born in Illinois, the daughter of Dr.
				  James N. Roundtree. In 1852, he brought his family across the plains to Lewis
				  County, Washington Territory where he was a pioneer physician and surgeon. She
				  married James Brost on October 15, 1854; they had eight children. Both she and
				  her husband were among the earliest settlers of the Chehalis River area; their
				  home in Centralia still stands and is open to the public.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorstMA1</container><unittitle>Mary Adeline Borst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mertens, Centralia, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borzone, Frank (December 21, 1850 - March 7,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Borzone (Berzone) was born in Italy. He married Louisa
				  Mortola in 1870; the couple came to Washington in 1883, settling first in Port
				  Ludlow and then in Seattle. Borzone was a carpenter and shipwright. In 1902, he
				  presented a petition to the Ballard (WA) Council for a franchise to build and
				  maintain a toll bridge across Salmon Bay. After his wife died in 1923, he
				  married Viktoria Newman in 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorzoneF1</container><unittitle>Frank Borzone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">F. H. Bertrand, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Borzone, Louisa Mortola (December 5, 1847 - March 18,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louisa Mortola, the daugher of Philip Mortola and Rosa Magnasco
				  Mortola, was born in Genoa, Italy. She married Frank Borzone in Italy. The
				  couple came to Washington in 1883, settling first in Port Ludlow and then in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorzoneLM1</container><unittitle>Louisa Borzone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">F. H. Bertrand, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bossard, John (February 9, 1849 - May 10,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Bossard, a native of Switzerland, lived in Newport,
				  Kentucky before moving to Happy Valley, near what is now Redmond, Washington.
				  He was known as a silversmith and orchardist and had a farm in Happy Valley. He
				  was married to Eliza Watkins.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BossardJ1</container><unittitle>John Bossard with group of men including Erick Olson
					 and Louis Hilliger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bostetter, Edward Everett (August 13, 1914-April 16,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Everett Bostetter was born in Hagerstown, MD and
				  graduated from Franklin and Marshall College. He received his M.A. in 1937 and
				  his Ph.D. in 1938, both from Princeton. He taught at the University of
				  Minnesota before coming to the University of Washington in 1940 where he was an
				  English professor specializing in Romantic Literature. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The Romantic Ventriloquists: Wordsworth, Coleridge,
				  Keats, Shelley, Byron</emph> and edited <emph render="italic">Twentieth Century
				  Interpretations of Don Juan</emph>. His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BostetterEE1</container><unittitle>Edward Everett Bostetter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Boswell, Helen</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Boswell appeared in several theater productions at Cornish
				  School in Seattle in the 1920s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG4</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey and Helen Boswell in<emph> Joy</emph>, a
					 play by John Galsworthy, directed by Burton James.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1924</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wayne Albee, McBride Studio, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso of image: Mark Tobey &amp; Helen Boswell in
						<emph>Joy</emph> by Galsworthy, directed by Burton James.</p><p>Written on verso of copy of photograph: Mark Tobey and Helen
						Boswell in <emph>Joy</emph> by Galsworhty, direc. by Burton James, photo by
						Wayne Albee, McBride Studio. Prob. Cornish School.</p><p>The play was presented at the Cornish School on June 13 and
						14, 1924.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Mark Tobey subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boughton, Gladys Rhua (December 18, 1898-March 15,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gladys Rhua Boughton received her B.A. from the University of
				  Denver. She taught cataloging and classification at the University of
				  Washington before being appointment acting director of the UW School of
				  Librarianship in 1950. She later became director before resigning in 1955 to
				  devote herself to research.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoughtonGR1</container><unittitle>Gladys Rhua Boughton </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the 1954 and 1955 editions of the 
					 <emph>Tyee.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boulet, Rt. Rev. Msgr. John Baptiste (July, 1834- August
				  4, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Father John Baptiste Boulet arrived in Washington on October 15,
				  1864. In 1878, he succeeded Father Chirouse at the St. Paul Mission where he
				  served the Lummi and Nooksack people in the Puget Sound region for 40 years. He
				  brought a printing press with him and printed many items in the Snohomish and
				  English languages. He built the Church of the Assumption in Bellingham in 1890
				  and also traveled from Bellingham to outlying areas to provide care and
				  instruction to families.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BouletJB1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Rt. Rev. Msgr. John Boulet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hegg, New Whatcom, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BouletJB2</container><unittitle>John Baptiste Boulet and J. W. Donovan, Jr. on
					 sidewalk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 15, 1916</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bourbon, Rollo Preston (January 4, 1890 - May 11,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rollo Preston Bourbon was the commanding officer of the 50th
				  General Hospital from September 1, 1942 until August 1, 1945. The 50th General
				  Hospital, officially activated on September 4, 1942, was comprised largely of
				  volunteer physicians and nurses from Seattle. In World War II, the 50th General
				  operated a hospital in Glasgow, Scotland, and then was chosen to follow in the
				  invasion of Normandy. The expedition included 68 doctors, 105 nurses and about
				  500 enlisted personnel.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BourbonRP1</container><unittitle>Rollo Preston Bourbon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Image signed on front: "To K. K. Sherwood-a fine soldier,
					 wartime comrade and friend. Cordially, Rollo P. Bourbon Col. M. C."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boutelle, Frazier Augustus (September 12, 1840–February
				  12, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frazier Augustus Boutelle served in the US Army for 57 years,
				  fighting in the Civil War and the Indian Wars and working as a recruiter in
				  World War I. He was born in Troy, New York; the family relocated to northern
				  California in the 1850s. His military career began on June 4, 1861 when he
				  enlisted as one of the first volunteers of the 5th New York Cavalry, Company A.
				  He served at Antietam, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Wilderness, Gettysburg, and
				  the Second Battle of Bull Run and was on the staff of Gen. J. H. Wilson, under
				  Gen. Philip Sheridan; he mustered out on July 19, 1865. On February 12, 1866,
				  he re-enlisted as a private in the regular Army and was sent to the West to
				  join the First Cavalry's Company F. By November, he was at Fort Boise, Idaho at
				  the beginning of Crook's Winter Campaign. He served in the Indian Wars and the
				  Modoc War. A scuffle with Scarface Charley precipitated the Battle of Lost
				  River subsequently gained him a brevet promotion and a citation for
				  distinguished service. He was also given a medal during the Nez Perce conflict.
				  He retired Aug. 27, 1895. In June 1889 he was appointed acting superintendent
				  of Yellowstone National Park which was initially run by civilians. The Army
				  took over management in 1886, establishing Fort Yellowstone at Mammoth Hot
				  Springs and developing systems for conservation and resource management that
				  served as foundations for the National Park Service. Boutelle supported the
				  conservation of bison, advocated stocking streams to maintain fish populations,
				  insisted that travelers use established campgrounds, and developed a system for
				  rapid and effective response to fires, which at that point were primarily
				  caused by park visitors. He gained recognition in conservation circles for his
				  advocacy of protection for wildlife, landscape, and natural features. His
				  demands for more resources for firefighting caused Secretary of the Interior
				  John Willock Noble to dismiss him from the superintendent's post. He returned
				  to service with the 1st Cavalry's Company K, retired from the Army a second
				  time on Aug. 27, 1895 and immediately took up work with the Washington National
				  Guard. In 1896 Gov. John H. McGraw appointed Boutelle to head the Guard as
				  Adjutant-General, with the rank of brigadier general. Boutelle developed a
				  streamlined reporting system, among other efficiencies, and coped with a Sand
				  Island incursion of armed Oregon fishermen. Adjutant-General had previously
				  been an elected post, and political turmoil ended Boutelle's term in January
				  1897. Boutelle returned to duty in 1905 as a recruiting officer and was active
				  at the Seattle office during World War I, the oldest serving officer of his
				  time. When the office closed in 1919, he retired from military service for the
				  third and final time. His papers are housed at the University of Oregon
				  Libraries' Special Collections &amp; University Archives.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitzgeraldMJ1</container><unittitle> Maurice Fitzgerald with Colonel Frazier Augustus
					 Boutelle and Histo, also known as Topplish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption on front of photo: Three veterans of Modoc Indian War
					 1872-73. Note from back of photo: Presented to my esteemed friend C.B. Bagley
					 this 1st day of December 1923. Maurice Fitzgerald.</p><p>Filed under Maurice Fitzgerald subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bowden, Angie Elizabeth (May 6, 1862 - November 29,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Angie Elizabeth Burt moved to Walla Walla in 1866 and to Seattle
				  in 1888. She wrote <emph>The Early Schools of Washington Territory.</emph> She
				  married Edmund Bowden, an insurance executive and founder of Bowden, Gazzam
				  &amp; Arnold Insurance Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Angie E. Bowden and unidentifed woman
					 standing by Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 31, 1911</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Chief Seattle subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bowen, John Clyde (May 12, 1888 - April 27,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Clyde Bowen was born in Newbern, Tennessee and graduated
				  from the University of Tennessee and Harvard Law School. He was admitted to the
				  bar in Tennessee in 1961, in Hawaii in 1917 and in Washington in 1919. He
				  served in the Army as a 2nd lieutenant during World War I. Bowen was named to
				  the Washington State Senate in 1931 and then became a legal advisor to Governor
				  Clarence Martin in 1933. From 1933 to 1934, he was a member of the Columbia
				  River Basin Commission which promoted the Grand Coulee Dam project. He also
				  served as a Collector, Internal Revenue for Washington and Alaska before
				  President Roosevelt appointed him a U. S. District Court judge in 1934. He was
				  chief justice from 1939 to 1959 and took senior judge status in 1961.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bowers, Peter M. (May 15, 1918 - April 27,
				  2003)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Bowers was an aeronautical engineer with Boeing in Seattle
				  as well as a journalist specializing in the field of aviation. He was known in
				  the general aviation community for his work with <emph render="italic">General
				  Aviation News</emph>with over 800 articles detailing historic aircraft for a
				  column called <emph>Of Wings and Things.</emph> He served as a contributing
				  editor for Sentry Publications' twin magazine titles <emph render="italic">Wings</emph> and <emph render="italic">Airpower</emph>, drawing
				  on a lifetime of aviation photographs of his own, and of a vast archive
				  collected through his employment at Boeing. Commissioned in 1943, he was
				  eventually assigned to the China/Burma/India theater as a maintenance officer;
				  by the end of the war, his abilities to photograph and categorize aircraft led
				  to his being placed in charge of the U.S. Army Aircraft Recognition Program.
				  After leaving the Army in 1947, he was hired as an engineer by the Boeing
				  Company in Seattle and remained with Boeing until his retirement in 1988. He
				  was an avid aviation photographer and a designer of home-built aircraft such as
				  the Fly Baby, a single-seat light aircraft, and Namu II, a single-engine
				  two-seat recreational aircraft. He redesigned a 1918 Fokker D.VII monoplane in
				  association with Rheinhold Platz, the original designer with a view to starting
				  a replica building program. He built a full-scale Fokker Triplane replicas well
				  as a full-scale replica of the Wright Model EX of 1911, the first airplane to
				  cross the American continent. He published 26 books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Guide to Homebuilts</emph>, <emph render="italic">Unconventional Aircraft</emph>, <emph render="italic"> Guide to
				  Aviation Photography</emph>, and <emph render="italic">Boeing Aircraft Since
				  1916</emph>. He was inducted into the EAA Homebuilder's Hall of Fame in
				  November, 2004. His photographs are held at the Museum of Flight in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BowersPM1</container><unittitle>Peter Bowers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">The Boeing Company</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bowlby, Wilson (July 4, 1818-January 15,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilson Bowlby was born in New Hampton, New Jersey. He went to
				  Cincinnati to attend medical lectures at the Eclectic Institution and began
				  practicing medicine in Fairfield, Indiana in 1845. In 1852, he went to Oregon,
				  first to Portland and later to Hillsboro, where he lived until 1860. In 1860,
				  he moved to Forest Grove to continue his medical practice. From 1869 to 1873,
				  he was collector of internal revenue, with his residence at Portland. He was a
				  member of the last territorial as well as the first state legislature. He
				  served in the lower House for four terms and in the Senate for one term, where
				  he was chosen presiding officer. During the Civil War, he served as examining
				  surgeon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BowlbyW1</container><unittitle>Wilson Bowlby</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bowman, Henry (January 14, 1833-November 30,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Bowman, one of the earliest settlers of Umatilla County,
				  was born in Tyler County, Virginia. In 1860, he traveled to Oregon in a train
				  of thirty-six wagons. Arriving in Umatilla Country, he selected a place on
				  Birch Creek, ten miles south of the present site of Pendleton and began
				  stock-raising. He later moved to Pendleton where he had a livery stable.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BowmanH1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Henry Bowman in top hat and with a Masonic
					 tie pin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bowmer, Angus Livingston (September 25, 1904 – May 26,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Angus Livingston Bowmer was born in Bellingham, Washington, the
				  only child of Charles C. Bowmer and Florence "Flora" Priest. He moved with his
				  family at least twice, living in Mount Vernon, Washington and Oak Harbor,
				  Washington. He graduated from the Washington State Normal School at Bellingham
				  (now Western Washington University) in 1923. He attended the University of
				  Washington in Seattle in the 1930s, acting in at least two Shakespeare
				  productions under guest director Ben Iden Payne. Payne was an Englishman whose
				  ideas for neo-Elizabethan staging of Shakespeare’s plays provided inspiration
				  later in Bowmer's life when he began producing the plays that became the Oregon
				  Shakespeare Festival. In 1931, Bowmer was invited to become an instructor in
				  English at Southern Oregon Normal School, a predecessor to Southern Oregon
				  University, in Ashland, Oregon. He organized theater activities in Ashland and
				  continued teaching at the college until he retired in 1971. Bowmer remained
				  active in the festival until his death in 1979.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BowmerAL1</container><unittitle>Angus Livingston Bowmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1956 and 1966?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dwaine E. Smith, Ashland, OR</persname></origination></did><note><p>Dwaine E. Smith photographed the Oregon Shakespeare Festival
					 from 1956 to 1966.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boyd, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">Boyd1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Mr. Boyd in suit and bow tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Boyle, Brian J. (April 23, 1941- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Brian Boyle received a Bachelor of Science degree from Montana
				  School of Mines and an MBA from the University of Portland and worked as a
				  supervising engineer and metallurgist in the metals industry. He was elected
				  Commissioner of Public Lands in 1980, serving until 1993. During his tenure,
				  the agency imposed tough restrictions on logging, setting aside 40,000 acres as
				  natural preserves. In 1989, he established the DNR Natural Resources
				  Conservation Area program and designated Cypress Island as one of the first in
				  the program. Until then, most of the island was privately owned, and over half
				  the total acreage slated for development as a resort. Through his efforts, the
				  state purchased the land from the developer, bringing state ownership to 4,700
				  acres. He took strong stands in favor of log exports and mixed forest uses and
				  attempted to negotiate a reasonable compromise in the spotted owl controversy.
				  Prior to his election, he was executive director of the Pacific Innovations
				  Group and chairman of the Cowlitz County Commissioners. After leaving office,
				  Boyle was a visiting professor at the University of Washington and directed a
				  study on the future of the U.S. Forest Service. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoyleBJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Brian Boyle sitting in front of map
					 of Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BoyleBJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Brian Boyle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1985 and 1989?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Gale Johnson, Jeffers Studio, Olympia, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bozarth, Mary Ebey Wright (1816-June 2,
				  1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ebey was born in Columbus, Ohio, the daughter of Jacob and
				  Sarah Ebey. The Ebeys were among the first settlers on Whidbey Island, arriving
				  in 1854. She married Thomas S. Wright on September 25, 1842 and divorced him on
				  February 13, 1857; they had two children, Polk and Almira. In 1858, she married
				  Urban E. Bozarth. In 1868, county commissioners approached her about using her
				  family's burial ground overlooking Ebey's Prairie for their first public
				  cemetery, and Bozarth agreed. On April 6, 1869, she sold the one and a quarter
				  acre plot to Island County for $1.00. The county records referred to the
				  burying ground as the "County Grave Yard on the Hill," later renamed Sunnyside
				  Cemetery, where Bozarth and the rest of her family are buried.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BozarthMEW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Ebey Wright Bozarth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1865</unitdate></did><note><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brackett, George (May 22, 1841-December 27,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Brackett was born and raised in eastern Canada, where his
				  father was a logger. He left home in his late teens and over the next decade
				  logged timber in New Brunswick and then in Wisconsin. In 1869 he headed farther
				  west, staying briefly in San Francisco before moving to Washington Territory
				  where he and his brother logged at several locations around Puget Sound.
				  Together they established a logging camp in Ballard, and Brackett also secured
				  a land claim at La Conner. Searching out new stands of timber, he rowed along
				  the eastern shore of Puget Sound and was attracted by the site that became
				  Edmonds. In 1876, he purchased acreage and moved there; meanwhile he logged an
				  area along the Sammamish River at a spot still called Brackett's Landing in
				  present-day Bothell. In 1880 he established the first store in Edmonds and four
				  years later the settlement acquired a post office, with Brackett as postmaster.
				  After Edmonds' incorporation in 1890, he became the first mayor. He operated a
				  mill and a wharf and maintained several businesses in Edmonds. He donated
				  property for a school after classes were originally held in his barn. He served
				  several terms on the city council, the last one a few years before he died in
				  1927.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrackettG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Brackett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradbury, Clement Adams (March 18, 1819-December 20,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clement Adams Bradbury was born in Maine and worked in the woods
				  from the age of thirteen. When he was twenty-five, he went to sea aboard a
				  whaler; on his second cruise, the ship ran aground on Bering Island. The crew
				  was rescued by a ship bound for the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii), where he
				  found a ship headed for the Columbia River. He reached the Columbia in
				  December, 1846 and found employment at a mill on the Oregon side of the
				  Columbia opposite Cathlamet. In 1848 he went to California to look for gold; he
				  returned to Oregon in 1851 where he was the first permanent settler on the
				  middle portion of the Lower Columbia below Sauvie’s Island and above Astoria.
				  Bradbury Slough and the one-time railroad station of Bradbury (later re-named
				  Locoda) are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradburyCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clement Adams Bradbury</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradford, James E. (December 26, 1868 - January 9,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Bradford was born in Rochester, Minnessota and graduated
				  from the University of Minnesota Law School. He moved to Seattle in 1900 and
				  was employed as the assistant in the office of the Corporation Counsel for
				  Seattle. He was appointed in 1911 to fill the unexpired term of Seattle
				  Corporation Counsel Scott Calhoun, who had resigned. He was subsequently
				  elected to the position in the municipal election and served from 1912-1916. In
				  1916 he was an unsuccessful candidate for governor on the Progressive ticket;
				  in early 1918, he ran for the office of Seattle Mayor and lost to Ole Hanson.
				  From 1928-1933 he served as the counsel for the Port of Seattle. Bradford was
				  later the state director of the National Emergency Council, the Federal Housing
				  Authority, and the National Recovery Act. In 1938, he left public service and
				  returned to private practice where he gained a reputation as a constitutional
				  lawyer. His scrapbooks are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE1</container><unittitle>Newspaper article with photograph of
					 Bradford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE2</container><unittitle>Portrait of James Bradford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Benjamin Reade, Sea ttle, WA</persname></origination><note><p>This photograph was made using studio proof paper which is
						not permanent and will fade easily. The photograph is very faded.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James Bradford, three
					 quarter view</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James
					 Bradford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE5a</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James
					 Bradford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradfordJE5b</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James
					 Bradford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Retouched version of BradfordJE5a.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradley, Robert Duncan (February 23, 1896-January 24,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Bradley was a photographer in Seattle during the early
				  part of the 20th century. He owned a photography studio on Second Avenue with
				  his brother Edwin.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradleyRD1</container><unittitle>Robert Bradley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is captioned "Robert D. Bradley, photographer."
					 It is assumed that this is a self-portrait.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradleyRD2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Robert Bradley in dark suit and
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is captioned "Robert D. Bradley, photographer."
					 It is assumed that this is a self-portrait.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradley, Thomas J. "Tom" (December 29, 1917 – September
				  29, 1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas J. "Tom" Bradley was the 38th Mayor of Los Angeles,
				  serving from 1973 to 1993. He was the only African-American mayor of that city,
				  and his 20 years in office mark the longest tenure by any mayor in the city's
				  history. His 1973 election made him the second African-American mayor of a
				  major U.S. city. Bradley retired in 1993.He ran unsuccessfully for Governor of
				  California in 1982 and 1986 and was defeated each time by Republican George
				  Deukmejian. In 1985 he was awarded the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradleyTJ1</container><unittitle>Tom Bradley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradshaw, Charles Miner (August 9, 1831-March 2,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Bradshaw was born in Bridgewater, Susquehanna County,
				  Pennsylvania and arrived in Portland, Oregon in 1852. He headed north to Port
				  Townsend where he farmed while continuing to study law. He was admitted to the
				  Washington Bar in 1864 and had a political career as sheriff, justice of the
				  peace, legislative representative, prosecuting attorney and mayor of Port
				  Townsend. In 1889 he was appointed, by President Harrison as collector of
				  customs of Puget Sound district. He wrote a history of Jefferson and Clallam
				  Counties and also owned Bradshaw Shingle Mill at Dry Creek near Port Angeles,
				  WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradshawCM1</container><unittitle>Charles Bradshaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bradstreet, Simon (baptized March 18, 1603/4 – March 27,
				  1697) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simon Bradstreet was a colonial magistrate, businessman,
				  diplomat, and the last governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Arriving in
				  Massachusetts on the Winthrop Fleet in 1630, Bradstreet was almost constantly
				  involved in the politics of the colony but became its governor only in 1679. He
				  served on diplomatic missions and as agent to the crown in London, and also
				  served as a commissioner to the New England Confederation. He was politically
				  comparatively moderate, arguing minority positions in favor of freedom of
				  speech and for accommodation of the demands of King Charles II following his
				  restoration to the throne. Bradstreet was married to Anne, the daughter of
				  Massachusetts co-founder Thomas Dudley and New England's first published poet.
				  He was a businessman, investing in land and shipping interests.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradstreetS1</container><unittitle>Simon Bradstreet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1680 and 1689?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">H. W. Smith</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Engraving by H. W. Smith from a Painting in
					 the Senate Chamber of the State House of Massachusetts.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brady, Alice Gwinn (or Quinn)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradyA1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Alice Brady standing, wearing a
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brady, John Green (May 25, 1847 – December 17,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Green Brady was orphaned at an early age and found living
				  on the streets of New York City by Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. a well-known
				  philanthropist and the father of the future President, Theodore Roosevelt.
				  Roosevelt sent him west to the family of John Green, of Tipton County, Indiana.
				  He attended Yale University and graduated in 1874. Brady moved to Alaska
				  Territory as a Presbyterian minister, missionary and lawyer. In 1878 co-founded
				  what is now Sheldon Jackson College as a school for educating Alaska Natives.
				  He was later appointed Governor for three terms serving from July 15, 1897
				  until March 2, 1906. He married Elizabeth Jane Patton in 1887 in Sitka,
				  Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradyJG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Green Brady sitting at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradyJG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Seated portrait of John Green
					 Brady</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Nowell</persname></origination></did><note><p>This is a later copy of the original Frank Nowell photograph,
					 possibly done by Webster &amp; Stevens.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brady, Ruth Coblentz (April 25, 1914-November 8,
				  2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth Coblentz Brady was a senior counselor at the UW Women's
				  Residence Halls.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BradyRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ruth Brady sitting in front of a
					 fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1955 edition of <emph>The
					 Tyee</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brainerd, Erastus (February 25, 1855 - December 25,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erastus Brainerd was an American journalist and art museum
				  curator. Born in Middletown, Connecticut to Norman and Leora (Campbell)
				  Brainerd, he attended Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard University, from
				  which he graduated at the age of 19. He served as curator of engravings at the
				  Boston Museum of Arts, then traveled to Europe, where he promoted a tour for
				  showman W. Irving Bishop. He was a success in Europe, and became a Knight of
				  the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, a Knight of the Red Cross of Rome, a Knight
				  Templar, and a Freemason. Returning to America, he wrote editorials for the 
				  <emph>New York World, </emph>where he also became assistant night editor, then
				  served as associate editor at the <emph>Atlanta Constitution</emph> and<emph>
				  Philadelphia Press.</emph> In July 1890, he headed west to become editor of the
				  <emph>Seattle Press</emph> and the <emph>Seattle Press-Times </emph>(now 
				  <emph>The Seattle Times</emph>), a role he held until September 1893. He was
				  appointed State Land Commissioner in 1893, serving in that capacity until 1897.
				  In 1897, as secretary and executive officer of the newly founded Bureau of
				  Information of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, he became the most prominent
				  figure in the publicity campaign that established Seattle's preeminence as a
				  mercantile and outfitting center for the miners headed to the Yukon. He also
				  convinced the federal government to open an assay office in Seattle. He briefly
				  worked as a mining consultant before becoming editor of the<emph> Seattle
				  Post-Intelligencer. </emph>In the 1910s, he led the Anti-Prohibition
				  Association of Washington in its unsuccessful fight to keep alcoholic beverages
				  legal in Washington. Brainerd died in Tacoma, Washington in 1922.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrainerdE1</container><unittitle>Erastus Brainerd and dog Toodles at coal mine on
					 Skinny Creek near Nason Creek, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrainerdE2</container><unittitle>Erastus Brainerd sitting in front of his log cabin at
					 Rampart on the Yukon River, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrainerdE3</container><unittitle>Erastus Brainerd standing near fence holding a
					 hoe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1899</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Man With the Hoe -- on the Yukon. A
					 vegetable garden at Rampart (P.O.) Alaska on the Yukon about 65 miles S. of the
					 Arctic Circle. Taken May 1899 by Erastus Brainerd Seattle, Wash.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrainerdE4</container><unittitle>Erastus Brainerd standing in a field of grain at
					 Rampart showing how high it has grown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Among the Red Top at Rampart (P.O.) Alaska
					 about 65 miles S. of the Arctic Circle: taken - June 1900 by Erastus Brainerd
					 Seattle, Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brainerd, Herbert M. (October, 1865 - 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert M. Brainerd was the editor and publisher of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Gate City Herald</emph> a weekly English language
				  newspaper for the community of Deep Creek Falls near Spokane, Washington in
				  1890. He married Minnie Alice Applegate in 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrainerdHM1</container><unittitle>Herbert M. Brainerd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brannan, Joseph (September 13, 1825-August 6,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Brannan was born in Union County, Ohio. On his 19th
				  birthday, he left home and moved west to Illinois where he farmed. In 1854, he
				  left Illinois for Washington Territory to join his brother, William. During the
				  Northwest Indian Wars, also known as The Treaty Wars, William and his family
				  were killed, and Joseph joined Company B, 1st Regiment. After the war, he moved
				  to Thurston County, Washington, before settling in Slaughter, W. T. in the Kent
				  Valley where he purchased the Meeker farm. The town of Slaughter was named
				  after Lt. William Slaughter who died during the war; the town was later renamed
				  Auburn.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrannanJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Brannan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Branner, John Casper (July 4, 1850 – March 1,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Casper Branner was an American geologist and academic who
				  discovered bauxite in Arkansas in 1887 as State Geologist. He was Chair of the
				  Departments of Botany and Geology at Indiana University and later at Stanford
				  University. He was a member of the founding faculty at Stanford and served as
				  the university's second president. He served as president of the Geological
				  Society of America in 1904 and was the president of the Seismological Society
				  of America in 1911. Banner was an expert in Brazilian geology, among many other
				  things. While at Stanford he directed the Agassiz-Branner expedition to Brazil
				  in 1899 and a second similar expedition in 1907-1908. He served on government
				  commissions studying the Panama Canal and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. He
				  published a grammar of the Portuguese language, based on his work in
				  Brazil.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrannerJC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Casper Branner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1, 1898</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Andrew Putnam Hill, San Jose, CA</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrannerJC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John Casper
					 Banner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Davey, Palo Alto, CA</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Roberts with the best wishes of John
						C. Branner</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Brassey, Anna (October 7, 1839 – September 14,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Brassey, Baroness Brassey was an English traveler and
				  writer. She was born Anna Allnutt in London in 1839. In 1860, she married the
				  English Member of Parliament Thomas Brassey (knighted in 1881 and became Earl
				  Brassey in 1886). The couple had five children. Her best-selling book, <emph>A
				  Voyage in the Sunbeam, our Home on the Ocean for Eleven Months</emph>(1878)
				  describes a voyage around the world aboard their luxury yacht 
				  <emph>Sunbeam</emph>. The yacht was said to have been named after their
				  daughter, Constance Alberta, who was nicknamed Sunbeam; she died of scarlet
				  fever in 1873. Lady Brassey's last voyage on the yacht was to India and
				  Australia, undertaken in November 1886 to improve her health. On the way to
				  Mauritius, she died of malaria and was buried at sea.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ3</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Benjamin F. Bush. Lord Thomas
					 and Lady Anna Brassey, four unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. J. Smith, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Lord and Lady Brassey visited Seattle during their around the
					 world voyage on their yacht, <emph>Sunbeam</emph>; Lady Brassey published a
					 book about their travels. During their visit, they toured Anacortes and the
					 Skagit Valley. Lord Brassey was interested in the Oregon Improvement Company
					 which owned and operated coal mines, railroads, and steamship companies; the
					 company's subsidiaries included the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Newspaper
					 accounts recorded General Counsel Andrew F. Burleigh, Treasurer Charles B.
					 Tedcastle, and Superintendent Phelps as members of the group touring the area
					 with Lord and Lady Brassey; they are probably the men in the photograph.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Brassey, Thomas (February 11, 1836 – February 23,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Brassey, 1st Earl Brassey, was a British Liberal Party
				  politician, governor of the Colony of Victoria and founder of <emph>The Naval
				  Annual.</emph>Brassey was the eldest son of the railway magnate Thomas Brassey
				  and was briefly Member of Parliament (MP) for Devonport in 1865. He returned to
				  Parliament three years later as the representative for Hastings at the 1868
				  general election. From 1895 to 1900 he was Governor of Victoria, a colony in
				  Australia, and lived in its capital, Melbourne, in Government House. Between
				  July 1876 and May 1877 Brassey circumnavigated the world in his steam-assisted
				  three-masted topsail-yard schooner <emph>Sunbeam</emph>, a yacht designed for
				  him by St Clare Byrne. This voyage is said to have been the first
				  circumnavigation by a private yacht. He married Anna Allnutt in 1860.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ3</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Benjamin F. Bush. Lord Thomas
					 and Lady Anna Brassey, four unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. J. Smith, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Lord and Lady Brassey visited Seattle during their around the
					 world voyage on their yacht, <emph>Sunbeam</emph>; Lady Brassey published a
					 book about their travels. During their visit, they toured Anacortes and the
					 Skagit Valley. Lord Brassey was interested in the Oregon Improvement Company
					 which owned and operated coal mines, railroads, and steamship companies; the
					 company's subsidiaries included the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Newspaper
					 accounts recorded General Counsel Andrew F. Burleigh, Treasurer Charles B.
					 Tedcastle, and Superintendent Phelps as members of the group touring the area
					 with Lord and Lady Brassey; they are probably the men in the photograph.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ4</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Lord Thomas Brassley, Benjamin
					 F. Bush, Charles B. Tedcastle and Andrew F. Burleigh.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Company, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Braun, Albert (February 18, 1863-February 17,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Braun was born in Dusseldorf, Germany. He initially
				  worked with his father, but in 1888, he sold his interest in the family
				  business and came to the United States. On the advice of Adolphus Busch,
				  president of the Anheuser-Busch Association, of St. Louis, Missouri, he entered
				  the brewery of Peter Doelger, of New York and learned the practical workings of
				  the business, completing his instruction at the Anheuser-Busch brewery in St.
				  Louis. In 1889, he made a trip through the Northwest, and, after a short visit
				  in Seattle, selected it as a location for his brewery, establishing the Albert
				  Braun Brewing Association in 1890. In 1893, the Albert Braun Brewing
				  Association was consolidated with the Bay View Brewing Company and the
				  Claussen-Sweeney Brewing Company, and incorporated as the Seattle Brewing and
				  Malting Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BraunA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Albert Braun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is printed on a page which discusses new
					 brewing equipment for the Albert Braun Brewing Association Plant.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bray, Charles Edward (July 20, 1845- September 9,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Bray was an Oregon composer and musician who wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Lost in the deep, deep sea</emph> in 1881 in memory of
				  Eva Burbank, who drowned in the Pacific Ocean. She was the daughter of Augustus
				  Ripley Burbank, an investor in the Oregon Railway Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrayCE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Bray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jacobs Photo, Milwaukie, OR</persname></origination></did><note><p>This photographer is the person who made a copy of the
					 original photograph. The original photographer is unknown.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bridger, James Felix (March 17, 1804 – July 17,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James "Jim" Bridger was born in Richmond, Virginia and began his
				  career in 1822 at the age of 18, as a member of General William Ashley's Upper
				  Missouri Expedition. He was among the first European-Americans to see the
				  geysers and other natural wonders of the Yellowstone region as well as the
				  Great Salt Lake. In 1830, he and several other trappers bought out Ashley and
				  established the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, competing with the Hudson's Bay
				  Company and John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company for the lucrative beaver
				  pelt trade. In 1843, Bridger and Louis Vasquez built a trading post, later
				  named Fort Bridger, on the west bank of Blacks Fork of the Green River to serve
				  pioneers on the Oregon Trail. In 1846, Bridger and Lansford W. Hastings were at
				  least partially responsible for the tragic journey of the Donner Party, due to
				  their misdirection of wagon trains through the impractical Hastings Cutoff. In
				  1850, looking for an alternate overland route to the South Pass, he found what
				  would eventually be known as Bridger's Pass, which shortened the Oregon Trail
				  by 61 miles. Bridger Pass would later be the chosen route for both the Union
				  Pacific Railroad and later Interstate 80. In 1864, he blazed the Bridger Trail,
				  an alternate route from Wyoming to the gold fields of Montana that avoided the
				  dangerous Bozeman Trail. Later, he served as guide and army scout during the
				  first Powder River Expedition against the Sioux and Cheyenne.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BridgerJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jim Bridger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Commercial Photo Shop, Helena, Montana</corpname></origination></did><note><p>This photographer made a copy of the original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bridges, Harry (July 28, 1901 – March 30,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Bridges was an Australian-born American union leader,
				  initially with the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA). In 1937, he
				  led several chapters in forming a new union, the International Longshore and
				  Warehouse Union (ILWU), expanding members to workers in warehouses, and led it
				  for the next 40 years. He was prosecuted for his labor organizing and believed
				  subversive status by the U.S. government during the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s,
				  with the goal of deportation. This was never achieved. Bridges became a
				  naturalized citizen in 1945. His conviction by a federal jury for having lied
				  about his Communist Party membership when seeking naturalization was overturned
				  by the Supreme Court in 1953 as having been prosecuted outside the statute of
				  limitations. His official power was reduced when the ILWU was expelled by the
				  CIO in 1950, but he continued to be re-elected by the California membership and
				  was highly influential until his retirement in 1977. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXF1</container><container type="item">BridgesH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Bridges</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bridge, Shirley Selesnick (May 24, 1922- June 2,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Shirley Bridge was born in Seattle, graduated from Broadway High
				  School and Magna Cum Laude in Pharmacy at the University of Washington, where
				  she was a member of Alpha Epsilon Phi and Rho Chi Honorary. A lifetime activist
				  and philanthropist, she was president of Seattle Women's Commission, as well as
				  leading or being a board member on a host of other organizations including the
				  Seattle Opportunities Industrialization Center, the University of Washington
				  Development Board, Harborview Foundation, Women's Law Center and Hadassah. She
				  helped create the Women’s Endowment Foundation of the Jewish Federation of
				  Greater Seattle and also helped start the Diabetes Research Council. The
				  co-chair of the Bailey Boushay AIDS Housing campaign, she was honored by having
				  the Shirley Bridge Bungalows named after her. She worked as a pharmacist for 40
				  years and was on the Board of Ben Bridge Jeweler.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bridgham, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BridgesH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Mr. Bridgham with unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter &amp; Gene Weber, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Possible union leader in Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Briggs, Albert (August 26, 1813 - August 10,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Briggs was born in Sholam, Addison County, Vermont. In
				  the spring of 1847, he and his family started with ox-teams to Oregon. He
				  arrived at The Dalles in October, 1847 and then continued down the Columbia to
				  Portland in small boats. He worked as a carpenter in Oregon City, but soon
				  started farming on the Santiam River. In 1849 he went to the gold fields of
				  California for three months, before returning to Oregon. In 1852, he moved to
				  the present site of Port Townsend in Washington Territory at a time when there
				  was only one house in the city. He was one of the first settlers of the
				  city.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BriggsA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Albert Briggs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Briggs, Benjamin Franklin (July 19, 1832 - August 17,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Briggs was born in Massachusetts and traveled to San
				  Francisco in 1852, where he worked in a steamboat office and later a grain and
				  commission business. He joined Dexter Horton's bank when it was founded in
				  1870; he was a clerk and remained in that position for 21 years. He then
				  resigned to become Dexter Horton's confidential agent and assistant. In 1877,
				  he married Sarah Rebecca Horton, Dexter Horton's daughter.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BriggsBF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Benjamin Briggs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Briggs, George C. (June 2, 1925- July 16,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Briggs attended the UW and graduated from University of
				  California Berkeley. After graduation, he was the assistant athletic director
				  for UC Berkeley before joining the UW as Director of the Athletic Department in
				  1955. In his five years at the UW, he created the Tyee Club, hired football
				  coaches Darrell Royal and Jim Owens, saw the team win two Rose Bowls and a
				  National Championship, and sent the UW Crew to both Henley and Moscow. In 1961,
				  he left the UW to begin a banking career first at UCB in Los Angeles, and then
				  in Seattle at Seattle First National Bank, Fidelity Mutual and First
				  Interstate. He was active in many organizations, serving as president of the
				  Washington Athletic Club and PONCHO, and chairman of the Museum of Flight.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BriggsGC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Briggs in his office at the
					 University of Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 13, 1956</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bright, William Henry (January 12, 1827-April 26,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Bright was President of the Council of the Wyoming
				  Territorial legislature. In 1869, during the Wyoming territory’s first
				  legislative session, he introduced a women’s suffrage bill. The bill was signed
				  into law by Governor John A. Campbell, and the territory became the first
				  government to grant women the right to vote in all public elections. Women
				  voted for the first time in 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrightWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Bright</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Credit William Robertson Coe, Library, University of
					 Wyoming</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bristow, Mary J. (May 1, 1822 - December 25,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary J. Bristow was an early pioneer settler in Oregon. She was
				  married to William W. Bristow.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BristowMJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary J. Bristow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Broderick, Henry (October 12, 1880–October 7,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Broderick was a Seattle civic leader and the longtime
				  president of the city's largest real estate firm. From the time he arrived in
				  town in 1901 until his death seven decades later, Broderick was involved in
				  almost every important aspect of Seattle civic life, boosting, chairing,
				  contributing financially, and observing and recording what he saw. Broderick
				  was youngest of 49 trustees of Seattle's Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
				  (A-Y-P). Years later, in 1962, as the only surviving A-Y-P trustee, he served
				  as a trustee Seattle's Century 21 Exposition and, toward the end of his life,
				  as an honorary trustee of Spokane, Washington's Expo '74 world's fair.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BroderickH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Broderick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1975?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brooke, George Smith (February 22, 1855 - December 8,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Brooke was born in Dubuque, Iowa and arrived in Portland,
				  Oregon in 1874. He worked as a cashier and bookkeeper for the Oregon Steam
				  Navigation Company before moving to Sprague, Washington Territory. He worked in
				  banking and in 1883, was the first mayor of Sprague.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrookeGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Brooke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brookes, Albert Marsden (September 2, 1842-August 6,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert M. Brookes was born in Galena, Illinois. He served in the
				  Civil War under the command of General Sheridan. After the war, he moved to San
				  Francisco, CA where he worked in the post office for twelve years. In 1877, he
				  moved to Seattle and went into business with his brother-in-law before moving
				  to Black Diamond for two years. He returned to Seattle in 1887, where he was
				  the president of the Northwest Cracker Company. He was also involved in the
				  Home Insurance Company, the Puget Sound Freezing and Cooling Company, and the
				  Ventilated Barrel Company. He was appointed postmaster by President Harding and
				  worked to improve the efficiency of the postal service. He resigned in 1891 to
				  accept a position with the Boston National Bank.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrookesAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Albert M. Brookes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brooks, John Emalus (October 29, 1822-March 11,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John E. Brooks was born in Canton, New York. He worked as a
				  traveling agent for the United States Book Publishing Company and later as a
				  teacher. He married Julia Ray on April 13, 1852, and a week later they headed
				  west to Oregon, arriving six months later. He located a Donation Land claim and
				  also purchased a sawmill approximately six miles west of present day
				  McMinnville, Oregon. He was opposed to slavery and was active in party
				  politics. He supported the development of railroads, schools and improvements
				  to the water system, and donated money to help start McMinnville College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksJE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John E. Brooks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brooks, Quincy A. (May 22, 1827-July 6,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Quincy Brooks was born in Washington County, PA and graduated
				  with honors from the Western University of Pennsylvania (now the University of
				  Pittsburgh). He practiced law in Pittsburgh until 1851, when he made the trip
				  to Portland by ox team, moving later to Olympia. He was the first United States
				  attorney in the vast domain north of the Columbia to the British Columbia line
				  and was a member of the famous Cowlitz convention which carved Washington out
				  of Oregon territory. He was later general agent of the post office department
				  for the entire coast and in 1886 was appointed collector of customs for the
				  district, serving until President Cleveland's first election.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksQA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Quincy Brooks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1851</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is a copy of a daguerreotype made in 1851.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brooks, Richard Edwin (October 28,
				  1865-1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Brooks was born in Braintree, MA and studied in Paris
				  under the sculptor Jean-Pierre Aube. He created a statue for the 1909
				  Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exposition to honor the Secretary of State, William
				  Seward, who advocated for the purchase of Alaska from Russia. The statue was
				  moved to Volunteer Park after the exposition. He also created the statue of
				  Governor John H. McGraw which is located in Seattle’s Times Square. He was
				  elected to the National Sculpture Society in 1897, won the gold medal for
				  sculpture at the Buffalo Pan-American Exposition in 1901 and was elected to the
				  American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1908. He was chairman of the Jury of
				  Sculpture at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksRE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Richard E.
					 Brooks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Randall</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksRE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Brooks with group at the dedication
					 of the Seward statue at Volunteer Park in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1, 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Brooks second from the right in the front row, Judge Thomas
					 Burke third from the right in the front row, Judge Cornelius Holgate Hanford in
					 center, Edward C. Cheasty to Hanford's left.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Broughton, William Robert (May 22, 1762 - March 14,
				  1821)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Robert Broughton was a British naval officer who served
				  in the late 18th century. As a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, he commanded 
				  <emph render="italic">HMS Chatham</emph> as part of the Vancouver Expedition, a
				  voyage of exploration through the Pacific Ocean led by Captain George Vancouver
				  in the early 1790s.The Broughton Archipelago, Broughton Island and Broughton
				  Strait in British Columbia's Queen Charlotte Strait region are named for him. A
				  street in Vancouver's West End and a street in downtown Victoria also bear his
				  name as does Broughton's Bluff, a popular rock climbing destination at the
				  Lewis and Clark State Recreation Site in Troutdale, Oregon. His map of the
				  Columbia River was instrumental in the planning of the Lewis and Clark
				  expedition. A plaque erected by the State of Oregon along Interstate 84 in the
				  Columbia Gorge commemorates the spot where he landed in 1792.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BroughtonWR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Broughton's grave in Livorno,
					 Italy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brouillet, Father Jean-Baptist Abraham (December 11,
				  1813-February 5, 1884)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Father Jean-Baptist Brouillet was a pioneer Catholic missionary
				  and the first director of the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions. Bishop
				  Augustin Blanchet encouraged him to join the Catholic missionary efforts in the
				  Oregon Territory, and Brouillet arrived in 1847. He was the first outsider on
				  the scene of the Whitman massacre and later wrote a book, <emph render="italic">Authentic account of the murder of Dr. Whitman and other
				  missionaries</emph> that described his efforts to allay the hostilities and
				  suspicions of the Indians, comfort the captives, and bury the dead.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrouilletJBA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Father Jean-Baptist
					 Brouillet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brouillet, Frank "Buster" (May 18, 1928-June 20,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Frank "Buster" Brouillet was an influential Washington State
				  educator. He served as a teacher in the Puyallup and Tacoma school districts,
				  State Representative, Superintendent of Public Instruction, President of Pierce
				  College and Director of the Education Department of the University of
				  Washington Tacoma Campus. He was instrumental in the development of the
				  community college system in the State of Washington as well as establishing
				  teacher exchange programs with the Peoples Republic of China. Frank B.
				  Brouillet Elementary School in Puyallup, WA is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrouilletF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank "Buster" Brouillet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">Brown1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mr. Brown with unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter &amp; Gene Weber, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Possible union leader in Seattle</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Amos (July 29, 1833 - April 9, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amos Brown was a prominent early citizen of Seattle. He was a
				  pioneering lumberman in the Puget Sound region beginning in the 1850s and had
				  substantial real estate holdings in present downtown Seattle and in several
				  counties along Puget Sound. He served as a member of the Seattle City Council
				  and was director of Western Washington Hospital in Steilacoom for several
				  years. The Brown Building at 1201 Second Avenue in Seattle was built in 1898
				  and named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amos Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Anna Mary (December 1845 - September 3,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Mary Peebles Brown, the daughter of Hugh Peebles and
				  Emaline Palmer Peebles, came to Seattle from the East Coast in 1865, traveling
				  around Cape Horn with her sister, Elizabeth Peebles Mackintosh. Brown taught at
				  Denny School in Seattle in the early 1900's. She married Amos Brown in
				  1867.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anna Mary Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Beriah (February 23, 1815 - February 8,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>A newspaper publisher by trade, Beriah Brown served as Clerk and
				  Recorder of Iowa County, Wisconsin and was a member of the first Board of
				  Regents of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 1857, he was an unsuccessful
				  candidate for the United States House of Representatives from Wisconsin. Brown
				  was later President and Chairman of the Board of Regents of the University of
				  Washington and was Mayor of Seattle from 1878 to 1879. He was the publisher of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Puget Sound Dispatch</emph> in partnership with
				  Charles H. Larrabee; at the time, this was the only daily paper published in
				  Seattle. One of his more notable editorials was a strong defense of civil
				  rights, in response to local opposition to the admission of an African American
				  student to the winter session of the University of Washington in January 1874.
				  Brown continued to be involved in both civic affairs and journalism after
				  leaving office, including establishing the first newspaper in Kent, called 
				  <emph render="italic">The Kent Recorder</emph>, founded in May 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Beriah Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jacobs Photo Shop, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Charles - See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Clarissa Browning (February 8, 1810-April 8,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarissa Browning was born in Tennessee. She married Hugh Leeper
				  Brown in 1828, and with him crossed the plains to Oregon, arriving in 1846. The
				  town of Brownsville, OR is named for her husband. They had eight children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownCB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clarissa Browning Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The picture lists her name as "Clarrisa"; however, records
					 show her name as "Clarissa."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Daniel Webster (October 11, 1838-August 19,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Webster Brown was an oysterman in Pacific County in the
				  1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownDW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Webster Brown standing on
					 crutches in a field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Brown, Debbie Sue (1957 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Debbie Sue Brown of Clarkston, Washington was the 1962 March of
				  Dimes national poster child.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD9</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, wearing New York Day
					 badge, with Debbie Sue Brown and Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance at the Seattle
					 World's Fair. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 10, 1962</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Edwin James (October 30, 1864-July 28,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin James Brown graduated from Western Dental College in 1897
				  and Kansas City School of Law in 1899. He arrived in Seattle in 1901 to
				  establish his dental practice. He frequently clashed with the dental
				  association over their prohibition of advertising. In addition to his dental
				  practice, he established the law firm of Parker and Brown. He was a candidate
				  for several offices, including state senator and prosecuting attorney. He was
				  elected mayor of Seattle in 1922 and re-elected in 1924; he was succeeded in
				  office by Bertha Landis.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownEJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Edwin James Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Grafton Tyler (February 22, 1841 – March 2,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grafton Tyler Brown was an African American painter,
				  lithographer and cartographer. Brown worked for a printer in Philadelphia when
				  he was fourteen where he learned the skill of lithography. He moved to San
				  Francisco in the 1860s where he initially worked as a lithographer. In 1878 he
				  created <emph render="italic">The Illustrated History of San Francisco</emph>,
				  which consisted of 72 topographical images of the city. He left the Bay Area in
				  1882 and moved to Victoria, British Columbia, where he participated in the Amos
				  Bowman Geological Survey, serving as draftsman and documenting the Cascade
				  Mountains. In 1884 he moved back to the United States and traveled throughout
				  the northwest and west, painting such sites as Mt. Rainier, Yosemite and
				  Yellowstone National Park. In 1893, Brown moved to St. Paul, Minnesota where he
				  worked as a draftsman for the United States Army Corps of Engineers and for St.
				  Paul's engineering department. Brown's works are held in the collections of the
				  Royal British Columbia Museum, Oakland Museum of California, Crocker Art Museum
				  in Sacramento, California Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Los Angeles
				  County Museum of Art.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownGT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Grafton Tyler Brown standing at an
					 easel with a painting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Duane H. (February 16, 1893 - January 6,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Duane H. Brown, the son of Hugh Brown and Addie Thompson Brown
				  and the brother of Hazel Brown, worked as a clerk. He married Mary Agnes
				  Mockler in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownHA3</container><unittitle>Hazel with her brother Duane Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Hazel A. Brown subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Hazel Agnes (November 21, 1890 -
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hazel A. Brown, the daughter of Hugh Brown and Addie Thompson
				  Brown and the sister of Duane Brown, taught in the fine arts department of Ohio
				  Wesleyan prior to her marriage to Earle Frances Houghton in 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownHA1</container><unittitle>Hazel Brown sitting on a wooden fence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 29, 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Your little niece.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownHA2</container><unittitle>Hazel Brown standing by tree</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 29, 1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownHA3</container><unittitle>Hazel Brown with her brother Duane Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Helen</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownH1</container><unittitle>Helen Brown with her dog "Whiskers"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 25, 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Hugh Leeper (June 24, 1810- January 23,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Leeper Brown was born in Tennessee and crossed the plains
				  to Oregon, arriving in 1846, arriving with his nephew, James Blakely. He was
				  one of the founders of the Brownsville Woolen Mills, was a soldier in the
				  Cayuse War, mined in California, served in the legislature three times, once
				  before statehood, and was also a member of the board of commissioners of Linn
				  County. The town of Brownsville, OR is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownHL1</container><unittitle>Hugh Leeper Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, John Arthur (August 28, 1914 - April 28,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Arthur Brown was born in Burlington, WA and lived in
				  several small towns in rural Washington where he became interested in Native
				  American history. He graduated from Seattle Pacific College in 1935 with a
				  major in Public School Education. He taught at a one-room school in Big Bend,
				  WA and later in Manson, WA before returning to the UW where he received a
				  Masters Degree in History. He initially taught at a high school in Wenatchee
				  before joining the faculty of Wenatchee Valley College where he also served as
				  dean of students. The library at Wenatchee Valley College is named for him.
				  With Robert Ruby, he wrote fourteen books and numerous articles on Native
				  American history and history of North Central Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownJA1</container><unittitle>John Arthur Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jean's Portrait Studio, Monitor, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Josiah Sawyer (March 6, 1845-June 20,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josiah Sawyer Brown was born in New Brunswick, Canada and moved
				  to Maine at an early age. In 1861, he enlisted with the Maine Volunteer
				  Infantry and rose from the rank of private to company commander during his war
				  career. He fought in over 30 battles, including Gettysburg and Spotsylvania.
				  After the Civil War, he served with the Army during the Modoc War. He arrived
				  in Washington in 1873. He served in the Constitutional Convention of 1887 and
				  represented Spokane in Washington State's first legislature. In 1915, he
				  represented the Rochester district. He was active in the G.A.R. (Grand Army of
				  the Republic).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownJS1</container><unittitle>Joseph Sawyer Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 17, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Yours piously, J. S. Brown of Spokane</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Kate Wilhelminia (January 10, 1878 - December 5,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kate Brown was the daughter of Winfield G. Brown and Mary Jane
				  Watson Brown. She married William Millsaps in 1895. Prior to her marriage, she
				  lived in Tacoma, WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownKW1</container><unittitle>Kate Brown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brown, Warren Frederick, Jr. (February 3, 1903-July 22,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Warren Frederick Brown, Jr. graduated from the University of
				  Washington Law School in 1926 and was admitted to the bar the same year. He was
				  a partner in the law firm of Bogle, Bogle and Gates in Seattle and was active
				  in state and national bar associations and the Municipal League of Seattle. He
				  was the son of Dr. Warren Brown, an early Tacoma physician.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrownWF1</container><unittitle>Warren Frederick Brown, Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Brown, Zenith Jones (December 8, 1898 – August 25,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zenith Jones Brown was an American crime fiction writer who also
				  wrote for a time in England. She wrote under the pseudonyms David Frome, Leslie
				  Ford, and Brenda Conrad. She is perhaps best known for her novels featuring the
				  fictional Grace Latham and John Primrose. She was born in Smith River,
				  California and grew up in Tacoma, Washington. Brown was educated at the
				  University of Washington and worked there as a teaching assistant from 1921 to
				  1923. She married Ford K. Brown, a professor, in 1921. She worked as the
				  assistant to the editor and circulation manager for <emph>Dial </emph>magazine
				  from 1922 to 1923. Brown began writing as “David Frome” in 1929 while staying
				  in London with her husband. She returned to the United States in 1931, and the
				  couple settled in Annapolis, Maryland. Brown used the pen name “Leslie Ford”
				  for her mystery novels published in the United States. During World War II, she
				  wrote several novels about nurses under the name “Brenda Conrad”. Brown was
				  also a war correspondent for the United States Air Force in England and the
				  Pacific. Her books often appeared in serial format in <emph>The Saturday
				  Evening Post </emph>before being published.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr3</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr. with Leslie Ford (Zenith
					 Jones Brown) and Allen Benham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930-1939</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken before 1950. In the 1930's, I guess.
					 Leslie Ford's real name Zenith Jones Brown, married to Ford Brown.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Jr. subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Browne, John J. (April 28, 1843-March 25,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John J. Browne was businessman and the first lawyer in Spokane,
				  WA. He graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 1868 and
				  practiced law for several years before moving to Portland, OR in 1874. He
				  relocated to Spokane where he developed land in what is now Browne's Addition,
				  a National Historic District. In addition to his land ventures, he and A. J.
				  Ross constructed the first railway, and together they founded the first
				  newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Spokane Chronicle</emph>. With A. M.
				  Cannon, he built the Auditorium, at the time the finest theater in the west. He
				  had an interest in the Spokane Mill Company and the Spokane Cracker Company and
				  founded the Browne National Bank in 1888. When the bank failed in during the
				  1893 Panic, Browne personally assumed the obligations of the bank and not a
				  creditor lost money. He was also involved in civic and educational work,
				  including serving on the school board. While he is regarded as Spokane’s first
				  attorney, he only practiced law for about seven years, giving up the profession
				  in 1885 to focus on his business ventures.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrowneJJ1</container><unittitle>John J. Browne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Browne, Maurice (February 12, 1881-January 21,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maurice Browne was born in Reading, Berkshire, England. He came
				  to the United States in 1910 where he founded The Little Theatre in Chicago's
				  Fine Arts Building. The company operated from 1912-1917 and inspired the
				  "little theater movement" across the United States. In Chicago, he introduced
				  residents to the works of Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg, Anton Chekhov and
				  many other dramatists. In 1927, Browne returned to England where he was to
				  become a friend and business partner of Dorothy and Leonard Elmhirst, and with
				  them, founded Maurice Browne Ltd, a West End theatrical company which put on a
				  variety of plays between 1929 and 1935. He was a prominent West End producer
				  for several decades.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrowneM1</container><unittitle>Maurice Browne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride &amp; Anderson, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Browne, Nathan (Nat) C. (March 31, 1895 - August 29,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan "Nat" Browne flew in South America and moved to Alaska in
				  early 1930's, where he was one of the first bush pilots. He formed the Nat
				  Browne Flying Service initially out of Valdez, and then in Fairbanks, Anchorage
				  and Bethel. He flew a Waco YKS. Later, when he was awarded a mail contract for
				  villages along the lower Kuskokwim &amp; Yukon, and to Goodnews Bay, he had a
				  Bellanca Skyrocket and a Stinson Reliant leased from Alaska Airlines. He and
				  refueling assistant Frank Brooks attempted a Seattle-to-Tokyo flight in 1932.
				  They planned to refuel the modified Fokker Universal in mid-air, a newer
				  technique at the time, with the refueling assistant parachuting out afterwards.
				  The combination of weakened wings due to replacement of the struts with cables
				  to save weight, and a refueling mishap in which the hose hit the plane's
				  rudder, caused the plane to become almost uncontrollable. When it appeared
				  imminent that the wings would fail, both parachuted to safety. In 1948, he
				  bought one of the first Cessna 170s with fabric wings. He closed his business
				  in 1950.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrowneNC1</container><unittitle>Nat Browne standing near airplane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harry A. Kirwin, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: With best wishes, Nat Browne</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bruce, James (November 3, 1827 - December 22,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Bruce was born in Indiana. At the age of 20, he went to
				  Texas and joined the Texas Rangers. In 1850, he traveled by wagon train to
				  California during the gold rush, moving north to Oregon in 1852. He was one of
				  the first settlers in Crescent City. He fought in the Indian Wars of the 1850s
				  and was promoted to Major for his efforts. After the war, he established a
				  Donation Land Claim near what is now Corvallis, OR. He served both Washington
				  and Benton Counties in the Oregon State Legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BruceJ1</container><unittitle>James Bruce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Brumbaugh, George Edwin (August 27, 1890 - January 29,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Edwin Brumbaugh was an American architect who worked
				  primarily in Philadelphia and the surrounding area. He was well known among
				  those interested in early American architecture and was widely regarded as one
				  of the leading practitioners in the Mid-Atlantic states. He was deeply
				  interested in the vernacular architecture of southeastern Pennsylvania,
				  specifically that of the Pennsylvania Germans and insisted on accurate and
				  careful restoration based in sound historical, archaeological, and
				  architectural investigations. His independent practice, active for much of the
				  twentieth century, was prolific, completing hundreds of public and private
				  restorations. He also designed residential commissions in the colonial revival
				  and remained a proponent of this style. Over the course of his nearly
				  seventy-year career, he worked to restore 117 historic buildings, both public
				  and private. Several of the best known Pennsylvania historic sites were
				  restored by Brumbaugh, including the Ephrata Cloister, the Daniel Boone
				  Homestead, Baumstown, PA, Grumblethorpe (John Wistar Residence) in Germantown,
				  and Gloria Dei Church (Old Swedes Church) in Philadelphia. His long years of
				  activity in this area culminated in his receiving an award in 1979 from the
				  Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission for his restoration of the Edward
				  Morgan Log House and in 1982 the National Trust for Historic Preservation
				  Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BrumbaughGE1</container><unittitle>George Edwin Brumbaugh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bryan, Edgar (February 24, 1841 – November 19,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Bryan was born in Lawrence, Illinois and came to
				  Washington in 1852. His family settled in Grand Mound Prairie, Washington
				  Territory, near what is now Olympia, WA. He was a member of the first class of
				  the territorial university. He was an assessor, umbrella manufacturer,
				  tombstone seller, teacher, carpenter, bookkeeper as well as working in real
				  estate. He had a store which burned in the Seattle Fire of 1889. Bryan was
				  active in the Pioneer Association, serving as president and secretary over the
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BryanE1</container><unittitle>Edgar Bryan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lynn &amp; Cram, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bryan, William Jennings (March 19, 1860 – July 26, 1925)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Jennings Bryan was an American lawyer, orator and
				  politician. Beginning in 1896, he emerged as a dominant force in the Democratic
				  Party, running three times as the party's nominee for President of the United
				  States in the 1896, 1900, and the 1908 elections. He served in the House of
				  Representatives from 1891 to 1895 and as the Secretary of State under Woodrow
				  Wilson. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR3</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers and William Jennings Bryan at
					 a banquet in Walla Walla, Washington; two unidentifed men in
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1900</unitdate></did><note><p>File under John Rankin Rogers subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bryant, William Cullen (November 3, 1794 – June 12,
				  1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Cullen Bryant was an American romantic poet, journalist,
				  and long-time editor of the <emph>New York Evening Post.</emph> Born in
				  Massachusetts, he started his career as a lawyer but showed an interest in
				  poetry early in his life. He soon relocated to New York and took up work as an
				  editor at various newspapers. He became one of the most significant poets in
				  early literary America and has been grouped among the fireside poets for his
				  accessible, popular poetry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">6</container><container type="item">BryantWC1</container><unittitle>William Cullen Bryant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1878?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hollyer after a portrait by Sarony from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buchan, George Colin (August 30, 1927 - November 30,
				  2011) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Colin Buchan performed as a Scottish piper and dancer in
				  the 1930s and 1940s. He received his undergraduate degree from the University
				  of Washington and his medical degree McGill University Medical School. His
				  grandfather, George Buchan, founded Buchan Bakery in the early 1900s; it merged
				  with Orowheat Bakery in 1966.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BuchanGC1</container><unittitle>George Colin Buchan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Six-year-old Colin Buchan will sing several
					 Scottish songs, à la Harry Lauder, at a meeting of the John Marshall Junior
					 High School Parent-Teacher Association on Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock.</p><p>The photograph appeared in the May 20, 1934 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buchanan, James (April 23, 1791 – June 1,
				  1868)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Buchanan was the 15th President of the United States
				  (1857–1861), serving immediately prior to the American Civil War. He also
				  served as Secretary of State under President James Knox Polk from 1845 to 1849.
				  In this capacity, he helped negotiate the 1846 Oregon Treaty establishing the
				  49th parallel as the northern boundary of the western United States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BuchananJ1</container><unittitle>James Buchanan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1859</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting by George Peter Alexander Healy, as
					 seen in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">6</container><container type="item">BuchananJ2</container><unittitle>James Buchanan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Smith from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buchtel, Joseph (November 22, 1830 - August 10,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Buchtel was early Portland photographer and inventor. In
				  1851, he purchased a daguerreotype outfit and started a portrait business in
				  Urbana, Illinois. In 1852 he crossed the plains to Oregon and spent the next
				  four years working on steamboats on the upper Willamette River. As river boat
				  work was slow when water was low in the summers, he resumed daguerreian work in
				  1853. In 1855 he took his first photographs on paper. During the next few
				  years, he moved between Portland and Oregon City, eventually partnering with
				  Byron P. Cardwell. At the first Oregon State Fair, held in Gladstone in 1861,
				  he and Cardwell won diplomas for their displays of forty photographs, including
				  twenty ambrotypes. He received a commission to photograph Fort Vancouver, where
				  he took a 12-part panorama of the garrison. In 1873 with his new partner, E. H.
				  Stolte, he offered stereo views and advertised likenesses of Captain Jack and
				  other Modoc warriors. In 1878 that partnership was dissolved, and two years
				  later, he decided to lease his gallery to William H. Towne while he traveled
				  back east, leaving behind his collection of 25,000 negatives. Upon returning
				  home, he found that Towne had discarded almost all of his vast collection of
				  negatives. He continued to own a small gallery for a few years, but moved more
				  towards civic affairs, serving two terms as sheriff and one as fire chief. He
				  had patents for several inventions, including fire hoses, cigar trays, mining
				  equipment and wooden-block pavement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BuchtelJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Buchtel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buckley, Stephen Patrick (December 23, 1891 - April 10,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Patrick Buckley was a Catholic priest who was the pastor
				  of St. Patrick Church in Walla Walla, WA and later St. Augustine Church in
				  Spokane, WA. He was the longest serving pastor at St. Augustine, serving from
				  1939 until his retirement in 1968.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BuckleySP1</container><unittitle>Father Stephen Patrick Buckley in lace surplice,
					 holding a Bible</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To Joseph Drumheller with my grateful
					 compliments, Fr. S. P. Buckley.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buford, Bennet (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bulfinch, Charles (August 8, 1763 - April 15,
				  1844)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Bulfinch was an early American architect, regarded by
				  many as the first native-born American to practice architecture as a
				  profession. He split his career between his native Boston and Washington, D.C.,
				  where he served as Commissioner of Public Building and built the intermediate
				  United States Capitol rotunda and dome. Bulfinch was responsible for the design
				  of the Boston Common, the remodeling and enlargement of Faneuil Hall (1805),
				  and the construction of India Wharf. He also designed the Massachusetts State
				  Prison (1803); Boylston Market (1810); University Hall for Harvard University
				  (1813–1814); the Meeting House in Lancaster, Massachusetts (1815–17); and the
				  Bulfinch Building, home of the Ether Dome, at Massachusetts General
				  Hospital.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BulfinchC1</container><unittitle>Charles Bulfinch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1786?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting by Mather Brown, held in the Harvard
					 University Portrait Collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bulfinch, Charles Francis (January 8, 1844 - May 23,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Bulfinch, the son of Francis Vaughn Bulfinch and Mary
				  Withrow Bulfinch, was born in Ashworth, GA. He fought in the Civil War with the
				  Massachusetts 13th Infantry and moved to San Francisco after the war ended. He
				  was an early settler in The Dalles, Oregon where he had a farm</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BulfinchCF1</container><unittitle>Charles Francis Bulfinch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bulfinch, John Trecothic Apthorp (May 3, 1837 - April
				  19, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Trecothic Apthorp Bulfinch was the grandson of Charles
				  Bulfinch, the architect. He went to sea in 1854, arriving on the west coast in
				  1857. He worked in the fur trade, invested in real estate and worked for Allen
				  Weir, the first Washington Secretary of State. He later worked for Colonel
				  Alden J. Blethen in connection with the Chamber of Commerce and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>. He wrote several books,
				  including<emph render="italic">The mother lode, a story of the Arctic</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">Story of a wayward life</emph>, and <emph>The first white
				  men in North West America</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BulfinchJTA1</container><unittitle>John Trecothic Apthorp Bulfinch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Plummer Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bullard, George Wesley (July 31, 1855 - May 30,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Wesley Bullard was born in Illinois and received his
				  degree in architecture from the University of Illinois. He joined the Western
				  Association of Architects in 1884, and thus became a member of the American
				  Institute of Architects on the merger of the two organizations in 1889. He was
				  the first president of the Washington chapter of the AIA. He designed numerous
				  public and private buildings throughout Washington state; in Tacoma, these
				  buildings include the State Historical Building, the Ferry Museum (a building
				  that is now the Washington State History Research Center), the YMCA and several
				  churches. He died after being struck by a streetcar.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BullardGW1</container><unittitle>George Wesley Bullard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. H. Scotford, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bullitt, Dorothy Stimson (Mrs. A. Scott) (February 5,
				  1892–June 27, 1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dorothy Stimson Bullitt was a radio and television pioneer who
				  founded King Broadcasting Company, a major owner of broadcast stations in
				  Seattle, Washington; she was the first woman in the United States to buy and
				  manage a television station. During the Great Depression, after the deaths of
				  her father, brother and husband, she took personal charge of her family's real
				  estate holdings and restored the family's real estate business to financial
				  health. While building KING’s broadcasting empire, she maintained a high level
				  of civic involvement. She served on the National Association of Broadcasters
				  Television Code Review Board from 1952 to 1956 and 1959 to 1963; the University
				  of Washington Board of Regents from 1958 to 1965; and the Washington State
				  Canal Commission from 1961 to 1967. Throughout her life, she won a number of
				  awards for her many achievements, including a personal Peabody award for her
				  contributions to the field of broadcasting, and Seattle’s First Citizen award
				  from the Seattle Real Estate Board. She remained an active member of King
				  Broadcasting’s executive committee until her retirement in 1988.The Bullitt
				  Foundation, which she founded in 1952, has a mission to protect the natural
				  environment of the Pacific Northwest, as well as donating to other charitable
				  organizations and causes. Her papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BullittDS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Stimson Bullitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0015/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BullittDS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Bullitt speaking at the
					 opening of the Stimson Building Cornerstone with James M. Ryan of University
					 Properties and Harold S. Shefelman of the UW Board of Regents</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1970</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0016/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Before the Stimson Building was replaced by the Financial
					 Center, commemorative ceremonies were held there. Mrs. Bullitt was the daughter
					 of C. D. Stimson, for whom the building was named and stands beside the bronze
					 plaque honoring her father.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bunzel, John Harvey (April 15, 1924 - July 19,
				  2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harvey Bunzel, a senior research fellow at the Hoover
				  Institution, specialized in current political and educational problems and
				  frequently wrote and lectured on issues of public policy. He was a former
				  commissioner of the US Civil Rights Commission. From 1970 to 1978, he was
				  president of San Jose State University. He received an AB in political science
				  from Princeton University, an MA in sociology from Columbia University, and a
				  PhD in political science from the University of California at Berkeley. From
				  1943 to 1946, he served in the US Army. He wrote numerous books and articles on
				  trade unions, discrimination and affirmative action, and the relationship
				  between quality and equality in education. He taught at San Francisco State
				  College (1953–56, 1965–70), Michigan State University (1956–57), and Stanford
				  University (1956–63). In 1990, he received the eighth annual Hubert Humphrey
				  Award from the American Political Science Association for his years of service
				  as "an outstanding public policy practitioner."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM1</container><unittitle>John Bunzel, Theodore Astley, Mr. Chinn and Albert
					 Ottenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burbank, Augustus Ripley (April 15, 1817 - October 7,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Augustus Ripley Burbank traveled overland from Naples, Illinois
				  to Sacramento, California between April and September of 1849. He stayed at
				  Sutter's Fort for a time and built up a business of trading in mules. From July
				  1850 to March 1851 he lived in Nevada City. He then sold out and returned to
				  Illinois via Panama and New Orleans. He and with his wife left Illinois in 1853
				  and came to Oregon by sea, via Panama and San Francisco. They settled first in
				  Lafayette, where Burbank engaged in various businesses, among them agent and
				  treasurer of the Pacific Telegraph Co. In 1857, they moved to Portland, and in
				  1858 to Monticello, W. T., where they established a hotel. Burbank was active
				  in politics, serving in the Oregon and Washington territorial legislatures. He
				  was appointed Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue, Second District, Washington
				  Territory in 1863. In 1867, he returned to Lafayette, Oregon and assumed full
				  ownership of a mercantile store in which he had retained half interest. Burbank
				  was also an investor in the Oregon Railway Company. His diaries are held in the
				  University of Oregon Special Collections and in the Huntington Library in San
				  Marino, CA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurbankAR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Augustus Ripley Burbank</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burbank, Eva L. (January 22, 1861 - August 15,
				  1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eva Burbank, the only child of Augustus R. and Mary Burbank,
				  drowned in the Pacific Ocean in 1880, and her body was never found. For several
				  years after her death, her memory was the major recurring theme of her father's
				  diaries. He distributed photographs of her to lighthouse keepers on the north
				  Pacific Coast and received communications from her via spiritualists. Charles
				  Bray, a Portland, Oregon composer, wrote a song in her memory, 
				  <emph render="italic">Lost in the Deep, Deep Sea </emph>which was published by
				  Wiley B. Allen of Portland in 1881.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurbankEL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eva Burbank</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burbank, Mary Eckles (January 14, 1827 - January 4,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Eckles was born near Milford, Delaware. Both of her parents
				  died before she was ten, and she married August Burbank in 1845 when she was
				  18. She and her husband traveled by boat to Oregon, arriving in 1853. She
				  taught Sunday School and conducted musical services for the Episcopal Church in
				  Lafayette, OR. Her only child, Eva, drowned in 1880.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurbankME1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Eckles Burbank</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burch, Benjamin Franklin (May 2, 1825 - March 24,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Burch was born in Carlton County, Missouri. In
				  1845, he traveled to Oregon, settling in Polk County. He was a teacher in the
				  first school in Polk County, which was also one of the earliest schools in
				  Oregon. In 1846, he helped Jesse Applegate and Levi Scott build the Applegate
				  Trail, a route to the valley through Southern Oregon. He served in the Cayuse
				  and Yakima Indian wars and attained the rank of captain. He was a delegate to
				  the constitutional convention from Polk County in 1857 and served on the
				  Military Affairs Committee. He served on a select committee with La Fayette
				  Grover and James Kelly to create a design for a state seal. Burch was elected
				  to serve in the State House of Representatives during the 1859 legislative
				  session, later serving in the State Senate from 1867 to 1870. In the 1868
				  session he was president of the Senate. In 1877 he was selected superintendent
				  of the state penitentiary and appointed receiver of the Oregon City land office
				  in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurchBF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Benjamin Franklin Burch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burd, Henry Alfred (July 12, 1889 - February 12,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Alfred Burd was born in Armstrong, Illinois and graduated
				  from Illinois Wesleyan University in 1910. After receiving his doctorate from
				  the University of Illinois, he taught at Hiram College, the University of
				  Illinois and the University of Wisconsin. During World War I, he was the
				  executive secretary to the State Council of Defense in Wisconsin, the first
				  State Council in the United States. He joined the University of Washington in
				  1924 as an assistant professor of Business Administration. During his 35 year
				  career at the UW, he was chair of the Department of Marketing, Transportation
				  and Foreign Trade (1945 - 1954), acting dean of the College of Business
				  Administration (1948 - 1949) and director of the UW summer quarter (1927 -
				  1945). He retired in 1954 but was called back in 1955 to be acting dean of the
				  Graduate School, a post he held until 1959 when he again retired. He was also a
				  marketing consultant and a faculty member of Advanced Management Seminars of
				  Western Canada. He wrote two books and numerous articles for professional
				  journals. He received an honorary Doctor of Law degree from Illinois Wesleyan
				  in 1957.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurdHA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Alfred Burd in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tom Cohen, NIS</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1953 edition of<emph>The
					 Tyee</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burdick, John "Slim Jim"</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John "Slim Jim" Burdick was a dog scout for General George A.
				  Custer. He accompanied General David S. Stanley on his 1873 expedition which
				  was organized to protect the surveyors and engineers of the Northern Pacific
				  Railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurdickJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John "Slim Jim" Burdick wearing
					 medals</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Burdon, Minnie Belle (August 3, 1878 - June 10,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Minnie Belle Burdon was born on Fidalgo Island, Skagit County,
				  Washington Territory to early settlers William and Jane Burdon. She graduated
				  from the University of Oregon Medical School in 1909 and completed her
				  internship at the Mayo Clinic. She served as a surgeon in the Army during World
				  War I. After the war, Burdon completed a residency in gynecology at the Mayo
				  Clinic and then returned to Anacortes to practice; she was the first female
				  suregon in Skagit County. She later practiced at Seattle General Hospital where
				  she served as Chief of Staff. She retired in 1950 after a forty-year career
				  that included volunteering her services at the Florence Crittenton Maternity
				  Home, a residential facility for young, unmarried, pregnant women. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">6</container><container type="item">BurdonMB1</container><unittitle>Dr. Minnie B. Burdon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 -1945?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: Sincerely, Minnie Burdon</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burke, John (1842 - 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>"Major" John M. Burke, sometimes known as "Arizona John," played
				  a pivotal role in cultivating William F. Cody's public image for 34 years. He
				  was associated with all the various iterations of Buffalo Bill's Wild West from
				  1883 until 1916, often holding the title of general manager. His actual duties
				  combined those of advance agent, location scout, press agent, and
				  public-relations manager. Known for his florid language, Burke composed much of
				  the copy for the Wild West's programs and advertising materials. In 1893 he
				  published a biography of Cody entitled <emph render="italic">Buffalo Bill from
				  Prairie to Palace</emph>, which was timed to coincide with the Wild West's
				  appearance at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>Bill Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma with Major John Burke,
					 Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill) Lillie, and Jose
					 Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p><p>Filed under William F. Cody subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burke, Mary William Ethelbert Appleton "Billie" (August
				  7, 1884 – May 14, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Billie Burke was an American actress, primarily known to modern
				  audiences as Glinda the Good Witch of the North in the musical film 
				  <emph render="italic">The Wizard of Oz</emph>. She was nominated for an Academy
				  Award for her performance as Emily Kilbourne in <emph render="italic">Merrily
				  We Live</emph>. Burke was the wife of Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr., of Ziegfeld
				  Follies fame, from 1914 until his death in 1932.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurkeMWEA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Promotional card for the play, 
					 <emph render="italic">Love Watches</emph> presented by Charles Frohman at the
					 Moore Theater in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1908</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burke, Caroline McGilvra (1857 - May 11, 1932) -See also
				  Burke Coll.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline “Carrie” Ethel McGilvra, the daughter of John J. and
				  Elizabeth Hills McGilvra, was born in Chicago in 1857. Her father was a
				  prominent lawyer and judge who was appointed by President Lincoln in 1861 to
				  serve as the United States Attorney for the Territory of Washington. After
				  first moving to Olympia, the McGilvras settled in Seattle in 1864. On October
				  5,1879, Caroline married Thomas Burke, a successful judge, businessman, and
				  activist who had once been law partners with her father. Caroline had a number
				  of civic and cultural interests and was involved with a food conservation
				  campaign during World War I, the Red Cross, the Ladies’ Relief Society, Camp
				  Fire Girls, Seattle Garden Club, Lighthouse for the Blind, the Seattle
				  Historical Society, Seattle Tennis Club, Seattle Golf Club, and the Garden
				  Club. She was one of the founding members of the Sunset Club. The couple were
				  avid collectors of Northwest native art and artifacts. Much of their collection
				  is now housed at the Burke Museum on the University of Washington campus, which
				  was named in honor of Thomas Burke in 1962, following a bequest from Caroline’s
				  estate. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH1</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin with (L to R) Mrs. Manson (Elise) Backus,
					 Mrs. Thomas (Caroline) Burke, Chin's bodyguard, Judge Thomas Burke and Chin's
					 son, Lem Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gee Hee Chin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burke, Thomas (December 22, 1849 - December 4, 1925)
				  -See also Burke Coll.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Burke was an early Seattle lawyer, businessman, and civic
				  activist who was instrumental in shaping much of the Seattle area. He served as
				  a judge, invested in real estate, established the Seattle, Lake Shore &amp;
				  Eastern Railway, which was later acquired by Northern Pacific Railway, and
				  supported many important civic developments. He supported public education and
				  served on the Whitman College board of overseers for over a decade. Burke was a
				  patron of both Whitman College and the University of Washington, and a
				  substantial gift from the Burkes' estate provided for the construction of the
				  Burke Museum on the University of Washington campus. His papers form a vital
				  part of the record of many important political and economic developments on
				  Puget Sound. Andrew Carnegie in 1910 asked Burke to act as a trustee of the
				  Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. This was one of Burke’s most
				  important duties and platforms during the remaining fifteen years of his life.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksRE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Brooks with group at the dedication
					 of the Seward statue at Volunteer Park in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1, 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Brooks second from the right in the front row, Judge Thomas
					 Burke third from the right in the front row, Judge Cornelius Holgate Hanford in
					 center, Edward C. Cheasty to Hanford's left.</p><p>Filed under Richard E. Brooks subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH1</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin with (L to R) Mrs. Manson (Elise) Backus,
					 Mrs. Thomas (Caroline) Burke, Chin's bodyguard, Judge Thomas Burke and Chin's
					 son, Lem Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gee Hee Chin subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burks, N.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Burleigh, Andrew Faulk (January 7, 1858 - July 2,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Faulk Burleigh was born in Pennsylvania. He studied law
				  in the office of Gideon C. Moody, later U. S. Senator from South Dakota, and
				  then took a law course at the University of Iowa, graduating in 1878. He began
				  practice at Yankton, Dakota, eventually moving to Seattle in 1889. He was the
				  general counsel of the Oregon Improvement Company, and also local counsel for
				  the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ4</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Lord Thomas Brassley, Benjamin
					 F. Bush, Charles B. Tedcastle and Andrew F. Burleigh.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Company, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnell, Edward W. (December 27, 1865 - October 13,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward W. Burnell was born in Nevada City, California and played
				  change field for the Seattle Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Oregon, Washington Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884
				  season. He was employed as a lather and shingler. He married Effie May O'Neal
				  in 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnet, William (March 1687/8 – September 7, 1729)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Burnet was a British civil servant and colonial
				  administrator who served as governor of New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and
				  New Hampshire. Born into a position of privilege (his godfather became William
				  III of England not long after his birth, and his father Gilbert Burnet was
				  later Bishop of Salisbury), Burnet was well educated, tutored among others by
				  Isaac Newton. Active for most of his life in intellectual pursuits (he was
				  elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1705/6), he occupied no posts of
				  importance until financial considerations and political connections brought him
				  the governorships of New York and New Jersey. His tenure in New Jersey was
				  without major controversies, although he set a precedent there for accepting
				  what were effectively bribes in exchange for his assent to legislation. In New
				  York he sought unsuccessfully to end the fur trade between Albany and Montreal
				  in order to implement a colonial policy preferring direct trade with the Native
				  Americans in central North America. His New York rule was marked by an increase
				  in political divisions between land owners (with whom Burnet sided) and
				  merchants. After the death of King George I, King George II appointed Burnet
				  governor of New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Although his New Hampshire tenure
				  was inconsequential, he engaged in a dispute with the Massachusetts assembly
				  over the issue of his salary, holding the legislative body in session for six
				  months and relocating it away from Boston. The dispute held up other colonial
				  business and was ongoing in September 1729 when Burnet died.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnetW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Burnet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1720 and 1729?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving from a portrait by John Watson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnett, James Danforth (March 12, 1822 - February 4,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Danforth Burnett was born in Blount County, Tennessee and
				  traveled to Salem, Oregon in 1850. He moved to Myrtle Creek, Douglas County,
				  Oregon in 1852 and established a farm. He was married to Margaret Love in 1847;
				  they had seven children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnettJD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Danforth Burnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnett, John Franklin (July 4, 1831 - March 1,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> John Burnett was born in Pike County, Missouri. His father died
				  when he was fifteen, and he supported himself by working as an errand boy for a
				  store and on a flat-boat on the Mississippi. In the spring of 1849, he traveled
				  to California during the gold rush. He worked in mining and cattle raising
				  until the spring of 1858, when he moved to Benton County, OR. He began reading
				  law with Colonel Kelsey of Corvallis and obtained a license to practice in
				  1861. In 1862 he ran for state senator but was defeated by only twenty-five
				  votes. In 1864 he took an active part in raising the first company in the
				  regiment called for in Oregon during the Civil War. He was elected county judge
				  of Benton County in 1870. In 1872 he ran for Congress and was defeated by a
				  small majority. He was admitted as an attorney by the Oregon Supreme Court in
				  1869 and was chosen associate justice of the Oregon Supreme Court in 1874. Two
				  years later he was elected state senator from Benton County and was appointed
				  chairman of the judiciary committee of the Senate. In 1882 he was appointed to
				  serve the unexpired term of Judge James Watson, who had resigned. After
				  expiration of his term of office he returned to the practice of law. In 1891 he
				  was elected mayor of Corvallis. He helped build the State Agriculture College
				  and was senior counsel for the state in its litigation with the
				  Methodist-Episcopal Church South for the control of the college board.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnettJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> John Burnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnett, Louis H. (December 24, 1875 - January 8,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis H. Burnett was born in Poland and moved to the United
				  States with his family in 1880. He arrived in Washington in 1893. He was the
				  founder and president of Burnett Brothers Jewelers. He opened his first jewelry
				  store in Chehalis in 1898; his store in Tacoma opened in 1918. He moved the
				  store to the Pythian Temple building at 924-26 Broadway in 1937; the company
				  went out of business in Tacoma in the mid-1960s. He was one of the
				  commissioners of the 1909 Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition and was very active
				  in civic affairs. During the first World War, he was the director of the U. S.
				  Government War Savings drive in Washington; after the war, he worked with the
				  American Relief Administration Commission. He was the organizer and first
				  president of the Pacific Coast International Baseball League and worked on
				  successful campaigns in Washington and California to increase teachers'
				  salaries.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnettLH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Louis H. Burnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. Gylfe, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnett, Martha Hinton (September 28, 1838 - July 6,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Hinton was born in Franklin County, Missouri. Her parents
				  emigrated to Oregon in 1846 and located their Donation claim in the southern
				  part of Benton County, near Monroe. In 1859, she married John Franklin Burnett.
				  They moved to Corvallis, where her husband began practicing law. They had seven
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnettMH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martha Hinton Burnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burnett, Samuel Elmer (October 24, 1877 - August 4,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Elmer Burnett was elected the secretary-treasurer of the
				  Milkwagon Drivers Union. He worked to improve bookkeeping methods and provide
				  better supervision of resources after the previous union official had
				  disappeared.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnettSE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Elmer Burnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hamilton Studio</corpname></origination></did><note><p>A similar photo appeared in the <emph render="italic">Seattle
					 Times</emph> on April 9, 1928.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burns, Wayne (August 26, 1916 - September 15,
				  2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. Wayne Burns was an English professor at the University of
				  Washington for over thirty-six years. He also taught at Miami University
				  (Ohio), Cornell, Harvard, the University of California at Berkeley, San Diego
				  State University (as visiting professor), and published widely in scholarly and
				  critical journals. He wrote several books, including <emph render="italic">A
				  panzaic theory of the novel</emph>,<emph render="italic">Charles Reade</emph>,
				  a study of the Victorian author, and an autobiography<emph render="italic">Journey through the dark woods</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurnsW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Wayne Burns in his office with
					 unidentified student</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burroughs, John (April 3, 1837 – March 29,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Burroughs was an American naturalist and nature essayist,
				  active in the U.S. conservation movement. The first of his essay collections
				  was <emph render="italic">Wake-Robin</emph>in 1871. <emph render="italic">The
				  Complete Writings of John Burroughs</emph> totals 23 volumes. In 1899, he
				  participated in E. H. Harriman's expedition to Alaska. Since his death in 1921,
				  he has been commemorated by the John Burroughs Association, which maintains the
				  John Burroughs Sanctuary in Esopus, New York, and awards a medal each year to
				  the author of a distinguished book of natural history.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MuirJ3</container><unittitle>John Muir with John Burroughs during the Harriman
					 Alaska Expedition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward S. Curtis</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under John Muir subseries. From the Harriman Alaska
					 Expedition Photograph Album Collection PH Coll 333.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Burwell, William Turnbull Jr. (May 4, 1883 - March 24,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Turnbull Burwell was born in Annapolis, Maryland, the
				  son of Admiral William Turnbull Burwell. The family moved to the Seattle area
				  when his father was the commander of the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. He
				  attended the UW in 1902, took a year off to go to sea, and then entered Cornell
				  University, graduating in 1906. He worked at Puget Sound Machinery and owned
				  several auto dealerships selling Durant Auburn and Cord cars. He later worked
				  in the insurance industry and was the branch manager of the General Adjustment
				  Bureau in Oakland, CA at the time of his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BurwellWT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Turnbull Burwell
					 Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Colpitts, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photo is signed: Yours in Phi Gamma Delta, W. T. Burwell,
					 Jr.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, Asahel (June 4, 1824 - December 23,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asahel Bush was born in Westfield, MA and originally apprenticed
				  as a printer, intending to work in the newspaper field; he was the editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Westfield Standard</emph> from January 1849 until
				  July of 1850. He also studied law in Westfield and was admitted to the bar in
				  1850. In July of 1850, he traveled west by way of Panama, arriving in Oregon
				  City, Oregon in 1850. He relocated to Salem, OR in 1853 and was one of the
				  founders of the city. He was the owner and editor of <emph render="italic">The
				  Oregon Statesman</emph>, the first edition appearing in March, 1851. He sold
				  the paper in 1861 and started in the banking business; his bank became the
				  largest in the state outside of Portland. He invested in several businesses in
				  Salem, including the Salem Flouring Mill, the Salem Woolen Mill, the Salem
				  Foundry and the Oregon Steam Navigation Company. He served as the territorial
				  printer for Oregon and was a member of the Board of Visitors to the U. S.
				  Miliary Academy at West Point. He was a regent at Oregon State University and
				  was one of the founders and a trustee of Willamette University. He was a member
				  of the Board of Directors of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition of
				  1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Bush</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, Anderson Sergeant (or Sargent) (December 24, 1837
				  - July 2, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anderson S. Bush was an early settler in Bay Center, Washington
				  who served in the Washington House of Representatives from 1893 to 1899. He
				  fought in the Civil War with the Wisconsin Volunteers 20th Infantry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anderson S. Bush</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W. Duckering, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bush, Andrew Jackson (January 11, 1859 - August 3,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Jackson Bush, the son of James William Bush and Martha
				  Ann Stewart Bush, was born in Corvallis, Oregon, and had a farm in Fall City,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Bush, Benjamin Franklin (July 5, 1860 - July 28,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Bush was an American railroad executive. At
				  various times, he served as the president of the Missouri Pacific Railroad, the
				  St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway (later part of the Missouri
				  Pacific), the Western Maryland Railway, the Denver and Rio Grande Western
				  Railroad, and the Western Pacific Railroad. He was a business partner of
				  Charles Jackson Smith and was associated with the Pacific Coast Coal Company,
				  the Rosyln Coal Company, and was an investor in the Oregon Improvement
				  Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ3</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Benjamin F. Bush. Lord Thomas
					 and Lady Anna Brassey, four unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. J. Smith, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Lord and Lady Brassey visited Seattle during their around the
					 world voyage on their yacht, <emph>Sunbeam</emph>; Lady Brassey published a
					 book about their travels. During their visit, they toured Anacortes and the
					 Skagit Valley. Lord Brassey was interested in the Oregon Improvement Company
					 which owned and operated coal mines, railroads, and steamship companies; the
					 company's subsidiaries included the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Newspaper
					 accounts recorded General Counsel Andrew F. Burleigh, Treasurer Charles B.
					 Tedcastle, and Superintendent Phelps as members of the group touring the area
					 with Lord and Lady Brassey; they are probably the men in the photograph.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ4</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Lord Thomas Brassley, Benjamin
					 F. Bush, Charles B. Tedcastle and Andrew F. Burleigh.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Company, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, Daniel Webster, Sr. (June 15, 1832 - May 7,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Webster Bush was born in Ohio County, Indiana. In 1853 he
				  crossed the plains to the Pacific Coast and established a Donation Claim on
				  Shoalwater Bay on the Willapa River. In 1855, he enlisted in the Army. During
				  his employment with the government, he drove the first wagon over the Zinco
				  Mountains. After leaving the army, he had a contract to carry the mail from Oak
				  Point to Round Valley. He married Alice LaDu in September, 1858 and in 1863,
				  the family moved to Mount Coffin Landing in Cowlitz County on the Columbia
				  River where he built a warehouse.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushDWebster1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Webster Bush, Sr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Churchley, Portland, OR</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, Daniel Wesley (December 5, 1869 - March 7,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel W. Bush was born in Kansas and graduated from the
				  University of Nebraska. He was the publisher of the <emph render="italic">Chehalis Bee-Nugget</emph> and president of the Chehalis
				  Chamber of Commerce.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushDWesley1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Wesley Bush</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Stevens Art Studio, Chicago, IL</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, Martha Ann (March 1, 1836 - April 23,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Ann Stewart was born in Indiana. She married James W.
				  Bush in Corvallis, OR in 1854, and the family moved to Squak Valley (now
				  Issaquah).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martha Bush standing in
					 doorway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushMA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martha Bush sitting on porch at
					 Issaquah, WA</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushMA3</container><unittitle>Martha Bush standing near gate and
					 motorcycle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>There are two copies, one is captioned on the back: "Mrs. Bush
					 at Issaquah. Lived there at the time of the Casto murders." On November 7,
					 1864, two members of the Snohomish tribe murdered William and Abigail Casto in
					 their home in Squab Valley. Also killed was John Halstead, a housemate. The
					 assailants were in turn killed by Aleck, the Casto’s Native American friend and
					 employee.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bush, William Owen (July 4, 1832 - February 14,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Owen Bush was the eldest son of George and Isabella
				  Bush. George Bush was a mixed-race settler who came with his large family to
				  what is now the Tumwater, Washington area in 1845. The Bushes were all farmers
				  on the 800 acre Bush farm along the Deschutes River. After a trip to the
				  California Gold Rush in 1850, William Owen moved to Mound Prairie south of
				  Tumwater with his wife Mandana Smith Kimsey Bush. After his parents’ deaths, he
				  moved back to the Bush Prairie farm and with his wife and brothers, helped
				  organize the Western Washington Industrial Association (WWIA) in 1872 to
				  promote agricultural exhibitions. The first of his many agricultural awards was
				  in 1875 which prompted the territory to authorize his exhibit at the
				  Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876. There he won bronze medals and
				  certificates for the “best wheat in the world.” The exhibit was put on
				  permanent display at the Smithsonian Institution while the medal and
				  certificates were shown from community to community around the territory. In
				  1889 he represented Thurston County in the first state legislature. While
				  serving in the House of Representatives he help write the first state laws
				  including House Bill 90 which pledged the state to use “use federal money from
				  the Morrell Act to establish a college for the study of the science of
				  agriculture.” Combined with several other bills, this proposal became
				  Washington State College in Pullman, now Washington State University. In 1892,
				  the State of Washington, Thurston County and the City of Olympia appropriated
				  money to take a Bush exhibit to the Chicago World’s Fair where he won medals
				  and certificates for vegetables and grains and where he was appointed to the
				  Advisory Council of the World’s Congress Auxiliary on Farm Culture and Cereal
				  Industry. Bush represented the farmers of the United States in this Congress,
				  and when he died, the Olympia newspaper headlined him: “Pioneer of Pioneers”
				  and said “No other resident of the State or Territory throughout its history
				  did more to advertise the state.” </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushWO1</container><unittitle>William Owen Bush</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bushnell, James Sherman (June 29, 1858 - May 12,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James S. Bushnell was born in Bangall, N. Y. and came to Seattle
				  in 1888. He was a member of the Territorial National Guard and helped fight the
				  fire of June 6, 1889 which destroyed much of Seattle's business district. In
				  1893, he married Kate Ward Knapp, the daughter of D. B. Ward, for whom Ward
				  Street is named. With John Leary and Captain William Ballard, he helped plan
				  the development of Ballard. He headed the Internal Revenue office in Seattle
				  from 1902 until 1912. From 1914 until his retirement in 1935, he was the deputy
				  assessor for King County. His brother-in-law was Edmond Meany.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushnellJS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James
					 Bushnell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Rainier Photographic and Art Studios, F. La Roche, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BushnellJS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Studio portrait of James
					 Bushnell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890-1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Butler, Hillory (March 31, 1819 - February 3,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hilory Butler was born in Virginia and lived on his father’s
				  farm until he was twenty-one years old. He moved to Lexington, Missouri, farmed
				  there until 1852. In April, 1852, he and his wife, Catherine, joined the Hays
				  and Cowan wagon train, arriving in Portland in September of the same year.
				  After spending the first winter in Portland, he went to Olympia in the spring
				  of 1853, and a month later to Alki Point, where he remained for three months.
				  He then moved to Seattle and purchased two lots on the corner of Second and
				  James Streets where he built the Butler Block. He took part in the war of
				  1855-56. In 1854 he was elected sheriff of King County. In 1861 he was
				  appointed Indian agent of the Duwamish and Muckleshoot Indians and served for
				  one year. He was appointed deputy provost marshal for Washington Territory in
				  1862. He also held the post of sergeant-at-arms of the legislature. He built
				  the first frame house in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ButlerH1</container><unittitle>Hillory Butler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="publisher">The Lewis Publishing Co</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ButlerH2</container><unittitle> Hillory Butler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>His first name is spelled Hilory on the engraving</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Butler, Ira Francis Marion (May 20, 1812 - January 16,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Frances Marion Butler was born in Kentucky, the eldest of
				  Peter and Rachel Butler’s children. In 1832 he served in the Black Hawk War
				  under his father from June 11 to September 4. He also served as the deputy
				  sheriff, sheriff and clerk of Warren County, Illinois during the time that he
				  lived there. He married Mary Ann Davidson on November 5, 1835; they had nine
				  children. In 1853, they traveled with his parents to the Oregon Territory. He
				  is believed to have selected the name of Monmouth for the new town in Polk
				  County, Oregon Territory (presumably after Monmouth, Illinois where the Butler
				  family came from), and broke the tie vote between the two possible names: Dover
				  and Monmouth. He served as Justice of the Peace in Polk County, Oregon from
				  1853 to around 1880. He helped found Monmouth University (now Western Oregon
				  University) and served as president for its Board of Trustees from 1855-1882.
				  He served three terms on the Oregon Legislature in 1856, 1858 and 1862, and
				  served as the Speaker for the Oregon House of Representatives for the Democrat
				  Party in 1858. He also served as Polk County Judge between 1872-1878 and 1882
				  and became the second mayor of Monmouth, Oregon in 1882 after its incorporation
				  in 1881. He also helped found the Polk County Bank.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ButlerIFM1</container><unittitle>Ira Frances Marion Butler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Butler, Nicholas Murray (April 2, 1862 - December 7,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nicholas Murray Butler, an American philosopher, diplomat, and
				  educator was president of Columbia University, president of the Carnegie
				  Endowment for International Peace, a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, and
				  the late James S. Sherman's replacement as William Howard Taft’s running mate
				  in the 1912 United States presidential election. Butler earned his bachelor of
				  arts degree in 1882, his master's degree in 1883 and his doctorate in 1884, all
				  from Columbia University. In 1901, he became acting president of Columbia
				  University and, in 1902, formally became president. Butler was president of
				  Columbia for 43 years, the longest tenure in the university's history, retiring
				  in 1945.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH11</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Governor Ernest Lister; Dr.
					 Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; and Dr. Ernest O.
					 Holland, president of Washington State College, taken on the day of President
					 Suzzallo's inauguration.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 21, 1916</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears on page 14 of the 1916 edition of 
						<emph>The Tyee.</emph></p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Butler, Paul Mulholland (June 15, 1905 – December 30,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Mulholland Butler was a U.S. lawyer and chairman of the
				  Democratic National Committee from 1955 until 1960. After being active in
				  Indiana Democratic Party politics, Butler was named to the Democratic National
				  Committee in 1952, when he was a staunch ally of Adlai Stevenson. He later
				  became DNC chairman and used the post to articulate policy positions in
				  opposition to the Eisenhower administration. Butler's liberal ideology was
				  opposed by conservative and moderate Democrats. Never a close ally of John F.
				  Kennedy, he was dropped as DNC chairman after Kennedy's 1960 general election
				  victory. He spoke at the UW in 1958.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ButlerPM1</container><unittitle>Paul Mulholland Butler speaking at a
					 lectern</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958?</unitdate><origination><corpname>NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Butterworth, Edgar Ray (March 3, 1847-January 1,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Ray Butterworth was an American funeral director, believed
				  to have coined the professional terms "mortuary" and "mortician." He was born
				  in Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, and from the age of 16, was the prime
				  breadwinner in his family. He worked for a time as a hatter; then, still in his
				  teens and despite a limited formal education, he began to study law and was
				  admitted to the bar in Massachusetts just after he reached the age of 21. He
				  married in 1869, and he and his wife moved west, first to St. Louis, MO and
				  then to Kansas where he worked as a cattleman. In 1881 the Butterworths moved
				  farther west, to Washington, arriving in Chehalis in August of that year.
				  Instead of raising cattle, he built the first steam-powered flour mill west of
				  the Cascades. The following spring the Butterworths relocated a short distance
				  to Centerville, (later Centralia), where Butterworth set up a small furniture
				  business. He served as a member of the first city council of Centralia and
				  later as the city's mayor; he also served two terms was in the state
				  legislature. When an epidemic of "black diphtheria" hit the region, Butterworth
				  was called upon to make coffins, which is the point at which he effectively
				  entered the undertaking business. In 1892, he relocated to Seattle, where he
				  went into the undertaking business in a bigger way. He purchased a controlling
				  interest in the Cross &amp; Co. Undertakers; the business was soon renamed E.
				  R. Butterworth &amp; Sons, with five of his sons joining him in the business.
				  The Butterworth Block or Butterworth Building, built in 1903, was the city's
				  first custom-built modern mortuary.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ButterworthER1</container><unittitle>Edgar Ray Butterworth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Buxton, Henry T. (October 8, 1829 - January 19,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Buxton was born in Manitoba, Canada where his father was
				  an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company. The Buxton family went to Oregon in
				  1841 as members of the Red River Colony and were among the first settlers of
				  Tualatin Plains. In 1850 the family moved to Forest Grove, where they operated
				  a farm. Henry Buxton assisted in building the first wagon road from Tualatin
				  Plains to Portland in 1846 and hauled the first load of produce over that road
				  to Portland. He served two terms as county commissioner, thirty-eight years as
				  school director and trustee and held many minor offices. He was a member of the
				  legislature from his district for one term. An unincorporated community in
				  Washington County, OR near Oregon Route 47 is named for Buxton; it was settled
				  by him in 1884, and he served as the first postmaster for the community. A
				  station on the Portland, Astoria &amp; Pacific Railroad above Mendenhall Creek
				  east of the community is also named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BuxtonHT1</container><unittitle>Henry Buxton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Bye, Louis Kenton (October 28, 1906 - February 26,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis K. Bye graduated from Tulane University. He was the
				  manager of the mail order division of Sears Roebuck &amp; Company and served on
				  several boards, including the Seattle Symphony, Seattle Goodwill, Seattle-King
				  County Community Check, the United Good Neighbor Fund and the Ryther Child
				  Center. In 1965, he donated microfilms of the Sears Roebuck catalogues to the
				  University of Washington Libraries.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilczewskiMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Marion Milczewski accepting a gift of
					 microfilm of Sears Roebuck catalogues from Louis Bye</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jack H. Johnson, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Marion Milczewski subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Byers, Horace Greeley (December 26, 1872 - December 2,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Greeley Byers (A.B., B.S., Westminster, (Pa.) 1895: A.M.
				  1898; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins 1899; LLD. Westminster 1926) was the first head of
				  the combined Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at the UW and
				  served in that capacity from 1899 to 1919. He was later head of the chemistry
				  department at Cooper Union in New York for nine years. From 1928 until 1942, he
				  worked for the Department of Agriculture as chief of the Division of Soil
				  Chemistry and Physics. He founded the UW Chemistry Library with his own books
				  and periodicals; his portrait was presented to the library by the alumni of the
				  department in 1952. He was president of the Institute of Chemistry, wrote
				  several books and was best known for his work on soil, although he also did
				  research on metals and rubber vulcanization. He served during World War I and
				  is buried in Arlington Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG1</container><unittitle>Horace Greeley Byers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University of
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Byles, Elizabeth Jane Medcalf (1835 -?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Jame Medcalf was married to Charles N. Byles whose
				  family was in the first wagon train to cross the Naches Pass in 1853. He
				  founded the town of Montesano, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BylesEJ1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Jane Byles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Byrne, Francis Barry (December 19, 1883 – December 18,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Barry Byrne was initially a member of the group of
				  architects known as the Prairie School. After seeing a Chicago Architectural
				  Club exhibit in 1902, he sought employment with Frank Lloyd Wright and secured
				  an apprentice position although he was untrained in architecture. He worked for
				  Wright in his Oak Park, Illinois studio until 1907 and then briefly at other
				  Chicago firms. He moved to Seattle in winter 1908 to 1909 to join Andrew
				  Willatzen who had been a fellow employee at Wright's office. They formed the
				  firm Willatzen &amp; Byrne and, over the next several years, produced a series
				  of residential designs in the Prairie School style. After the Willatzen &amp;
				  Byrne partnership dissolved in 1913, Byrne moved to Southern California where
				  he lived briefly with Wright's sons, Lloyd Wright and John Lloyd Wright. In
				  1914, he returned to Chicago and by 1917 was practicing under his own name.
				  During the 1920s, he became successful as a designer of ecclesiastical and
				  educational buildings for the Roman Catholic Church.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByrneFB1</container><unittitle>Francis Barry Byrne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>C</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Caesar, Frantz </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frantz (or Franz) Caesar was a magician who performed in
				  vaudeville in the early part of the 20th century.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CaesarF1</container><unittitle>Frantz Caesar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cain, Harry Pulliam (January 10, 1906 – March 3,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Pulliam Cain was born in Nashville, Tennessee. The family
				  moved to Tacoma in 1911, and Cain attended Tacoma public schools. In 1920, he
				  enrolled at Hill Military Academy in Portland, Oregon, where he was a star
				  athlete and edited the school newspaper. He graduated from The University of
				  the South in Sewanee, Tennessee in 1929, and received an offer of work from 
				  <emph>The New York Times.</emph> Before moving to New York City, Cain visited
				  his father in Tacoma but finding him in ill health, decided to stay in Tacoma
				  where he was employed by The Bank of California. In 1935, he and his wife,
				  Marjorie, took an extended trip to England and Germany. While in Germany, Cain
				  attended several mass rallies where Adolf Hitler and other top Nazi leaders
				  spoke and returned home convinced that Germany presented a major world threat.
				  He made more than 150 speeches to local and statewide groups about what he had
				  seen. When Tacoma was selected to host the 1939 Golden Jubilee Celebration,
				  Cain was selected as its festival director. The success of the event led Cain
				  to run for the non-partisan position of Mayor of Tacoma in a special election
				  to complete the two-year term of the interim mayor who decided not to run
				  again. His first term was characterized by the build-up for World War II at the
				  shipyards and military bases around Tacoma. Following the Japanese attack at
				  Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Cain was one of only two elected officials on the West
				  Coast to publicly oppose the government's internment of 110,000 Japanese and
				  Japanese Americans. In 1942, Cain was re-elected mayor by the largest plurality
				  in Tacoma's history. His second term was characterized by his aggressive
				  efforts to clean up long-existing vice, to obtain funding for wartime housing,
				  to institute a long-range planning process for the city, to reform the outdated
				  City Commission form of government, and opposition from his fellow city
				  commissioners to each of the above. He took a leave of absence in May 1943 to
				  enter the United States Army, serving in the European front until 1945. After
				  the war, he resumed his duties as mayor of Tacoma until June 15, 1946 when he
				  resigned to run for the United States Senate. He was elected in 1946, serving
				  until 1953 when he was defeated by Henry M. Jackson. While in the Senate, he
				  generally supported the efforts of Senator Joseph McCarthy and others to
				  identify and dismiss government employees who were alleged to be Communist
				  security risks. Following his Senate career, he was nominated by President
				  Dwight Eisenhower to the Subversive Activities Control Board; he soon became
				  aware of numerous cases in which the government’s internal security program,
				  while legal, often violated the civil liberties of the accused and sometimes
				  denied them due process under the law. He began to speak out against the
				  program, giving speeches and championing the cause of those unfairly charged.
				  He later moved to Florida, where he was appointed to the Metropolitan
				  Miami-Dade County Commission. He championed one of the first indoor smoking
				  bans in the country and other measures ensuring equal rights in jobs, housing
				  and public accommodation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at a train
					 station with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry, being
					 interviewed by a newsman with a microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform talking to
					 his wife Marjorie, in a crowd, probably at the train station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry. sitting in
					 front of a Nazi flag</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain speaking at a podium in
					 front of a KVI radio sign</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cain, Harry P. Jr. (September 26, 1935 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry P. Cain Jr., the son of Harry Cain, former Tacoma mayor
				  and U. S. Senator, received his undergraduate degree from Stanford, a Master's
				  degree in political theory and American government from the UW (1961) and a PhD
				  from Brandeis University in social policy, planning and research.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at a train
					 station with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry, being
					 interviewed by a newsman with a microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry. sitting in
					 front of a Nazi flag</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cain, Marjorie Eloise Dils (December 26, 1908 -
				  September, 1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marjorie Eloise Dils was married to Harry P. Cain, former Tacoma
				  mayor and U. S. Senator. They divorced in the 1950s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at a train
					 station with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry, being
					 interviewed by a newsman with a microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform talking to
					 his wife Marjorie, in a crowd, probably at the train station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry. sitting in
					 front of a Nazi flag</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Cain, Marlyce "Candy" (June 5, 1944 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marlyce "Candy" Cain Tingstad is the daughter of Harry P. Cain,
				  former Tacoma mayor and U. S. Senator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at a train
					 station with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry, being
					 interviewed by a newsman with a microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CainHP4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Cain in army uniform at home
					 with his wife, Marjorie, and children Marlyce "Candy" and Harry. sitting in
					 front of a Nazi flag</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Pulliam Cain subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Caine, Elmer E. (May 31, 1863 - August 25,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer E. Caine was born in Whitehall, Michigan. He moved to
				  Minneapolis where he was employed by the Wisconsin Central and Northern Pacific
				  Railways. He arrived in Seattle in 1889, gaining his start by bringing building
				  materials to the city after the Seattle fire of that year. Caine owned several
				  steamships and tugboats, and during the Alaska gold rush, formed the Pacific
				  Clipper Line, operating between Seattle and Alaska. He later organized the
				  Alaska and Pacific Steamship Company; one of his vessels was the first to bring
				  supplies to San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake. He owned two cement
				  companies, and with Senator A. T. Van de Vanter, G. W. Dickinson and J. F.
				  McElroy, organized the King County Fair Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CaineEE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elmer E. Caine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on the front page of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Daily Times</emph> on August 25, 1908.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Caldwell, Shirley L. (May 21, 1929 - November 16,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Shirley Caldwell was president of the Seattle Women’s Commission
				  in the 1970s. She was a graphic ad artist with <emph>The Seattle
				  Times</emph>retiring from The Seattle Times in 1994. She was a University of
				  Washington graduate, and was one of the founding members of the Seattle Women's
				  Commission. She was a lifelong member of the Newspaper Guild/CWA, and was
				  elected as a Vice President of the National Union. She was a delegate to the
				  MLK Central Labor Council in later years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calhoon, Dr. George Villiers (October 19, 1837 -
				  September 16, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Villiers Calhoon was one of the most important figures in
				  Washington Territory and in Washington State medical circles. He was born in
				  Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick, Canada and graduated from the University of
				  Glasgow Medical School in 1862. He served as an assistant surgeon alongside Dr.
				  Joseph Lister with the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War. After the war,
				  he joined the Marine Hospital Service and was assigned to the Marine Hospital
				  in Port Angeles. He built the first Marine Hospital in Port Townsend, where he
				  trained other physicians, including Dr. D. I. Minor. After leaving the Hospital
				  Service, he started a private practice, first in Port Townsend and later in
				  Seattle, where he practiced at Providence Hospital. He was appointed by the
				  governor as one of the regents of the Territorial University and was president
				  of the Board until 1880 when he returned to private practice in La Conner.
				  After La Conner was incorporated in 1883, he served on the first city council
				  and was elected mayor the following year. He was appointed to the first medical
				  examining board in the state and worked to secure laws to improve the practice
				  of medicine. In 1893, he served as one of the executive commissioners of the
				  Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Calhoon returned to Seattle and served on the
				  school board and as a trustee of the Territorial University. He was active in
				  the King County Medical Society and the Washington State Medical Association
				  and was one of the organizers of the State Historical Society. He retired from
				  practice in 1904.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhoonGV1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Villiers Calhoon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhoonGV2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of George Villiers
					 Calhoon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calhoun, Abigail Cleveland (October 2, 1827 - March 11,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abigail Cleveland, the daughter of Isaac Cleveland and Catherine
				  Howard Cleveland, married James B. Calhoun on February 18, 1860 in New
				  Brunswick, Canada. The family moved to La Conner, WA inn the 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhounAC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Abigail Cleveland Calhoun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. J. Wingren, La Conner, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calhoun, Ida E. (November 29, 1862 - August 5,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida E. Calhoun, the daughter of James B. and Abigail Calhoun,
				  was born in Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick, Canada. The family moved to La
				  Conner, Washington in the 1880s. She married Robert C. Turner in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhounIE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ida E. Calhoun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">D.B. Ewing, Everett, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calhoun, James B. (December 12, 1825- March 4,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James B. Calhoun was born in Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick,
				  Canada. He married Abigail Cleveland in 1862, and the family moved to La
				  Conner, WA in the 1880s. He became a naturalized citizen in 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhounJB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James B. Calhoun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. J. Wingren, La Conner, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Calhoun, John Caldwell (March 18, 1782 – March 31,
				  1850)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Caldwell Calhoun was an American statesman and political
				  theorist from South Carolina who held many important positions including being
				  the seventh vice president of the United States from 1825 to 1832, while
				  adamantly defending slavery and protecting the interests of the white South. He
				  began his political career as a nationalist, modernizer, and proponent of a
				  strong national government and protective tariffs. In the late 1820s, his views
				  changed radically, and he became a leading proponent of states' rights, limited
				  government, nullification, and opposition to high tariffs. He saw Northern
				  acceptance of those policies as a condition of the South remaining in the
				  Union. His beliefs and warnings heavily influenced the South's secession from
				  the Union in 1860–1861.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">6</container><container type="item">CalhounJC1</container><unittitle>John Caldwell Calhoun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Jackman after a portrait by Brady from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calhoun, Maggie Chambers (June 20, 1868-November 9,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maggie Chambers Calhoun was the daughter of Andrew Jackson
				  Chambers and Margaret White Chambers, both early settlers in the Yelm area;
				  Chambers Prairie is named for the family. She married William M. Calhoun in
				  1889; he was president of Calhoun, Denny and Ewing, a real estate firm. She and
				  her husband lived in Seattle before retiring to Olympia, WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalhounMC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Maggie Chambers Calhoun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Bushnell, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph is damaged</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Call, Dr. Samuel Johnson (February 18, 1858 - February
				  16, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Johnson Call was a Public Health Surgeon who participated
				  in the Overland Rescue of 1897. In 1897, eight whaling ships were trapped in an
				  Arctic ice field surrounding Point Barrow, the northernmost point of Alaska.
				  The owners of the ships were concerned that the 265 men of the ships' crews
				  would starve during the winter. They appealed to President William McKinley to
				  send a relief expedition. McKinley asked the United States Treasury Department
				  to organize an expedition, and they sent the USRC <emph render="italic">Bear</emph>, to undertake the expedition. It was too late in
				  the year for the cutter to push through the ice, so it was decided the party
				  must go overland, The overland trek left from Cape Vancouver, Alaska on
				  December 16, 1897, led by First Lieutenant David H. Jarvis, the executive
				  officer of the Bear, Second Lieutenant Ellsworth P. Bertholf and Call, the
				  ship's surgeon. They were also assisted by William Thomas Lopp, the
				  Superintendent of the Teller Reindeer Station, and Charlie Antisarlook, a
				  native reindeer herder. They traveled using dog sleds, sleds pulled by
				  reindeer, snowshoes, and skis, while driving a herd of reindeer. After 1,500
				  miles (2,400 km), the group reached Point Barrow on March 29, 1898. In
				  recognition of their work, Jarvis, Bertholf, and Call received Congressional
				  Gold Medals in 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallSJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel J. Call</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1899</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Callahan, Harlan S. (March 2, 1898 - August 10,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harlan Callahan was born in Blue Hill, Nebraska. His family
				  moved to Bellingham, WA in 1905 where his father was the police chief and later
				  Whatcom County sheriff. Harlan Callahan served as chief deputy coroner in King
				  County until he was elected King County sheriff in 1942; he served until 1955
				  when he lost his bid for re-election. In 1956, he was found guilty of tax
				  evasion and served 22 months at McNeill Island Federal Penitentiary where he
				  worked as a librarian. He was granted a presidential pardon, and his civil
				  rights were restored. He started the first Boys Club in King County in an
				  effort to curb juvenile delinquency.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallahanHS1</container><unittitle>Callahan with unidentified man, signing
					 document</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1954</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallahanHS2</container><unittitle>Harlan Callahan with (from left to right) Mrs. Marie
					 Lafty, Percy Pratt Bliss and Mrs. Thomas Balimier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1950?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford &amp; Carter, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photo may have been taken at the retirement of Percy Bliss
					 after 40 years as a King County employee.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calligan, Robert H. (February 29, 1840 - October 13,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert H. Calligan was born in Maine and worked in the sawmills
				  there. In 1860, he was commissioned by Pope &amp; Talbot to estimate the lumber
				  possibilities in Washington Territory and to establish mills. After leaving
				  Pope &amp; Talbot, he worked in Port Gamble, served on the school board in
				  Seabeck and was elected Kitsap county commissioner. He moved to Seattle in
				  1876, where he worked in the lumber business. He was the first chief of the
				  volunteer fire department, a member of the city's first charter commission, and
				  served as Superintendent of Water and Superintendent of Streets. He served
				  three terms on the City Council and was a member of the Seattle Parks Board at
				  the time of his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalliganRH1</container><unittitle>Robert H. Calligan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Long's Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Callow, Russell Stanley "Rusty" (August 9, 1890 -
				  February 23, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Russell 'Rusty' Callow was a member of the UW rowing crew from
				  1914 to 1915. He captained the 1915 shell and raced with the first UW crew to
				  row at Poughkeepsie. He returned to the UW in 1922 as head coach. Under his
				  leadership, UW won three Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championships and
				  was also the first crew from the west coast to win the Hudson River Classic.
				  Callow was known for his strict discipline delivered in a respectful manner
				  that cultivated the team spirit and gained him the admiration of the crew
				  members. His career spanned the first half of the 20th century, and he also
				  coached at Penn and Navy. Among his many accomplishments, Callow coached the
				  1952 Navy crew to an Olympic gold medal. The Rusty Callow Award is presented
				  each year by the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges (EARC) programs to the
				  crew that best personifies the virtues of “spirit, courage and unity.” He was
				  elected to the Husky Hall of Fame in 1982.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY1</container><unittitle>George Pocock and Russell "Rusty" Callow at the Long
					 Beach Marine Stadium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY5</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Alvin Ulbrickson, Elmer Leader and
					 Russell Callow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens&lt; Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY6</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Russell Callow, Carroll M. Ebright
					 and Alvin Ulbrickson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calton, C.C. [missing July 2007]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calvert, Elizabeth Henderson (March 14, 1845 - November
				  21, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Henderson McRobie was born in Perthshire, Scotland and
				  moved to Montreal, Canada as a young girl. She married William K. Calvert in
				  1867 and moved to the United States in 1869, first to Chicago and then to
				  Seattle where her husband started a publishing and stationery company. She was
				  a member of both the Women's Century Club and the Writers Club and was active
				  in literary circles of the city. She wrote and published a novel about early
				  life in Puget Sound entitled <emph render="italic">Two Houses</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalvertEH1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Henderson Calvert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS? (copy photo)</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CalvertEH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Calvert with group of
					 people sitting on stairs in front of a building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pioneers of 1866-67-68-69.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Calvert, Margaret Anne "Peggy" (April 15, 1912 - April
				  6, 1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Anne Calvert married Negley England in 1933. After
				  divorcing him, she married George Royal Kneeland in 1946; they divorced in
				  1962.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnglandNF1</container><unittitle>Negley Frank England with Peggy Calvert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Negley F. England subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Camehl, John Henry (October 13, 1833 - April 13,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Henry Camehl was born in Hanover, Germany and came to
				  Seattle in 1889 shortly after the Seattle fire. A contractor, he was killed
				  when he fell from a scaffold at a construction site.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CamehlJH1</container><unittitle>John H. Camehl</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Campanini, Cleofante (September 1, 1860 – December 19,
				  1919) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cleofonte Campanini was born in Parma and studied music at that
				  city's conservatory. He was made the director of the Parma Opera at the age of
				  23. In 1883, he was invited to New York City during the inaugural season of the
				  Metropolitan Opera and was offered a position as assistant conductor with the
				  company. In 1888, he led the American premiere of Giuseppe Verdi's 
				  <emph render="italic">Otello </emph>at the Academy of Music; the role of
				  Desdemona was sung by Eva Tetrazzini, whom Campanini had married in 1887.
				  Campanini was at La Scala for three years, where he conducted the premiere of
				  Puccini's <emph render="italic">Madama Butterfly</emph> in 1904. In 1906 he was
				  appointed artistic director of the newly formed Manhattan Opera Company. He
				  left in 1910 to become the first conductor of the Chicago Opera, where he
				  remained until his death. Campanini was known for his association with French
				  opera and introduced numerous works to the United States. On April 4, 1913, he
				  conducted the Chicago Opera Company in a performance at the Moore Theater in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampaniniC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cleofonte Campanini</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1913</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Moffett Studio, Chicago</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampaniniC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cleofonte Campanini seated at table
					 writing on a music score</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Campbell, A. A. </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampbellAA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">A. A. Campbell in white
					 tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 26, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wagner (?), Green Bay, Wisconsin</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Campbell, Alexander Colin (May 20, 1833
				  - December 12, 1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander C. Campbell was born in Perth, Ontario, Canada. He
				  went to California in 1854 and later to British Columbia before moving to
				  Steilacoom, Washington in 1868. He settled in Puyallup where he grew hops,
				  worked as a blacksmith and owned a grocery store. He was a stockholder in the
				  National Bank of Commerce and president of the Farmers' Bank of Puyallup.
				  Campbell was mayor of Puyallup in the 1880s and served on the first municipal
				  councils of Steilacoom, Tacoma and Puyallup.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampbellAC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alexander Colin Campbell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Campbell, Patricia Piatt (September 18, 1901 - September
				  13, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patricia Piatt Campbell was born at Dilworth Point on Vashon
				  Island; the point is named for her maternal grandfather who had homesteaded in
				  the area in the 1880s. She wrote several books set in the Northwest, including
				  her first book, <emph render="italic">Eliza</emph> a novel set in the 1870s and
				  <emph render="italic">A History of the North Olympic Peninsula</emph>. She
				  directed plays and was president of the Pacific Northwest Writers Conference
				  inn 1967.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampbellPP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Patricia Piatt Campbell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roy Anderson, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Campbell, Wallace H. (August 6, 1898 - July 9,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wallace H. Campbell was president of the Campbell Industrial
				  Supply Company, president of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and served two
				  terms on the National Chamber of Commerce. He was appointed by the U. S.
				  Department of Commerce to serve on numerous trade missions. In the 1960s, he
				  was president of the Washington State International Trade Fair and was
				  president of the Seattle Symphony, 1950-1952. He was also active in the
				  Community Fund Campaign.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCW3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Doyle with Wallace H.
					 Campbell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Doyle subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Campeau, Robert Joseph Antoine (August 3, 1923 – June
				  12, 2017)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Joseph Campeau was a Canadian financier and real estate
				  developer, who engineered one of the largest retailing bankruptcy at the time
				  in U.S. history. Starting from a single house constructed in Ottawa, Canada,
				  Campeau built a large land development corporation around the development of
				  the suburb of Kanata. Expansion in the U.S. led Campeau to diversify into the
				  ownership of retail department stores to anchor commercial development
				  projects. The Campeau Corporation used leveraged buyouts to buy the department
				  stores and went bankrupt when it could not maintain the debt payments.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CampeauRJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert Joseph Campeau</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1987?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Canby, Edward Richard Sprigg (November 9, 1817 – April
				  11, 1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Richard Sprigg Canby was a career U.S. Army officer and a
				  Union general in the American Civil War, Reconstruction era, and the Indian
				  Wars. He was killed at a peace talk with the Modoc in Northern California, the
				  only United States general to be killed during the Indian Wars. Canby, Oregon
				  and Fort Canby, Washington are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CanbyERS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">General Edward Richard
					 Canby</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1873?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>This is based on the carte-de-visite photograph taken by
					 Buchtel &amp; Stolte, Portland, OR. The original photograph is located at PH
					 Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Canfield, Oscar Fitzallen (March 8, 1838 - October 8,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oscar Fitzallen Canfield was born in Springfield, Pennsylvania
				  and crossed the plains with his family in 1847. The family arrived at the
				  Whitman mission in Walla Walla on October 20, 1847 and decided to remain until
				  spring. On November 29, 1847, the Cayuse and Umatilla Native Americans attacked
				  the mission; the incident began the Cayuse War. William Canfield, Oscar's
				  father, was wounded but managed to escape and send for help. A month later, the
				  captives, including Oscar and his family, were ransomed. Oscar later moved to
				  northern California and Idaho, mining for gold, ranching and raising cattle.
				  The town of Canfield, Idaho is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CanfieldOF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Oscar Canfield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rembrandt Studio, Lewiston, ID</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cannon, Anthony McCue (1839 - April 6, 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anthony M. Cannon was born in Monmouth, Illinois and traveled
				  west at the age of 20, first to Colorado and later to Oregon. He arrived in
				  Spokane Falls, Washington Territory in 1878 where he and John J. Browne
				  purchased a large section of the town which they divided into the Cannon and
				  Browne Additions. He helped develop the city through banking, real estate and
				  civic leadership. He started the Bank of Spokane Falls, one of the first banks
				  in the town, and the Northwestern and Pacific Hypotheekbank, which helped fund
				  the rebuilding of the town after the 1889 fire. He served on the city council
				  and was mayor of Spokane from 1885 until 1887. He, along with other civic
				  leaders, purchased and donated the land for Greenwood Cemetery. Cannon Hill
				  Park is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CannonAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anthony M. Cannon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cannon, Joseph Gurney (May 7, 1836 – November 12,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph G. Cannon was a United States politician from Illinois
				  and leader of the Republican Party. He served as Speaker of the United States
				  House of Representatives from 1903 to 1911 and was the second-longest
				  continuously serving Republican Speaker in history. His congressional career
				  spanned 46 years of cumulative service. Cannon was the subject of the first 
				  <emph>Time</emph> magazine cover ever published, appearing in March 3, 1923.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CannonJG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph Cannon speaking at the opening
					 ceremonies of the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1905</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Caraher, Michael (September 29, 1835 - November 20,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Caraher was born in Ireland and emigrated to the United
				  States in 1846 where he served as a Union soldier during the Civil War. He
				  married Ellen Kelly in 1864; they arrived in Seattle the year before the
				  Seattle Fire of 1889. He was a shoe manufacturer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaraherM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Michael Caraher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carkeek, Morgan James (September 6, 1847 - April 5,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Morgan Carkeek, a prominent Seattle builder, was born in
				  Redruth, Cornwall and emigrated to California in 1866. He later moved to Port
				  Townsend, where he built the first two-story stone building in Washington
				  Territory. In 1870, he moved to Seattle where he built many of the early
				  buildings in Seattle, including the Dexter Horton Bank, the first stone
				  building in Seattle and one of the few buildings to survive the 1889 fire. He
				  founded the Pontiac Brick and Tile Company at Sand Point in 1899. He also
				  helped to found the Museum of History and Industry and donated the original
				  land for Carkeek Park at Sand Point for the site of the museum. When King
				  County took the Carkeek Park land for the Sand Point Naval Station, Carkeek
				  offered the proceeds of his sale to the city for another park. The resulting
				  park, named after Carkeek, is in the Broadview neighborhood of Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarkeekMJ1</container><unittitle>Morgan James Carkeek</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lothrop, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarkeekMJ2</container><unittitle>Morgan Carkeek with his son, Vivian, and a woman at
					 Carkeek Park; it may be his daughter, Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheef</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1922?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarkeekMJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the Carkeek home in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>The home was located at the southeast corner of Boren Avenue
					 and Madison Street. It was known for its iron fence and stained glass windows.
					 This is a photocopy of the photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carkeek, Vivian Morgan (November 23, 1879 - December 29,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vivian Carkeek, the son of Morgan and Emily Carkeek, graduated
				  from the University of Washington's first law class in 1901. He was associated
				  with the firm of Carkeek, McDonald, Harris and Coryell. In addition to
				  practicing law, he also taught at the UW and established a prize for the
				  student who wrote the best article in the UW Law School Review. He served as
				  the president of the Museum of History and Industry. He collected coins, medals
				  and Wedgewood plate; his collection of medals was donated to the Fuller Art
				  Museum (later the Seattle Art Museum) shortly before his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarkeekVM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Vivian Morgan Carkeek</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">before 1920?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarkeekMJ2</container><unittitle>Morgan Carkeek with his son, Vivian, and a woman at
					 Carkeek Park; it may be his daughter, Guendolen Carkeek Plestcheef</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1922?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Morgan James Carkeek subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carker(?), Coach </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Possibly a University of Washington coach.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">Carker1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Coach Carker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster and Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carle, Nathaniel Allen (May 28, 1875 - July 27,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathaniel Allen Carle was born in Portland, Oregon and came to
				  Seattle in 1889. He graduated from Seattle Central High School in 1893. A
				  graduate of Stanford University in 1898, he was one of the few engineers in the
				  country qualified in civil, electrical, mining, mechanical and hydraulic
				  engineering. He was chief engineer and vice president of the New Jersey Public
				  Service Corporation and vice president and general manager of the Northern
				  Colorado Power Company before returning to Seattle. In 1911, he was the chief
				  engineer of the Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company and then vice president
				  and general manager of the Seattle Toll Bridge Company, where he helped plan
				  the Lake Washington Bridge. He was Seattle’s city engineer and chair of the
				  Board of Public Works from 1936 until 1938. He worked for various companies in
				  New York, New Jersey and the Midwest. During World War II, he developed power
				  sites for a number of firms and was cost engineer for Alaska air bases. After
				  the war, he was engaged in the construction of bases in Attu, Adak and other
				  outposts. He married Heartie Wood, a graduate of the University of Washington,
				  in 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarleNA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nathaniel Allen Carle in football
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed "Yours truly, N. A. Carle."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Charles (February 1, 1838 - January 12,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Carpenter was born in Vermont and traveled west to
				  California in 1859. He moved to British Columbia in 1863 before finally
				  settling in North Yakima, Washington Territory in 1868. In 1872, he brought
				  root stock from his father's hop farm in Constable, NY, establishing the first
				  hop farm in the Yakima area. By 2003, 75% of the hops grown in the United
				  States were grown in Yakima and Benton Counties. He also invested in real
				  estate and banking.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Charley</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterC1</container><unittitle>Charley Carpenter, Edith Carpenter, Iva Carpenter and
					 Clev (?) Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Charley Carpenter, Clark Co. &amp;
					 Ridgefield, Wa, Edith Kraft Carpenter, Clev (?) &amp; Iva</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Edward Laramie (January 14, 1873 - January
				  18, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Carpenter was a Federal engineer who worked on the north
				  and south jetties at Westport, WA and the Nome breakwater.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterEL1</container><unittitle>Edward Laramie Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. M. Hofsteater, Vancouver, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterEL2</container><unittitle>Edward Laramie Carpenter photograph on waterfront pass
					 from the Port of Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 13, 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Frank D. (May 27, 1850 - January 24,
				  1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank and his sister Ida were members of the Radersburg Party
				  (named after the community where they lived) who traveled to Yellowstone Park
				  in August 1877. They were captured by members of the Nez Perce tribe, and two
				  of their party were shot. The others were kept by the tribe for one day before
				  being released.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterFD1</container><unittitle>Frank Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from the Montana Historical Society</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Ida M. (1865 - November 8,1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida and her brother Frank were members of the Radersburg Party
				  (named after the community where they lived) who traveled to Yellowstone Park
				  in August 1877. They were captured by members of the Nez Perce tribe, and two
				  of their party were shot. The others were kept by the tribe for one day before
				  being released. Ida married James Ernest Stevens in 1886 and died later that
				  year in a fire.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterIM1</container><unittitle>Ida Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1880?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from the Montana Historical Society</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carpenter, Labbeus Ross (July 14, 1876 - March 18,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lebbeus Ross Carpenter Jr. was born in 1876 in Chicago, Illinois
				  and moved to Vashon Island around 1886 with his parents and three brothers. He
				  graduated from the UW in 1904 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and was
				  the senior class president. Carpenter studied art with Fokko Tadama, Edgar
				  Forkner and Karl Goodwin. Under the name L. Ross Carpenter his illustrations
				  appeared in the <emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer,</emph><emph>Seattle Town
				  Crier, </emph>and <emph>Pacific Motor Boat Magazine,</emph> and his short
				  fiction appeared in publications such as <emph>Overland Monthly </emph>and 
				  <emph> Grit.</emph>His art was featured in exhibitions of Northwest Artists and
				  he was a member of the Vashon Island Art League. He did the etchings for 
				  <emph render="italic">Lyrics of Fir and Foam</emph> a book of poems by Alice
				  Rollit Coe published in 1908. He married Blanche Edith “Dollie” O’Neill in
				  1919, and the couple moved to Los Angeles where he worked as a freelance
				  illustrator. When Carpenter’s vision began to fade, he gave up art and worked
				  at the Los Angeles County Museum of History until 1946. After he retired from
				  the museum, the Carpenters returned to Vashon Island.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarpenterLR1</container><unittitle>Labbeus Ross Carpenter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carr, Byron Thorpe (March 16, 1861 - June 9,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Byron Thorpe Carr came to Seattle from Galesburg, Illinois and
				  established a mercantile business in 1888. After the fire of 1889, he opened a
				  livery stable on Broadway, was superintendent of Seattle’s street railway
				  system and held the same office for the Oregon Improvement Company. He was the
				  secretary-treasurer of the H. F. Norton Company for ten years. He was the son
				  of Colonel Byron Oscar Carr and the nephew of General Eugene Asa Carr, both of
				  whom served during the Civil War. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH1</container><unittitle>John McGraw, Mark Thomas McGraw and Byron Thorpe Carr
					 on the porch of a cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: McGraw's home at Rampart. Gov. John H.
					 McGraw, Tom McGraw and Mr. Carr.</p><p>Filed under John Harte McGraw subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carr, Henrietta Anna May (July 18, 1860 - July 27,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henrietta Anna May Clark was born in Jackson, Oregon. Her
				  parents, Jason and Anna Clark, had arrived in Oregon in 1847. She married
				  Clarence M. Reid in 1876; after Reid died in 1885, she married Ulrich A. Carr
				  in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrHAM1</container><unittitle>Henrietta Anna May Carr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carr, Lucie L. Whipple (December 2, 1832 - September 26,
				  1912 )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucie L. Whipple was born in Pennsylvania and married Ossian
				  Jeremiah Carr in 1856. They traveled to Oregon in 1858 and then to Washington
				  Territory in 1861. When the University of Washington was founded as the
				  Territorial University in 1861, its initial class offering was a primary school
				  (elementary school) taught by Asa Mercer; Lucie Carr taught the second class in
				  1862. Her husband was the postmaster of Seattle for twelve years, and her
				  sister, Susan, married Daniel Bagley, Seattle pioneer. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrLLW1</container><unittitle>Lucie L. Whipple Carr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carr, O. J. - See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carroll, Dr. in lab with testing equipment and
				  student</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>University of Washington professor?</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">Carroll1</container><unittitle>Dr. Carroll in lab with testing equipment and
					 student</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carroll, Harry Winans (September 4, 1858 - June 14,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Winans Carroll was born in Sacramento, the eldest of six
				  children of a pioneer California family. He was graduated from the School of
				  Mines of the University of California in 1880, and his first work was as a
				  mining engineer. In 1887 he was elected to the California State Legislature. In
				  1890 he came to Seattle as an employee of the Oregon improvement Company. Four
				  years later, he was appointed chief deputy city comptroller. He was chief
				  accountant of the city for several years. After serving for several years as
				  chief deputing comptroller, he became reading clerk of the State House of
				  Representatives in its third session, also serving in the fourth, fifth and
				  seventh sessions. In March, 1906, he was elected city comptroller and was
				  repeatedly re-elected. He served from 1906 to 1910 and then from 1912 until his
				  death in 1938. In 1903 he was appointed a member of the State Board of
				  Accountancy and served until 1911. He was chair of the board at the time of his
				  retirement. In World War I, he had an active role in the sales of Liberty Bonds
				  and War Stamps. During his college years, he was commissioned captain of the
				  College Cadets and later served in the California National Guard. He was
				  commissioned lieutenant colonel on the staff of Governor George Stevenson. He
				  was a member of many organizations, including the Chamber of Commerce, the
				  National Aeronautical Association and the American Institute of Accountants.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carroll, (Captain) James (November 1, 1840 – May 19,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Carroll was an Irish-American steamboat captain who
				  brought the first large steamboat to Alaska. Born in Ireland, Carroll came to
				  the U.S. when he was a year old, settling in Kendall County, Illinois with his
				  parents. At the age 16, he moved to Chicago and became a sailor, spending two
				  years on the Great Lakes. After time spent in the Merchant Marine and the
				  National Steamship Company (based in San Francisco), he became employed in the
				  Alaska service in 1878, carrying tourists to Alaska from Portland, Oregon and
				  Seattle, Washington. He was with the Pacific Coast Steamship Company for over
				  25 years. He was elected to represent Alaska as an unofficial delegate to the
				  51st Congress (1889 – 1891). In 1891, he appeared before Congress, representing
				  a syndicate of moneyed men, with an offer of $14,000,000 to buy Alaska. In
				  1898, Carroll retired from seafaring, becoming an agent for the Alaska
				  Commercial Company and for the Northern Lakes &amp; Rivers Navigation Company.
				  Eventually, he returned to the Pacific Coast Steamship Company to command the
				  new steamer, <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph>, but retired again in 1906.
				  He was also a representative of the Rodman Bay mines on Baranof Island, ran
				  outfitting businesses from Seattle, Skagway, and Nome, Alaska, and was Alaska's
				  first mailboat captain. With a partner, M. W. Murry, he built the Carroll-Murry
				  Wharf in Juneau, which was the only one in that city until 1894; the wharf was
				  later renamed in his honor. Carroll Glacier, located at Queen Inlet in Glacier
				  Bay National Park and Preserve is also named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrollJ1</container><unittitle>Captain James Carroll</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carroll, John Edward (October 15, 1877 - February 22,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Seattle City Council President John Carroll was appointed to be
				  the mayor of Seattle by the City Council on January 27, 1941 to succeed Arthur
				  Langlie who resigned to become the governor. Born in New Orleans, LA, he served
				  as a major in the U.S. Army during World War I.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrollJE1</container><unittitle>Mayor John Carroll sitting at his desk, facing
					 camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 5, 1941</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrollJE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mayor John Carroll sitting at his
					 desk, facing camera (close-up view)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 5, 1941</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrollJE3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mayor John Carroll signing a paper at
					 his desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 5, 1941</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarrollJE4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mayor John Carroll signing a paper at
					 his desk (close-up view)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 5, 1941</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carson, John (January 25, 1827 - January 14,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Carson was born in Butler County, PA and later moved to
				  Indiana. He married Emma Lane Darrow in 1851, and in 1853 they began their
				  Oregon Trail trip, initially joining Reverend Whitworth at St. Joseph, MO. They
				  left the Whitworth party after crossing the Blue Mountains and joined the
				  Wright-Longmire party, the first party across Naches Pass to Pierce County, W.
				  T. He farmed, had a ferry and toll bridge across the Puyallup River, just north
				  of Puyallup. He was the first postmaster of Franklin (later Sumner), and his
				  wife was the first teacher. By 1884 he owned a mill in Tacoma. He served in the
				  territorial legislature and was a Pierce County commissioner for 15 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarsonJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Carson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carson, John Crosthwaite (February 20, 1825 -May 31,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Crosthwaite Carson was born in Center County, Pennsylvania.
				  In 1834 the family moved to Ashland, Ohio. He learned the carpenter’s trade and
				  attended the Ashland Academy. He then read medicine three years, and in 1850
				  went to California with Dr. J. W. Kinnaman to establish a hospital. Instead,
				  they spent the winter in the mines. The next year he moved to Portland, Oregon
				  and began a business career. He was one of the founders of the Republican party
				  in Oregon. In 1855-6, he was president of the City Council and was twice
				  re-elected a member of the Council. In 1866 he was a member of the United
				  States board appointed to report upon the claims of the Hudson’s Bay Company.
				  In 1870 he was elected a member of the lower house of the legislature and was
				  twice re-elected,. In 1884 he was elected to the state senate, and in 1887 was
				  President of the Senate. He was re-elected Senator in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarsonJC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John C. Carson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Aune, Portland, OR</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carson, Lulu May (May 1868 - March 24, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lulu Carson was the daughter of Isaac Carson and Mary Ann Eastes
				  Carson; her parents arrived in Washington Territory in 1853 as members of the
				  G. F. Whitworth party. She was a docket clerk in Tacoma.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarsonLM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lulu May Carson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 26, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carson, Will (August, 1857 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Will Carson and Ella Shepherd Bush were founders of the Seattle
				  Art League, which was initially in the Hinkley Block and later housed in
				  Territorial University building. He was not an artist, but an art lover whose
				  occupation is variously listed as editor, publisher and journalist. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarsonW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Will Carson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901?</unitdate></did><note><p>The portrait includes a sketch of a devil and an angel.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carstensen, Carole Emily (September 1, 1937 -
				  ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carole Emily McDonald married Donald M. Carstensen in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarstensenCE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Carole and Donald Carstensen, cutting
					 their wedding cake</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carstensen, Donald M. (August, 1938 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald M. Carstensen married Carole Emily McDonald in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarstensenCE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Carole and Donald Carstensen, cutting
					 their wedding cake</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate></did><note><p>See Carole Emily Carstensen subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carstensen, Vernon (December 28, 1907 - October 20,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vernon Carstensen, one of six children, was raised on a farm in
				  Iowa; his father died when Carstensen was 6. He graduated from the Iowa State
				  Teachers College in 1928, received a master's degree in 1932 and his Ph.D. in
				  1936 in history from the University of Iowa. Until 1964, when Carstensen moved
				  to Seattle and became a full-time faculty member at the UW, he spent the
				  majority of his time teaching at the University of Wisconsin, where he also
				  co-authored <emph render="italic">The University of Wisconsin: A
				  History</emph>. At the UW, Professor Carstensen taught undergraduate and
				  graduate American-history classes. He also headed the committee that developed
				  the University's African-American studies program. He retired from the UW in
				  1975.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarstensenV1</container><unittitle>Vernon Carstensen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Information Services, UW Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarstensenV2</container><unittitle>Vernon Carstensen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carter, Dudley C. (May 6, 1891 – April 7,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dudley Carter was born to a pioneer family in New Westminster,
				  Canada; he moved to Washington state in 1928. He was a timber cruiser and
				  forest engineer most of his life, exploring and mapping Pacific Northwest
				  wilderness. The chief inspiration for Carter's art was his childhood among the
				  Kwakiutl and Tlingit Indians. Carter was a participant in the "Art in Action"
				  program during the 1940 season of the 1939-1940 Golden Gate International
				  Exposition (GGIE). He was also the first King County, Washington Parks and
				  Recreation artist-in-residence when he was 96 years old.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dudley Carter standing next to large
					 outdoor sculpture</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterD2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Several pieces of work by Dudley
					 Carter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterD3</container><unittitle>A wood carving of a canoie by Dudley
					 Carter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterD4</container><unittitle>Dudley Carter at his 99th birthday party at Crossroads
					 Mall in Bellevue</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1990</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterD5</container><unittitle>Dudley Carter at his 99th birthday party at Crossroads
					 Mall in Bellevue</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1990</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Carter, Alfred Lyle (August 8, 1890 - May 19,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred (Fred) L. Carter was born in Charlevoix, Michigan and
				  moved to Bellingham with his family in 1909. He was a newspaper photographer
				  for more than 40 years, working for<emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Star</emph>, <emph render="italic">The Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>, and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>. He was later a commercial
				  photographer, retiring in 1957.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterAL1</container><unittitle>Self-portrait of Alfred Carter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterAL2</container><unittitle>Alfred Carter with Mr. Page and Jack
					 Jarvis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Jarvis is holding a card that states "No problem is too small
					 to baffle our organization."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Cary, Austin (July 31, 1865 – April 28,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Austin Cary was an American forester, known as the "father of
				  southern forestry". He was born in 1865 in East Machias, Maine, and educated at
				  Washington Academy in East Machias. He graduated with honors from Bowdoin
				  College in 1887. After working as an instructor in Biology and Geology at
				  Bowdoin for a year, he moved to Johns Hopkins University, where he studied
				  biology. In 1890, Cary studied paleontology at Princeton. In the summer of
				  1891, Cary took part in the Bowdoin Scientific Expedition to Labrador. Cary
				  kept a diary of the expedition, later published in a bulletin by the American
				  Geographical Society. He initially began his career as a teacher at Harvard
				  University, before beginning his career in forestry. Cary served for three
				  years with the Federal Division of Forestry starting in 1893. Between 1898 and
				  1904, he worked for the Berlin Mills Company, which was prominent in northern
				  New Hampshire and his home state of Maine. In 1908, Maine governor William T.
				  Cobb selected Cary to represent the state at the Great Natural Resources
				  Conference in Washington, D.C. The following year, he was appointed
				  Superintendent of Forests for New York, but resigned in 1910 due to ill health.
				  Later that year, he became Senior Logging Engineer with the U.S. Forest
				  Service. He worked with them for the next 25 years, retiring at the age of 70
				  in 1935. His <emph>Woodsman's Manual,</emph> originally named <emph>Manual for
				  Northern Woodsmen,</emph> became an important reference. He wrote over one
				  hundred articles for various periodicals, including the American Geographical
				  Society, Journal of Forestry and American Lumberman. Austin Cary Forest, on
				  Great Island, Maine, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotM2</container><unittitle>Martha Talbot at a family gathering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1892</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Picture taken East Machias. Edgar Davis,
					 Mrs. P. S. Talbot, Sam V. Cole, Stephen C. Talbot, Leonora Harris Balkane,
					 George F. Talbot, James R. Talbot, Samuel Harris, Frederic Talbot, Mr. Balkane,
					 William J. Pope, Micah Jones Talbot, Mrs. M. J. Talbot, Mrs. Austin Harris
					 (Emily Pope), P. S. Talbot, John C. Talbot, Mrs. J. C. Talbot, Austin Cary,
					 Hattie Caldwell Murchie, Mrs. Edgar Davis (Mina Talbot), Mrs. Helen Talbot
					 Eager, Mrs. J. R. Talbot (Lennie ? Burrall), Mrs. F. Talbot, Susie G. Talbot,
					 Florence Harris, Mrs. Loring Talbot, Mrs. C. H. Talbot, Mabel Harris, Edna
					 Pettigrew Talbot (Mrs. Frank T.), Alice W. Pope, Austin Harris, Frank Talbot,
					 Bessie Pope Hawley, Rebecca Talbot (James R's), Bessie Salmon, Emily Harris,
					 Lillian Hawley, Miriam Hawley, Herbert Harris, Henry Talbot. Balance of the
					 cousins off walking. Names written by Andrew Pope Talbot, son of Charles.
					 Picture taken East Machias (Maine).</p></note><note><p>Filed under Martha Talbot subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cary, Cyrene Bundren (July 24, 1815 - September 1,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cyrene Bundren Taylor was born in Richmond, VA to William Taylor
				  and Lucy Scott Taylor. She married Miles Cary in 1831. The couple initially
				  settled in Missouri, but after reading a pamphlet by Dr. Marcus Whitman, they
				  decided travel to Oregon, joining the Jesse Applegate party. They arrived in
				  Walla Walla in 1843, left their cattle there for the winter and traveled the
				  rest of the journey to Oregon by boat. Her husband first worked in Oregon City,
				  Oregon before taking a donation land claim on the Yamhill River. The family
				  went to California during the gold rush before returning to Oregon. After her
				  husband's death, she continued to farm for many years. She and her husband had
				  twelve children, nine of whom predeceased her.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaryCB1</container><unittitle>Cyrene Bundren Cary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cary, Miles (June 15, 1811 - September 26,
				  1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Miles Cary was born in Kentucky and married Cyrene Bundren
				  Taylor in 1831. They initially settled in Missouri, but after reading a
				  pamphlet by Dr. Marcus Whitman, they decided travel to Oregon, joining the
				  Jesse Applegate party. They arrived in Walla Walla in 1843, left their cattle
				  there for the winter and traveled the rest of the journey to Oregon by boat. He
				  worked at Dr. John McLaughlin's mill in Oregon City, Oregon before taking a
				  Donation land claim on the Yamhill River. The family went to California during
				  the gold rush and then returned to Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaryM1</container><unittitle>Miles Cary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1858?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Case, Samuel (May 31, 1831 - August 25,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Case was born in Lubec, Maine and attended East Maine
				  Conference College in Bucksport, Maine. In 1853 he traveled to California by
				  way of Nicaragua. After his arrival he mined and taught school. In 1861, with
				  the regular troops having been called East, the Pacific states had to organize
				  volunteer forces for their protection. Case enlisted and was stationed in
				  Oregon. He served until 1864. After the war, he was employed as superintendent
				  of farming on the Alsea Indian Reservation. In 1866 he moved to Yaquina Bay and
				  located a claim where the town of Newport now stands. Newport’s first Post
				  Office was established on July 2,1868, and he was the first postmaster. He
				  served as one of three peace commissioners appointed by the general government
				  to deal with the Modoc Indians in 1873. In the 1880s, he established a resort
				  hotel along Newport's bay front called "Ocean House."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaseS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Case</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Castleman, Ianthe Jane Evans (December 28, 1834 -
				  November 8, 1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ianthe Jane Davis was born in Ohio and moved to Oregon Territory
				  with her parents, Benjamin Franklin Davis and Catherine Sluyter Davis in 1847.
				  She married George W. Evans in 1850; after his death in 1853, she married
				  Philip F. Castleman in 1856. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CastlemanIJE1</container><unittitle>Ianthe Jane Davis Castleman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Castleman, Philip F. (May 27, 1827 - March 24,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip F. Castleman was a daguerreotypist and photographer who
				  was active in the Pacific Northwest from 1854 until the 1870's. He was born
				  near Hodgenville, Kentucky and joined a group heading to the California gold
				  rush in 1849. While in California, he worked as a miner, a baker and a builder.
				  He moved to the Oregon Territory in 1851, settling near the present site of
				  Eugene, where he built the first sawmill south of Salem. In 1853, he returned
				  to the east coast where he received training in daguerreotyping. He purchased
				  cameras and supplies before returning to Eugene, where he opened the first
				  daguerreotype studio. After serving in the Rogue River War of 1855, he traveled
				  throughout the Pacific Northwest and Northern California as a photographer. In
				  the 1870's, he farmed, worked as a teamster and as a veterinarian. He married
				  Ianthe Jane Davis Evans in 1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CasetlemanPF1</container><unittitle>Philip F. Castleman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cates, Elizabeth Ann (May 1, 1818 - July 18,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Ann McCormick, the daughter of J. Ezekiel McCormick
				  and Jane Withrow McCormick, was born in Virginia. She married George Herbert in
				  1839;. The couple were earlier pioneers in Oregon, arriving in 1845 and
				  settling in Wasco County, Oregon. After her first husband's death, she married
				  John Cates and moved to The Dalles, Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CatesEA1</container><unittitle>Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Cates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cathcart, Isaac C. (October, 1845 – January 26,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Cathcart was a well-known businessman and a Snohomish
				  County, Washington pioneer. He was born in County Fermanagh, Ireland, the son
				  of Isaac F. and Charlott (Bushfield) Cathcart. He emigrated to the Pacific
				  Northwest in 1868, settling in the area now called Cathcart after him. He
				  worked as a logger, hotel-keeper and as the city treasurer. He ran the
				  Snohomish Exchange Hotel and in 1891 was one of the organizers of the
				  Snohomish, Skykomish and Spokane Railway and Transportation Company. His large
				  land holdings were purchased by George Hillman who platted and sold the lots,
				  eventually creating the town of Clearview.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CathcartIC1</container><unittitle>Isaac Cathcart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Catherine of Aragon (December 16, 1485 – January 7,
				  1536) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine of Aragon was Queen of England as the first wife of
				  King Henry VIII from their marriage on 11 June 1509 until their annulment on 23
				  May 1533. She was previously Princess of Wales as the wife of Henry's elder
				  brother, Arthur, Prince of Wales. Her daughter Mary would become the first
				  undisputed English queen regnant in 1553.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">7</container><container type="item">Catherine1</container><unittitle>Catherine of Aragon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>After a portrait by Hans Holbein</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Catlin, John (February 6, 1832 - July 19,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Catlin was born in Turkey Hill, St. Clair County, Illinois.
				  In 1848 his family, crossed the plains to Oregon, arriving at Oregon City on
				  September 15, 1848. The family first settled near Portland and later moved to
				  Cowlitz County, then a part of Oregon Territory, but now in the state of
				  Washington, where they established a farm. John Catlin attended McKendree
				  College and studied law with ex-Governor A. C. French. He afterwards attended
				  the law school at Cincinnati, Ohio, graduating in 1861. He returned to
				  Portland, Oregon in 1862 and practiced law. In 1868 he was elected to and
				  served in the House of the Washington Territorial Legislature. He also served
				  as councilman in Portland and County Judge. He was a candidate for the Oregon
				  State Senate and was defeated by a small plurality. Catlin was elected County
				  Judge of Multnomah County in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CatlinJ1</container><unittitle>John Catlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Catt, Carrie Lane Chapman (January 9, 1859 – March 9,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carrie Lane Chapman Catt was an American women's suffrage leader
				  who campaigned for the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution,
				  which gave U.S. women the right to vote in 1920. Catt served as president of
				  the National American Woman Suffrage Association and was the founder of the
				  League of Women Voters and the International Alliance of Women. She came to
				  Seattle in 1890, while in the Northwest on a speaking tour for the Iowa Woman
				  Suffrage Association, and married engineer George Catt, a former college
				  classmate, that year. She was one of the charter members of the Women's Century
				  Club in Seattle and was its first president. During the 1920s and 1930s, she
				  was active in anti-war causes. In 1933, in response to Adolf Hitler's rise to
				  power, Catt organized the Protest Committee of Non-Jewish Women Against the
				  Persecution of Jews in Germany. She also pressured the U.S. government to ease
				  immigration laws so that Jews could more easily take refuge in America. For her
				  efforts, Catt became the first woman to receive the American Hebrew Medal.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CattCLC1</container><unittitle>Carrie Lane Chapman Catt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS?</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph is mislabeled "Carrie Lane Chapman Carr."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cavanaugh, Thomas H. (March 8, 1844 - August 31,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas H. Cavanaugh was born in Vincennes, Indiana where his
				  father was a printer and publisher. He assisted his father until 1855, when he
				  left home and moved to Chicago, working at several newspapers. In 1861, he was
				  clerk in an auditor’s office; when the Civil War started, he joined the army
				  and served until April, 1865. After the war, he worked in Illinois and later
				  Kansas, where he served in various offices for the Kansas legislature,
				  including assistant chief clerk of the House and secretary of the Senate. He
				  was appointed Register of the United States land office in 1881. From 1883 to
				  January, 1885, he was special agent of the general land office. He resigned,
				  moved to Washington and purchased the <emph render="italic">Puget Sound
				  Courier</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Olympia Transcript</emph>, and
				  began the publication of the <emph render="italic">Republican Partisan</emph>.
				  He was appointed surveyor general of the Territory of Washington in 1889 and
				  had general supervision of government lands.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CavanaughTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas H. Cavanaugh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cayton Jr., Horace Roscoe (April 12, 1903 - January 22,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Roscoe Cayton Jr. was an American sociologist known for
				  his studies of working-class African-Americans, particularly in
				  mid-20th-century Chicago, Illinois. He was born in Seattle, Washington, to
				  Horace R. Cayton, Sr. and Susie Revels Cayton. Cayton grew up in Seattle and
				  moved to Chicago in 1929 to study sociology at the University of Chicago. He is
				  the coauthor, with St. Clair Drake, of the 1945<emph render="italic"> Black
				  Metropolis: A Study of Negro Life in a Northern City </emph>, a history of
				  Chicago's South Side and its African-American residents from the 1840s, when
				  the area was a major transport hub for the Underground Railroad, to the 1930s.
				  The book was considered pioneering in its exploration of the role race
				  relations played in creating the economic situation of lower and middle-class
				  African-Americans in urban America. He is also the coauthor, with George S.
				  Mitchell, of a work on the roles early 20th century unions played in the
				  economic situation of blacks, <emph render="italic">Black Workers and the New
				  Unions</emph>. Cayton wrote an autobiography titled <emph render="italic">Long
				  Old Road - An Autobiography</emph> in 1963. He was a columnist for the 
				  <emph render="italic">Pittsburgh Courier</emph> and director of Parkway
				  Community Center in Chicago.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaytonHRJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Horace R. Cayton,
					 Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The portrait is autographed by Cayton.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaytonHRJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Horace R. Cayton, Jr. with
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1960s?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ebony Magazine</corpname></origination><note><p>This photograph has a copyright statement from 
						<emph render="italic">Ebony Magazine.</emph> on the back.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaytonHRJ3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Horace R. Cayton, Jr. sitting near
					 blackboard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><processinfo><p>Color photograph</p></processinfo></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cayton, Horace Roscoe (February 3, 1859 - August 16,
				  1940) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Cayton was born in 1859 on a plantation in Mississippi.
				  After Emancipation, he and his family moved to a farm near Port Gibson,
				  Mississippi. He graduated from Alcorn College (now Alcorn State University) and
				  headed west, ending up in Seattle where he worked as a political reporter for
				  the <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>. Cayton found
				  employment at the <emph render="italic">Seattle Standard</emph>, the city’s
				  first newspaper for African-Americans, until 1893. He issued the first edition
				  of the <emph render="italic">Seattle Republican</emph> in May 1894, seeking to
				  appeal to both white and black people, which at one point had the second
				  largest circulation in the city. He published <emph>Cayton’s Weekly</emph> from
				  1916 until 1921 and helped to found the Seattle Branch of the National
				  Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1913. His wife,
				  Susan Revels Cayton, was the daughter of Hiram Revels, the first
				  African-American elected to the United States Senate; she became the associate
				  editor of the paper.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CaytonHR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Horace Roscoe
					 Cayton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930?</unitdate></did><note><p>The portrait was copied from <emph render="italic">Cayton's
					 Yearbook, 1930</emph> and shows the halftone dots.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chabot, Anthony (August 13, 1813 – January 6,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anthony Chabot was a nineteenth-century businessman and
				  entrepreneur, notable for his contribution to developing hydraulic mining and
				  for building water systems, especially in the Bay Area, so much that he became
				  known as the "Water King." He was born near Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada and
				  left home at age sixteen, eventually settling in California. He initially
				  worked in the mining and lumber industries before moving to San Francisco,
				  where he built the city’s first public water system. This led to projects
				  supplying other cities with water. Chabot founded the Contra Costa Water
				  Company in 1866, which developed a monopoly on supplying water to Oakland and
				  neighboring areas. He was involved in several other businesses during this
				  time, including a paper mill in Stockton, the Judson Manufacturing Company in
				  Oakland, the Pioneer Pulp Mill Company near Alta (Placer County), the Puget
				  Sound Iron Company, and a large tract of land in Washington state for the
				  cultivation of cranberries. In 1883, he donated a telescope and the funds to
				  build an observatory in the city of Oakland, to be named Oakland Observatory;
				  it became known as the Chabot Observatory. The original observatory was built
				  in Lafayette Square, near downtown Oakland and was moved in 1915 to Oakland
				  Hills. In 2000, it moved 2 miles north to a higher elevation on Skyline
				  Boulevard, undergoing significant expansion; it is now known as the Chabot
				  Space &amp; Science Center. There are several San Francisco Bay Area locations
				  that are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChabotA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anthony Chabot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chadwick, Emma Plummer (November 5, 1863 - November 11,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Plummer Chadwick was the daughter of Dr. Orlando Pleasant
				  Shields Plummer and Sarah Cool Plummer. Dr Plummer was a pioneer Portland
				  physician who came west to Oregon in 1863.Emma attended Willamette University
				  and Illinois State Normal School and taught for several years in Portland and
				  Pacific County before marrying Stephen J. Chadwick, a Washington State Supreme
				  Court Justice. She was a national leader in the Order of the Eastern Star and
				  was the chairman of the committee that selected a design for the Washington
				  State flag. The Emma P. Chadwick Home, a nursing home project of the Order of
				  the Eastern Star, was named in her honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChadwickEP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Emma Plummer Chadwick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chadwick, Stephen Foster (August 14, 1894 - August 28,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Chadwick was an attorney and Seattle civic leader. He
				  served during World War I and was a civilian aid to the Secretaries of War and
				  of the Army for Washington State from 1933 to 1954. He was the National
				  Commander of the American Legion in 1938 and the National Commander of the
				  Veterans American Expeditionary Forces, Siberia, in 1974. He ran for the United
				  States Congress in 1926 and for the Senate in 1932, both times as a Democrat;
				  in 1940, he ran for the Senate as a Republican. His father, Stephen J.
				  Chadwick, was the Chief Justice of the Washington State Supreme Court and his
				  grandfather, Stephen Fowler Chadwick, was the fifth Governor of Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChadwickSFoster1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stephen Foster Chadwick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Brotzman</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front: To my friend of the years, Sterling Boone,
					 with regards, Stephen F. Chadwick, The American Legion, 1938-9</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chadwick, Stephen Fowler (December 25, 1825 – January
				  15, 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Chadwick, a lawyer, was admitted to the New York State
				  Bar on May 30, 1850. He soon made his way to Oregon, setting up a law firm in
				  Douglas County in the settlement of Scottsburg on April 21, 1851. He also
				  served as the town's first postmaster. After moving from Scottsburg to
				  Roseburg, he ran for the newly created position of Judge of Douglas County and
				  represented Douglas County at the State Constitutional Convention, in 1857. He
				  won the 1870 election to the position of Secretary of State, and was
				  subsequently reelected in 1874. In 1877, La Fayette Grover resigned the
				  governorship after his election to the United States Senate by the State
				  Legislature. Chadwick, as Secretary of State and second in the gubernatorial
				  line of succession, was inaugurated to fill out the remaining year of Governor
				  Grover's term while continuing to act as Secretary of State. When signing
				  official documents requiring the signatures of both the Secretary of State and
				  Governor, he would sign first on the left side, then on the right. At the time
				  of the 1878 elections, he declined a second term and went back to practicing
				  law. He was the fifth Governor of Oregon and the first person to obtain the
				  governorship by way of the state's Line of Succession.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChadwickSFowler1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stephen Fowler Chadwick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chadwick, Steven James (April 28, 1863 - November 19,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen James Chadwick, the son of Stephen Fowler Chadwick, was
				  born in Roseburg, Oregon. He attended Willamette University and graduated from
				  the University of Oregon. He was admitted to the bar in Oregon in 1895, but
				  first practiced law in Washington. He was elected Mayor of Colfax, Washington
				  in 1891. He later served on the State Board of Land Commissioners, was a
				  Superior Court Judge and served as the Chief Justice of the Washington State
				  Supreme Court from 1909 until 1919. He ran for governor of Washington in
				  1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChadwickSJ1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait with another man; Stephen Chadwick at
					 left</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChadwickSJ2</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Stephen Chadwick in judge's
					 robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1919</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chamberlain, George Earle (January 1, 1854 - July 9,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Chamberlain was an American politician, legislator, and
				  public official in Oregon. A native of Mississippi and a trained lawyer, he was
				  a Democrat who served as the 11th Governor of Oregon, as a representative in
				  the Oregon Legislative Assembly, and as a United States Senator. The
				  Chamberlain Military Preparedness Bill of 1918, which he wrote, bears his name.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChamberlainGE1</container><unittitle>Governor George Chamberlain standing in front of
					 pillar at Oregon Building during the construction of the Alaska Yukon Pacific
					 Exposition (AYPE); he is holding a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Nowell</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChamberlainGE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor George Chamberlain standing
					 in front of pillar at Oregon Building during the construction of the Alaska
					 Yukon Pacific Exposition (AYPE); he is wearing a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Nowell</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chamberlain, Martin Nichols (August 9, 1914 - November
				  7, 2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Chamberlain was born in Calgary, Canada and graduated
				  from the University of Washington with a B.S. in mining engineering. He served
				  in WW II, eventually commanding the <emph>U.S.S. Earle</emph>. After discharge,
				  he worked at the UW in the Continuing Education Department, which he eventually
				  headed. He took time off from the UW to earn a PhD in Social Sciences from the
				  University of Chicago; he returned to the UW, where he worked for 17 years. He
				  then joined the Peace Corps as director of the East African Program. In 1965,
				  he returned to the U.S. to hold the position of Dean of the University of
				  California San Diego's Extension Program and was later Assistant to the
				  Chancellor. In retirement, he wrote a book about his grandfather, Col.
				  Granville Haller, a northwest pioneer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChamberlainMN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martin N. Chamberlain standing near
					 map of Washington in UW office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 7, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS (probably)</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photo appears in the 1953 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chamberlin, Martin Lucius (May 17, 1847 - August 25,
				  1903) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin L. Chamberlin was born in Dryden, Michigan and immigrated
				  to Oregon with his parents in 1858. He was elected city treasurer of Salem,
				  Oregon in 1879, county clerk of Marion County in 1880 and Oregon state senator
				  in 1886. He married Rose Weller in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChamberlainML1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martin L. Chamberlain</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chambers, Andsworth Hardaway (June 25, 1851 - July 1,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andsworth H. Chambers was the son of Washington Territory
				  pioneers, David and Elizabeth Chambers. He served as mayor of Olympia,
				  Washington for three terms and one term as a representative in the Washington
				  State legislature. He was the proprietor for many years of a successful
				  butchery and meat packing plant, and he built the Chambers Block in downtown
				  Olympia. He was the director of the First National Bank of Olympia and had a
				  controlling interest in the Olympia Gas and Electric Company. He served as a
				  member of the Washington State Capital Commission. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChambersAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Andsworth H. Chambers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chambers, Mary A. Harris (January 10, 1856 - December
				  17, 1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary A. Harris was born in Massachusetts. She was married to
				  Andsworth Hardaway Chambers, the mayor of Olympia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChambersMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary A. Chambers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chambers, Reed McKinley (August 18, 1894 - January 16,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reed Chambers was a pioneer in the American aviation industry, a
				  flying ace in World War I, a founder of an early airline, and founder and
				  chairman of America's first aviation insurance company. He was born in Onaga,
				  Kansas and grew up in Tennessee. He enlisted in the Tennessee National Guard in
				  1914 and served in the Mexican Border Service in 1916. He enlisted in the
				  Aviation Section of the U S. Army Corp for flight training in 1917. After
				  completion of training, he was assigned to the 94th Aero Squadron and was
				  credited with the destruction of seven enemy aircraft in aerial combat. Among
				  his awards were the Distinguished Service Cross, the French Legion of Honor,
				  and the Croix de Guerre. After the war, Chambers, along with Eddy Rickenbacker,
				  founded Florida Airways, which in 1926 received the first private airmail
				  contract awarded by the U.S. Government. After the airline's uninsured aircraft
				  suffered a series of accidents and damage caused by hurricanes, the airline
				  declared bankruptcy in 1927. As a result of this loss, Chambers teamed with
				  David Beebe and the two founded the United States Aircraft Insurance Group, the
				  nation's first aviation insurance company. The security provided by this
				  company ensured the development and testing of such pioneering aircraft as the
				  Douglas DC-3, the Boeing 707, the B-52 jet bomber, and the General Dynamics
				  F-111A. While flying second seat in a Convair F-106 Delta Dart in 1968,
				  Chambers broke the sound barrier.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChambersRM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reed Chambers wearing World War I Air
					 Force uniform and standing in front of airplane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chandler, Helen Marr Crossman (August 27, 1820 - July
				  27, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Marr Crossman was educated in Utica, NY and began teaching
				  school at the age of 15. She married John Hassett Chandler in 1841, and she and
				  her husband were missionaries in Siam (now Thailand) from 1841 until 1878,
				  where she taught school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> John and Helen Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lovejoy, Philadelphia, PA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under John H. Chandler subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chandler, John Hassett (March 21, 1813 - August 5,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The Chandlers were missionaries to Burma and Siam from 1841 to
				  1878. John Chandler made translations and did printing, making a font of type
				  in the Siamese characters. Helen Chandler taught and did religious work. John
				  Chandler was appointed United States Consul by President Buchanan and became
				  the confident and personal advisor to the king. For many years, he acted as
				  court interpreter. The Chandlers spent 39 years overseas, eventually returning
				  to the U.S. and settling in Camden, N.J.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> John and Helen Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lovejoy, Philadelphia, PA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chandler, Rodney Dennis (Rod) (July 13,1942 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rod Chandler worked for KOMO as a political correspondent and
				  anchorman and later was the assistant vice president for the marketing
				  department of Washington Mutual Savings Bank. He served four terms in the
				  Washington State House of Representatives and was elected as a Republican to
				  the 98th Congress, where he represented the newly created 8th congressional
				  district from January 3, 1983 to January 3, 1993. He gave up his seat for an
				  unsuccessful candidacy for the United States Senate. He is the
				  great-great-grandnephew of long-time U.S. Senator Zachariah Chandler of
				  Michigan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerRD1</container><unittitle>Rodney "Rod" Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerRD2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rodney "Rod" Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1982</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ron Rusnak Carla Leonardi Photography, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chandler, William Martin (September 23, 1858 - July 13,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William M. Chandler organized a school district in Sprague, W.
				  T., in 1884 and acted as clerk of the district until April 1885. He was first
				  treasurer of the city of Sprague and acted as agent for Wells, Fargo &amp; Co’s
				  express from August, 1883 to July, 1886, when it withdrew from the Northern
				  Pacific line. He was elected probate judge of Lincoln county in 1886 and served
				  until March 4, 1889. He was assistant chief clerk of the house in the first and
				  second sessions of the legislature in Washington after it was a state. He was
				  clerk in the office of the commissioner of public lands in Olympia for a short
				  time and also was deputy in the treasurer's office in Thurston County for a
				  year. Chandler was a member of the House of Representatives for the Idaho
				  legislature in 1913 and 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerWM1</container><unittitle>William M. Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerWM2</container><unittitle>William M. Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1889</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChandlerWM3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Willaim M. Chandler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1913</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stamper, Boise, ID</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chaplin, Daniel (September 1, 1822 - December 9,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Chaplin was born in New York where he trained as a
				  surveyor. He crossed the plains to Oregon, arriving in 1854. He settled first
				  in Marion County before moving first to Yamhill County and finally to La
				  Grande, Union County where he laid out the original town in spring of 1862 . He
				  also helped establish the first water system in the area. He succeeded in
				  having the land-office for Eastern Oregon located there, and for fifteen
				  consecutive years held the position of receiver of the land-office. In 1864 he
				  was elected to the legislature of Oregon. Chaplin was instrumental in bringing
				  the Oregon Railway &amp; Navigation Company to the area, donating 105 acres to
				  the new railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChaplinD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Chaplin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chapman, Esther Lorinda Bewley (July 19, 1826 - November
				  6, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Esther Lorinda Bewley was captured by Indians at the Whitman
				  Mission and was held prisoner three weeks; her brother, Crocket Bewley, was
				  killed. She later married William W. Chapman in 1849; they had ten
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanELB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Esther Lorinda Chapman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chapman, Stuart W. (February 27, 1907 - November 19,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stuart W. Chapman was born in Valley Falls, R. I. and graduated
				  in 1927 from Boston University. He received his doctorate in American Social
				  History from Yale University in 1939. He taught at the Carnegie Institute of
				  Technology in Pittsburgh for 16 years before joining the faculty of the UW. He
				  retired in 1972 from the UW College of Engineering where for 25 years he was a
				  member of the humanistic social studies department. He was department chair
				  from 1949 until 1968. He was a consultant for the Boeing Company and was
				  faculty coordinator in 1959 and 1960 of the faculty-student summer program at
				  Boeing.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanSW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stuart W. Chapman sitting at his desk
					 and holding papers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1952</unitdate></did><note><p>This photo appears in the 1952 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanSW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Close up of Stuart W. Chapman sitting
					 at his desk and holding papers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanSW3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Close up of Stuart W. Chapman sitting
					 at his desk and holding papers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanSW4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stuart W. Chapman in his office,
					 sitting at his desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1956</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chapman, Wilbert Mcleod (March 10, 1910
				  - June 25, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilbert Macleod (Wib) Chapman became Director of the UW School
				  Fisheries in 1947. In the early post-war years, enrollment in the School had
				  increased markedly. Chapman immediately undertook the revision of the
				  curriculum, sought to increase the faculty and to significantly expand the
				  Fishery Technology Program. He took leave of absence from the UW in the summer
				  of 1948 to become Special Assistant to the Secretary of State for Fish and
				  Wildlife; he did not return to the University. He later became Director of
				  Research for the Van Camp Seafood Company where he became an intellectual force
				  in fisheries policy. He is considered to be one of the principle architects of
				  postwar U.S. fisheries diplomacy as well as U.S. scientific policy in the 1940s
				  and 1950s. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanWM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilbert Macleod Chapman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1948</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS —251</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chapman, Colonel William W. (September 16, 1824 - July
				  23, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William W. Chapman was born in Catherine Township, Schuyler Co.,
				  NY. He joined the last wagon train to leave for Oregon in 1847, led by John
				  Bewley. The group caught up with the Smith wagon train, and the two groups
				  traveled together. The group made a detour to the Whitman mission, and two sick
				  children, Esther Lorinda Bewley and her brother Crocket, were left at the
				  mission to be nursed back to health. At the Dalles, Chapman took a canoe to
				  Switzer's Landing, and then walked to Oregon City. After working in the area,
				  he moved onto Salem, where John Courtney invited him to stay and hunt game.
				  While there, news came of the Whitman massacre and capture of hostages. Chapman
				  joined Maxon's company in East Portland and fought in the Cayuse war. At the
				  end of the war, he worked on Howell's Prairie and went to California to look
				  for gold. Returning by boat in 1849, he married Esther Lorinda Bewley and in
				  1852, took a donation land claim near Sheridan, Yamhill Co. Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanWW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Chapman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChapmanWW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Chapman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chapple, Dr. Stanley William (October 29, 1900 - June
				  21, 1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Chapple, pianist, conductor and educator, was born in
				  London. He was the director of the British National Opera Company and the
				  London Academy of Music. He was the conductor of the St. Louis Philharmonic
				  Orchestra for two years and the first director of Tanglewood. He arrived at the
				  UW in 1945 and became the director of the UW School of Music. Chapple also
				  conducted the Seattle Symphony Orchestra. and wrote several books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Language of Harmony</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChappleSW1</container><unittitle type="itemphotos">King TV television camera filming
					 Dr. Chapple at the piano</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1954?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Al Roberts</persname></origination></did><note><p>This photograph was probably published in the 
					 <emph render="italic">University of Washington Daily </emph>in September
					 1954.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChappleSW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stanley Chapple</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1945 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ernest Kassowitz, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Chapson, Warner</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM2</container><unittitle>Mount Rainier excursion: Helen Morrill, Harold
					 Stevenson, Warner Chapson, Amelia Nicoles, Gertrude Sennes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Morrill Wolfle subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Queen Charlotte (Sophia Charlotte of
				  Mecklenburg-Strelitz) (May 19, 1744 -November 17, 1818)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charlotte was the queen consort of George III of the United
				  Kingdom. The Queen Charlotte Islands in British Columbia, Canada were named
				  after her until 2010 when they were renamed Haida Gwaii, a First Nations term.
				  Queen Charlotte City on Haida Gwaii was developed in 2005 and was named after
				  her as was Queen Charlotte Sound in British Columbia, Canada (not far from the
				  Haida Gwaii Islands). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CharlotteS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Queen Charlotte</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Walker &amp; Cockerell, London</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph is of a painting by Allan Ramsay in the
					 National Portrait Gallery in London.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chatham, Earl of - see John Pitt</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chauncy, Charles (January 1, 1705 - February 10,
				  1787)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Chauncy was an American Congregational clergyman in
				  Boston. A graduate of Harvard in 1721, he was ordained as a minister of the
				  First Church, Boston, in 1727 and remained in that pulpit for 60 years. Next to
				  Jonathan Edwards, Chauncy was probably the most influential clergyman of his
				  time in New England. He was one of the leading critics of the Great Awakening
				  revivalist movement in the British American colonies in the mid-18th century.
				  He wrote <emph render="italic">Seasonable Thoughts on the State of Religion in
				  New England </emph>(1743), the Unitarian reply to Jonathan Edwards, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Some Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival of Religion
				  in New England </emph>(1742), which represented the neo-Calvinist wing of
				  Congregationalism. A firm believer in the colonial cause, he set forth the
				  political philosophy of the American Revolution in sermons and pamphlets during
				  the period. After the war, he defended the doctrine of Universalism. Chauncy
				  played a role in the major events of his time: not only the Great Awakening,
				  but also the French and Indian Wars, the controversy over the proposed
				  establishment of the Anglican episcopacy in America, political events from the
				  Stamp Act through the Revolution, the rise of the Enlightenment, the growth of
				  liberal Protestantism, social changes in Boston, and the development of
				  Unitarianism. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChauncyC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Chauncy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1760 and 1769?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">H. W. Smith</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Print by H. Andrews.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chealander, Otto Godfrey (June 8, 1868 - December 4,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otto Godfrey Chealander was the first to suggest that Seattle
				  hold the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific (A-Y-P) Exposition, the world's fair that in 1909
				  drew more than three million visitors. He came to the Northwest in 1894, just
				  before the Klondike Gold Rush. An immigrant from Kalmar, Sweden, Chealander
				  joined the hordes of miners who traveled north to the Yukon in 1897 upon
				  hearing reports of gold strikes. Chealander went as a merchant, however, not a
				  miner. He was a member of the Swedish Club and the Arctic Brotherhood and set
				  up a small exhibit at the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland in 1905. He
				  then discussed the idea of creating a similar exhibit in Seattle with 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> editor, James Wood and with William
				  Sheffield, secretary of the Alaska Club. Chealander participated in public life
				  in Seattle for more than a decade, serving as a special commissioner for the
				  A-Y-P and as a Civil Service Commission member in Seattle, and helping
				  establish Swedish Hospital. He and his wife operated retail stores in Snohomish
				  County before moving to Southern California in 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChealanderOG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Otto Godfrey Chealander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cheasty, Edward Camano (October 9, 1864-June 12,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward C. Cheasty was a pioneer merchant and civic figure who
				  was police commissioner in 1892. He was president of the Board of Parks, served
				  on the Board of the New Seattle Chamber of Commerce and chaired the Chamber's
				  Streets and Roads Commission. He was on the State Commission for the Louisiana
				  Purchase Exposition of 1907 and on the commission for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
				  Exposition. When he died, Mayor Hiram Gill ordered the flags of the city
				  buildings and city parks to be flown at half-mast. Cheasty Boulevard South on
				  Beacon Hill in Seattle is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksRE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Brooks with group at the
					 dedication of the Seward statue at Volunteer Park in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1, 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Brooks second from the right in the front row, Judge Thomas
					 Burke third from the right in the front row, Judge Cornelius Holgate Hanford in
					 center, Edward C. Cheasty to Hanford's left.</p><p>Filed under Richard E. Brooks subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cherberg, John Andrew (October 17, 1910 – April 8,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Cherberg was an American football coach, teacher,
				  television executive, and politician. He served as the head coach at the
				  University of Washington from 1953 to 1955, compiling a record of 10–18–2. He
				  also played college football at the University of Washington. He served as the
				  13th Lieutenant Governor of Washington from 1957 to 1989, longer than any other
				  lieutenant governor in the state's history. At his death, he was the longest
				  serving lieutenant governor in United States history. The John A. Cherberg
				  Building, which houses Washington State Senate offices at the State Capitol
				  campus, was renamed in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John A. Cherberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1985?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Washington State Senate Photo SDC 85-282-8</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg sitting at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with Frank N. Morris,
					 member of AF of L Local 200, Joe David, and Elmer Miller, past president of the
					 Local 200. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph was from the <emph render="italic">Labor
					 News</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with group of men
					 including Father John Murphy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Labor News</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD5</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini at the podium with John Cherberg
					 and unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, University of Washington Office of Public Information</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chesley, Frank (September 7, 1929 - April 22,
				  2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Chesley (born Cekovich) had a long career in journalism,
				  reporting in the era of the civil rights struggles and the protests of Vietnam
				  War. A product of the University of Washington School of Journalism, he
				  reported for <emph render="italic">The San Francisco Chronicle</emph>, and
				  spent five years in Europe while working for Reuters and <emph render="italic">Stars &amp; Stripes</emph>. He was a television critic and
				  reporter at the <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> from
				  1969 until 1977. He later worked at <emph render="italic">The Everett Herald
				  </emph>as a reporter, columnist, and copy editor. His journalistic career was
				  interspersed with world travel and work in media relations, including a stint
				  with King County Executive John Spellman and his 1980 gubernatorial campaign.
				  He spent his years before retiring in late 2009 as a staff historian for
				  www.historylink.org, the online encyclopedia of Washington State history.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChesleyF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Chesley sitting in office
					 trying to cut telephone cord</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cheves, Langdon (September 17, 1776 – June 26,
				  1857)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Langdon Cheves was an American politician, lawyer and
				  businessman from South Carolina. He was a U. S. Representative from 1810 to
				  1815, served as Speaker of the House in 1814-1815, and was President of the
				  Second Bank of the United States from 1819-1822. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChevesL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Langdon Cheves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a drawing.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Chew, Robert Smith (November 4, 1811- August 3,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Smith Chew, Jr. was the son of Robert Smith Chew, who
				  succeeded his father, John Chew, as the Clerk of the Hustings Court. Chew Jr.
				  entered the service of the government in his youth and served in the State
				  Department more than forty years, when he was advanced to the Chief Clerkship
				  on the appointment of William Hunter as Second Assistant Secretary of State in
				  July 1866. He was an aide to William Henry Seward and was present at signing of
				  Alaskan treaty in 1867. During the Civil War, he was a wartime special
				  messenger for President Abraham Lincoln and carried a famous message from
				  Lincoln to Governor Pickens at Charleston.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chilberg, Andrew (March 29, 1845 - February 14,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Chilberg was born in Sweden and arrived in Seattle in
				  1875. During the 1880s, he served as county assessor, city councilman and city
				  treasurer. He was the founder and president of the Scandinavian-American Bank
				  and Puget Sound Savings and Loan Company and one fo the founders of Swedish
				  Hospital. He was a charter member of the Swedish Club and served as vice
				  counsel for Sweden. He owned the Stockholm Hotel located at First Avenue and
				  Bell Street as well as the Chilberg Agency, a general insurance and steamship
				  agency.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">ChilbergA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Andrew Chilberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chilberg, Carl Edward (April 1, 1898- May 24,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carl Edward Chilberg was the son of John Edward Chilberg and
				  Anna Mary Rinehart Chilberg and the grandson of William V. and Amanda Rinehart.
				  He was born and educated in Seattle. After graduation from high school, he
				  entered the Belmont Military Academy in San Francisco, where he continued his
				  studies for four years. He entered the University of Washington in 1916 as a
				  freshman. Two days after the declaration of war with Germany, he enlisted in
				  the Sixty-Third Coast Artillery. Within a month, he was promoted to the rank of
				  corporal and went overseas in September 1918. He returned to Seattle with his
				  unit in March 1919 and was killed in an automobile accident on May 24,
				  1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RinehartASG1</container><unittitle>Amanda Rinehart with grandsons Hugh Rinehart Chilberg
					 and Carl Edward Chilberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>See Amanda Rinehart subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chilberg, Hugh Rinehart (September 7, 1896- December 12,
				  1958) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Rinehart Chilberg was the son of John Edward Chilberg and
				  Anna Mary Rinehart Chilberg and the grandson of William V. and Amanda Rinehart.
				  He studied in Germany from 1911 to 1913 and worked in banking and real estate
				  in Los Angeles. He married Anne Sylvester in 1917. </p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RinehartASG1</container><unittitle>Amanda Rinehart with grandsons Hugh Rinehart Chilberg
					 and Carl Edward Chilberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>See Amanda Rinehart subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chilberg, John Edward (January 19, 1867 - December 10,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Edward Chilberg was a Seattle banker and president of the
				  Board of the Alaska Yukon Exposition in 1909. He attended the UW before working
				  as a printer and in the family grocery; when the grocery burned during the
				  Seattle fire of 1889, he became a merchant broker and operated vessels between
				  Seattle and Central America and to the Yukon. In 1899, he and a colleague broke
				  through the ice in a canoe to carry the news of the Nome gold strike to Dawson.
				  He held interests in several businesses and banks in Alaska and Seattle and
				  served as president of the Scandinavian-American Bank. He built and financed
				  the New Washington Hotel and the Alaska Building, the first skyscraper in
				  Seattle. He twice served as president of the Chamber of Commerce.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robley Dunglison Evans in an
					 automobile with others in front of a building, during a tour of the site of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Seated in front, next to chauffeur: J. A. Kruikshank, manager
					 of Admiral Evans' lecture tour; in second seat: President of A-Y-P Board John
					 E. Chilberg and Captain Alfred W. Lewis, director of concessions; seated in
					 back: Admiral Evans and Mrs. Evans. The photo appeared in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> on March 30, 1909.</p><p>Filed under Robley Dunglison Evans subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chin, Frank (February 25, 1940 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Chin is an Asian American playwright and novelist whose
				  works addresses issues dealing with the stereotypes of Asian American within
				  the United States. He was the first Chinese-American playwright to have his
				  play, <emph render="italic">The Chickencoop Chinaman</emph>, performed on the
				  American Place Theatre stage in New York. Chin was also a founder of many
				  theaters such as the East West Players, which was the longest running
				  Asian-American theater in the nation, and the Asian American Theater Workshop,
				  which became known as the Asian American Theater Company in 1973. Chin received
				  the American Book Award in 1989 for his collection of short stories. He also
				  received the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1975</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Nancy Wong, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chin, Gee Hee (June 22, 1844 – 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gee Hee Chin was a Chinese merchant, labor contractor, and
				  railway entrepreneur who made his fortune in Seattle before returning to his
				  native village in Taishan, Guangdong province. He was brought to the U. S. at
				  an early age and worked in a placer mine and a lumber mill in Port Gamble,
				  Washington. In 1873, he arrived in Seattle and became a junior partner in the
				  Wa Chong company, the city's leading Chinese enterprise of the time. At the Wa
				  Chong company, he acquired labor contracts from coal mines, railroads, farming,
				  and the Puget Sound mosquito fleet. He built the Canton Building (now the Kon
				  Yick Building) on Washington Street, one the first brick buildings raised after
				  the Great Seattle Fire of June 6, 1889. He returned in 1904 or 1905 to China
				  where he was the entrepreneur behind South China's first railway and where he
				  founded a seaport, while continuing also to have business associations with
				  Seattle. He returned frequently to the U.S. and, in particular, to Seattle,
				  where he retained close ties.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH1</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin with (L to R) Mrs. Manson (Elise) Backus,
					 Mrs. Thomas (Caroline) Burke, Chin's bodyguard, Judge Thomas Burke and Chin's
					 son, Lem Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH2</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of the original photograph.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Chin, Lem (1875 - ? )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lem Chin was the son of Gee Hee Chin and inherited his Seattle
				  businesses. He is possibly the first Chinese American born in Washington
				  State.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinGH1</container><unittitle>Gee Hee Chin with (L to R) Mrs. Manson (Elise) Backus,
					 Mrs. Thomas (Caroline) Burke, Chin's bodyguard, Judge Thomas Burke and Chin's
					 son, Lem Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gee Hee Chin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chin, Quong (1856 - 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Quong Chin arrived in Seattle in 1868 at the age of 11; he was
				  one of Seattle's first immigrants from China. He founded the Qa Quong Company,
				  which continued in operation until the 1940's.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChinQ1</container><unittitle>Quong Chin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p> A copy of a photograph in newspaper. The photograph also
					 appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on September 11,
					 1955.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chinn, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM1</container><unittitle>John Bunzel, Theodore Astley, Mr. Chinn and Albert
					 Ottenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chirouse, Father Eugene Casimir (September 20, 1821 -
				  May 28, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p id="shi">Father Eugene Casimir Chirouse was born in France and
				  took his vows in 1844. On January 22, 1847, he left France for Oregon, arriving
				  at Fort Walla Walla on October 5, 1847, only a month before the Whitman
				  Massacre. Chirouse was ordained with Charles M. Pandosy at Fort Walla Walla on
				  January 2, 1848, the first Catholic ordination in what would become the state
				  of Washington. He lived and worked among the Yakimas from 1848-1856 and for a
				  short time was missionary to the Cayuse tribe. The priests attempted
				  peacemaking during the tensions that culminated in the Yakima Indian War, but
				  in 1857 were transferred to Olympia for their safety. Chirouse was assigned to
				  oversee Puget Sound tribes and lived on the Tulalip reservation from 1857 to
				  1878. Here he established a school and church, the Mission of St. Anne, and
				  helped to build missions on the Lummi and Port Madison reservations. Father
				  Chirouse knew a number of Salish dialects, translating the scriptures,
				  authoring a grammar and a catechism, and creating an
				  English-Salish/Salish-English dictionary. He was later transferred to a post in
				  British Columbia, but continued to visit Tulalip to visit friends and perform
				  baptisms and weddings.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChirouseEC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Father Eugene Casimir
					 Chirouse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>This is a copy of an earlier photograph--possibly from a
					 carte-de-visite.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChirouseEC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Father Eugene Casimir
					 Chirouse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>This is a copy of an earlier photograph which was torn.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChirouseEC3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Father Eugene Casimir Chirouse,
					 seated, holding cane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>The is a copy of an earlier photograph which was probably a
					 carte-de-visite.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chisholm, Margaret (July 12, 1874 - June 12,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Chisholm, the daughter of Roderick Chisholm and
				  Margaret Kiley Chisholm, was born in Hannibal, Missouri. Her family moved to
				  Seattle in 1889, where her father worked as a mining operator. Margaret worked
				  as a stenographer in the Seattle Comptroller's officer, as a clerk for the
				  Appropriations Committee and as Speaker Robert Brooke Albertson's secretary
				  during the 1901 legislative session. She also worked for the Chamber of
				  Commerce. She married James Taylor Epler in 1906. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chism, Middleton Martis (July 17, 1899 - December 6,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Middleton Martis Chism was born in Jasper, Alabama. He attended
				  the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and came to Seattle in 1929. He
				  married Catherine Gould, whose father, Charles Gould, had invented a coupling
				  device for railroad cars. He was an investor, the president of the Arboretum
				  Foundation, and a commodore and life member of the Seattle Yacht Club. Chism
				  Park in Bellevue, Washington is named for him. Half of the eighteen acre park,
				  representing Chism's summer lakefront home, was donated to Bellevue from
				  Chism's estate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChismMM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Middleton Martis Chism with Commander
					 Albert E. Harned</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1, 1954</unitdate></did><note><p>From an accompanying article from <emph render="italic">The
					 Seattle Times</emph> dated Friday, July 2, 1954: Comdr. A. E. Harned of the
					 Coast Guard, who was transferred yesterday to Washington, D.C., smiled happily
					 as he received an engraved cigaret box from Middleton Chism, commodore of the
					 Seattle Yacht Club. The club, at a farewell party at the club, presented Harned
					 with the memento in recognition of his interest in yachting and marine safety
					 in the Pacific Northwest. Harned had been chief of search and rescue operations
					 for the 13th Coast Guard District. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Christgau, Victor (September 20, 1894 – October 10,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Christgau was a politician and government official from
				  Minnesota who served as the executive director of the Social Security
				  Administration. He was a member of the Minnesota Senate from 1927 until his
				  resignation in 1929. and was elected as a Republican to the 71st and 72nd US
				  Congresses, (March 4, 1929 – March 3, 1933); he was an unsuccessful candidate
				  for renomination in 1932. He was appointed executive assistant to the director
				  of production, Division of Agricultural Adjustment Administration, in June
				  1933. He was director of the Production Division and assistant administrator
				  from January 1934 through February 1935. Christgau was appointed state
				  administrator of the Minnesota Works Progress Administration in June 1935 and
				  served until June 1938. From 1939 through 1954 Christgau was state director of
				  the Minnesota division of employment and security at St. Paul. He then served
				  as president of the Interstate Conference Employment Security Agencies from
				  1947 to 1948; Director, Bureau of Old Age and Survivors Insurance, Social
				  Security Administration, from 1954 to 1963, and executive director of Social
				  Security Administration from January, 1963 to March, 1967.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE6</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with Victor Christgau, executive director
					 of the Social Security Administration</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chittenden, Hiram Martin (October 25, 1858 - October 9,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Chittenden was a leading historian of the American West,
				  especially of the fur trade. A graduate of West Point, he was the Seattle
				  district engineer for the Army Corps of Engineers (April 1906 – September 1908)
				  for whom the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks in Seattle, Washington, were named. He
				  was one of the first three elected Port Commissioners at the Port of Seattle.
				  He also helped found the Pacific Coast Association of Port Authorities (PCAPA),
				  later known as the Association of Pacific Ports (APP) in 1913.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChittendenHM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Chittenden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0022/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Choir, Melody (March, 1850? - December 31, 1906
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melody Choir came to Seattle in the 1870s. In city directories
				  his occupation is listed as “book agent” in the 1880s, and “real estate” or
				  “capitalist” in the 1890s. For a brief time at the end of the 19th century he
				  held public office as a Seattle Park Commissioner. He published 
				  <emph render="italic"> Choir's pioneer directory of the city of Seattle and
				  King County, history, business directory, and immigrant's guide to and
				  throughout Washington Territory and vicinity</emph>in 1878. When he died, he
				  left an estate variously reported as between $120,000 and $200,000, directing
				  that the funds be used as a park that would contain a mausoleum for himself and
				  his dog, Hobo. Several people contested his will, including his mother and a
				  possible widow. It was finally established that his real name was Joseph H.
				  Melchoir, and his estate went to his mother. The mausoleum was never built.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChoirM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Melody Choir with unidentified
					 woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chombeg, M.Y.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>M. Y. Chombeg was a lieutenant in the Royal Marines in the 19th
				  century.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChombegMY1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">M. Y. Chombeg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chow, Cheryl Mayre (May 24th 1946 – March 29,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cheryl Chow was a Seattle educator and politician. She was the
				  daughter of restauranteurs Ping and Ruby Chow; her mother was later a King
				  County Council Member. She was a teacher and principal in the Seattle school
				  system. She coached girls' basketball for the city Parks and Recreation
				  Department and was the assistant director for Girl Scouts of Western
				  Washington. From 1990-1997, she served on the Seattle City Council and then
				  served as president of the Seattle School Board. She died of cancer in
				  2013.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChowC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cheryl Chow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1990?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Chow, Ruby (June 6, 1920 – June 4, 2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruby Chow was a politician, restaurateur and civic activist. As
				  the first Asian American elected to the King County Council in 1973, she pushed
				  Seattle Public Schools to offer bilingual education for newly arrived students.
				  Born in 1920, she dropped out of Franklin High School at age 16 to help support
				  her nine siblings after the death of their father during the Great Depression.
				  A year later, she moved to New York to find work waiting tables. Returning to
				  Seattle, she and her husband Ping opened Ruby Chow’s in 1948, an upscale
				  restaurant at Broadway and Jefferson. She became an influential figure,
				  advocating for Seattle’s Chinese community, immigrants and services in the
				  city’s South End, mentoring other politicians, and helping to open the Wing
				  Luke Museum. She served three terms on the County Council. She also raised five
				  children, including Cheryl Chow, who followed her example of public service to
				  the Seattle City Council from 1990-97 and the Seattle School Board from
				  2005-09. Ruby Chow Park, at the corner of S. Albro Place and 13th Avenue S. in
				  Seattle, is named for her.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Christgau, Victor (September 20, 1894 – October 10,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Christgau was was a politician and government official
				  from Minnesota who served as the executive director of the Social Security
				  Administration. He was a member of the Minnesota Senate from 1927 until his
				  resignation in 1929. and was elected as a Republican to the 71st and 72nd US
				  Congresses, (March 4, 1929 – March 3, 1933); he was an unsuccessful candidate
				  for renomination in 1932. He was appointed executive assistant to the director
				  of production, Division of Agricultural Adjustment Administration, in June
				  1933. He was director of the Production Division and assistant administrator
				  from January 1934 through February 1935. Christgau was appointed state
				  administrator of the Minnesota Works Progress Administration in June 1935 and
				  served until June 1938. From 1939 through 1954 Christgau was state director of
				  the Minnesota division of employment and security at St. Paul. He then served
				  as president of the Interstate Conference Employment Security Agencies from
				  1947 to 1948; Director, Bureau of Old Age and Survivors Insurance, Social
				  Security Administration, from 1954 to 1963, and executive director of Social
				  Security Administration from January, 1963 to March, 1967.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE6</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with Victor Christgau, executive director
					 of the Social Security Administration</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Christie, James Halbold (December 14, 1854 - June 15,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Halbold (or Helbold) Christie was born in Scotland. He
				  served in a branch of the Canadian military forces and later took part in a
				  three year expedition to the Arctic. In 1889, <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Press</emph> newspaper challenged any "hardy citizens of the Sound to acquire
				  fame by unveiling the mystery which wraps the land encircled by the snow capped
				  Olympic range." Hardy responded, stating his qualifications for such an
				  exploration, his desire to lead an exploring party and a request for financial
				  support. The newspaper agreed to be the sponsor, and by December 1889, a
				  six-man team was organized, known as the "Press Exploring Expedition." In
				  slightly less than six months, the expedition traversed the entire Olympic
				  range from north to south, most of which is now in Olympic National Park. It
				  was the first documented expedition to accomplish such a feat. Mt. Christie in
				  the Olympic Mountains is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChristieJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Christie sitting near water and
					 holding a rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Churchill, Samuel J. (December 6, 1911 - December 28,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Churchill was born in Astoria, Oregon and grew up in a
				  logging camp. He later moved to Seaside, Oregon where he attended school. He
				  served in the Navy in World War II. After discharge, he joined the staff of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Yakima Herald Republic</emph> newspaper where he
				  wrote a column called "Sam's Valley." He also wrote several books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Big Sam</emph> about his father's logging experiences. He
				  retired in 1974.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChurchillSJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Churchill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clannthearghuis, Seumas (April 26, 1879 - March 26,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Seumas Clannthearghuis, the chief of Clannthearghuis of
				  Stra-chur, Argyll, Scotland, and of Clann Alpein, a descendant of Gaellic Kings
				  of Scotland, was an explorer, military cartographer and ethnologist who
				  represented the fifty-first generation of his clan. The Anglicized version is
				  Clan Ferguson. During World War I, he was an officer in the British
				  Frontiersmen in Africa. He once crossed the Sahara on foot, a mapmaking and
				  battle journey that took two and a half years. He was decorated for his
				  services in Palestine and was a life member of the Explorers Club and the St.
				  Andrews Society of New York. In 1933 he was named a Fellow in The Royal
				  Scottish Geographical Society for his explorations in remote parts of the
				  world.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClannthearghuisS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Seumas Clannthearghuis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bachrach</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: To Jack Robertson from his sincere friend
					 Clannthearghuis of Stra-chur, 8 August 1931.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clapp, Cyrus Francis (July 29, 1851 - July 2,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cyrus F. Clapp was born in Maine and educated at Hanover Academy
				  in Massachusetts, the Royal Institute of Belfast, Ireland and St. Andrews
				  College in Scotland. After graduation, he traveled west, first to California
				  and then to Port Townsend, Washington and Seattle, Washington where he invested
				  in timber lands, real estate and banking.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClappCF1</container><unittitle>Cyrus F. Clapp</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClappCF2</container><unittitle>Two photographs of the Clapp home at 906 - 14th Avenue
					 East on Capitol Hill in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copies of original photographs</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Allan Bela (June 6, 1896 - April 16,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Missoula, Montana, Allan Clark was a sculptor whose
				  figure work reflected his world-wide travels, especially in Asia where from
				  1924 to 1927, he studied in China, Korea and Japan. He was raised in Tacoma and
				  at times maintained a studio there. He was a student at Stadium High School and
				  Puget Sound College in Tacoma, Washington, the Art Institute of Chicago and the
				  Art Students League in New York. Clark was a member of the National Institute
				  of Arts and Letters and the National Sculpture Society. He begun work as a
				  sculptor in 1917 in New York City working in stone and terra cotta while
				  teaching at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. He was also a member of the
				  Fogg Museum expedition to explore cave chapels near Turkestan. In 1923, at the
				  age of 27, he received his largest commission, the 21 statues that adorn the
				  Suzzallo Library at the University of Washington. Eighteen were of historical
				  figures cast in terra cotta, but the three largest were of cast stone. The
				  three statues were to symbolize the concepts of "Mastery, Inspiration, and
				  Thought." In 1930, he moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico where he did sculptures of
				  Indian heads whose titles include "Maria of Chichiti" and "Klah-Navaho Medicine
				  Man." He was killed in 1950, at the age of 53, in an auto accident as he was
				  returning to Tacoma to visit his father.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 13, 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. Eugene Smith</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph for <emph render="italic">Life Magazine</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAB2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Clark's Figure of a woman,
					 "Study for a Garden Pool" </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Clark's Bust of woman, "Mrs
					 Adrian Iselin" </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAB4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Clark's Head of woman,
					 "Japanese Courtesan"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAB5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allan Clark's Head of
					 woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Alonzo Kent (December 5, 1845 - October,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alonzo Kent Clark was born in Vermont and served in the Civil
				  War, participating in several battles including Gettysburg. After the war, he
				  re-enlisted and served until 1879 when he was discharged from Fort Sherman. He
				  owned a hardware store and tinshop on Main Street in Spokane in the 1880s.
				  Clark, Edward Knight (his partner in the hardware store) and Clarence White
				  stretched the first telephone wire in Spokane, running it from the hardware
				  store to the newspaper where White was employed. He was also in the Spokane
				  delegation to the first Washington State legislature, introducing the bill for
				  organizing the territorial militia. He was appointed postmaster by President
				  Harrison and again by President McKinley. After he sold his hardware store, he
				  farmed in Rockford, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkAK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alonzo Kent Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">D. R. Brockman, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Barrett Harper (August 26, 1890 - August 5,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Barrett Harper Clark was an influential editor, critic,
				  historian, lecturer and literary manager who helped create theater companies
				  that encouraged experimental American dramatists. From 1936 until 1953, he
				  headed the Dramatists' Play Service, a play leasing and publishing company
				  formed to benefit playwrights and create healthy competition in the amateur
				  theater market. His career influenced the shape of modem American dramatic
				  literature through his friendships, publication, criticism and editorship. His
				  activities linked together the influences of the little theater movement, folk
				  drama, worker's theater, changes in play publication, and the Drama League of
				  America. Clark produced a huge amount of criticism and educational materials
				  and was a regular critic and book reviewer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkBH1</container><unittitle>Photograph of a drawing of Barrett Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Cyrus Leroy Baldridge</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Donald Hathaway (August 5, 1890 - June 18,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald H. Clark was a forester, author and authority on Pacific
				  Northwest history. His work and writings were instrumental in establishing new
				  uses for native red alder and other hardwood species. He received his B.S.,
				  M.S. and PhD in forestry from the UW. He was secretary-manager of Northwest
				  Hardwood Association and secretary-manager of Red Cedar Shingle Association,
				  1919-1923. He owned Cascade Cedar Company and was sales manager for Colonial
				  Cedar Company. He was a research associate for forest products at the
				  University of Washington College of Forestry, 1945-1953 and director of the
				  Institute of Forest Products, 1953-1960. He was among the founders of the
				  Pacific NW Writers Conference and served as its president in 1959. He did
				  research and wrote text for many of the historical markers on Washington
				  highways, and lectured throughout the region on Washington place names, ghost
				  towns and cannon hunting. In 1949, he founded Cannon Hunters Association of
				  Seattle (CHAOS), which was dedicated to the recovery and restoration of ancient
				  cannons. At the time of his death, the organization had over 1,500 members in
				  32 countries. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkDH1</container><unittitle>Donald Clark and woman examining a cannon, possibly at
					 the University of Washington campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 15, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Edgar Erastus (February 18, 1856 - December 1,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Erastus Clark was born in Lima, New York. He became a
				  brakeman and later a conductor on various railroads. In 1890, he was elected
				  chief of the Order of Railway Conductors, working to improve working conditions
				  and pay for its members. President Theodore Roosevelt appointed him to the
				  arbitration committee for the settlement of the coal strike in 1906 and then to
				  the Interstate Commerce Commission.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Elias Treat (September 1, 1886 - June 1,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elias Treat Clark was the first professor of logging engineering
				  at the University of Washington and later served as the secretary-manager of
				  the Pacific Northwest Logging Association. He was an authority on safety
				  engineering and received numerous awards for his contributions to industrial
				  safety in the forests. He was a member of the Joint Commission of Forest
				  Conservation since its founding in 1934 and was one of the promoters of tree
				  farms in the Pacific NW to encourage timber growth. He was a trustee of the
				  Keep Washington Green Committee since its formation in 1940. Clark was born in
				  Woodbridge, Connecticut and graduated from the Yale University College of
				  Forestry in 1907; he received his master’s degree from there in 1908. After
				  graduation, he joined for the Forest Service and came to Seattle as the
				  director of the Snoqualmie National Forest. He returned to Washington DC for
				  work with the Forest Service and then came back to the Northwest to work for
				  several logging companies near Everett, Washington. From 1930 until 1938, he
				  was professor of logging engineering at the University of Washington School of
				  Forestry. He then worked for the loggers’ association. Clark was treasurer of
				  the Association of Washington Industries and vice chair of the committee for
				  Forest Products Industries. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkET1</container><unittitle>Elias Treat Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Ella Elizabeth (January 8, 1896 - July 9,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ella Elizabeth Clark was born at Summertown, Tennessee. After
				  graduating from high school in 1917 she became a high school teacher although
				  she did not receive her B.A. from Northwestern University until 1921. She
				  continued to teach high school English and dramatics until 1927 when she
				  received her M.A. from Northwestern. She began teaching at Washington State
				  University where she taught she taught both beginning and advanced writing and
				  literature courses and wrote on such diverse subjects as Indian mythology,
				  botany, and firefighting in the national forests. In 1933, in collaboration
				  with fellow faculty member Paul P. Kies, she wrote a writer's manual and
				  workbook which was soon followed by an annotated anthology of poetry which she
				  authored alone. She was a fire lookout for the United States Forest Service in
				  the Cascades in the summers during the Second World War. Her papers are held in
				  Special Collections at Washington State University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEElizabeth1</container><unittitle>Ella Elizabeth Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Gertrude (August 6, 1877 - December 16,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Ingram Clark, the daughter of Seth W. Clark and Mary
				  Hall Clark, was born in the District of Columbia. She married Earnest Foster in
				  1909, and the couple moved to Alaska. She died in California. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Norman H. (May 10, 1925 - February 9,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norman H. Clark was born in Mesa, AZ and held a bachelors degree
				  from Southern Methodist University and a Ph.D. from the University of
				  Washington. He taught for many years at Everett Community College and served as
				  president of that institution. He retired from the faculty in 1985. He was the
				  author of several books on Prohibition, including<emph render="italic">Deliver
				  Us from Evil: An Interpretation of American Prohibition</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Dry Years: Prohibition and Social Change in
				  Washington </emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkNH1</container><unittitle>Norman H. Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Clark, Thomas Campbell (September 23, 1899 – June 13,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Campbell Clark was an American lawyer who served as the
				  59th United States attorney general from 1945 to 1949 and as Associate Justice
				  of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1949 to 1967.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Thomas Jefferson Vernon (August 27, 1847 -
				  January 27, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Jefferson Vernon Clark was born in Maryland and served in
				  the Union Army during the Civil War. After the war, he went west to Kansas and
				  Colorado, serving as a scout and guide during the Indian Wars (1865 - 1870).
				  After marrying Margaret Nancy Mann, he started raising cattle, trapping and
				  hunting. In 1874, he began farming on the Skagit River and began working for
				  the railroads constructing bridges. He was one of the first settlers in North
				  Yakima where he opened a store and operated a boarding house. He was elected
				  city councilman and mayor of North Yakima, and was a representative to the
				  territorial legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkTJV1</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson Vernon Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Wellington Montgomery (1860 - January 11,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wellington Clark was born in California and moved to Walla
				  Walla, Washington in 1880. He was a prosecuting attorney in Walla Walla, was
				  the representative from Walla Walla for the last Washington Territorial
				  Legislature, 1887-1888 and served as speaker of the Territorial House of
				  Representatives in 1886. He married Alica Hayden in Seattle in 1889. He
				  returned to California in 1900.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkWM1</container><unittitle>Wellington Montgomery Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Clark, Olympia</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, William (August 1, 1770 – September 1,
				  1838)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Clark was an American explorer, soldier, Indian agent
				  and territorial governor. Along with Meriwether Lewis, Clark helped lead the
				  Lewis and Clark Expedition of 1803 to 1806 across the Louisiana Purchase to the
				  Pacific Ocean, and claimed the Pacific Northwest for the United States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkW1</container><unittitle>William Clark </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1810</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Charles Willson Peale</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of the painting by Peale in Independence Hall,
						Philadelphia, PA</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkW2</container><unittitle>William Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1800 and 1809?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of a drawing of Clark</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkW3</container><unittitle>William Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1820 and 1829?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Chester Harding</persname></origination><note><p>Written on front: "From the painting by Chester Harding, in
						the possession of Mrs. Julia Clark Voorhis." Julia Clark Voorhis was William
						Clark's granddaughter.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisM4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Meriwether Lewis and William
					 Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1807?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
					 after a painting by Charles Willson Peale.</p><p>Filed under Meriwether Lewis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clark, Zerelda Harlow (December 10, 1843 - June 10,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zerelda Clark was born in Missouri. In 1847, she, her parents
				  Silas D. and Mary Harlow Maxon, and her sister Catherine crossed the plains to
				  Oregon. The family settled on a donation claim near Washougal. Her father was a
				  member of territorial legislature starting in 1871 and on the committee that
				  selected the original site for the University of Washington. She married John
				  Clark in 1889. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkZH1</container><unittitle>Zerelda Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910 </unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clarke, Chloe Sherman (April 22, 1885 - March 31,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chloe Sherman Clarke received her B.S. from the Teachers College
				  at Columbia University and her PhD from Alfred University in 1911 where she
				  delivered the valedictory oration on the subject of individual responsibility.
				  She taught home economics at the University of Washington; her brother,
				  Clarence L. Clarke, also taught at the UW. She married Andrew Glen Elder in
				  1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkeCS1</container><unittitle>Chloe Sherman Clarke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clarke, Donald William (January 5, 1897 - October 24,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald W. Clarke was born in Moscow, ID and moved to Bellingham,
				  Washington at an early age. A veteran of World War I and a UW graduate, he
				  worked for the IRS before becoming Director of the Washington State Game
				  Department. He served in that capacity from 1945 until 1951. He died while
				  attending the UW - University of Oregon football game.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkeDW1</container><unittitle>Donald W. Clarke sitting at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Western Engraving and Colortype, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Clarke's figure is outlined in white</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clarke, Esther A. (October 21, 1919- July 12,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Esther Clarke was a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971. Clarke worked for many years as a legal secretary for the military, and
				  was the secretary of the Aerospace Industrial Industrial District Lodge 751 for
				  25 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clarke, Nancy E. (May 11, 1948 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy E. Clarke graduated from and was an academic counselor at
				  the UW. She married Stephen A. Saunders in 1977.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkeNE1</container><unittitle>Nancy Clarke ice skating on Frosh Pond (Drumheller
					 Fountain) at the University of Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1969</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clarke, Tom Eugene (December 16, 1915 - July 13,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tom E. Clarke was an Alaska novelist and writer who also worked
				  as court reporter. Among the books he wrote are<emph render="italic">Alaska
				  Challenge,</emph> 1959 and <emph render="italic">The Mounties Patrol the
				  Sea</emph> 1969 and <emph render="italic">The Big Road</emph> 1966, a
				  semi-autobiographical novel about his experiences riding the rails during the
				  Depression. He enlisted in 1941, joining the Coast Artillery Corps, and spent
				  time in Alaska during and after the war. He studied creative writing at the UW.
				  His papers are held at the University of Southern Mississippi.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkeTE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tom Eugene Clarke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><note><p>Signed on front by Clarke</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkeTE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tom Eugene Clarke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tackett Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clary, Charles (March 24, 1873 - March
				  24, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Clary was a stage actor who moved to film and appeared
				  in more than 200 films between 1910 and 1930, including <emph>The
				  Penalty</emph> (1920), <emph>The Rosary</emph> (1915) and <emph>A Connecticut
				  Yankee in King Arthur's Court</emph> (1921).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClaryC1</container><unittitle>Charles Clary in costume as priest </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Witzel, Los Angeles</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed "To Mrs. Thomas Burlle (?) with all good wishes,
					 sincerely Charles Clary."</p><p>Photograph is a photocopy; original in the vault.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClaryC2</container><unittitle>Charles Clary in suit and wearing a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hartsock Photos, LA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> Signed "To Mrs. Thomas Burlle (?) a pioneer, Truly, Charles
					 Clary."</p><p>Photograph is a photocopy; original in the vault.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?)Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clawson, James (Jack) Harold (April 18, 1899 - May 28,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>.James Harold Clawson, the son of Charles C. and Rosetta Thorpe
				  Clawson, was born in Providence, Utah. He received his early education in the
				  Providence Public School, then attended high school and college at the Brigham
				  Young College in Logan, taking time out to serve in the armed forces in the
				  first World War. After graduating, he also earned a degree from the Utah State
				  Agricultural College, and completed his Master’s degree in Business
				  Administration at Harvard in 1922. After a few years of employment with Stone
				  &amp; Webster in utilities management and travel, he returned to Logan and
				  married Leora Gibbs, a classmate from Brigham Young College. After the first of
				  three sons was born, they moved to Seattle, Washington, where Clawsonwas
				  employed by Puget Sound Power &amp; Light Company (now Puget Sound Energy),
				  starting as an auditor. He received his CPA certification in 1931 and continued
				  to advance in the company over the years, becoming President and CEO in late
				  1959. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClawsonJH1</container><unittitle>James H. Clawson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Clay, Henry (April 12, 1777 – June 29, 1852)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Clay Sr. was an American attorney and statesman who
				  represented Kentucky in both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. He
				  was the seventh House speaker as well as the ninth secretary of state, also
				  receiving electoral votes for president in the 1824, 1832, and 1844
				  presidential elections. He helped found both the National Republican Party and
				  the Whig Party. For his role in defusing sectional crises, he earned the
				  appellation of the "Great Compromiser" and was part of the "Great Triumvirate"
				  of Congressmen, alongside fellow Whig Daniel Webster and John C. Calhoun.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">8</container><container type="item">ClayH1</container><unittitle>Henry Clay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1848</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by W. G. Jackman after a photograph by Brady from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clayworth, John T. (November,1859 - June 30,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John T. Clayworth arrived in Skagway, Alaska Territory in 1897.
				  He lost his first two outfits during attempts to take them into Dawson before
				  packing his third outfit over White Pass Summit in 1898. He worked at Quartz
				  Creek and other sections of Yukon Territory before going to the Fairbanks area,
				  working in Gold Hill, Ester and the Circle district. He invested in mining and
				  real estate, spending part of the year in Seattle before returning to his
				  mining interests in Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClayworthJT1</container><unittitle>John T. Clayworth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1938</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. W. Wheeler, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cleman, John (July 29, 1855 - July 9, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Cleman was born in Oregon in 1855. His parents were both
				  early settlers to the area; his mother, Rebecca Griffith arriving in 1847, and
				  his father, Charles Augustine Cleman, arriving before 1850. They moved to
				  Washington Territory, eventually settling in Yakima, Washington. John Cleman
				  raised livestock, including sheep, and was president of the Washington Wool
				  Growers. He married Mary Elizabeth Hershaw in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClemanJ1</container><unittitle>John Cleman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clements, Judson Claudius (February 12, 1846 - June 18,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judson C. Clements was a U.S. Representative from Georgia. He
				  was a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission for over twenty-five years
				  and served one year as its chairman. Clements had served as a member of the
				  Confederate States Army.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clements, Mary Donahue (November 5, 1836 - December 5,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Donahue was born in Maine and moved to Brinnon, Jefferson
				  County, Washington before 1880 with her husband, Samuelson Clements. Captain
				  Clements was one of the earliest settlers to the area, arriving in 1844 in a
				  whaling ship. He was in the whaling trade for 16 years and then was in the
				  merchant service on the Washington coast. They had five sons, three of whom
				  worked on the coastal steamships.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClementsMD1</container><unittitle>Mary Donahue Clements</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cleveland, Stephen Grover (March 18, 1837-June 24,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Grover Cleveland was the 22nd and 24th President of the
				  United States and was the only US president to serve two nonconsecutive terms
				  (1885–1889 and 1893–1897). He is counted twice in the numbering of the
				  presidents. He was the winner of the popular vote for president three times
				  (1884, 1888, and 1892) and was one of two Democrats (alongside Woodrow Wilson)
				  elected to the presidency in the era of Republican political domination dating
				  from 1861 to 1933. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClevelandSG1</container><unittitle>Stephen Grover Cleveland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClevelandSG2</container><unittitle>Stephen Grover Cleveland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall Jr. from a photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cline, Charles E. (July 8, 1858 - January 15,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Cline, a pioneer resident of Whatcom County, served as
				  the chief clerk of the lower house of the State Legislature in 1889. He was
				  elected a member of the Washington State House of Representatives in 1895 and
				  became Speaker of the House in 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClineCE1</container><unittitle>Charles Cline</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 26, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clinton, Gordon Stanley (April 13, 1920 – November 19,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Clinton was born in Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. His
				  ancestor was DeWitt Clinton, Governor of New York and builder of the Erie
				  Canal. Clinton grew up in Seattle and went to the UW, graduating in political
				  science and law. He worked for the FBI until World War II started. After the
				  war, he worked for the Prosecuting Attorney's Office in King County and then
				  became a Deputy Prosecutor, serving for two years before running for mayor.
				  After defeating incumbent Mayor Allen Pomeroy in a close election in 1956,
				  Clinton served two terms, from 1956 to 1964. He established the Metropolitan
				  Problems Advisory Committee, headed by local community leader John Ellis, to
				  suggest approaches to dealing with chronic local and regional problems. During
				  his administration, he tackled issues as divergent as regional governance,
				  international trade, and discrimination in housing. He actively supported
				  development of regional governments, leading to the formation of the
				  Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle (Metro) in 1958. He also established
				  Seattle's first sister city relationship (with Kobe, Japan) in 1956 and
				  supported the development of the current Seattle Center site for the World's
				  Fair in 1962. In 1963,He created the 12-member Seattle Human Rights Commission
				  to promote equality and understanding among Seattle residents. His papers are
				  held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gordon Clinton at desk signing papers
					 with Eloise Pratt and Governor Albert Rosellini looking on.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clise, Harry Rountree (November 10, 1852 - March 3,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Rountree Clise was born in Wisconsin and graduated from
				  the University of Wisconsin with a law degree. He and his brother James came to
				  Seattle in 1889. Clise was secretary of Seattle Lighting, and general counsel
				  for Washington Trust and Savings and Washington Securities Company. He served
				  on the Seattle City Council (1894-1896) and instituted and carried through
				  measures resulting in the Seattle city water system.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Clise, James William (December 16, 1855 - October 7,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James William Clise was born in Wisconsin and arrived in Seattle
				  the day after the fire of 1889. He attracted investors to Seattle to help
				  rebuild the city. He developed Carlton Park, the Seattle Regrade area, the
				  University District and Mercer Island. In addition to real estate, he started a
				  gas company, an international trade firm and the Washington Trust and Savings
				  Bank which eventually became Seattle First National Bank. He was married to
				  Anna Herr, who was one of the prime movers in the founding of Seattle
				  Children's Hospital in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CliseJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James William Clise</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Close, Upton - see Josef Washington Hall</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cobb, Charles H. (July 31, 1853 - November 15, 1939)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Cobb had interests in banking, trust companies, real
				  estate and lumber. He was a major investor in and president of the Metropolitan
				  Building Company, one the nation's first planned development programs, intended
				  to create a commercial center in Seattle. The Cobb Building is the only
				  surviving example of the program. It was the first building on the west coast
				  designed for a single professional use, in this case, physicians and
				  dentists.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CobbCH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Cobb</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph copied from <emph render="italic">Men of the
					 Pacific Coast</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cochran, James Alfred (January 5, 1844 - June 29,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James A. Cochran arrived in Oregon in 1857 to join his father,
				  who had established a farm in Amity, Oregon. Cochran later moved to eastern
				  Washington Territory before returning to Oregon in 1882 when his father was
				  dying.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CochranJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James A. Cochran</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>An engraving of the farmhouse and surrounding lands of the
					 James A. Cochran farm outside Pullman, with an inset portrait of Cochran. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cochrane, William ("Bill") ( December 15, 1845 - May 17,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Cochrane was born in County Cavan, Ireland and came to
				  America in 1863. After working in New York, Michigan and Kentucky, he arrived
				  in Seattle in March, 1873. He owned one of the largest logging companies in the
				  area as well as one of the largest ranches in the White River Valley in King
				  County, where he raised wheat and hops. He was elected sheriff in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CochraneW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Bill Cochrane playing hand organ in
					 Seattle's Pioneer Square with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1888</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "[King County] Sheriff Bill Cochrane (in
					 silk hat) paying election bet in 1888 in Seattle Wash. Played hand organ all
					 day on Pioneer Square, also took up collection of several hundred dollars which
					 he turned over to charity."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cockrell, Francis Marion (October 1, 1834 – December 13,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Cockrell was a Confederate military commander and
				  politician from the state of Missouri. He served as a United States Senator
				  from Missouri for five terms. He was appointed to the Interstate Commerce
				  Commission by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1905. He served on the Commission
				  until 1910. Cockrell then became part of a commission which negotiated the
				  boundaries between the state of Texas and the New Mexico Territory, which was
				  about to become a state. In 1912, he became a director of ordnance at the War
				  Department.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cody, William Frederick "Buffalo Bill" (February 26,
				  1846 – January 10, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody was an American scout, bison
				  hunter and showman. He performed in shows that displayed cowboy themes and
				  episodes from the frontier and the Indian Wars. He founded Buffalo Bill's Wild
				  West in 1883, taking his large company on tours throughout the United States
				  and, beginning in 1887, in Great Britain and Europe.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF1</container><unittitle>William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1875?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma
					 with Major John Burke, Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill)
					 Lillie, and Jose Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coffin, Stephen (May 4, 1807 - March 16,
				  1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Coffin arrived in Oregon in 1847. He was the owner of
				  223 acres of the Portland, Oregon original town site. He was involved in
				  transportation, both road building, railway and steam companies, and was one of
				  the prime movers in the building of the wagon road which proved important for
				  the development of Portland. Coffin provided transportation and provisions for
				  troops during the Yakima Indian War and was made a Brigadier General of the
				  Oregon Militia by Governor Gibbs in 1863. He donated land for a public levee as
				  well as providing funds for Portland’s first school and church bell at the
				  Methodist Church on Taylor Street.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CoffinS1</container><unittitle>Stephen Coffin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coffman, Harry Canby (August 3, 1875 - October 27,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Canby Coffman was born in Illinois and moved with his
				  family to Chehalis, Washington in 1889. He graduated from the UW in 1899. Two
				  years before graduation, he was the assistant librarian for the UW Library and
				  was named head librarian upon graduation. He resigned in 1906 to enter the real
				  estate and insurance businesses. He was one of the founders of the Chehalis
				  Mill Company, the principal stockholder in the Chehalis Improvement Company and
				  president of the Southwest Washington Development Association. He spurred the
				  movement to build a library in Chehalis, giving money every year for the
				  purchase of books. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CoffmanHC1</container><unittitle>Henry Canby Coffman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coffman, Jessie Irene Davis (September 21, 1867 -
				  September 30, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jessie Irene Davis was born in California and moved to Seattle
				  with her family in 1888. She was married to William Madison Coffman, the
				  grandson of William Nathaniel Bell, one of the founders of Seattle. She was a
				  member of the Washington Pioneers Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CoffmanJID1</container><unittitle>Jessie Irene Davis Coffman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Mushet Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coffman, Laura Keziah Bell (November 19, 1842 - November
				  15, 1887) [missing]</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Laura Keziah Bell Coffman was the eldest daughter of William
				  Nathaniel Bell and Sarah Ann Bell. She was eight years old when she was a
				  member of the Denny landing party at Alki Point in 1851, arriving with her
				  parents and three sisters. She married James Coffman in 1858 in Napa,
				  California. Their son was William Madison Coffman.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coffman, William Madison (December 8, 1859 - December
				  27, 1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Madison Coffman was the grandson of William Nathaniel
				  Bell, one of the founders of Seattle, and was married to Jessie Irene Davis. He
				  headed the machine shop that built the engine for the battleship, 
				  <emph render="italic">Nebraska</emph>, the only battleship built in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CoffmanWM1</container><unittitle>William Madison Coffman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coghlan, Charles Joseph (December 24, 1846 - September
				  7, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles J. Coghlan was born in Tignish, Prince Edward Island,
				  Canada and emigrated to the United States when he was fourteen. He married Mary
				  Jane O'Hara in 1875, and was the editor of two newspapers, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Ocosta Pioneer</emph> and <emph render="italic">The
				  Montesano Independent</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CoughlanCJ1</container><unittitle>Charles J. Coghlan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on front: Yours truly, C. J. Coghlan</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cole, Frank Beach (May 27, 1851 - July 18,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank B. Cole was a lumberman in Tacoma. He was on the board of
				  the Foresters Association, served as Washington State Forest Commissioner in
				  1917 and was the publisher of <emph render="italic">The West Coast
				  Lumberman</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColeFB1</container><unittitle>Frank B. Cole</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. L. Jackson, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cole, George Edward (December 23, 1826 – December 3,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Cole was born in New York and moved to Oregon Territory
				  where he was a member of the Legislature and a member of the committee which
				  drew up a memorial to Congress asking for the creation of Columbia Territory,
				  later re-named Washington Territory. He served as clerk of the United States
				  District Court of Oregon in 1859 and 1860. He moved to Walla Walla, Washington,
				  and in 1863, was the first citizen east of the Cascades who was elected to
				  Congress. He was appointed Governor of Washington Territory by President Andrew
				  Johnson in 1865; however, his administration ended within a few months. He was
				  never officially seated as governor because the U. S. Senate refused to confirm
				  his nomination. During his brief term, the Territorial Legislation passed its
				  first memorial to Congress, requesting admission to statehood. He returned to
				  Portland, Oregon, in 1867 and worked in railroad construction. He was
				  postmaster of Portland from 1873 to 1881. He moved to Spokane, Washington, in
				  1889, where he was Treasurer of Spokane County. He had extensive interests in
				  mining, manufacturing, and farming.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColeGE1</container><unittitle>George Edward Cole</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">F. G. Kernan, New York</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph of an engraving</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cole, Kenneth A. (July 16, 1910 - June 25,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kenneth A. Cole was born in Odessa, Washington and attended the
				  University of Washington Law School. He was the attorney for the Association of
				  Washington Cities and helped draft the Washington State optional municipal
				  code. He was Bellevue's first city attorney, serving from 1953 when the city
				  was incorporated until 1958. He served on Bellevue's City Council from 1958
				  until 1976. He was twice elected mayor of Bellevue by the Council, serving from
				  1958 until 1960 and from 1967 until 1969. He also served four years on the
				  Bellevue Board of Education.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColeKA1</container><unittitle>Kenneth A. Cole</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Brant, Bellevue, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cole, Kenneth Carey (April 10, 1898 - April 2,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kenneth Carey Cole graduated from the University of Washington
				  and was a Rhodes Scholar in 1921. He was a political science faculty member at
				  the University of Washington from the 1920s until the 1970s. He also served as
				  the vice chair of the regional War Labor Board during World War II.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColeKC1</container><unittitle>Kenneth C. Cole in his office at the UW</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Collier, William Carleton (September 29, 1902 - July 10,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Carleton Collier was the son of Herbert Lyall Collier
				  and Eugenia Bibb Smith Collier. He started with the Union Pacific Railroad in
				  1921, working as chief clerk and traffic agent. He was appointed general agent
				  in charge of passengers and freight in 1957. He continued to work for the
				  railroad until his retirement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CollierWC1</container><unittitle>William Carleton Collier studio portrait as a child,
					 holding a rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edwin Rogers, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Collyun, Samuel</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CollyunS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Collyun</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wagness, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Colman, Laurence James (December 25, 1859 - November 29,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laurence J. Colman was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and moved to
				  Seattle in 1872. His father, James Murray Colman, was an early pioneer in
				  Seattle who arrived in 1861 and played an important role in the building of the
				  city. Laurence Colman attended the UW; however, he left in his junior year to
				  join his father in business. Upon his father's death, he assumed control of the
				  Colman interests, including the J. M. Colman Company and the West Coast Wood
				  Preserving Company, among other business interests.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E. W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Colwell, William Magee (1846? - May 23,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William M. Colwell was born in Steuben County, NY and enlisted
				  in the Union Army on July 9, 1863. After the war, he lived in Michigan before
				  moving to the West Coast in 1887. He worked in the lumber business and in 1898
				  was elected to the Washington State Legislature, representing the Cathlamet
				  area. He died in Portland, Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColwellWM1</container><unittitle>William M. Colwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Sewell, San Francisco</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Comeford, James Purcell (December 23, 1833 - August 24,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Purcell Comeford was born in County Cork, Ireland. His
				  family emigrated to Ontario, Canada in 1837; they later moved to the United
				  States, first to Wisconsin and then to Minnesota. Comeford fought in the Civil
				  War; when the Sioux Indian Uprising broke out in Minnesota in August 1862, he
				  received permission from General Ulysses Grant to return to Minnesota.
				  Afterward, he returned to his regiment in Columbus, Kentucky and served in the
				  Union Army until the Civil War ended in 1865. After the war, he farmed in
				  Minnesota and the Dakota Territory. He first arrived in Snohomish County in
				  1872 and ran a trading post on the Tulalip Reservation for six years. He
				  founded Marysville in 1878, naming it after his wife Maria. He built the first
				  store and hotel in town, organized its first school district, and established
				  Marysville's first post office. He platted the town of Marysville and dedicated
				  the filing of the plat in February 1885. Later in life, he was active in real
				  estate and farming. He was known as the "father of Marysville," and Comeford
				  Park, a 2.6-acre park located in downtown Marysville, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComefordJP1</container><unittitle>James Purcell Comeford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Comegys, Henry Clay (November 5, 1844 -
				  November 9, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Clay Comegys was born in Missouri and arrived in Oregon
				  before the Civil War. He moved to Snohomish, Washington in 1884. He was
				  director of the largest bank in Snohomish and was the mayor of the city. He was
				  married to Sarah Lysons.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComegysHC1</container><unittitle>Henry Clay Comegys</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Snohomish Studio, Snohomish, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Compton, Arthur Holly (September 10, 1892 – March 15,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Holly Compton was an American physicist who won the Nobel
				  Prize in Physics in 1927 for his discovery of the Compton effect, which
				  demonstrated the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation. He was awarded
				  the Medal for Merit for his services to the Manhattan Project, and after the
				  war, served as the Chancellor of Washington University. He was the brother of
				  Wilson M. Compton and Karl T. Compton. The lunar crater <emph render="italic">Compton</emph> is named after Compton and his brother Karl, who
				  was also an influential scientist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComptonWM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilson Compton with Karl and Arthur
					 Compton at the inauguration of Wilson Compton as president of Washington State
					 College (now University).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1945</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hutchinson, Pullman, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: "Dr. Wilson Compton, Karl Compton, Arthur
					 Compton. W. B. B. in second line."</p><p>Filed under Wilson M. Compton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Compton, Karl Taylor (September 14, 1887 – June 22,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Karl Taylor Compton was a prominent American physicist and
				  president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) from 1930 to 1948.
				  He was the brother of Wilson M. Compton and Arthur Compton. The lunar crater 
				  <emph render="italic">Compton</emph> is named after Compton and his brother
				  Arthur, who was also an influential scientist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComptonWM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilson Compton with Karl and Arthur
					 Compton at at the inauguration of Wilson Compton as president of Washington
					 State College (now University).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1945</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hutchinson, Pullman, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: "Dr. Wilson Compton, Karl Compton, Arthur
					 Compton. W. B. B. in second line."</p><p>Filed under Wilson M. Compton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Compton, Wilson Martindale (October 15, 1890 – March 7,
				  1967)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1945</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Wilson M. Compton was born in Wooster, Ohio. He attended the
				  College of Wooster and earned a Ph. D. in economics from Princeton University
				  as well as a law degree. He was a professor of economics at Dartmouth for a
				  year early in his career before working as an administrator and lobbyist for
				  the lumber industry in Washington, D.C. He began his presidency at Washington
				  State College in 1944 and led a period of substantial growth on the Pullman
				  campus as many veterans used GI Bill benefits to attend college. In April of
				  1951, in the midst of difficult financial times due to state budget cuts, the
				  Board of Regents ended the Compton presidency. In 1952, the Student Union
				  Building was dedicated in his name, becoming the Compton Union Building or CUB.
				  After leaving WSU, he was the director of International Information
				  Administration in Washington D.C., and then headed the Council for Financial
				  Aid to Education in New York City.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComptonWM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilson Compton at his inauguration as
					 president of Washington State College (now University).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1945</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hutchinson, Pullman, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ComptonWM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilson Compton with Karl and Arthur
					 Compton at the inauguration of Wilson Compton as president of Washington State
					 College (now University).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1945</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hutchinson, Pullman, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: "Dr. Wilson Compton, Karl Compton, Arthur
					 Compton. W. B. B. in second line."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Condon, Herbert Thomas (March 17, 1870 - June 28,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Thomas Condon was born in The Dalles, Oregon. He
				  graduated from the University of Oregon and proceeded to graduate study at the
				  University of Michigan Law School where he graduated in 1894. Condon served as
				  a comptroller, registrar, Secretary to the Faculty, Secretary to the Board of
				  Regents, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, and as Dean for the
				  University of Washington from 1903 to his retirement in 1951.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HipkoeMO1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Max Hipkoe with Herbert T. Condon at
					 retirement dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information University of Washington (negative 464-B)</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Max Hipkoe: retires after 45 years. Condon
					 presents him with watch and bag, Feb., 1949.</p><p>Filed under Max Otto Hipkoe subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP5</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg with Governor Monrad C. Walgreen after
					 the landing from the crew regatta on Lake Washington; Herbert T. Condon and
					 Maude Condon in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Lee Paul Sieg subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD7</container><unittitle>David Thomson , Maude Thomson, Herbert T. Condon and
					 Nelson Wahlstrom sitting in a 1947 or 1948 Dodge convertible by Thomson
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Dedication Thomson Hall, June 6, 1948</p><p>Filed under David Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Condon, John Thomas (September 20, 1865 - January 5,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Thomas Condon was born in Washington Territory. He
				  graduated from the UW in 1879 with a B.A., received his Bachelors of Law from
				  the University of Michigan and his Masters from Northwestern University in
				  1891. He returned to Seattle, where he was in private practice before joining
				  the UW in 1899. He taught at the law school and was Dean of the law school for
				  26 years. In addition to his duties as head of the law school, he was executive
				  vice-president of the UW, dean of the faculty of social sciences, and chair of
				  the faculty athletic committee. He also took a leading part in the University’s
				  campaign for funding from the state legislature. Between 1933 and 1974, the UW
				  Law School occupied Condon Hall #1, a building that was subsequently renamed
				  Gowen Hall. A second Condon Hall served as the law school until replaced by
				  Gates Hall in 2003; since then, the building has been retro-fitted several
				  times, providing space for several humanities departments and is currently
				  occupied by the UW Ethnic Cultural Center.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CondonJT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Thomas Condon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Condon, Maude Wilkins (October 19, 1874 - November 27,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Wilkins, the daughter of Francis Marion and Emily Marie
				  Wilkins, was born in Eugene, Oregon. She married Herbert T. Condon in 1899.
				  After their marriage, the couple moved to Moscow, Idaho where Herbert Condon
				  was the comptroller and an instructor of political science and law at the
				  University of Idaho. In 1903, they moved to Seattle where Herbert Condon began
				  his career with the University of Washington. Maude was active in campus
				  activities and social affairs, and gave assistance and guidance to many student
				  organizations. She was a member of the Faculty Wives Club, the Early American
				  Glass Club, and the Antiquarian Society. Her grandfather helped settle Eugene,
				  Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP5</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg with Governor Monrad C. Walgreen after
					 the landing from the crew regatta on Lake Washington; Herbert T. Condon and
					 Maude Condon in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Lee Paul Sieg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Condon, Thomas (March 3, 1822 - February 11,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Condon was born in Ireland and arrived in Oregon in 1855
				  by way of Cape Horn. An early missionary in Oregon and self-trained scientist,
				  he was the first person to identity the John Day fossil beds as a world class
				  paleontological site. He first visited the area in 1865 and started
				  excavations. The specimens he sent to eastern universities ignited interest in
				  the area. He was appointed the first Oregon State Geologist in 1872, and later
				  became professor of geology at the University of Oregon, a position he held
				  until his death in 1907. The Thomas Condon Paleontology Center is named for
				  him. Herbert Thomas Condon was his son. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB6</container><unittitle>Orson Johnson with Thomas Condon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Orson Bennett Johnson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cone, Howard M. (April 10, 1908 - October 5,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard M. Cone was born in Longview, WA and received a B.S. in
				  Aeronautical Engineering from University of Washington in 1933. He was a pilot;
				  during World War II, he was the pilot for President Franklin D. Roosevelt when
				  he went to Casablanca. He married Mary Belle Davis in 1935.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ConeHM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Howard M. Cone in pilot's
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Pan American Airways, New York</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cone, Molly Lamken (October 3, 1918 - March 23, 2016
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Molly Lamken Cone was born in Tacoma, WA studied at the
				  University of Washington before marrying Gerald Cone in 1939. She worked at
				  various writing jobs until her husband came home from the war; they then opened
				  a direct-mail service together. Cone’s first book, <emph render="italic">Only
				  Jane</emph>, was published in 1960. She regularly drew on her own experiences
				  for inspiration: her Mishmash series was based on her rambunctious dog, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Too Many Girls</emph> reflected her memories of her
				  brother’s disappointment at the birth of her youngest sister. She also wrote
				  books on the environment, an account of Henrietta Szold’s life, and a number of
				  books on Jewish history and practice. Cone was chosen as one of thirty Seattle
				  women interviewed for the Jewish Women’s Archive’s oral history project. She
				  and her husband were founding members of Temple Beth Am, a reform synagogue in
				  Northeast Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ConeML1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Molly Lamken Cone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Congdon, Alden Kirby (November 13, 1924 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alden Kirby Congdon was born in West Chester, Pennsylvania, and
				  grew up in Old Mystic, Connecticut. Drafted into the army during World War II,
				  he attended Columbia University on the GI Bill. He is the author of dozens of
				  books and small-press editions of poetry; his collections include 
				  <emph render="italic">Aipotu</emph> and<emph render="italic">Poems from Fire
				  Island Pines and Key West </emph>. Active in the postwar avant-garde poetry
				  scene in New York City, he co-founded Interim Books with Jay Socin and Cycle
				  Press with Ralph Simmons. He edited <emph render="italic">Magazine</emph> , and
				  has written plays and a book of opinion pieces. His work has been anthologized
				  in <emph render="italic">Gay Roots</emph> and<emph render="italic"> Inside the
				  Outside</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CongdonAK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alden Kirby Congdon in profile,
					 wearing motorcycle cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CongdonAK2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alden Kirby Congdon wearing
					 motorcycle jacket and cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Conger, Ira Charles (August 17, 1827- August 7,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Charles Conger was born in Smith, Tennessee and crossed the
				  plains to Oregon in 1853. He later settled in Cowlitz County, Washington
				  Territory, where he established a farm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Congle, John Burke (December 9, 1817 - April
				  10,1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Burke Congle was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania. In
				  1832 he went to Philadelphia to learn the harness and saddlery trade. At the
				  end of his apprenticeship, he moved first to Virginia, then to Missouri and
				  Indiana, where he married Ellen H. Gray in 1844. In 1849, he traveled to
				  California, and in 1853 settled in Corvallis, Oregon. He was the first mayor of
				  Corvallis, serving for four years. In 1857 he was elected sheriff of Benton
				  County, but resigned the position after two months, the shortest duration of
				  any sheriff in the history of Benton County. In 1861 he removed to Portland and
				  opened J. B. Congle &amp; Company, a manufacturer and importer of saddlery,
				  harness and saddlery hardware; the business closed in 1882 when he retired. He
				  was elected councilman of the second ward in 1870, and in 1872 was chosen
				  representative to the state legislature from Multnomah County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CongleJB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Burke Congle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1888?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Conibear, Hiram Boardman (September 5, 1871- September
				  9, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Boardman Conibear was the rowing coach at the University
				  of Washington, coaching both the men's and women's rowing team. Conibear began
				  his coaching career in cycling. In 1906, working as athletics trainer at the
				  University of Washington, he accepted the post of rowing crew coach.
				  Experiments convinced him that the traditional Oxford style of rowing,
				  involving a long stroke, was both unsound and uncomfortable, and he developed
				  the new, shorter style with which his name became associated. Under his
				  coaching the university crew became the first Western crew to compete by
				  invitation in the Intercollegiate Rowing Association regatta in Poughkeepsie,
				  New York in 1913, and Washington crew members went on to achieve success at
				  subsequent regattas and at national and Olympic level using the technique
				  developed by him. He was killed in 1917 when he fell from a plum tree at
				  home.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConibearHB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Conibear wearing
					 raincoat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1907 and 1917?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConibearHB2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Conibear wearing
					 raincoat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1907 and 1917?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed version of previous photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConibearHB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Conibear in boat holding
					 megaphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1907 and 1917?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0024/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConibearHB4</container><unittitle>Hiram Conibear in suit, hands in pockets</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1907 and 1917?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LiptonTJ1</container><unittitle>Sir Thomas Lipton, Hiram Conibear and other
					 unidentified men at the UW Crew House</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Sir Thomas Lipton subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LiptonTJ2</container><unittitle>Sir Thomas Lipton, Hiram Conibear and other
					 unidentified men in front of a car at the UW Crew House</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1912</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Sir Thomas Lipton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Conoyer, Narcisse Antoine (November 11, 1820 - April 1,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Narcisse Antoine Conoyer was born in St. Clair, Minnesota. He
				  was an Indian agent in Adams County, Oregon. The Department of the Army had
				  oversight over Indian affairs and frequently gave Indian agents military titles
				  commensurate with their civil service status as government employees; Conoyer
				  was a captain earlier in his career before become a major. He died in Walla
				  Walla, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConoyerNA1</container><unittitle>Narcisse Antoine Conoyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Conrad, Ernest M. (March 17, 1917 - November 21,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest M. Conrad, born in Davenport, Washington, graduated from
				  the UW in 1940 with a business degree. He was manager of the UW Student
				  Cooperative Association until he joined the UW business office in 1944. He
				  became the UW's business manager in 1957. After serving as business and finance
				  VP, he spent two years overseeing the UW's Metropolitan Tract in downtown
				  Seattle. As vice president for business and finance from 1963 to 1974, he
				  purchased property for the UW, hired the first University architect and oversaw
				  the campus transformation during the late 1960's building boom. Conrad also
				  played an important part in keeping the campus calm during student protests
				  against the Vietnam War, arranging meetings between student leaders and regents
				  that eased tensions. At his retirement in 1976, the alumni association honored
				  him with its Distinguished Service Award. Conrad was the force behind the
				  association's purchase of Alumni House at the corner of 45th Street and 15th
				  Avenue NE. In retirement, he served on the boards of Olympic College in
				  Bremerton, the Hansville Water District, Group Health Cooperative and the UW
				  Retirement Association. The Ernest M. Conrad Scholarship Fund at the UW was
				  established in his memory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConradEM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ernest Conrad standing near an aerial
					 photo of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 22, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph made for the <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConradEM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ernest Conrad, standing near aerial
					 photo of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 22, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph made for the <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConradEM3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ernest Conrad sitting at his
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 22, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph made for the <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Conrad, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">9</container><container type="item">ConradJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Conrad</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860-1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a tintype</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">9</container><container type="item">ConradJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Conrad, looking to the
					 left</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860-1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a tintype</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Considine, John W. (September 29, 1868 – February 11,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Considine was an American impresario and a pioneer of
				  vaudeville. Working as an actor, he arrived in Seattle in 1889. He brought
				  variety entertainment to Seattle and owned various saloons and gambling halls.
				  In 1902, he invested in a movie theater, creating the city’s first
				  establishment to combine variety entertainment with movies. He established one
				  of the first vaudeville circuits with theaters throughout the Northwest. In
				  1906 he teamed up with Tammany Hall boss Tim Sullivan to form the
				  Sullivan–Considine vaudeville circuit and nationwide booking agency. At its
				  peak, the Sullivan–Considine circuit owned 20 theaters in the Pacific Northwest
				  and was affiliated with 20 in California; they also booked numerous theaters in
				  the Midwest. The circuit fell apart during World War I. Considine later moved
				  to Los Angeles, where he became involved in the film industry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConsidineJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John W. Considine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of portrait in J. Willis Sayre collection (PH 200).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Constantine, Dorothy Edna (December 11, 1896 -
				  ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dorothy Edna Constantine was born in Bulgaria and emigrated to
				  the U.S. with her parents at an early age. The family went first to St. Paul,
				  MN and then to Seattle. Constantine graduated from the UW in 1918 with a degree
				  in journalism. She started as a copy writer for a department store in Seattle
				  before taking a similar job with John Wanamaker's in Philadelphia. She became a
				  copy supervisor for the Compton Agency in New York, then one of the largest
				  advertising agencies in the world. She married Rauley Opfield Morgan in
				  1923.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConstantineDE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Edna Constantine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Merrihew Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Conway, Edwin Francis (November 22,
				  1898 - January 17, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Francis Conway was born in Port Townsend, WA. His father,
				  a Port Blakely lumberman, was drowned in the wreck of the steamship 
				  <emph>Dix</emph> in Elliott Bay in 1906. Conway graduated from Queen Anne High
				  School and then from the University of Washington as a member of the class of
				  1920, which graduated in June 1919 due to World War I. He joined the US Navy
				  and was killed when his plane crashed near Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn, NY.
				  Conway was the commanding officer of the Naval Reserve Aviation Base at Floyd
				  Bennett Field, from June 1932 until his death. He is buried in Arlington
				  National Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">ConwayEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwin Francis Conway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cook, Dr. Alonzo G. (May 13, 1839 - November 12,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alonzo G. Cook was born in Portland, Maine. He graduated from
				  law school and married Isabella Webster in 1861. They traveled overland by
				  wagon and oxen, arriving in the Dalles, Oregon in 1862. They settled in
				  Lafayette, Oregon where his daughter, Marabelle, was born. He was offered the
				  post of district attorney in Boise, where the family stayed for several years.
				  He then moved to Vancouver, Washington where he practiced law. When he
				  experienced health problems, he became interested in medicine and decided to
				  return to school. He graduated from Hahnemann Homeopathic College and began to
				  practice medicine in California. In 1876, he helped establish the city of
				  Garden Grove, California, providing land for the school, organizing a church
				  and becoming a partner in the first store. In later life, he returned to
				  Washington State to live near his daughter in Olympia, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookAG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Alonzo G. Cook with woman in
					 front of house, probably in Southern California; unidentified man in
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Dr. Alonzo G. and Mary G. Cook." Since Mrs.
					 Cook's name was Isabelle, the woman in the photo may be Marabelle, his
					 daughter.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cook, Francis Henry (April 4, 1851 - June 29,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Henry Cook was born in Marietta, Ohio and moved west to
				  Olympia, Washington where he worked as a printer. In 1879, he moved to the
				  Spokane area, where he started a newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Spokan
				  Times</emph>. (He did not use an “e” on the end of “Spokane.”) He platted the
				  South Hill in Spokane for housing, naming the area Montrose Park for the wild
				  roses that grew there. In 1888, he had a streetcar powered by steam bringing
				  people up South Hill. He also purchased the forty acres where the Cathedral of
				  St. John now stands and two years later purchased the 160 acres that eventually
				  became Manito Park. During the depression of 1893, he lost his house and the
				  surrounding land; the new owners decided to give the ninety acres where Manito
				  Park sits to the City of Spokane providing they run roads and water to the
				  South Hill. The City dedicated Manito Park in 1904. He was an early homesteader
				  on Mount Spokane and in 1909 built a toll road to the summit. With others in
				  the city, he helped acquire land for Mount Spokane Park, which was dedicated in
				  1927.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookFH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Francis Henry Cook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cook, Frederick Albert (June 10, 1865 – August 5,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Albert Cook was an American explorer, physician, and
				  ethnographer, noted for his claim of having reached the North Pole on April 21,
				  1908. This was a year before April 6, 1909, the date claimed by American
				  explorer Robert Peary, and the accounts were disputed for several years. His
				  expedition did discover Meighen Island, the only discovery of an island in the
				  American Arctic by a United States expedition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookFA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Albert Cook and Robert
					 Peary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1906 and 1908</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Handwritten text on verso refers to the controversy about who
					 reached the North Pole first. "Which of these two gentlemen do you favor? I
					 think both got to the Pole."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cook, Captain James</unittitle></did><note><p>Missing as of September 14, 1994.</p></note></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cook, William T. (April 20, 1848 - December 25,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William T. Cook was born in Polk County, Missouri and arrived in
				  Oregon in 1874. He taught school before becoming a druggist in Centerville,
				  Oregon. He was also the first postmaster of the town. He married Ella J.
				  Davidson in 1884. Active in politics, he served in the State Convention and was
				  a delegate to the Democratic National Convention which nominated Grover
				  Cleveland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookWT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William T. Cook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cooke, Charles P. (February 5, 1824 - October 11,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles P. Cooke was born in Ohio in 1827 and served in the
				  Mexican-American War. After the war, he crossed the Great Plains via wagon
				  train bound for California in 1849. In 1851, he married Susan Brewster in
				  Salem, Oregon. The family moved to Washington Territory in 1868. Cooke
				  represented Yakima and Klickitat counties in the legislation of 1873 and again
				  represented Yakima County in 1876. He represented Yakima and Kittitas Counties
				  jointly in 1886 and was also joint councilman for Yakima, Kittitas, Franklin,
				  Adams, Lincoln and Douglas Counties. He was the first auditor elected in Yakima
				  County, one of the county commissioners and served several times as school
				  superintendent. He assisted in organizing the counties of Yakima and Kittitas.
				  In 1870 the Cookes herded 175 cattle over the Saddle Mountains and into the
				  Kittitas Valley, where they established a working ranch.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookeCP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles P. Cooke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1888?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cooke, Edwin N. (February 26, 1810 - May 6,
				  1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin N. Cooke was born in Adams, NY. He married Eliza
				  Vandercock in 1835. In 1851, he went west to Oregon, settling in Salem. He
				  opened a store and a hotel as well as establishing The People's Transportation
				  Company, which ran steamboats on the Willamette River. He served as State
				  Treasurer from 1862 until 1870 and on the Board of Trustees of Willamette
				  University. The Oregon State Library in Salem is on the grounds of his former
				  home, which was razed in 1939.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookeEN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwin N. Cooke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cooke, Eliza Vandercook (April 29, 1814 - August 20,
				  1900) )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eliza Vandercook was born in Schaghticoke, Rensselaer, NY to
				  Henry S. Vandercook and Margery Lester Vandercock. She married Edwin Cooke in
				  1835 and traveled west with him, settling in Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookeEV1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eliza Vandercook Cooke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coolidge, John Calvin (July 4, 1872-January 5,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Calvin Coolidge was the 30th President of the United States
				  (1923–1929). A Republican lawyer from Vermont, Coolidge worked his way up the
				  ladder of Massachusetts state politics, eventually becoming governor of that
				  state. His response to the Boston Police Strike of 1919 thrust him into the
				  national spotlight and gave him a reputation as a man of decisive action. Soon
				  after, he was elected as the 29th Vice President in 1920 and succeeded to the
				  Presidency upon the sudden death of Warren G. Harding in 1923. Elected in his
				  own right in 1924, he gained a reputation as a small-government conservative,
				  and also as a man who said very little.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoolidgeJC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Calvin Coolidge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photogravure.</p></phystech><note><p>Photocopy; original in vault.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoolidgeJC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Calvin
					 Coolidge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Edmonston Studio</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed: "To Edmond S. Meany with Regards Calvin Coolidge." The
					 photograph also comes with a letter from Roy Fitzgerald, House of
					 Representatives discussing the photograph. Photocopies; originals in vault.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoolidgeJC3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of a painting of Calvin
					 Coolidge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1923 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy; original in vault.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Coombs, Reverend J. E. and
				  family</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reverend J. E. Coombs was the pastor of the Bethesda Baptist
				  Church in La Conner, Washington between 1890 and 1893. He then served as pastor
				  in Victoria, B.C. from 1893-1894. He may have moved to Colfax, Washington in
				  1900 and later to Pocatello, Idaho.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoombsJE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Coombs' three children with
					 a pet deer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">D.B. Ewing, La Conner, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoombsJE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend J. E. Combs and
					 family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">DuVall, Colfax, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coon, Samuel Harrison (April 15, 1903-May 8,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel "Sam" Coon was born in Boise, Idaho. He was a member of
				  the Oregon State Legislature from Baker County, Oregon and went on to serve as
				  the U.S. Representative for the 2nd district of Oregon from 1953-1957. In 1955,
				  he introduced a bill to build John Day Dam under a partnership proposal. Senate
				  Candidate Neuberger, who supported public power, denounced the plan and
				  challenged Coon to a series of debates on the partnership idea. Coon was
				  defeated by Al Ullman in 1957.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoonSH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Representative Sam
					 Coon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September, 24 1955</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rollie Dobson, staff photographer for the Oregonian, Portland, OR</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoonSH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Representative Sam Coon debating
					 Senator Richard Neuberger in the Hood River High School auditorium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 26, 1955</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cooper, Dawnmarie A. Murray (January 10, 1947 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dawnmarie Cooper was a Director of Seattle MESA (Mathematics,
				  Engineering, Science Achievement), an organization designed to increase the
				  number of underserved minorities and women in these areas. She graduated from
				  Xavier University and married Milton Cooper in 1974. As a Seattle School
				  District administrator, Cooper coordinated instructional materials, supplies
				  and technology for programs to assist low-income students struggling in
				  school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CooperDMAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dawn Cooper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cooper, Frank Bowen (September 17, 1855 - November 23,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank B. Cooper was the Superintendent of Seattle Schools for
				  over 21 years. He graduated from Cornell University and prior to arriving in
				  Seattle, served as professor of education at University of Iowa, superintendent
				  of schools in Des Moines, Iowa for eight years and in Salt Lake City for three
				  years. Cooper arrived in Seattle around 1900, recruited from New York where he
				  was a protégé of John Dewey, the progressive education reformer. Cooper
				  replaced wooden schools with masonry ones, recruited teachers, reduced class
				  sizes and introduced up-to-date instruction methods. He wanted schools to be
				  the anchors of neighborhoods, normally placing them on high ground and keeping
				  them open in the evening for adult instruction. He was a believer in small
				  schools, for educational reasons and to make them walk able for the
				  neighborhoods. After World War I, the city became a leader in the reaction
				  against progressive values and big spending, and Cooper was removed from his
				  post in 1922. The Frank B. Cooper School, now the Youngstown Cultural Arts
				  Center in Seattle, was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CooperFB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank B. Cooper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Cooper, James Fenimore (September 15, 1789 – September
				  14, 1851)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Fenimore Cooper was an American writer of the first half
				  of the 19th century. His historical romances depicting colonist and Indigenous
				  characters from the 17th to the 19th centuries created a unique form of
				  American literature. After a stint on a commercial voyage, Cooper served in the
				  U.S. Navy as a midshipman, where he learned the technology of managing sailing
				  vessels which greatly influenced many of his novels and other writings. The
				  novel that launched his career was <emph>The Spy</emph>, a tale about espionage
				  set during the American Revolutionary War and published in 1821. He also
				  created American sea stories. His best-known works are five historical novels
				  of the frontier period, written between 1823 and 1841, known as the
				  Leatherstocking Tales, which introduced the iconic American frontier scout,
				  Natty Bumppo. Cooper's works on the U.S. Navy have been well received among
				  naval historians, but they were sometimes criticized by his contemporaries.
				  Among his more famous works is the romantic novel <emph>The Last of the
				  Mohicans, </emph>often regarded as his masterpiece. Throughout his career, he
				  published numerous social, political, and historical works of fiction and
				  non-fiction with the objective of countering European prejudices and nurturing
				  an original American art and culture.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">9</container><container type="item">CooperJF1</container><unittitle>James Fenimore Cooper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Engraving by W. E. Marshall after a painting by C. L.
						Elliott from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Copeland, Paul Worthington (September 4, 1899 - August
				  8, 1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Worthington Copeland was born in Staten Island, NY and
				  moved to Olympia, Washington as a child; his father was the supervising
				  architect on the State Capitol Buildings. After serving with the Navy in World
				  War I, he graduated from Whitman College and received his Masters degree in
				  history from the UW. He taught for two years at the American University in
				  Beirut and four years at Aleppo College in Syria on a grant from the State
				  Department. He returned to Seattle, where he taught for twenty years at
				  Franklin, Queen Anne and Ballard High Schools before retiring in 1965. He also
				  worked for four years with the Office of Price Administration. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The People and Land of Jordan</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">The People and Land of Syria</emph>, and 
				  <emph render="italic">The People and Land of Libya</emph>. He wrote for 
				  <emph render="italic">The Christian Science Monitor</emph> and several
				  architectural publications and was a life member of the Puget Sound Group of
				  Northwest Painters.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CopelandPW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Worthington Copeland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corbaley, Richard (August 7, 1820 - July 16,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Corbaley was born in Marion County, Indiana and moved to
				  Plymouth, Indiana in 1848, where he was appointed sheriff of the Circuit Court
				  and the Court of Common Pleas. In 1871 he went to west, first to California and
				  then to Washington Territory. He established the firm of R. Corbaley &amp;
				  Company, which dealt in real estate, placing loans and transferring
				  property.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbaleyR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Corbaley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The name is misspelled "Corbaly" on the engraving</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corbally, John E. ( March 20, 1897 - September 27,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John E. Corbally was born in Hudson, Wisconsin and came to
				  Seattle in 1910. He graduated from Whitworth College and received his M.A. and
				  PhD from the University of Washington. He taught high school in Everett and at
				  Queen Anne High School before becoming Superintendent of Schools in South Bend,
				  Pacific County, WA. He joined the UW faculty in 1927 and retired in 1967 as the
				  associate dean of the UW College of Education. He was one of the founders of
				  the School and College Division of the National Safety Council. His son, John
				  E. Corbally, Jr., was the president of the University of Illinois.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorballyJE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John E. Corbally with three
					 unidentified associates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corbet, Darrah (November 19, 1884 - March 1,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Darrah Corbet was born in Brookville, Pennsylvania, the son of
				  Judge Charles Corbet and Mary Darrah. He graduated from Yale University in 1907
				  with a mechanical engineering degree. He arrived in Seattle in 1910, where he
				  worked for Seattle office of the Charles C. Moore &amp; Co., engineers of San
				  Francisco. Corbet then joined the firm of Smith Cannery Company, where he
				  worked for 31 years, retiring as president. He was elected chairman of the
				  board of the company, which later became the Smith Berger Manufacturing
				  Company. He also served as a director of the Boeing Company, the National Bank
				  of Commerce, and Puget Sound Power and Light. His Seattle residence was
				  designed by noted architect Arthur Loveless and won an award in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbetD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Darrah Corbet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbetD2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Darrah Corbet as a young
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbetD3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Darrah Corbet seated with one man,
					 two others standing, possibly at one of his clubs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbetD4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Darrah Corbet
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corbett, Billy (February 21, 1925 - August 6,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Billy Corbett, also know as Billy Lanza, was a boxer,
				  weightlifter and karate instructor. He was originally from Sedro Woolley,
				  Washington. Corbett fought in prize fights from 1947-1959, mainly on the west
				  coast and then taught karate at Seattle's Downtown Club. In 1971, he broke
				  2,005 bricks to raise money for charity to help purchase kidney machines in
				  Seattle. During the 1960s and 1970s, he performed many brick-breaking
				  demonstrations to raise money for charity.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbettB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Billy Corbett breaking
					 bricks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1971</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H. Francis Jackson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Billy Corbett, Seattle tough guy</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corbett, Henry Winslow (February 18, 1827 – March 31,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Winslow Corbett was an American businessman, politician,
				  civic benefactor and philanthropist in the state of Oregon. A native of
				  Massachusetts, he spent his early life in the East and New York before moving
				  to the Oregon Territory. He was a prominent figure in the early development of
				  Portland, Oregon and was involved in numerous business ventures there, starting
				  in general merchandise. His interests later included banking, finance,
				  insurance, river shipping, stage lines, railways, telegraph, iron and steel and
				  the erection of Portland downtown buildings among other enterprises. A
				  Republican, he served as a United States Senator from 1867 to 1873. He
				  supported many philanthropic enterprises, including the building of a public
				  library and the first art museum. Corbett Avenue in SW Portland and the town of
				  Corbett, Oregon on the Columbia Gorge are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorbettHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Winslow Corbett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cordray, John Francis (March 17, 1852 - August 9,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John F. Cordray was a well-known and successful theatrical
				  manager on the Pacific Coast. He was born in Lancaster, Ohio and was hired as a
				  property boy when he was fourteen by theater manager John A. Ellsler. Over the
				  years, he took increasingly responsible management roles in theaters in the
				  Midwest. He arrived in Portland in 1888 and built a theater to house his stock
				  company. He added theaters in Seattle and Tacoma. By 1890, he had organized a
				  larger circuit of theaters in the Pacific Northwest, Montana and California.
				  His Seattle theater was at Third and Madison, where the Arctic Building now
				  stands. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CordrayJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John F. Cordray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coreleijlo, Marguerite E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoellerJE1</container><unittitle>Jule E. Moeller and Marguerite E. Coreleijlo (?)
					 performing<emph render="italic"> A Soldier's Farewell</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1895</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oscar M. Pausch, Saginaw, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>One of the women in the photograph may be Julia Emma Moeller
					 (April 25, 1872 - December 12, 1960), the daugher of Frederick Moeller and
					 Fredericka Bader Moeller, who was born in Michigan. She married James Monroe
					 Rose in 1901 in Saginaw.</p><p>Filed under Jule E. Moeller subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoellerJE2</container><unittitle>Jule E. Moeller and Marguerite E. Coreleijlo (?)
					 performing<emph render="italic"> A Soldier's Return</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1895</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oscar M. Pausch, Saginaw, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Jule E. Moeller subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Corey, Clarence Raymond (January 15, 1881 - January 1,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Raymond Corey was an assistant professor of mining and
				  metallurgy at the University of Washington in 1908. He received his M.E. from
				  Montana School of Mines in 1905 and an M.A. from Columbia University in 1915.
				  Corey played an important role in developing the metallurgy department of the
				  UW College of Mines and served on the College of Mines staff from 1907 until
				  1944 when illness forced his retirement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Corey, Eleanor Claire (October 27, 1909 - May 14,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eleanor Claire Corey graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1932 and married Emerson C. Itschner that same year. He was chief of the
				  construction operations division under the direction of military construction
				  in Europe and the Pacific during World War II and was later chief of the Army
				  Corps of Engineers. Her father, Clarence Corey, played an important role in
				  developing the metallurgy department at the University of Washington and was on
				  the staff of the UW from 1907 until May 1944 when illness forced his
				  retirement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoreyEC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eleanor Claire Corey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1911</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Eleanor Claire Corey, 19 mos.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Cornelius, Nellie Mary (November 30, 1870-August 2,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nellie Cornelius was the daughter of John and Bessie Cornelius.
				  Her father crossed the plains to Oregon City in 1845, and her mother was the
				  first non-Indigenous woman on Whidbey Island. She spent her entire life on the
				  island, attending school at Pleasant Ridge and later was a student at the
				  academy in Coupeville. During her later years, she was an active member of the
				  Daughters of Pioneers, the Territorial Daughters and the Skagit County
				  Pioneers' association. Her father died in 1880, and her mother married to John
				  O. Rudene in 1882.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RudeneJO2</container><unittitle>John Oscar Rudene, Bessie Jane Rudene, and Nellie
					 Cornelius</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899</unitdate></did><note><p>See John Oscar Rudene subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cornelius, Thomas Ramsey (November 16, 1827 - June 24,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Ramsey Cornelius, the son of Benjamin Cornelius,
				  immigrated with his family to Oregon in 1845 as a member of the Meek party. The
				  family settled on the Tualatin Plains. Cornelius served in the Cayuse War of
				  1847-48 and the Yakima War of 1855-56. He served twenty years in the Oregon
				  legislature, including two terms as the president of the Senate. In 1871, he
				  established the town of Cornelius, Oregon, where he owned a store, sawmill,
				  several large farms and a dairy and cheese factory. Cornelius ran for governor
				  of Oregon in 1886, losing to Sylvester Pennoyer. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CorneliusTR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas Ramsey Cornelius</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cornell, Sabra Stone (August, 1831 - August 8,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sabra Stone Cornell was born in New York, the daughter of Henry
				  Stone. She married John Cornwell; they were early settlers in Olympia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CornellSS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Sabra Stone
					 Cornell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CornellSS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sabra Stone Cornell standing in front
					 of house, holding flowers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cornish, Nellie Centennial (July 9,
				  1876 - April 24, 1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nellie Centennial Cornish was a pianist, teacher, writer and
				  founder of the Cornish School (now Cornish College of the Arts) in Seattle,
				  Washington. She was influenced by the ideas of Maria Montessori as well as
				  Calvin Brainerd Cady's ideas about teaching broader values through music
				  education. She founded the Cornish School in 1914 and served as the school's
				  director for the next 25 years. Within three years it had enrolled over 600
				  students and was the country's largest music school west of Chicago. The
				  curriculum soon expanded to include subjects as diverse as eurhythmics, French
				  language, painting, dance (folk and ballet), and theater. She went on to serve
				  as the school's director for the next 25 years and recruited artists such as
				  the dancer Martha Graham, the painter Mark Tobey, and the musician John Cage.
				  In 1921, Cornish led a successful fundraising drive to save the Seattle
				  Symphony.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CornishNC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nellie Centennial Cornish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0025/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cornwell, James Madison (August 7, 1834 - April 4,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Madison Cornwell was born in Orleans, Indiana, the son of
				  Clayton Cornwell and Margaret Moyer Cornwell. In 1852, he traveled with his
				  brother, Francis, to Oregon. In 1861, he moved from his ranch in Oregon to the
				  Walla Walla, Washington area, eventually settling in Dixie, Washington. In
				  1881, he was elected to the territorial legislature. In 1889, he served as
				  representative to the first Washington State legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CornwellJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Madison Cornwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cort, John (circa 1861 -November 17, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Cort was an American impresario; his Cort Circuit was one
				  of the first national theater circuits. Along with John Considine and Alexander
				  Pantages, he was one of the Seattle-based entrepreneurs who parlayed their
				  success in the years following the Klondike Gold Rush into an impact on
				  America's national theater scene. While Considine and Pantages focused mainly
				  on vaudeville, Cort focused on legitimate theater. At one time, he owned more
				  legitimate theaters than anyone else in the United States, and he eventually
				  became part of the New York theatrical establishment. He arrived in Seattle in
				  1888 to take over the Standard Theater. When the Standard burned in the fire of
				  1889, he re-opened two weeks later in a tent, and by November, he had erected a
				  replacement theater, the first post-fire brick building in the city. He left
				  Seattle during the 1893 depression, but returned to build the Grand Opera House
				  on Cherry Street. With Considine, he also played a major role in one of the
				  country's rising fraternal organizations: just before the turn of the century
				  they founded what became the Fraternal Order of Eagles (F.O.E.).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CortJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cort</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cory, Herbert Ellsworth (October 8, 1883 - February 1,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Ellsworth Cory was born in Providence, Rhode Island. He
				  received his BA from Brown University and a PhD in English from Harvard in
				  1910. He also received a doctorate in Educational Psychology from the
				  University of Washington. In 1919 he published <emph render="italic">The
				  Intellectuals and the Wage Workers: A Study in Educational
				  Psychoanalysis</emph>. He taught at the UW starting in 1923 and later served as
				  the Dean of the Department of Liberal Arts. In later years he converted to
				  Catholicism and wrote <emph render="italic">The Education of a
				  Freethinker</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoryHE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Herbert Ellsworth Cory wearing
					 academic robes, holding motarboard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coryell, George Kirby (January 28, 1859- February 7,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Kirby Coryell was born in New York and came to Seattle in
				  1887. At the time of the Seattle Fire in 1889, he was a member of the printing
				  firm of Ingraham &amp; Coryell. Later the firm became known as Denny &amp;
				  Coryell and dealt in stationery supplies as well as doing printing and
				  publishing. In 1892, Coryell was a member of the City Council and from 1895
				  until 1905 was city clerk. Other enterprises included the Merriam stationery
				  store and a connection with the real estate firm of West &amp; Wheeler. He
				  married Eloise Harris in 1882. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cosgrove, Howard Goodlove (February 2,
				  1881 - July 7, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Goodlove Cosgrove was born in Ohio. He was the son of
				  Governor Samuel G. Cosgrove, who died a few months after his inauguration in
				  1909. Howard Cosgrove had two degrees from the UW, receiving his law degree in
				  1904. While at the UW, he earned athletic letters in football and track. After
				  graduation, he managed his father’s campaign for governor. Cosgrove served as
				  the private secretary to his father’s successor, Governor Marion E Hay, and to
				  his predecessor, Governor Albert E. Mead. He later practiced law, founding his
				  own firm, Cosgrove and Terhune. He was a member of the UW Board of Regents in
				  1909. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CosgroveHG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Howard Goodlove Cosgrove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cosgrove, Samuel Goodlove (April 10, 1847– March 28,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove was born in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. He
				  enlisted in the 14th Ohio Volunteer Infantry of the Union Army at the age of
				  sixteen, and served in the Civil War. He was honorably discharged in July 1865.
				  After the war, he taught school and attended Ohio Wesleyan University, earning
				  M. A. and LL.B. degrees in 1873. He moved to Pomeroy, Washington Territory in
				  1882 and served as the president of the Pomeroy School Board for eight years
				  and as the mayor for five terms. He became "Washington's One-Day Governor" in
				  1909, when he was elected but served only one day of his term. He suffered a
				  heart attack and was too weak to complete his address during his inaugural
				  ceremony. He was granted a leave of absence and went to Paso Robles, California
				  to recuperate but died there two months later. His body was returned to Olympia
				  and laid in the Capitol rotunda. Cosgrove was buried in the Masonic Cemetery in
				  Olympia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CosgroveSG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portraitof Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove
					 as a young man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1873</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">T.A. Beach, Delaware, Ohio</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy or original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CosgroveHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CosgroveHG3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Goodlove Cosgrove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Engraving from previous photograph.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coshow, Oliver Perry (July 4, 1831 - January 26,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oliver Perry Coshow was born in Connersville, Indiana. He
				  crossed the plains in 1851, settling near Brownsville, Oregon where he took up
				  a donation claim. He sold the claim a few years later and bought a farm near
				  Harrisburg, Oregon. He invested in a mercantile business in Brownsville and in
				  1875 helped to organize the Brownsville Woolen Mills Company. He then exchanged
				  his stock in the mill for a store he had managed for the company. Coshow
				  married Sarah E. Cochran in 1853. Their son, Oliver Perry Coshow, Jr., was the
				  23rd Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, serving on Oregon’s highest
				  court from 1924 to 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoshowOP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Oliver Perry Coshow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coshow, Sarah E. Cochran (January 23, 1837 - March 6,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah E. Cochran was born in Putnam County, Missouri and crossed
				  the plains with her parents in 1847. The family settled near Brownsville,
				  Oregon on a donation claim. She married Oliver Perry Coshow in 1853. Their son,
				  Oliver Perry Coshow, Jr., was the 23rd Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme
				  Court, serving on Oregon’s highest court from 1924 to 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoshowSEC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sarah Coshow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cotterill, George Fletcher (November 18, 1865 – October
				  13, 1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Fletcher Cotterill, born in Oxford, England, was an
				  American civil servant and politician. His public career in Seattle and the
				  state of Washington lasted over 40 years; Cotterill's politics were generally
				  aligned with Progressivism. An advocate of woman suffrage and Prohibition, he
				  was also concerned with the development of public parks and with public
				  ownership of port and harbor facilities and of utilities. He served in the
				  Washington State Senate from 1906 until 1912. He was elected mayor of Seattle
				  in 1912 and served one term. Rather than seek re-election as mayor, in 1914
				  Cotterill ran again for the United States Senate and lost. In 1916, he was
				  appointed Chief Engineer of the state highway department. In 1922, he was
				  elected to the first of four three-year terms on the Seattle Port Commission,
				  after which he worked a variety of jobs, including working for the King County
				  Assessor's Office until retiring at the age of 84.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoddardAJ1</container><unittitle>Albert J. Goddard with William H. Murphy and George F.
					 Cotterill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert J. Goddard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cotton, Charles Stanhope (March 18, 1870 - October 11,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Stanhope Cotton was the son of Admiral Charles Stanhope
				  Cotton. In 1891, Charles Cotton Jr. was the guest of his father on board 
				  <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Mohican</emph> on a cruise to Alaska where the
				  ship was to assist the Bering Sea fishing fleet protecting the sealing plants
				  and fisheries. He kept a diary during the cruise, which is kept in the papers
				  of the Charles S. Cotton family at the Operational Archives Branch, Naval
				  Historical Center, Washington, D.C. Charles Cotton Jr. served in the U.S. Army
				  and is buried in Arlington Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CottonCS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Stanhope Cotton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1898</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Zié (?) With love from Charlie</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CottonCS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Stanhope Cotton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tabor, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CottonCS3</container><unittitle>Group portrait with Charles Stanhope Cotton and
					 others</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Group at Selma Hall, Selma MO, 35 miles
					 below St. Louis.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cotton, John (December 4, 1585 – December 23, 1652)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Cotton was a clergyman in England and the American colonies
				  and considered the preeminent minister and theologian of the Massachusetts Bay
				  Colony. As a Puritan, he wanted to do away with the ceremony and vestments
				  associated with the established Church of England and preach in a simpler
				  manner. He felt that the English church needed significant reforms but was
				  adamant about not separating from it; his preference was to change it from
				  within. He accepted the position of minister in Lincolnshire in 1612 and served
				  until 1632 when church authorities increased pressure on non-conforming clergy.
				  Cotton was forced into hiding, and the following year he and his wife left for
				  New England. He was quickly installed as the second pastor of the Boston
				  church, sharing the ministry with John Wilson. Early in his Boston tenure, he
				  became involved in the banishment of Roger Williams, who blamed much of his
				  trouble on Cotton. Soon after, Cotton became embroiled in the colony's
				  Antinomian Controversy when several adherents of his "free grace" theology
				  began criticizing other ministers in the colony. Cotton was able to mend fences
				  with his fellow ministers, and he continued to preach in the Boston church
				  until his death. A great part of his effort during his later career was devoted
				  to the governance of the New England churches, and he was the one who gave the
				  name Congregationalism to this form of church polity. His grandson Cotton
				  Mather also became a New England minister and historian.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CottonJ1</container><unittitle>John Cotton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1640 and 1649?</unitdate><origination><persname role="emgraver">H. W. Smith</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Engraving by H. W. Smith from the painting
					 in the possession of John B. Thayer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Couch, John Heard (February 28, 1811 –
				  January 19, 1870)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Heard Couch was an American sea captain and pioneer in the
				  Oregon Country in the 19th century. Often referred to as Captain Couch, he
				  became famous for his singular skill at navigation of the mouth of the Columbia
				  River. He is one of the early residents and founders of Portland, Oregon. The
				  contribution to Portland for which he is most remembered today is the platting
				  of his land claim in Northwest Portland, which stretched from Burnside Avenue
				  between Northwest 23rd Avenue and the Willamette River. In laying out the
				  streets, Couch named the east-west thoroughfares in alphabetical order as A
				  Street, B Street, etc. The streets were later renamed, retaining the alphabetic
				  ordering, with "C Street" renamed "Couch Street" in his honor. Couch Park in
				  the district is also named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CouchJH1</container><unittitle>John Heard Couch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="series"><did><unittitle>Coughlin, Howard (April 5, 1913 - January 19,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Coughlin was the president of the Office and Professional
				  Employees International Union and a leader in the unionization of white collar
				  workers. When he became president of the union in 1953, it had only 30,000
				  members, and there was strong resistance to organizing white collar workers. By
				  the time he retired in 1979, the union had grown to over 100,000 members. In
				  organizing, he stressed that the coming of automation could result in the loss
				  of jobs for workers. He said unionization could preserve jobs and allow for
				  retraining for new tasks created by automation. He also pressed for shorter
				  workweeks. Coughlin was appointed by Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
				  Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson to serve as the United States representative at
				  key international labor conferences in Europe and Asia. President Johnson named
				  him to serve on advisory councils, including those on equal opportunity and the
				  development of educational professions. Coughlin was the first union official
				  to be the chairman of the executive board of the American Arbitration
				  Association. In 1974, he was named a member of the New York State Banking
				  Board.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoughlinH1</container><unittitle>Howard Coughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on May 25, 1956 in 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coulter, Fletcher Theodore (May 1, 1859 - May 5,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fletcher Theodore Coulter played third base for the Seattle Reds
				  baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington
				  Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. He was born in Oregon,
				  the son of pioneers Theodore Coulter and Sarah Frances Denny Coulter. He was a
				  member of the Seattle Rifles, Company B, of the territorial militia, and later
				  worked as a carpenter and a mechanic.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Council, Martha Virginia Scurry (June
				  26, 1882 - April 5, 1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Virginia Scurry married Walter Wooten Council, a
				  physician, in 1907. They moved to Alaska, where Dr. Council was a surgeon for
				  the Ellamar Mining Co. From 1911 to 1927, he was the surgeon for the Copper
				  River and Northwestern Railway in Cordova. The Councils divorced in the early
				  twenties, and Virginia lived in Seattle until moving to the San Francisco Bay
				  area in California. She was the daughter of John G. Scully and Nelle May Terry
				  Scully. Her mother was the eldest daughter of Charles C. Terry, a member of the
				  Denny Party which landed on Alki in 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisMBT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Mary Bess Terry Lewis and Virginia
					 Scurry Council</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Mary Bess Terry Lewis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Couper, William L. (September 20, 1853
				  – June 22, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William L. Couper was an American sculptor. Born in Norfolk,
				  Virginia, Couper studied in Munich and Florence before returning to New York in
				  1897. He worked as a portraitist and sculptor of busts in the modern Italian
				  manner. He was the son-in-law of sculptor Thomas Ball and a colleague of Daniel
				  Chester French.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CouperWL1</container><unittitle>William L. Couper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To Prof. Edmond Meany with compliments of
					 William Couper.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Couzens, James J. (August 26, 1872 –
				  October 22, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James J. Couzens was born in Chatham, Ontario, Canada. He moved
				  to Detroit, Michigan in 1890 and worked as a railroad car checker for the New
				  York Central Railroad from 1890 to 1897. In 1902, Henry Ford was organizing the
				  Ford Motor Company; Couzens was an investor, and along with others, helped
				  organize the new firm. He took over the business management and later became
				  vice president and general manager of the company. In 1915 he resigned his
				  position as general manager, although he retained a seat on the board. He was
				  president of the Bank of Detroit, director of the Detroit Trust Company,
				  commissioner of street railways (1913-1915), commissioner of the metropolitan
				  police department (1916-1918) and mayor of Detroit (1919-1922). Elected as U.
				  S. Senator from Michigan, he served from 1922 until 1936; he died in office. He
				  provided funds to the University of Michigan for the building of a residence
				  hall for female nursing students; it was named Couzens Hall in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CouzensJJ1</container><unittitle>James J. Couzens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Harris and Ewing, Washington D. C.</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cowan, Emma Jospehine Carpenter (June 27, 1854 -
				  December 20, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma J. Carpenter was born in Black Earth, Wisconsin. She
				  married George F. Cowan in 1875. In 1877, to celebrate their second wedding
				  anniversary, the couple took a trip with her brother Frank Carpenter, and her
				  sister Ida Carpenter, along with six other men to Yellowstone National Park. On
				  the morning of their anniversary, they were ambushed and attacked by a group of
				  Nez Perce warriors. The Nez Perce were being pursued by the U.S. Army, which
				  was trying to force the tribe onto a reservation in Idaho. During the
				  encounter, George was shot in the head, and Emma and the others were taken
				  captive. The captured tourists spent the night with the Nez Perce on the east
				  side of Mary Lake and were released near the next day. The women were given
				  horses to ride, and they came upon a detachment of the 2nd Cavalry near Tower
				  Junction on August 26. They were escorted to Mammoth Hot Spring, and on August
				  27 they started for Fort Ellis in Bozeman, Montana where Emma was eventually
				  reunited with her husband George, who had survived his wounds.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanEJC1</container><unittitle>Emma J. Cowan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George and Emma Cowan standing where
					 the shooting took place</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note><note><p>Filed under George Franklin Cowan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cowan, George Franklin (February 10,
				  1842 - December 18, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George F. Cowan was born in Ohio and married Emma Carpenter in
				  1875. In 1877, to celebrate their second wedding anniversary, the couple took a
				  trip with her brother Frank Carpenter, and her sister Ida Carpenter, along with
				  six other men to Yellowstone National Park. On the morning of their
				  anniversary, they were ambushed and attacked by a group of Nez Perce warriors.
				  The Nez Perce were being pursued by the U.S. Army, which was trying to force
				  the tribe onto a reservation in Idaho. During the encounter, George was shot in
				  the head and Emma and the others were taken captive; they were later released
				  unharmed. George was picked up by Army scouts, and field surgeons removed the
				  bullet from his skull, which he later used as his watch fob. In 1902, the
				  Cowans returned to Yellowstone National Park and talked about their anniversary
				  adventure. Cowan Creek, a tributary of Nez Perce Creek, was named in honor of
				  Cowan who was wounded near the mouth of the creek. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of George Cowan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Cowan standing on the spot
					 where he was shot from his horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George and Emma Cowan standing where
					 the shooting took place</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Group in woods near where George
					 Cowan was shot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowanGF5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Group in stagecoach near where the
					 group was captured in 1877</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1902</unitdate><note><p>Photograph from Montana Historical Society. Do not
						reproduce.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cowden, William Henry Harrison (June
				  29, 1840 - November 3, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Harrison Cowden was a constable in Whatcom County
				  for twenty years. He was born in Jackson, Michigan and arrived in Washington in
				  1880, after working in the mines in Nevada. He was married to Mary DeEtta
				  Barr.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowdenWHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Henry Harrison Cowden with
					 wife Mary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cowden, Mary DeEtta Barr (September 7,
				  1846 - February 28, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary DeEtta Barr was married to William Henry Harrison Cowden.
				  They were early settlers in Whatcom County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CowdenWHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Henry Harrison Cowden with
					 wife Mary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Henry Harrison Cowden subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cowie, William H. (June 1842 - June 4, 1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Cowie was born in Scotland and came to the United
				  States at an early age. He first settled in Minnesota before heading west to
				  Seattle, arriving in 1883. He lost his jewelry store during the 1889 Seattle
				  fire,, but soon re-built. He then sold the business and started a real estate
				  and loan business.</p></bioghist><note><p>Filed under John F. Vandevanter</p></note></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cowling, Donald John (August 21, 1880 - November 27,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald J. Cowling was Carleton College's third and
				  longest-serving president, serving from July 1, 1909 until 1945. He was only 28
				  years old at the time that he was chosen for the office. Under his tenure, the
				  Arboretum that would later bare his name was begun. Cowling earned a B.A. from
				  Lebanon Valley College and four degrees from Yale (a B.A., an M.A., a B.D. and
				  a PhD); at that time, this was a record for most degrees earned from that
				  institution. He co-founded the Spritual Mobilization movement with James
				  Fifield.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FifieldJW1</container><unittitle>James Fifield at a meeting in the Hotel Statler in Los
					 Angeles with Dr. Donald J. Cowling and James C. Ingebretsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1955 </unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under James W. Fifield subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cox, Bertha (October 30, 1880 - October
				  25, 1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bertha Cox was born in a Quaker colony in Texas. She graduated
				  from Pacific College, now George Fox University, in 1900. She was active as a
				  teacher and Quaker missionary in Alaska, serving in Deering, Kotzebue and
				  Noorvik from about 1906 until the 1940s. In 1910, she married Delbert King,
				  whom she met in Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoxB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Bertha Cox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">F.D. Blackburn, Lebanon, Ohio</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Coyle, William Jennings (March 18, 1888-January 10,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Jennings "Wee" Coyle was a Republican politician from
				  Washington and served as the eighth Lieutenant Governor of the state.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">fG5</container><unittitle>Gil Dobie with William "Wee" Coyle sitting in the
					 bleachers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gilmore Dobie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Craig, Donald Edward (October 6, 1911 - October 1,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald Craig was a Seattle native who graduated with degrees
				  from the University of Washington and Columbia University. He was the director
				  of choral activities at Western Connecticut State College (1965 - 1969) and a
				  professor of music at the University of Wisconsin. He was the choral director
				  of the <emph render="italic">Bell Telephone Hour</emph> and was a singer and
				  assistant conductor with the Robert Shaw Chorale.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CraigDE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donald Craig</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crane, Charles Eugene (December 14,
				  1853 - May 27, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles E. Crane was born in New Albany, Indiana. He founded
				  Diamond Ice and Storage, the first ice company in Seattle, in 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CraneCE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles E. Crane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1907</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a drawing by Talbot (?) in <emph render="italic">The
					 Westerner</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crary, Horace Holmes (November 3,
				  1890-October 10, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Holmes Crary graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1912 with a degree in Mining Engineering. After graduation, he worked at
				  Tacoma Smelter and was later president of the Washington Mining Society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO2</container><unittitle>Wendell Nelson, Nathan (Nate) Blair, Homer Blair and
					 Horace H. Crary at Rees's Camp, later the site of Paradise Inn on Mount
					 Rainier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Homer Orrin Blair subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Crawford, Clara Clayton (May, 1857 - February 1,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clara Clayton was born in Indiana to Marion F. Clayton and Sarah
				  Davis Clayton. She married Samuel Leroy Clayton in 1890. On February 1, 1930,
				  she was shot to death by her son, Clayton, who then committed suicide.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordCC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
					 (AYPE) ticket for Clara Crawford with her portrait on it, signed by H. D.
					 Barrell, Chief of Admissions</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H. D. Barrell, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crawford, Elizabeth Jane Moore
				  (October, 1837 - December 3, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Jane Moore was born in Illinois and traveled to Oregon
				  in the 1840s. She married Ronald C. Crawford in 1852.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordEJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Jane Crawford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crawford, John Wallace (Captain Jack)
				  (March 4, 1847 - February 28, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>"Captain Jack" Crawford, known as "The Poet Scout,” was an
				  American adventurer, educator, and author. He was born in Carndonagh, Ireland
				  and emigrated to the United States in 1861. He worked as a newspaper reporter,
				  authored several books and was known for his poetry and stories about his
				  experiences. He fought in the Civil War; in 1875, he was appointed captain of
				  the Black Hills Rangers militia. His daring ride of 350 miles in six days to
				  carry dispatches to Fort Laramie for the <emph render="italic">New York
				  Herald</emph>, to tell the news of the victory by General George Crook against
				  the village of Chief American Horse at the Battle of Slim Buttes during the
				  Sioux War of 1876-1877, made him a national celebrity. He briefly worked for
				  Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. From 1898 to 1900, he spent the next two years
				  in the Klondike, searching for gold. On his return to the United States, he
				  rejoined the lecture circuit, traveling throughout the country for the next
				  decade.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordJW1</container><unittitle>Portrait of "Captain Jack" Crawford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taber, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>The photographic format is a card mounted photograph called a
				  "Paris Panel."</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordJW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of a Christmas greeting
					 card with a poem by J. W. Crawford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on card: Greeting - <emph render="underline">Xmas
					 Dawson City Yukon Terr 1898</emph> . To my friends of the great Klondike, Yukon
					 and Copper River Co, as well to all my other friends, in grateful remembrance
					 of their many acts of kindness, and also for that confidence which has
					 sustained me amid trying scenes of toil and danger on the snow-clad trail to
					 the Yukon Gold District.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crawford, Ronald C. (January 31, 1827 -
				  July 12, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ronald C. Crawford was born in Havana (now Montour Falls), NY in
				  1827 and crossed the plains to Oregon in 1847. He married Elizabeth Jane Moore
				  in 1852. He was the deputy collector of internal revenue in Oregon from 1865
				  until 1869. He established a furniture factory and store in Tumwater,
				  Washington in the 1860s before homesteading in Lewis County, WA in 1874. In
				  1876,he was appointed the superintendent of the U.S. penitentiary on McNeil
				  Island, WA. In 1877, he moved to Seattle. His son, Samuel, was one of the
				  founders of the <emph render="italic">Intelligencer</emph> newspaper before it
				  consolidated with the <emph render="italic">Post</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ronald C. Crawford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Crawford, Samuel Leroy (June 22, 1855 - October 11,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Crawford, the son of Ronald C. and Elizabeth Jane
				  Crawford, was born in Oregon City, Oregon in 1855. He moved with his family to
				  Olympia, WA, where he learned printing in the office of <emph render="italic">The Washington Standard</emph>. He was a later a reporter for 
				  <emph render="italic">The Morning Echo</emph>. He moved to Seattle in 1876 and
				  worked for the <emph render="italic">Daily Intelligencer</emph> where he was
				  initially the only reporter. In 1880, he purchased the paper with Thomas W.
				  Prosch. After he sold his interest in 1888, he continued to work for the paper.
				  The same year, he and C. T. Conover started the real estate firm of Crawford
				  and Conover. He was the police commissioner for several years and was one of
				  the founders of Children's Orthopedic Hospital. He married Clara Clayton in
				  1890. The first record of baseball in Seattle is when Crawford began practicing
				  in Occidental Square upon his arrival in the city. He was an outfielder for the
				  Alkis, the first Seattle baseball team, when they played on May 16, 1878.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordSL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Samuel L.
					 Crawford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">E. G. Williams &amp; Bro., N.Y</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrawfordSL2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
					 (AYPE) ticket for Samuel Crawford with his portrait on it, signed by H. D.
					 Barrell, Chief of Admissions</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H. D. Barrell, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crim, Owen [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crisler, Herbert Bruce (July 23, 1893 -
				  December 15, 1985) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herb Crisler spent years in the Olympic Mountains filming
				  wildlife and living in a small cabin near the Elwha River. In 1938, Crisler
				  went out into the Olympics with a fellow filmmaker, Don McQuade and made the
				  first color file of Olympic National Park. During most of the 1940s, Crisler
				  and his wife Lois, a writer and cinematographer, spent their summers in the
				  Olympic Mountain high country, where they established a series of high camps
				  ranging from Cat Creek Basin all the way south to the Skyline Trail. In the
				  early 1950s, Walt Disney bought his elk footage and released it with the title
				  of <emph render="italic">The Olympic Elk</emph> as part of the True Life
				  Adventure series. In April 1951, the Disney Studios sent the Crislers to
				  Colorado to film bighorn sheep and in the fall of 1952, they continued on to
				  Denali National Park in Alaska to film grizzly and brown bears. The Crislers
				  moved on to the Brooks Range within the Arctic Circle in April 1953 where Herb
				  filmed the caribou and Lois kept journals of her observations of the wildlife
				  and her surroundings. He also filmed <emph render="italic">The Vanishing
				  Prairie</emph> (1954) and <emph render="italic">White Wilderness</emph> (1958).
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrislerHB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Herb Crisler </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1977</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ventura CA, 83 yrs, 10 mos.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Crocker, Homer (March 1, 1849 - November 23,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Homer Crocker was born in Sharlersville, Ohio. He enlisted in
				  Company K, 38th Wisconsin Infantry in 1864 and served with General Grant’s army
				  in the siege of Petersburg and in the pursuit of Lee’s army to Appomattox.
				  Returning to Ohio, he took advantage of an opening at Hiram College, made
				  possible to soldiers by James A. Garfield, later President. After graduation,
				  Crocker taught school and then went out to survey in Minnesota and the Dakotas.
				  After taking up a homestead in Deer Creek, Minnesota, he again taught school.
				  He married Mary Juni, a fellow teacher, in 1878; she died in 1895. In 1899, he
				  sold his farm and moved to Tacoma. He worked as a contractor before joining the
				  Tacoma Police Department in 1907 where he was a desk sergeant for 18 years.
				  Crocker was a commander of the Custer Post, G. A. R. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">Crocker1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Homer Crocker in uniform and holding
					 rifle, next to another man (obscured)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1919? </unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Henry Jackson. So sorry we could not be
					 there on your birthday. Here is a good picture of Mr. Crocker, Ingleside Apts,
					 Tacoma Wash.</p></note><note><p>The Ingleside Apartments (now the Bayview Apartments) was
					 built in 1909 and were the first large apartment built in Tacoma according to
					 the Tacoma Daily Ledger in 1931. In 2011 the Bayview Apartments was recorded as
					 a historical building on the National Register of Historic Places.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Hugh (September 21, 1829 -
				  March 26, 1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Crockett, the son of Walter and Mary Crockett, came to
				  Whidbey Island in 1851. He married Rachel Bond in 1863; the couple later moved
				  to Puyallup, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hugh Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Hugh Crockett, copied from the original in
					 the possession of Samuel D. Crockett, Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Mary Black Ross (February 20,
				  1798 - October 23, 1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Black was born in Blacksburg, Virginia. She married George
				  Ross in 1813. After his death, she married Walter Crockett. Walter and Mary
				  arrived on Whidbey Island in 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettMBR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mary Black Crockett, wife of Col. Walter
					 Crockett. Copied from the original in possession of Samuel D. Crockett,
					 Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Crockett, Rachel Bond (1834? - July 11,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rachel Bond was born in England and married Hugh Crockett, a
				  Whidbey Island pioneer, in 1863. The couple later moved to Puyallup.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettRB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rachel Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Rachel Crockett, wife of Hugh Crockett.
					 Copied from the original in the possession of Samuel D. Crockett, Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Samuel Davidson (June 23,
				  1850 - July 7, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Davidson Crockett was born in Centerville, Iowa and
				  traveled with his family to Washington Territory in 1851. The family farmed on
				  Whidbey Island; a blockhouse built by the Crocketts during the Indian Wars of
				  1856 still stands. He went to the territorial university in Seattle and later
				  attended Willamette University in Salem where he met his first wife, Lydia
				  Elizabeth Chamberlin. After leaving school, he farmed for several years before
				  moving to Seattle and becoming a partner in the Hall and Paulson Furniture
				  Company in 1881. After the 1889 fire, he started other businesses and was
				  president of the Seattle Security Company. Lydia Crockett died in1907; he
				  married Nellie Valentine Wood in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettSD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Davidson Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1922?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mushet, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Samuel Black (February 14,
				  1820 - October 27, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Black Crockett, the son of Walter and Mary Crockett, came
				  to Whidbey Island in 1844. His parents and siblings followed in 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettSB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Black Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Walter, Jr. (September 26,
				  1833 - August 21, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Crocket was the son of Walter and Mary Crockett who came
				  to Whidbey Island in 1851. He was a county commissioner and served in the
				  Territorial Legislature of 1878 and the State Legislature of 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettWJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter Crockett Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crockett, Walter Sr. (January 29, 1786
				  - November 25, 1869)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Crockett was born in Shawsville, Virginia and served in
				  the War of 1812. He served three terms in the Virginia State Legislature.
				  Crockett moved with his family to Washington Territory in 1851, arriving first
				  in Olympia and then joining Colonel Ebey on Whidbey Island where he established
				  a farm. During the Indian War of 1856, he built a pair of blockhouses. One is
				  still standing; the other was sold to Ezra Meeker for use as an entrance to his
				  restaurant during the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter Crockett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrockettW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photographic portrait of Walter
					 Crockett used to make the engraving</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Walter Crockett, copied from the original
					 now in the possession of Samuel D. Crockett, Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cronin, Eugene A. (August 9, 1841 -
				  October 13, 1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eugene A. Cronin was a Portland attorney who played a key role
				  in the disputed 1876 election between Rutherford B. Hayes, the Republican, and
				  Samuel J. Tilden, the Democrat. The Democratic Governor of Oregon, L.F. Grover,
				  appointed a Democratic elector, E. A. Cronin, who took the ballots from the
				  Secretary of State. He formed his own group of electors while the two original
				  Republican electors formed their own consortium. Cronin and his band cast three
				  votes: one for Samuel J. Tilden and two for Rutherford B. Hayes; he later
				  received $3,000 from the Democratic National Committee for his efforts. Oregon,
				  therefore, had two sets of electoral votes going to Washington. Tilden won the
				  popular vote, but lost the electoral vote. He served in the Union Army during
				  the Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CroninEA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eugene A. Cronin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crook, George R. (September 8, 1828 –
				  March 21, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George R. Crook was a career United States Army officer, most
				  noted for his distinguished service during the American Civil War and the
				  Indian Wars. Crook County in Wyoming and Oregon were named for him, as was the
				  town of Crook, Colorado.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrookGR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George R. Crook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Currier, Omaha, NE</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Major General George Crook, taken when he
					 was a Brigadier General. Copied from a picture in the regimental album of the
					 4th U.S. Infantry at Fort George Wright, Washington, through courtesy of
					 Lieutenant Colonel E. J. Oliver, 4th Infantry.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crosby, Clanrick (November 5, 1814 -
				  October 22, 1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clanrick Crosby was born in Massachusetts. A member of a
				  seafaring family, he captained a ship that sailed into Portland in the spring
				  of 1850. He arrived in the Puget Sound area in April, 1850 where he purchased
				  the rights to the grist and saw mills along the Deschutes River in Tumwater and
				  took out a Donation Land Claim that included Tumwater's upper, middle and lower
				  falls. By so doing, he held the key to Tumwater's economic development. He also
				  devised the initial plat of the City of Tumwater as early as 1857. In the 1850s
				  he started a mercantile store. In 1863 he started construction on a new flour
				  mill, but did not complete it until 1866. The Crosby Lincoln Flour Mill
				  dominated the landscape until it burned in 1905, long after it had left the
				  possession of the Crosby family. He married Phoebe Hopkins Fessenden in 1837 in
				  Boston.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrosbyC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George R. Crook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Crosson, Joseph Esler "Joe" (June 29, 1903 - June 21,
				  1949 )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph "Joe" Crosson was an experienced arctic pilot who became
				  a national hero between the World Wars, flying mercy missions in Alaska
				  including a winter flight in an open cockpit to carry serum to Barrow Alaska
				  and a dangerous search in the Siberian winter for lost pilot, Carl Ben Eielson.
				  Crosson and his sister, Marvel, learned to fly in San Diego, California and
				  barnstormed together before he accepted an offer from Fairbanks Aircraft
				  Company in 1926. Crosson was one of the first pilots to cross the Endicott
				  Range to fly to Point Barrow and was the first pilot to land on a glacier. In
				  1927 he was a pilot with the Wilkins Arctic expedition. Crosson was asked to
				  fly the bodies of Will Rogers and Wiley Post back to the U.S. after their crash
				  in Alaska in August,1935. He became the Alaska division manager for Pan
				  American World Airways in 1934. He resigned in 1944 and moved to Seattle to
				  manage NW Air Services at Boeing Field. He died suddenly in Seattle at the age
				  of 45 and was inducted into the Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum Hall of Fame in
				  2002. A mountain and a glacier in Alaska's Mt. McKinley National Park are named
				  for him. His sister, Marvel, was a pioneer aviator, and the first female pilot
				  to earn a commercial license in the Territory of Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW2</container><unittitle>Will Rogers with Isadore Goldstein, Wiley Post, Rex
					 Beach and Joe Crosson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under William "Will" Rogers subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crow, James Jeremiah (April 5, 1842 -
				  August 14, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain James J. Crow was born in Lincoln County, Missouri. In
				  the summer of 1849, he and his parents crossed the plains to Oregon with a team
				  of oxen. They settled near Portland, Oregon; the following year, they moved to
				  Milwaukie, OR. He worked at a variety of occupations before establishing a
				  ranch on White River near the present city of Kent, Washington. He married Emma
				  Russell in 1862; they had thirteen children. In 1872 an Indian outbreak seemed
				  eminent, and the settlers organized a company, with Crow as captain. He held
				  the office of constable for eighteen years, served as school director for
				  several terms, and was elected mayor of Kent. In 1878, he planted and harvested
				  the first hop fields in the Kent Valley, after obtaining hop roots from Ezra
				  Meeker in Puyallup. The high yields and profits from the hops attracted other
				  farmers, and hop growing spread through most of the Kent Valley. As the
				  popularity of the steamboats increased; the steamboat <emph render="italic">Lily</emph>, which he captained, was the best known. He was one
				  of the early climbers to reach the summit of Mt. Rainier.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrowJJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Captain James J. Crow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Crow, Joseph Wright (April 26, 1872 -
				  February 1, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph W. Crow was born in Kent, Washington, the son of James J.
				  and Emma Crow. He was a long-time employee of the Carnation Milk Company. In
				  1934, he became the mayor of Monroe, Washington, completing the term of Mayor
				  John Joseph Cretney, who had died. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CrowJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph W. Crow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1938?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cunningham, Imogen [file
				  out]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cunningham, Jesse M. (June 23, 1858 - August 26, 1935)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse M. Cunningham was born in New York and moved to Seattle in
				  1900. He was one of the leading tailors in the city.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CunninghamJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jesse M. Cunningham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studios, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph taken by the Curtis Studios for the
					 Arctic Club.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Cunningham, Paul "Old Peppercorn" (August 10, 1846 -
				  September 22, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Cunningham was born in Meaford, Ontario, Canada, August 10,
				  1846, as was his wife, Mary Seaman. They were married March 9, 1868 in Canada.
				  He traveled by boat through Georgian Bay and Lake Huron to Ohio, where he
				  joined a wagon train going to Nebraska in 1868-1869. After arriving near
				  Osceola, he received free land from the government of the United States. His
				  wife joined him in 1870. They put up a tent made of linen sheets for their
				  first home and later built a dugout and a lean-to covered with sod. They left
				  Osceola in 1900, moving first to Wheatland, Wyoming, and then to Whidbey Island
				  in 1906. He worked as a wagon master, scout, sharpshooter, a stand-in for
				  William (“Buffalo Bill”) Cody at fairs, a big game hunter during a time when
				  buffalo herds still roamed the Plains, and a lawman of several frontier towns.
				  He took a prominent role in the early development of the Island County Fair
				  wrote and published poems, some under the names “Peppercorn” or “The Sage of
				  Whidbey.” </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SnakelumC1</container><unittitle> Chief Charles Snakelum with Paul
					 Cunningham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Chief Charles Snacklem and Paul Cunningham
					 on a tribal log. Washington - Whidbey Island. Nina Trumball, Langley, Wash.</p><p>Filed under Chief Charles Snakelum subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cunningham, William (December 29, 1849
				  - June 10, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Cunningham was a British economist and churchman who was
				  largely responsible for the establishment of economic history as a scholastic
				  discipline in British universities. He was ordained in the Church of England in
				  1873, became vicar of Great St. Mary’s in 1887, and archdeacon of Ely in 1906.
				  From 1891 to 1897 he was a professor of economics at King’s College, London. In
				  1882, he published <emph render="italic">The Growth of English Industry and
				  Commerce</emph>, one of the first systematic economic histories of England,
				  which became a standard reference work. He was a proponent of the historical
				  method in economics and developed an increasingly protectionist outlook,
				  shifting from a belief in free trade and internationalism to a belief in trade
				  barriers, a strong nation-state, and British imperialism.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CunninghamW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Cunningham seated in chair,
					 holding papers and eyeglasses, wearing a clerical collar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1912</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">J. Russell &amp; Sons Photographers, Southsea, England</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Curran, William J. (June 1, 1866 - April 14,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurranWJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William J. Curran</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1892?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stafford, Chicago, Illinois</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Currie, Arthur William (December 5,
				  1875 - November 30, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>General Sir Arthur William Currie GCMG, KCB was a Canadian
				  military commander during World War I. He had the unique distinction of
				  starting his military career on the very bottom rung as a pre-war militia
				  gunner before rising through the ranks to become the first Canadian commander
				  of the four divisions of the unified Canadian Corps of the Canadian
				  Expeditionary Force. He was the first Canadian to attain the rank of full
				  general. Currie's success was based on his ability to rapidly adapt brigade
				  tactics to the exigencies of trench warfare. He is generally considered to be
				  among the most capable commanders of the Western Front and one of the finest
				  commanders in Canadian military history. After the war, he was offered the
				  position of Principal and Vice-Chancellor of McGill University in Montreal,
				  Canada. He held this post from 1920 until his death in 1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurrieAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Arthur William Currie in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Currier, Susan Lord (July 25, 1871 -
				  January 4, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan Lord Currier was born in Kansas and moved to Washington
				  with her parents at an early age. She graduated from Olympic Collegiate
				  Institute in Olympia, Washington and was the Skagit County superintendent of
				  schools. She was a member of the Washington State Library Commission from 1901
				  until 1903. She married Frederik Ornes, a newspaper publisher and editor, on
				  October 30, 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurrierSL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Susan Lord Currier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Curtis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Curtis, Asahel (November 3, 1874 -
				  March 7, 1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asahel Curtis was born in Minnesota; the family moved to
				  Washington Territory in 1888. Asahel Curtis and his brother, Edward Sheriff
				  Curtis, were both photographers. Asahel photographed Washington's natural
				  resources and related industries, as well as the cities and historic events of
				  Washington state. Edward S. Curtis supported the family by opening a
				  photography studio in Seattle, and Asahel went to work for him in 1894. In
				  1897, Asahel went to the Yukon to document the Klondike Gold Rush and remained
				  there for two years. Differences over credit for this work later led to a break
				  with his brother. In 1911, Asahel established his own studio in Seattle. He was
				  a founding member of the Mountaineers, a mountain-climbing group which also
				  promoted the preservation of wilderness areas, although his involvement in the
				  Seattle-Tacoma Rainier National Park Committee (later the Rainier National Park
				  Advisory Board) strained his relations with the Mountaineers. The committee,
				  which Curtis chaired from 1912 to 1936, was formed by community business
				  interests to take advantage of the park's tourism potential. Curtis, through
				  the committee, sought to promote greater accessibility to the park by building
				  roads to increase tourism. The Asahel Curtis Photo Company Photographs in the
				  collection of the University of Washington Libraries Digital Collection
				  provides one of the most valuable photographic records of the Northwest from
				  the 1850s until 1940. Sixty-thousand of his images are held in trust by the
				  Washington State Historical Society. The Curtis Glacier of Mount Shuksan was
				  named for Curtis, who made an early ascent of the mountain in 1906. he married
				  Florence Conley on November 29, 1902. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Asahel Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Curtis and W. Montelius Price
					 on the summit of Mt. Shuksan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0003/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Asahel Curtis and W. Montelius Price claimed the first ascent
					 of Mt. Shuksan in 1906; Shuksan’s Curtis and Price glaciers serve as namesakes
					 to the climbers.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Asahel Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Curtis at right, above, with
					 group of men and women in front of and on a train, possibly a Seattle Chamber
					 of Commerce group; Walter Miller at left with camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis and Miller, Seattle WA</corpname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0001/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA5</container><unittitle>Asahel Curtis at French Camp along the Skagway (White)
					 Pass</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">9</container><unittitle>Portrait of Asahel Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note><note><p>Transferred to vault</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Curtis, Edward Sheriff (February 16,
				  1868 - October 19, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Edward S. Curtis was an American ethnologist and photographer
				  of the American West and of Native American peoples. Curtis left school in the
				  sixth grade and soon built his own camera. In 1885 at the age of 17, he became
				  an apprentice photographer. In 1887 the family moved to Seattle, Washington,
				  where he purchased a new camera and became a partner in an existing
				  photographic studio. He was appointed official photographer to the Harriman
				  Alaska Expedition of 1899. Curtis spent the summer of 1900 with George Bird
				  Grinnell observing the Sun Dance at an encampment of Blood, Blackfeet and
				  Algonquin in Montana. This increased his interest in Native-American cultures
				  and confirmed his desire to study and document the tribes of North America. In
				  1904, encouraged by the popularity of his Native-American images, he began to
				  photograph other tribes throughout the West, and two years later approached
				  railroad tycoon J.P. Morgan to request financial assistance for his project, 
				  <emph render="italic">The North American Indian</emph>. </p></bioghist><note><p>Copies of portraits located in Edward Curtis collection PH Coll
				  484.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Edward S. Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Edward S. Curtis, wearing hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Edward S. Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1889</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Edward S. Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES5</container><unittitle>Two portraits of Edward S. Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisES6</container><unittitle>Advertisement for Curtis &amp; Guptill
					 Photographers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1888?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Curtis, Florence Etta Carney (April 9, 1885 - March 28,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asahel Curtis married Florence Carney on November 29, 1902;
				  after his death, she moved to Honolulu, Hawaii where she spent the remainder of
				  her life. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisFEC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Florence Carney Curtis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Curtiss, Caroline "Carrie" (August 1874 - February 24,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline "Carrie" Curtiss was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut
				  and worked as a music teacher before marrying Frank Wells Batchelder, a
				  machinist and a musician, in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtissC1</container><unittitle>Carrie Curtiss</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Betts, Bridgeport, Connecticut</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cushman, Francis Wellington (August 8,
				  1867 - July 6, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Wellington Cushman was born in Brighton, Iowa. He
				  attended Pleasant Plain Academy, moved to Wyoming, in 1855 and was employed as
				  a ranch hand and worked as a teacher while studying law at night. He was
				  admitted to the bar in 1889 and began to practice law in Bassett, Nebraska.
				  Relocating to Tacoma, Washington in 1891, he continued the practice of law and
				  began his political career. In 1899, he was elected as a Republican to the
				  Fifty-sixth Congress and to the next five succeeding Congresses, serving until
				  his death at age 42.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CushmanFW1</container><unittitle>Francis W. Cushman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 6, 1897</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">French, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Yours for sounds money.</p><p>Written on verso: To my kind friend Dean Thomas Burke in
					 appreciation of his many courtesies.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="imagephoto">Custer, General George Armstrong
				  (December 5, 1839 – June 25, 1876) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George A. Custer was a United States Army officer and cavalry
				  commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars. He was
				  admitted to West Point in 1858, where he graduated last in his class. With the
				  outbreak of the Civil War, he was called to serve with the Union Army. He
				  fought in the first major engagement, the First Battle of Bull Run. His
				  association with several important officers helped his career, as did his
				  success as a highly effective cavalry commander. After the Civil War, he was
				  dispatched to the west to fight in the American Indian Wars and appointed
				  lieutenant colonel of the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment where he and all his men
				  were killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876 fighting against a
				  coalition of Native American tribes. Custer and his men were defeated so
				  decisively in this battle that the Battle of the Little Bighorn has
				  overshadowed all his prior achievements. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of George Armstrong Custer
					 in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA2</container><unittitle>Portrait of George Armstrong Custer, standing with
					 arms folded</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1876?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Armstrong Custer and staff,
					 7th Cavalry in the Black Hills of South Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William H. Illingworth, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Included in the photograph are Captain Tom Custer, Marcus A.
					 Reno, Bloody Knife and Colonel Fred Grant.</p><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Custer, Thomas Ward (March 15, 1845 – June 25,
				  1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Ward Custer was a United States Army officer and two-time
				  recipient of the Medal of Honor for bravery during the American Civil War. He
				  was a younger brother of George Armstrong Custer, perishing with him at the
				  Battle of the Little Bighorn in the Montana Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Armstrong Custer and staff,
					 7th Cavalry in the Black Hills of South Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William H. Illingworth, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Included in the photograph are Captain Tom Custer, Marcus A.
					 Reno, Bloody Knife and Colonel Fred Grant.</p><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p><p>Filed under George Armstrong Custer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cutler, Russell Kelsey (December 10,
				  1907 - November 20, 1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Russell K. Cutler graduated from UCLA in 1930 with a degree in
				  physical education. He taught at the University of Oregon from 1930 until 1942;
				  while there, he earned a Master's degree. From 1942 until 1946, her served in
				  the U.S. Air Force where he was in charge of troop physical training at March
				  Air Force Base. After his service, he taught at the UW where he was the
				  executive officer of the Men's Physical Education Department. In 1955, he
				  received his PhD from Stanford and then taught at California State University
				  Chico until retirement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CutlerRK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Russell Kelsey Cutler with three men
					 in swim suits</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 15, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University of Washington Tyee yearbook</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cutter, Kirtland Kelsey (August 20,
				  1860–September 26, 1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kirtland Kelsey Cutter was a 20th-century architect in the
				  Pacific Northwest and California. He was born in East Rockport, Ohio, the
				  great-grandson of Jared Potter Kirtland, who co-founded Western Reserve
				  University's medical school and the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. He
				  studied painting and illustration at the Art Students League of New York. At
				  the age of 26 he moved to Spokane, Washington and began working as a banker for
				  his uncle. By the 1920s he had designed several hundred buildings that
				  established Spokane as a place rivaling Seattle and Portland, Oregon in its
				  architectural quality. Most of Cutter's work is listed in State and National
				  Registers of Historic Places. His design for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair
				  Idaho Building was a rustic design log construction. It was a popular favorite,
				  visited by an estimated 18 million people. The building's design and interior
				  furnishings were a major precursor of the Arts and Crafts movement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CutterKK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Kirtland Kelsey Cutter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>D</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dalby, David Henry (April 22, 1922 -
				  January 20, 2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David H. Dalby was a University of Washington track and field
				  athlete whose service in the Coast Guard during World War II interrupted his
				  college career. He returned to the UW after the war and was ranked among the
				  ten best discus throwers in the country. He won first place in every dual and
				  championship meet and took second place in the Pacific Coast Conference. He was
				  elected captain of the track team in 1949, but withdrew from the team to focus
				  on his scholarship and work commitments. He is one of the UW's all-time letter
				  winners. Dalby also competed in the 1948 Olympic Trials for shot and
				  discus.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DalbyDH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Three views of Dave Dalby throwing
					 the discus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1944 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dalton, Charles C. (February 29, 1864 -
				  June 27, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles C. Dalton was born in Churchill County, Nevada and came
				  to Washington State in the 1880s. He was a lawyer, Assistant Attorney General
				  and chief prosecutor for Washington State and a Justice of the Peace in Seattle
				  who was the divorce proctor for King County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DalbyCC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles C. Dalton at his
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: Sincerely, C. G. Dalton</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Damman, Jeremiah Douglas (June 22, 1826
				  - February 27, 1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jeremiah Douglas Damman was born in Sebec, Maine. When he was
				  18, he moved to Wisconsin, then a territory, and later to Denver, where he
				  worked as a blacksmith and, with a partner, bought a mine in Gregors' Gulch.
				  His partner sold it for $300 during his absence, shortly before it began
				  producing. He returned to Wisconsin. In 1861, at the outbreak of the civil war,
				  he raised a company of men and took them to Camp Barstow at Janesville,
				  Wisconsin, to be incorporated in the Third Wisconsin Cavalry. He was
				  commissioned captain of Company A of the same regiment. In March, 1863, he
				  resigned his commission because of ill health and went back to Wisconsin, where
				  he lived until 1870. He journeyed westward for Washington Territory in late
				  1870 with horse teams, but stopped for the winter in Utah, arriving in Yakima
				  County on September 13th, 1871. He built the first sawmill and the second
				  gristmill in the area and established a dairy farm and orchard. He deeded land
				  for the Damman School, and a district of Kittitas Valley is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DammanJD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jeremiah Douglas Damman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Damon, John Fox (February 17, 1827 -
				  January 11, 1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Fox Damon was born in Waltham, Massachusetts. He was a
				  correspondent for the <emph>Boston Journal</emph> during the California Gold
				  Rush. He worked as a printer and became a part-owner of a newspaper in San
				  Diego, where he was elected a Justice of the Peace. In 1858, he headed for the
				  Fraser River gold fields, but stopped in Victoria, B.C. and went to work on 
				  <emph render="italic">The Victoria Gazette</emph>. In 1860, he started 
				  <emph render="italic">The Northwest</emph> a newspaper in Port Townsend,
				  Washington. He was active in politics and was president of the first Republican
				  Convention in Olympia, Washington. In 1863, he married Mary Yantis and went to
				  work on an Olympia newspaper. He then went to Portland and studied for the
				  ministry; he was ordained as a pastor of the Congregational Church in 1869. He
				  started Plymouth Congregational Church in Seattle and was its pastor for many
				  years. He married over 3,000 couples and was known as “the marrying
				  pastor.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DamonJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John. F.
					 Damon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DamonJF2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John. F.
					 Damon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DamonJF3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John F. Damon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1904?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">La Roche, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SackmanDJ1</container><unittitle>Daniel J. Sackman with Elizabeth W. Sackman, Mrs.
					 Joseph W. (Mary Elizabeth) Phillips, and Rev. John F. Damon sitting in the
					 Sackman yard at Port Blakely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1885</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daniel Jacob Sackman subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Danz, John (September 24, 1877 -
				  October 27, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Danz was born in Bronsk, Russia. His family came to the
				  United States in about 1882, fleeing from religious persecution. He came to
				  Portland, Oregon, by covered wagon with his father in 1889, transporting the
				  household belongings and joining the rest of the family who had crossed the
				  country by train. From 1903 to 1914 he was owner and manager of Sterling Men’s
				  Wear on Second Avenue South in Seattle. When an adjacent storefront became
				  vacant, Danz saw an opportunity to increase foot traffic to the clothing store
				  by installing a nickelodeon; he started showing movies there in 1913. The movie
				  house soon became more profitable than the clothing store. By 1914, Danz
				  devoted all of his energy as president of his movie theater business, Sterling
				  Theatre Company, named after his original haberdashery. In 1961, he and his
				  wife made a substantial gift to the University of Washington to establish a
				  perpetual fund to provide income to be used to bring to the University of
				  Washington each year "distinguished scholars of national and international
				  reputation who have concerned themselves with the impact of science and
				  philosophy on man's perception of a rational universe."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DanzJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John Danz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DanzJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John Danz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Darby, William Theodore (June 14, 1877-July 4,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Theodore Darby was born in Stayner, Ontario. He received
				  his A.B. from Yale in 1905 and his M.A. from Columbia in 1907. He was an
				  instructor in English at the University of Washington (1907-12), and assistant
				  professor (1912-18). He took a leave of absence in 1918 and engaged in farming
				  in Washington for four years. He was a professor of English literature at the
				  University of Redlands from 1922 until 1925 before returning to farming in
				  Chula Vista, California. Darby worked as an investigator for the California
				  State Social Welfare Department (1930-40), and as a supervisor of civilian
				  personnel 11th Naval District, San Diego from 1940 until his retirement in
				  1946.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">D'Arcy, Cyrus Alger (April 1833 - April
				  26, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Cyrus D'Arcy was born in Nova Scotia and apprenticed at
				  an early age as a sailor. He retired from command of ships in the 1870s and
				  settled near La Conner, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">D'ArcyCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cyrus D'Arcy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: C. A. D'Arcy</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Darnell, Frederick Wislizenus (September 26, 1892 -
				  October 25, 1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Wislizenus Darnell was a real-estate appraiser in
				  Seattle for more than fifty years. Born in Denver, he attended the University
				  of Washington and was a graduate of the University of California, Berkley. He
				  was a World War I Navy veteran. Darnell was an appraiser with the John Davis
				  Company from 1927 to 1955, and then worked in his own appraisal firm from 1955
				  until a month before his death. He was a member of the American Institute of
				  Real Estate Appraisers, the American Society of Real Estate Counselors, the
				  National Association of Realtors and the Seattle-King County Board of Realtors.
				  He served as president of the Seattle Real Estate Board in 1949.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Das, Taraknath (June 15, 1884 –
				  December 22, 1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Taraknath Das was born in West Bengal, India. While attending
				  college in Calcutta, he was recruited into an anti-British secret society. By
				  1905, he had given up his studies in order to focus on freedom for India.
				  Wanted by police, he fled to Japan in 1905 disguised as a sadhu, or Hindu
				  ascetic. After the British ambassador requested his extradition, Das fled to
				  the U.S. in search of asylum. He arrived in Seattle in July, 1906. Awarded the
				  UW’s first graduate fellowship in political science to conduct independent
				  research on employers’ liability law in the UW, he obtained an M.A. and
				  teaching certificate in 1911. In 1925, he received the first Ph.D. from the
				  School of Foreign Service in Georgetown University. He was a professor of
				  public affairs at New York University, a lecturer in history at Columbia
				  University and a fellow at Georgetown University. In 1935, he founded the
				  Taraknath Das Foundation to promote international friendship and understanding
				  between the United States and India; the foundation awards grant money to
				  Indian graduate students studying in the United States. In the 1950s, he
				  contributed funds for the establishment of a lectureship in honor of J. Allen
				  Smith who was for many years chairman of the Social Science and Political
				  Science departments at the UW and was later dean of the Graduate School. Das
				  was one of the pioneers of the India Freedom movement and a pioneer of the
				  South Asian community in the U.S.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DasT1</container><unittitle>Taraknath Das</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph copied from <emph>The Tyee</emph> University of
					 Washington yearbook.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DasT2</container><unittitle>Taraknath Das</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 15, 1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Ralph Chaplin, Leavenworth USA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Yours for the emancipation of the oppressed
					 of the world. Taraknath Das; written on verso: To my friend &amp; teacher Dr.
					 Wm. Savery, October 16, 1919.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">David, Joe</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joe David was a member of the Industrial Insurance Appeals Board
				  in the 1950s and 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with Frank N. Morris,
					 member of AF of L Local 200, Joe David, and Elmer Miller, past president of
					 Local 200.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph was from the <emph render="italic">Labor
					 News</emph>.</p><p>Filed under John A. Cherberg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davidson, Dick B.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dick B. Davidson served on the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Patterson</emph>, a Paulding-class destroyer launched in 1910 and in service
				  during World War I. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavidsonDB1</container><unittitle>Dick Davidson in uniform, possibly wearing plotter or
					 observer emblem</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 4, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">La Roche, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davidson, George (May 9, 1825 -
				  December 2, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Davidson was the head of the Field Assistants of the U.S.
				  Coast and Geodetic Survey, working with the Survey for over 40 years. He was a
				  geographer and astronomer who surveyed the coast of Alaska in 1867 while
				  negotiations for the purchase of the territory was still under way. His 
				  <emph render="italic">Directory of the Pacific Coast of the United
				  States</emph>, published in 1868, was the first Coast Pilot, providing
				  information to navigators of coastal and inter-coastal waters. Mariners still
				  use an updated version of this survey. He was an active member of the
				  California Academy of Sciences and published original investigations in
				  geometry and astronomy as well as devising new instruments of precision,
				  working on the introduction of science in the public schools and endowing
				  scientific research in California. In 1874 he was elected a member of the
				  National Academy of Sciences. He was re-elected President of the California
				  Academy of Sciences from 1871 to 1885; elected President of the Geographical
				  Society of the Pacific, at its inception in 1881; made life member of the
				  Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia for special services (1855);
				  elected member of the American Philosophical Society, 1865; and fellow of the
				  American Association for the Advancement of Science. He held the position of
				  Honorary Professor of Geodesy and Astronomy in the University of California and
				  was a regent of the same institution from 1877 to 1884. At his own expense he
				  maintained the first astronomic observatory on the Pacific Coast of North
				  America. Seattle's Magnolia Bluff was named by him in 1857 during a U.S.
				  Coastal Survey on the mistaken identification of its red-barked madrona trees
				  as magnolia trees. Fauntleroy Cove was named in honor of his fiancée, Eleanor
				  Fauntleroy. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavidsonG1</container><unittitle>George Davidson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photographic copy of an engraving.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davies, Arthur E. (February 11,
				  1868-February 22, 1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Davies was the first son of William W. Davies who had
				  started a communal society called <emph render="italic">The Kingdom of
				  Heaven</emph>near Walla Walla, Washington in 1866. His father believed in
				  reincarnation and proclaimed Arthur to be the reincarnation of Jesus Christ.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DaviesWW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William W. Davies, his sons, David
					 and Arthur, with a view of what is probably their <emph render="italic">Kingdom
					 of Heaven</emph> communal settlement near Walla Walla, Washington. The Kingdom
					 of Heaven began to collapse in 1880, when both Davies children died of
					 diphtheria. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William W. Davies subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Davies, David F. (September 28, 1869-February 15,
				  1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Davies was the second son of William W. Davies who had
				  started a communal society called <emph render="italic">The Kingdom of
				  Heaven</emph> near Walla Walla, Washington in 1866. His father believed in
				  reincarnation and proclaimed David to be <emph render="italic">God the
				  Father</emph>. The Kingdom of Heaven began to collapse in 1880, when both
				  Davies children died of diphtheria. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">10</container><container type="item">DaviesDF1</container><unittitle>David F. Davies in ceremonial robe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DaviesWW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William W. Davies, his sons, David
					 and Arthur, with a view of what is probably their <emph render="italic">Kingdom
					 of Heaven</emph> communal settlement near Walla Walla, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William W. Davies subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davies, William W. (August 9,
				  1833-November 25, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Davies was born in Wales to a Methodist family. In 1847,
				  he converted to Mormonism and in 1854–55 he emigrated to Utah Territory as a
				  Mormon pioneer to join the gathering of the members of The Church of Jesus
				  Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). In 1857, he became disillusioned with
				  the leadership of the LDS Church and became a follower of the schismatic leader
				  Joseph Morris. After the 1862 Morrisite War, Davies moved with a number of
				  Morrisites to Deer Lodge County, Montana; while there, he had a series of
				  revelations which instructed him to establish the "Kingdom of Heaven" near
				  Walla Walla, Washington. Davies and forty of his followers moved there in 1866
				  and established a communal society on 80 acres. His main departure from
				  mainstream Mormonism was his teaching of reincarnation, teaching his followers
				  that he was the archangel Michael, who had previously lived lives as the
				  biblical Adam, Abraham, and David. When his son Arthur was born in 1868, Davies
				  declared that the infant was the reincarnated Jesus Christ; the child came to
				  be called "Walla Walla Jesus." After the announcement, the size of Davies's
				  followers doubled; most of the new converts came from San Francisco, California
				  and Portland, Oregon. When Davies's second son, David, was born in 1869, he was
				  declared to be God the Father. The Kingdom of Heaven began to collapse in 1880,
				  when both Davies children died of diphtheria, and some of his followers sued
				  him. As a result, he was forced to sell the Kingdom's property, which
				  essentially brought the Kingdom to a close. At the time of its break-up, there
				  were 43 members of the group. Davies moved to Mill Creek, Washington and
				  briefly attempted to revive his following, but eventually gave up and moved to
				  San Francisco, California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DaviesWW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William W. Davies, his sons, David
					 and Arthur, with a view of what is probably their <emph render="italic">Kingdom
					 of Heaven</emph> communal settlement near Walla Walla, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Davis, Aubrey (September 29, 1917 - February 17, 2013)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aubrey Davis was born in Southern California and graduated from
				  Occidental College. After college, he took a job as an intern in Washington,
				  D.C., with the Federal Works Agency. Drafted during World War II, he served in
				  the Army ordinance unit in Calcutta, India. After the war, he moved to Seattle,
				  where he worked with the Seattle Housing Authority and later the Wage
				  Stabilization Board. Davis was elected to the Mercer Island City Council in
				  1967, serving until 1978, and became mayor in 1970. He had a major role in
				  negotiating the design and construction of I-90 across Mercer Island and the
				  placement of parks over its right-of-way. In 1970, Davis formed a committee to
				  protect the quality of life on Mercer Island as the state set out to expand
				  I-90 across the north end of the island. The lawsuit, which followed led to the
				  1976 Memorandum of Understanding with the state, gave communities affected by
				  the interstate certain rights and the standing to object or intervene in such
				  projects. Davis was a founding member of Group Health Cooperative, serving for
				  three years as the CEO. In addition to his years on the City Council, he served
				  on boards and commissions regarding public works throughout his adult life. In
				  1971 he became chair of Metro’s Transit Committee, helping to create the
				  Seattle ride-free zone, use of higher-capacity articulated buses, and
				  accessibility for the disabled. He was later named regional administrator of
				  the federal Urban Mass Transportation Administration, where he lobbied for
				  funds for Portland’s light rail system and Seattle’s bus tunnel. In 1992, Davis
				  was appointed to the Washington Transportation Commission, where he supported
				  rail and commuter-trip reduction. Mr. Davis continued to work on issues such as
				  congestion pricing after he left the state commission in 2004.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, Mrs. C S.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mrs. C. S. Davis lived in Summit Station, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisCS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mrs. C. S. Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, Charles D. [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, George A. (February 1832 -
				  January 21, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George A. Davis was born in Maine and served during the Civil
				  War. He married Hannah Dudley in Iowa in 1867; the couple later moved to
				  Marshall outside of Spokane in the 1870s or 1880s. They later lived in
				  Snohomish and Myrtle Creek, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisGA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George A. Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, Harold Lenoir (October 18,
				  1894–October 31, 1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Lenoir Davis, also known as H. L. Davis, was an American
				  novelist and poet. A native of Oregon, he won the Pulitzer Prize for his novel 
				  <emph render="italic">Honey in the Horn</emph>a novel about Oregon pioneer
				  life, the only Pulitzer given to a native Oregonian. He also wrote several
				  other novels as well as short stories for magazines.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisHL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harold Lenoir Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph from a book jacket.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, James S. "Cashup" (November 16,
				  1815 - June 22, 1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James S. “Cashup” Davis was born in England and immigrated to
				  the US in 1840. He worked in Ohio, Wisconsin and Iowa before moving west to
				  Oregon in the 1870s. He settled first in Yamhill, Oregon and later moved to
				  Cottonwood in Whitman County, Washington Territory; the town is now called
				  Cashup, after Davis’ nickname. The nickname grew out of the fact that he had
				  hard money and was able to pay it to consummate a deal. Cash was rare in those
				  times, with trade or barter being a more common form of transaction; to be able
				  to pay in cash was worthy of distinction. He built a stagecoach stop and inn in
				  Cottonwood. In 1888, he built a hotel on Steptoe Butte near Cottonwood, an area
				  that is now a state park.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisJS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James S. “Cashup” Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, James </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. James Davis was the foreign student counselor at the
				  University of Washington from 1948 until 1954 when he resigned to take a
				  similar position with the University of Michigan. He was also the executive
				  director of the<emph render="italic"> Foundation for International
				  Understanding through Students</emph> at the UW in the 1950s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Davis standing in front of a
					 Washington State map</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 10, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University of Washington The Tyee yearbook</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Davis sitting at a desk talking
					 with unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 10, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University of Washington The Tyee yearbook</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, Patricia (Pat) (1936 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patricia Davis, the first woman elected to the Seattle Port
				  Commission, served as a Seattle Port Commissioner from 1986 until 2009 when she
				  decided not to seek re-election in the face of a recall petition. The recall
				  petition later failed when there were insufficient signatures to put the recall
				  question on the ballot. The Legacy of Leadership Award, named for her,
				  recognizes women who, through their exemplary leadership, have stood for values
				  in the face of adversity and advanced possibilities for women at the Port of
				  Seattle. Unlike other Port awards that are presented annually, the Pat Davis
				  Award is awarded only when exceptional recipients arise. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Patricia Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1985</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis, William Henry (1852 - April 16,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Davis, one of the pioneer residents of the state,
				  arrived in Washington Territory with his parents in the 1850s. He first
				  attended school in Sehome (now Bellingham), then taught by Judge Eldridge, in
				  1856, and later in Victoria, B. C., and Olympia, Washington. In 1867, he went
				  to San Francisco to attend St. Mary’s College and Pacific Business College.
				  Returning to Sehome, he married Nellie Harrison. The couple moved to Seattle
				  where he established the Cloverdale Nursery on a 40-acre tract near the present
				  intersection of 19th Avenue and Republican Street. Sixteen years later, he
				  established the Idlywild Nursery in Colby, Washington and then the Home Nursery
				  in Kirkland, Washington. In the 1870s, he taught telegraphy at the Territorial
				  University (now the University of Washington) and served one term on the
				  Seattle City Council in 1890 under Mayor Harry White.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DavisWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William H. Davis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1918?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Radium Portrait Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Dawdy, Ellis</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DawdyE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ellis Dawdy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1893 and 1896?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Faber, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ellis Dawdy (?); the team roster lists Ellis
					 Dority as the quarterback for the team.</p><p>In 1889, Ellis Dority was the quarterback on the first
					 football team organized at the University of Washington and participated in the
					 first college football game played west of the Mississippi, competing against a
					 Yale-Harvard team consisting of men who had been stars on their respective
					 college teams. The team played one more game against Washington College of
					 Tacoma before disbanding.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Day, Anna M. Alley (September 3, 1850 - January 19,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Alley Day moved to the Pacific Northwest in the 1870s from
				  Maine and married Henry B. Day in 1873 in Walla Walla. They had large farming
				  and livestock interests in Pataha, Washington. Upon his retirement, they moved
				  to Dayton and later to Seattle. She and Henry had five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DayAMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anna Alley Day</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Maxwell Brothers, Walla Walla WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of Maxwell Brothers photograph. Written on verso: Anna M.
					 Day to the Pacific Coast 1874. Wife of Henry B. Day.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Day, Elizabeth Ellen Forrest (January 22, 1838 -
				  September 12, 1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Forrest came to Oregon in 1846 with her parents. She
				  married Jessie N. Day on May 20, 1855; they had five children and lived in
				  Dayton, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DayEEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Forrest Day</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Towne, Portland OR</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Written on verso: From Missouri
					 to Oregon 1846, wife of Jessie N. Day.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Day, Henry Ballard (November 12, 1830 - September 7,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Day was born in Virginia and moved to Wisconsin in 1846
				  with his brothers where they worked in the lead mines. In March 1850, he headed
				  to California along with his brothers, Nicholas, Jesse, and cousins Patterson
				  and George Day and Al Hill and John Ernest. They obtained their outfit at
				  Dubuque, Iowa, crossed the Missouri River at Iowa Point, about twenty miles
				  above St. Joseph, where they saw their first Indian lodges. They proceeded
				  through Forts Kearney and Laramie, crossed the Rockies, and then took the Fort
				  Hall route. A chance circumstance caused them to alter their plans to go to
				  California. While camped, they met a brother of Mr. Hill, who informed them
				  that their best plan would be to go to Oregon, remain there during the winter,
				  and then proceed to California in the spring. Hill informed them that they
				  would find plenty of feed and no difficulties on the Oregon route, and that
				  only one party was ahead of them, while the road to California was crowded with
				  emigrants, and cholera was prevalent the entire distance. After considering the
				  matter, the party turned toward Oregon. Henry helped settle Yamhill County,
				  Oregon, south of Portland. He continued in mining, but branched off into
				  raising livestock in Columbia County, Washington. He was elected in November
				  1890 to the first state legislature in Washington. He owned 1400 acres in
				  Columbia and Garfield Counties, and real estate in Puget Sound. He was married
				  to Anna Alley Day in 1873.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DayHB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Day</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers Studios, Olympia, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Written on verso: Came to Pacific
					 Coast in 1850. November 12, 1830-September 7, 1901. (The grave stone shows 1900
					 as the correct date.)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Day, Jessie Newberry (May 21, 1828 - April 20,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Jessie Day was born in Virginia and moved first to Wisconsin
				  and then to Oregon with his brothers Henry and Nicholas. He married Elizabeth
				  Ellen Forrest in 1855. After her death in 1888, he married Nellie Gillian in
				  1889. He was the founder of the city of Dayton and was a farmer and
				  businessman. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DayJN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jessie Day</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Towne, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Written on verso: May 21, 1828 -
					 April 20, 1893. 1850 Came to Pacific Coast. Founder of Dayton.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Day, John Harvey (April 20, 1816 - February 13,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harvey Day was born in Virginia and attended Emery and
				  Henry College, working and teaching school to pay for his board. In 1846, he
				  and his mother, sisters and brothers James, David, Henry and Nicholas, went to
				  Grant County, Wisconsin. From there, he became a school teacher in Mississippi,
				  visited Louisville, Kentucky and ended up in St. Paul, Minnesota with his
				  brothers James and David. He served a term in the Minnesota Territorial
				  Legislature, but didn't make much money as a doctor and in 1854, decided to try
				  his fortunes in Leavenworth, Kansas. In Leavenworth, he was able to purchase
				  land, and was soon offered $80,000 for the land. He refused to sell, instead
				  borrowing $10,000 and using his property as collateral. With the onset of the
				  Civil War and the subsequent decline in property values, that and the interest
				  on his loan left him with about $75 in assets. Leaving Kansas, he headed for
				  the Rocky Mountains, where he became an assayer in the Colorado territory and
				  Nevada. Eventually, he settled in Walla Walla where he opened a shop, pharmacy
				  and doctor's practice.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DayJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Harvey Day</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Abell &amp; Son, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Written on verso: Came to Pacific
					 Coast 1863.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Deady, Matthew Paul (May 12, 1824 –
				  March 24, 1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew Paul Deady was a politician and jurist in the Oregon
				  Territory and the state of Oregon of the United States. He served on the Oregon
				  Supreme Court from 1853 to 1859, at which time he was appointed to the newly
				  created federal court of the state. He remained on the United States District
				  Court for the District of Oregon in Portland, Oregon as the sole judge until
				  his death in 1893. While on the court he presided over the trial that led to
				  the United States Supreme Court decision of Pennoyer v. Neff concerning
				  personal jurisdiction. Prior to joining the court, Deady served in the
				  legislature of the Oregon Territory, including time served as the President of
				  the Council, and was elected as President of the Oregon Constitutional
				  Convention in 1857. A native of the state of Maryland, his first profession was
				  as a blacksmith; he also taught school in both Ohio and Oregon. Deady read law
				  in Ohio and practiced law for a time in that state before immigrating to the
				  Oregon Territory via the Oregon Trail. In Oregon, he helped codify the laws of
				  the state and assisted in the foundation of the Multnomah County Library in
				  Portland. He also was president of the University of Oregon's Board of Regents.
				  The university renamed Deady Hall in his honor after his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeadyMP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Matthew Paul Deady</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dean, Benjamin Franklin (April 8, 1840
				  - February 2, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Dean was born in Greenville, Ohio. When he was
				  10 years old, his family moved from Ohio to Kansas by wagon train. On the way,
				  they met a family named Armstrong; Dean would marry the Armstrong daughter,
				  Nancy Mariah. On April 8, 1861, he enlisted in Company A, Fifth Kansas Cavalry,
				  also known as the "Jayhawkers." He served as a recruiting officer and scouted
				  with 'Buffalo' Bill Cody. He received a disability discharge on October 4,
				  1863. He moved to the Western plains and for a time drove ox and mule teams
				  carrying supplies to army posts in the West. In 1866, he returned to Kansas,
				  where he married Nancy Mariah Armstrong. They moved to Los Angeles, California
				  in 1873. Three years later, they traveled to Puget Sound on the lumber bark 
				  <emph render="italic"> Oregon</emph>, landing in Seabeck in September 1876.
				  They made their way to Freeport (now West Seattle), where Dean worked in a
				  sawmill. In 1877 the family established a homestead on Cannery Point near
				  Sequim Bay, in Clallam County. Dean bought a clam cannery and moved it, the
				  post office, and a store to Cannery Spit. Two years later he bought 160 acres
				  at the head of Sequim Bay where he moved the store and post office. He also
				  opened a post office at a new store in Blyn and served as postmaster from 1890
				  until 1896. Dean Creek, southeast of Blyn, is named for him. By 1902, the
				  family had moved back to Seattle, where he worked in real estate business until
				  1919. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeanBF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Benjamin Franklin Dean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Dean, Nancy Mariah Armstrong (March 19, 1850 - October
				  31, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Mariah Armstrong was born in Williamsport, Indiana. She
				  married Benjamin Franklin Dean in 1866; the couple had seven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeanNMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nancy Mariah Armstrong
					 Dean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>de Bodisco, Waldemar (1825- July 31, 1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Waldemar de Bodisco came to the United States at an early age
				  with his uncle, Baron Alexander deBodisco, the Russian minister in Washington,
				  and graduated at Georgetown College. For nearly twenty years, he was secretary
				  of the Russian legation at Washington, in 1866 and 1869 acted as charge
				  d'affaires, and was appointed Russian consul-general at New York in 1871,
				  holding that office at the time of his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Debs, Eugene Victor (November 5, 1855 –
				  October 20, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eugene V. Debs was an American union leader, one of the founding
				  members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or the Wobblies), and five
				  times the candidate of the Socialist Party of America for President of the
				  United States. Through his presidential candidacies, as well as his work with
				  labor movements, Debs eventually became one of the best-known socialists living
				  in the United States. Early in his political career, Debs was a member of the
				  Democratic Party. He was elected as a Democrat to the Indiana General Assembly
				  in 1884. After working with several smaller unions, including the Brotherhood
				  of Locomotive Firemen, Debs was instrumental in the founding of the American
				  Railway Union (ARU), one of the nation's first industrial unions. He called a
				  boycott of the ARU against handling trains with Pullman cars, in what became
				  the nationwide Pullman Strike. To keep the mail running, President Grover
				  Cleveland used the United States Army to break the strike. As a leader of the
				  ARU, Debs was convicted of federal charges for defying a court injunction
				  against the strike and served six months in prison. In prison, Debs read the
				  works of Karl Kautsky and learned about socialism. Upon his release, he
				  launched his career as the nation's most prominent Socialist in the first
				  decades of the 20th century. He ran as the Socialist Party's candidate for the
				  presidency in 1900, 1904, 1908, 1912 and 1920, the last time from a prison
				  cell. Debs was noted for his oratory, and his speech denouncing American
				  participation in World War I led to his second arrest in 1918. He was convicted
				  under the Espionage Act of 1917 and sentenced to a term of 10 years. President
				  Warren G. Harding commuted his sentence in December 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Eugene V. Debs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Monfort, Chicago</persname></origination></did><note><p>This is a copy of the original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV2</container><unittitle>Eugene V. Debs speaking to a crowd in front of the
					 Socialist Presidential Special train in Centralia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1908</unitdate></did><note><p>The crowd includes Reinhold Hilpert who is holding his son,
					 Hamlet, and his wife, Lilla Harrison Hilpert.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV3</container><unittitle>Eugene V. Debs sitting in chair near a tree, in a
					 suburb of Chicago</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">De Cosmos, Amor ( August 20, 1825 -
				  July 4, 1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amor De Cosmos was a Canadian journalist, publisher and
				  politician who served as the second Premier of British Columbia who played a
				  major role in bringing British Columbia into Confederation. He promoted union
				  with Canada through his newspaper and, as a founding member of the
				  Confederation League, helped organize the Yale Conference that formalized the
				  demands for union. He was born in Nova Scotia and changed his name from William
				  Alexander Smith to Amor De Cosmos (Lover of the Universe) in 1854. He settled
				  on Vancouver Island in 1858 and founded a newspaper, <emph render="italic">The
				  British Colonist.</emph> De Cosmos served as a member of the legislative
				  assembly of Vancouver Island from 1863 to 1866 and was appointed to British
				  Columbia's legislative council in 1867. For a time he held seats in both the
				  provincial and federal legislatures. He served as the premier of British
				  Columbia, Canada from December 23, 1872 until February 11, 1874 and also
				  serving as a Liberal member of the Canadian House of Commons. His government
				  supported the implementation of free, non-sectarian public schooling, extended
				  the rights of married women and introduced the secret ballot. De Cosmos lost
				  the 1882 federal election and retired to Victoria. Although widely regarded as
				  a stirring orator, effective debater, and a man of great intellectual depth, De
				  Cosmos had always been considered eccentric, and he had unusual phobias,
				  including a fear of electricity. As he grew older, his eccentricities
				  intensified, he became increasingly incoherent, and by 1895 he was declared
				  insane. One of his more notable eccentricities was the founding of a hot food
				  delivery company to prospectors in the Klondike Gold Fields. The difficult
				  logistics of this service scared away investors and ultimately provided its
				  downfall. He died in Victoria at the age of 71.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeCosmosA1</container><unittitle>Amor De Cosmos</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1874</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dederer, Michael (October 20, 1905 -
				  June 24, 1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Dederer was born in Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada. His
				  family later settled in Great Falls, Montana where Dederer learned the fur
				  business. He worked briefly in a tannery and joined the Seattle Fur Exchange in
				  1923 as a janitor. He worked his way up in the organization; he was named
				  treasurer and general manager in 1936, and became president in 1939. He devoted
				  his life to the Seattle Fur Exchange, building it into one of the foremost fur
				  auctions in the country and an international presence in the industry. He
				  served as president of the Board of Regents of Washington State University
				  (WSU) and Pacific Lutheran University (PLU) and headed the WSU Foundation. He
				  volunteered for and chaired the Century 21 Corporation, which organized and ran
				  the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair; served at various times as president of the
				  Seattle Chamber of Commerce, Community Chest and United Good Neighbor Fund (now
				  United Way), YMCA, Rotary Club of Seattle, Seattle Foundation, Seattle
				  Goodwill, and the Rainier Club. He also served on the boards of the Seattle
				  Repertory Theatre, Pacific Science Center Foundation, Washington Children’s
				  Home Society, Boy Scouts of America, and World Affairs Council. He was
				  president of the Seattle-King County Historical Society and a member of its
				  board for 20 years. His honors include the National Conference of Christians
				  and Jews Brotherhood Award, and he was named the Seattle-King County
				  Association of Realtors “Citizen of the Year” in 1960. The Dederer Family
				  Conference Center at the YMCA’s Camp Orkila on Orcas Island is named in his
				  honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DedererM1</container><unittitle>Michael Dederer at a banquet in the Grand Ballroom of
					 the Olympic Hotel where he was honored as Seattle's First Citizen for 1960. He
					 is holding a hand-carved wooden bowl made by J. W. Wheeler, pioneer
					 realtor.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 24, 1961</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Deggeller, Martin Ney (December 8, 1894 - November 8,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Ney Deggeller was born in Chehalis, Washington. He
				  graduated from the University of Washington in 1916 with a degree in civil
				  engineering and was a member of Sigma Xi, the national scientific fraternity.
				  He married Marjorie McLean in 1917; she died the following year. He
				  subsequently married Jessie Mae Richey in 1919 and Ida Jennie Prato in 1940. He
				  served in the Army in France during World War I and was president of Harbor
				  Plywood in Aberdeen, Washington. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard W. Peterson with Sadie Michael, Martin
					 Deggeller, Marjorie Bloyd and Frank Michael</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under H. W. "Pete" Peterson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Dehn, William Maurice (June 24, 1872 - May 21,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Maurice Dehn was a professor of chemistry at the
				  University of Washington starting in 1907. Dehn was noted for his research work
				  and experiments, particularly in explosives. He held several patents, one for
				  an inexpensive land-clearing explosive of sawdust and ammonium nitrate which he
				  assigned to the Washington State Grange for marketing. Born in Michigan, he
				  received his bachelor and master’s degrees from Hope College in Holland,
				  Michigan. He was a professor of science at Wilton College, Iowa, from 1894 to
				  1897 and a science instructor and football coach at Culver Military Academy in
				  1897 and 1898. He was an instructor in chemistry at the University of Illinois
				  from 1900 until 1907, during which time he earned his doctorate. It was the
				  first doctorate in chemistry conferred by the university. In 1907, Dehn came to
				  the University of Washington as an assistant professor of physiological
				  chemistry. In 1919 he became professor of organic chemistry at the UW. He
				  retired from active teaching in 1947. He was a charter member of Alpha Chapter
				  of Phi Lambda Upsilon, chemistry honorary, and was one of the founders of the
				  Faculty Research Club at the University. He coached the UW baseball team in
				  1908 and served a member of the faculty athletic committee.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">DeLacombe, Isabella Anne Harris (May
				  31, 1834 - September 21, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isabella Anne Harris, the daughter of Quarles and Anne Harris,
				  married William Addis Delacombe in 1858. William Delacombe served as commandant
				  of the English Camp in the San Juan Islands from 1867 to 1872.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeLacombeIAH1</container><unittitle>Isabella Anne Harris DeLacombe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Delaney, Matilda Jane Sager (October 6,
				  1839 - April 13, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matilda Jane Sager was the daughter of Henry and Naomi Sager. In
				  April 1844 Henry and his family took part in the great westward migration and
				  started their journey along the Oregon Trail. During their journey, both he and
				  Naomi died. Their seven children were adopted by Marcus and Narcissa Whitman,
				  missionaries in what is now Washington. Matilda and her sisters were orphaned a
				  second time, when both their new parents and their two brothers were killed
				  during the Whitman massacre in November 1847. The girls were split up and grew
				  up with different families. All of them married young. Matilda married three
				  times; all of her husbands predeceased her. She had eight children and spent
				  her later life with a daughter in California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DelaneyMJS1</container><unittitle>Matilda Jane Sager Delaney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 7, 1916</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">De Lashmutt, Van B. (July 27, 1842 –
				  October 4, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Van B. De Lashmutt was born in Burlington, Iowa. His family
				  journeyed over the Oregon Trail in 1852 and settled in Polk County, Oregon. He
				  worked as a printer in Salem, Oregon for Asahel Bush before moving to
				  California. At the start of the American Civil War, he joined the Union Army in
				  1861, serving in the Third California regiment guarding the mail routes. After
				  the war, he returned to Oregon and settled in Portland where he joined 
				  <emph render="italic">The Oregonian</emph> newspaper as a compositor. He
				  established the Witch Hazel Farm near Hillsboro, OR, which became the community
				  of Witch Hazel. He helped start the Oregon National Bank and the Metropolitan
				  Savings Bank and served as president of both banks. On May 2, 1888, he was
				  appointed as mayor of Portland after the death of Mayor John Gates. He was then
				  elected to the position on June 18, 1888, and served until June 15, 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeLashmuttVB1</container><unittitle>Van B. De Lashmutt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">DeMattos, James Patterson (February 20,
				  1854 - January 13, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Antonio DeMattos, originally from Madeira Island, settled in
				  Jacksonville, IL and organized the Portuguese Presbyterian Church there in
				  1849. His eldest son, James was the first Portuguese student at Illinois
				  College. He attended Columbian College Law School in Washington D.C., receiving
				  his L.L.D. in 1872. He worked as a clerk for the Department of Treasury from
				  1873 until 1875. In 1875, he moved to Colorado and practiced law in Leadville,
				  Colorado before moving to the state of Washington. He eventually became the
				  first mayor of Whatcom, which later became New Whatcom and then Bellingham,
				  Washington. He was mayor for seven different terms, not all sequentially, was
				  also a circuit judge and started an abstracting business which he owned from
				  1884 until 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeMattosJP1</container><unittitle>James DeMattos</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grosart Photo, Bellingham WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeMattosJP2</container><unittitle>James DeMattos</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grosart Studio, Bellingham WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Demers, Bishop Modeste (October 11,
				  1809 - July 28, 1871)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Modeste Demers was a Roman Catholic Bishop and missionary in the
				  Pacific Northwest. A native of Quebec, he traveled overland to the Pacific
				  Northwest and preached in the Willamette Valley and later in what would become
				  British Columbia. He was born in Saint-Nicolas, Quebec, and studied at the
				  seminary of Quebec. After becoming a priest in 1836, he left the following year
				  to be a missionary at the Red River Colony before traveling to the Oregon
				  Country with François Norbert Blanchet. In 1838, they arrived in the Willamette
				  Valley of what would become the state of Oregon. Demers quickly became immersed
				  in the work with the local trading post staff and the Chinookan nation. He
				  learned the language and worked on a dictionary, a catechism, a prayer book,
				  and hymns in that language. In 1844, he became the first priest at Oregon City.
				  His work carried him north to present day British Columbia where his knowledge
				  of French and English languages, and his affinity for native languages allowed
				  him to continue his mission. In 1847, he was consecrated bishop of Vancouver
				  Island and also held responsibility for the Queen Charlotte Islands and New
				  Caledonia (Canada). During the period from 1866 until 1869, he travelled in
				  South America, the United States and France, in search of priests and money. He
				  was present at the Vatican Council in 1870 and returned to Victoria where he
				  died in 1871. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DemersM1</container><unittitle>Bishop Modeste Demers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">De Mille, Agnes George (September 18,
				  1905-October 7, 1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Agnes de Mille, an American dancer and choreographer, was born
				  in New York City into a well-connected family of theater professionals. Her
				  father, William C. DeMille, and her uncle, Cecil B. DeMille, were both
				  Hollywood directors; her mother, Anna Angela George, was the daughter of Henry
				  George, the economist. De Mille graduated from UCLA with a degree in English.
				  After graduation, she moved to London to study ballet. She began her
				  association with the fledgling American Ballet Theater in 1939; however, her
				  first significant work, Rodeo, with a score by Aaron Copland, was staged for
				  the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. She choreographed Oklahoma! And over a dozen
				  other musicals. She revolutionized musical theatre by creating choreography
				  which not only conveyed the emotional dimensions of the characters but enhanced
				  the plot. She became an outspoken advocate for dance in America. Agnes de Mille
				  was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame in 1973. Her many other
				  awards include a Tony Award, the 1976 Handel Medallion for achievement in the
				  arts, an honor from the Kennedy Center (1980), an Emmy, and the National Medal
				  of Arts.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeMilleAG1</container><unittitle>Agnes de Mille</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Deming, Horace Grove (February 25, 1885
				  - July 4, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Deming received his B. S. degree in chemical engineering
				  at the University of Washington in 1907 and in 1911 was awarded a Ph. D. degree
				  at the University of Wisconsin. He was an author of chemistry textbooks, an
				  educator and a research chemist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Demmery, Joseph (October 4, 1893 - May
				  28, 1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Demmery was born in Bristol, England and graduated from
				  the University of Chicago . He was secretary of the Portland Securities Company
				  and taught for two years at Washington State College (now Washington State
				  University) before joining the faculty of the UW in 1929. He taught at the UW
				  until 1964 and was head of the Department of General Business Administration
				  when he retired. He was president of the state chapter of the American
				  Institute of Real Estate Appraisers in 1949.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DemmeryJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Joseph Demmery in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 5, 1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Two copies of the same photograph, one cropped.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DemmeryJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Joseph Demmery in his
					 office, wearing pin-stripe suit and dark tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1951?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DemmeryJ3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Professor Joseph Demmery in his
					 office, wearing dark suit and light tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1952</unitdate></did><note><p>Date written on photo is also November 5, 1951; however, he is
					 wearing a different suit than in the previous photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Denikin, Anton Ivanovich (December16, 1872 - August 8,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anton Ivanovich Denikin was a Lieutenant General in the Imperial
				  Russian Army (1916) and afterwards a leading general of the White movement in
				  the Russian Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DenikinAI1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Anton Ivanovich Denikin at the grave
					 of General Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denman, Asahel Holmes (November 29,
				  1859- December 26, 1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asahel Holmes Denman was born in New York, studied law and came
				  to Tacoma, Washington to practice in 1890. He loved photography and
				  mountaineering and helped form the Tacoma Mountaineers group in 1912. He
				  documented Mt. Rainier and was involved in the campaign to restore the name of
				  the mountain to Mt. Tacoma. He wrote <emph render="italic">The Name of the Mt.
				  Tacoma</emph> in 1924 and in collaboration with his friend and fellow
				  photographer, Albert Barnes, he published <emph render="italic">Our Greatest
				  Mountain and Alpine Regions of Wonder</emph> . Ben Longmire named Denman Falls
				  in honor of his work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DenmanAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Holmes Denman at Denman Falls,
					 Mt. Rainier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Brewster Castberg (September 5,
				  1924 -June 22, 2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Brewster C. Denny was the great-grandson of Arthur and Mary
				  Denny, founders of Seattle and the University of Washington. He received a
				  bachelor’s degree from the UW in 1945, and earned a master’s (1948) and
				  doctorate (1959) from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Harvard and
				  Tufts Universities. Denny’s public service included Naval service in World War
				  II and the Korean War; supervisory intelligence research analysis in the
				  Department of Defense (1952 to 1960); U.S. representative to the General
				  Assembly of the United Nations (1968); and representative of the U.S. National
				  Academy of Sciences. He founded what is now the Daniel J. Evans School of
				  Public Affairs at the University of Washington, one of the first independent
				  public schools of public administration in the country. He served first as
				  director and later as dean, a position he held until 1980. He continued to
				  teach diplomatic history and American foreign policy at the school until 2004;
				  he was named professor and dean emeritus in 1992. Among his numerous honors, he
				  received the Distinguished Citizen Award of the National Municipal League, the
				  Outstanding Public Service Award of the University of Washington Alumni
				  Association, the Distinguished Service Award of the Seattle Federal Executive
				  Board and the Outstanding Advocate for Children award from the Children’s
				  Alliance.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyBC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Brewster C. Denny speaking at the
					 United Nations</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968</unitdate></did><note><p>He served as the U.S. representative to the 23rd General
					 Assembly in the United Nations. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Grace Goldena (December 7, 1883
				  - March 29, 1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grace Goldena Denny, the daughter of Nathan and Clara Denny, was
				  born in Nebraska and came to Seattle with her family at an early age. She
				  taught in the UW Home Economics Department for over 37 years, retiring in 1950.
				  She was an expert on textiles and wrote several books on the subject, including
				  <emph>Fabrics and how to know them.</emph> Her papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyGG1</container><unittitle>Grace Goldena Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1913</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Townsend, Lincoln, Nebraska</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyGG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Grace Goldena Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948 or 1949</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Mulholland Studios, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Henry Levi (September 13, 1838 -
				  October 23, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Levi Denny, the son of Samuel and Lucy Dow Denny, was born
				  in New Providence, Indiana. He served in the Civil War and came to Seattle in
				  1869. He worked in Yesler's Mill and invested in real estate in the then remote
				  area of Green Lake.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyHL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry L. Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Denny, Horton Herschel (November 4, 1888 - October 13,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horton Herschel Denny was the son of Charles Latimer Denny and
				  the grandson of Arthur Denny and Mary Ann Boren Denny, Seattle pioneers. He was
				  an architect who practiced in California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Horton Herschel Denny standing on the
					 porch of his father's house at Third Avenue and University Street in
					 Seattle.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, John William (September 3, 1844
				  - March 2, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John William Denny, the son of Samuel and Lucy Dow Denny, was
				  born in New Providence, Indiana. He married Mary Rumsey McCorkle in 1866, and
				  they moved to Oregon the same year. After three years, they moved to Seattle,
				  where they purchased land north of Green Lake near First Avenue NE and 91st
				  Street. He worked as a carpenter and a farmer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John William Denny portrait with Mary
					 R. Denny, both wearing "Pioneer of Washington" badges</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Christy Studio, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Mary Rumsey McCorkle (December
				  5, 1845 - March 14, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Rumsey McCorkle was born in Iowa and married John William
				  Denny in 1866. They moved to Oregon the same year and lived there for three
				  years before moving to Seattle in 1969.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John William Denny portrait with Mary
					 R. Denny, both wearing "Pioneer of Washington" badges</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Christy Studio, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under John William Denny subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Merle Wilson (February 1, 1891 -
				  July 5, 1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Merle Wilson Denny was the son of Arthur Wilson Denny and
				  Catherine Orr Denny and the grandson of Arthur Denny and Mary Boren Denny who
				  were part of the original group who landed at Alki Point in 1851. He attended
				  Princeton and was an Army veteran of World War I; he was awarded the Purple
				  Heart.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E. W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard. </p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Gertrude Jane Hall White (May
				  15, 1837 - August 5, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Jane Hall was born in Ten Mile Run, New Jersey. In 1847
				  the family came overland to Oregon. They stopped at the Whitman Mission; during
				  the massacre, her father, Peter Hall, was among those killed. The women and
				  young children survived and were eventually rescued. Her mother moved to Oregon
				  and took up a donation land claim across the river from Butteville. In 1858,
				  she married Captain Leonard, a river steamboat captain, whom she divorced in
				  1867, She married Judge Owen Nickerson Denny in 1868. Judge Denny served
				  Multnomah County in the Oregon State Senate, was U. S. minister to Korea,
				  served as the advisor to the Korean King and was later appointed consul-general
				  at Shanghai, where he served four years before resigning and returning home to
				  Oregon. He also introduced the ring-neck pheasants to Oregon and Washington.
				  When she died, she was the last survivor of the Whitman Massacre.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyGJHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gertrude Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Denny, Viretta Chambers (December 31,
				  1862 - August 9, 1951) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Viretta Chambers was one of the nine daughters of Andrew Jackson
				  Chambers (1825-1908), who is said to have been a relative of president Andrew
				  Jackson. She grew up on Chambers Prairie, 700 acres of land owned by her father
				  near Olympia, Washington. She attended the Washington Territorial University
				  during the 1879-1880 school year, taking classes in the commercial course, but
				  did not complete her degree. She married Charles L. Denny on June 15, 1887 in
				  Olympia. She and her husband were founding members of the first Seattle Camera
				  Club which formed in 1895, as well as the Seattle Amateur Photographic Club in
				  1901. In addition to being a photographer, she was also a painter and a
				  historian for the Seattle Historical Society (now the Museum of History and
				  Industry). The Dennys had two children: Andrew Chambers Denny (1893-1973) and
				  Horton Hershel Denny (1888-1925). Andrew was named for Viretta's father, while
				  Horton is the surname of a family closely connected with the Dennys; Dexter
				  Horton, who partnered with Charles' father, Arthur Denny (1822-1899), in
				  1854.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DennyVC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Viretta Chambers
					 Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899? </unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.DennyVC1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Densmore, Harvey Bruce (September 10, 1881 - January 22,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harvey Bruce Densmore taught classics at the University of
				  Washington from 1907 until his retirement in 1952. Born in Stanton, Nebraska,
				  he graduated from the University of Oregon in 1903 and was a Rhodes scholar at
				  Oxford from 1904 until 1907. He first joined the UW as an instructor in Greek,
				  and in 1937 became a professor and executive officer of Classical Languages and
				  chair of General Studies. From 1948 until 1950, he was professor and executive
				  officer of Classical Languages. After retirement, he was a consultant in Greek
				  literature and philosophy. Densmore was a member of the American Philological
				  Association and the Classical Association of the Pacific Coast.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Densmore, Rosamond S. Merwin (July 22,
				  1848 - April 25, 1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rosamond S. Densmore, the daughter of John Thomas Merwin, was
				  born in Belvidere, Illinois and grew up in Wisconsin. She married Milton
				  Densmore in 1869; they moved to Seattle in 1871. Milton Densmore was the
				  captain of the <emph render="italic">Linna C. Gray</emph> which carried the
				  first coal for Seattle across Lake Union. He helped lay the rails for the first
				  railroad in Seattle, to carry coal from Lake Union along what is now Westlake
				  Avenue. Densmore Avenue is named for him. Rosamond was one of the first women
				  to serve as a juror; she was on the territorial jury panel in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DensmoreRSM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rosamond S. Densmore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Densow, Bert Blaine (October 9, 1905-
				  June 12, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bert Blaine Densow was born in Irby, Lincoln County, Washington
				  and graduated from Washington State College (now WSU) School of Pharmacy in
				  1926. He owned several drug stores in eastern Washington and in Idaho. Densow
				  was president of the Washington State Pharmaceutical Association in 1949 and
				  was secretary of the State Board of Pharmacists from 1948 until 1952. He was
				  also president of the Spokane Chamber of Commerce.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DensowBB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Bert Blaine Densow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wilson Mantor, Spokane WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto ">Denton, Fremont Quincy (March 31, 1889
				  - November 30, 1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fremont Quincy Denton was the first non-Native American child
				  born in the Fremont district of Seattle; he was named after the district. He
				  worked in the meat business for over fifty years, starting as a delivery boy
				  for William H. Murphy, who operated the only meat shop in Fremont. He was
				  elected as the honorary mayor of Fremont at the annual dinner of the Fremont
				  Old Timers Club in March 1948.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DentonFQ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fremont Quincy Denton wearing silk
					 top hat and the seal of office as honorary mayor of Fremont,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1948</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto ">Denton, Hannah May (June 24, 1849 -
				  February 26, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hannah Peebles, the daughter of Hugh Peebles and Elizabeth
				  Bradford Peebles, arrived in Seattle in the 1860s. She married Burrell Arthur
				  Denton and was active in the Women's Century Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DentonHM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hannah Denton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>DeRoin Hurley Eugene "Firpo" (April 28, 1908 - August
				  26, 1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hurley Eugene DeRoin was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He played
				  football for the University of Washington in 1932 and 1933 and was a star in
				  wrestling and track. During the October 28, 1933 game against Stanford, the
				  same eleven men, including DeRoin, played the entire game, earning the title of
				  “The Iron Men.” He was a history teacher and coach at Highline High School and
				  married Honey Mabel Matthews in 1937. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeRoinHE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hurley Eugene DeRoin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Me - self- standing along side of the state
					 car. Gas - oil- car furnished by state. Tough life. Packwood, Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">DeShaw, Enna Marie (Qui-Alk) (January
				  7, 1863 - March 11, 1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Enna Marie (Qui-Alk) DeShaw was the great grand-daughter of
				  Chief Seattle and the granddaughter of Princess Angeline Sealth. She married
				  Seth McPhee in 1880; they had two children. In 1885, after McPhee's death, she
				  married Charles James Thompson; they had three children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeShawEM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Enna Marie (Qui-Alk)
					 DeShaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>De Smet, Reverend Pierre Jean (January 30, 1801 - May
				  23, 1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Father Pierre-Jean De Smet (also known as Pierre De Smet and
				  Peter De Smet), was a Belgian Roman Catholic priest and member of the Society
				  of Jesus (Jesuits), active in missionary work among the Native Americans of the
				  Midwestern United States in the mid-19th century. He traveled extensively as a
				  missionary. In 1838, he helped to establish St. Joseph's Mission in what is now
				  Council Bluffs, Iowa. He also assisted and supported Joseph Nicollet’s efforts
				  at mapping the Upper Midwest, using newly acquired mapping skills to produce
				  the first detailed map of the Missouri River valley system, from below the
				  Platte River to the Big Sioux River. One of De Smet's longest explorations
				  began in August 1845, starting from Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho and crossing into
				  the Kootenay River Valley. From there he followed the valley, eventually
				  crossing over to the source of the Columbia River. In his remaining years, he
				  was active in work regarding the missions he helped establish and fund. His
				  papers, with accounts of his travels and missionary work with Native Americans,
				  are held at two separate locations: the Jesuit Archives - De Smetiana series in
				  Saint Louis, Missouri, and the Pierre Jean De Smet Papers at the Washington
				  State University Archives in Pullman, Washington. Several places are named
				  after De Smet, including De Smet, Idaho and De Smet, Montana.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeSmetPJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Father De
					 Smet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1838?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeSmetPJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Father De Smet </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">De Spain, Jeremiah (December 21, 1833-
				  March 11, 1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jeremiah De Spain, one of the pioneers of Union and Umatilla
				  counties in Oregon, was born in Kentucky and crossed the plains to Oregon in
				  1852. He married Nancy Eugenia Howard in 1866, and the couple moved to a sheep
				  ranch near the stage station of Pendleton, Oregon. In 1872, they moved to the
				  town, where he began to erect buildings. The De Spain block in Pendleton was
				  planned by him but erected after his death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeSpainJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Residence of Nancy E. De Spain in
					 Pendleton and an insert portrait of Jeremiah De Spain</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph from a book</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>De Spain, Nancy Eugenia (June 5, 1850 - March 5,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Eugenia Howard, the daughter of the Reverend William H.
				  Howard, was born in Illinois and came with her family to Oregon at an early
				  age. She married Jeremiah De Spain in 1866.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeSpainJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Residence of Nancy E. De Spain in
					 Pendleton and an insert portrait of Jeremiah De Spain</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph from a book</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Jeremiah De Spain subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>de Stoeckl, Eduard Guillaume Andreevich (1804- January
				  26, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eduard Guillaume Andreevich Stoeckl was a Russian diplomat best
				  known today for having negotiated the American purchase of Alaska on behalf of
				  the Russian government. He was born in 1804 in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire,
				  where his father, Andreas von Stoeckl, was serving as an Austrian diplomat.
				  From 1844 to 1854, he served as secretary of the Russian Legation at Washington
				  and, from 1849 to 1851, chargé d'affaires of the Russian embassy in Washington,
				  and in 1854 held the post of minister, vacant after death of Aleksandr Bodisko.
				  Stoeckl advocated the sale of Alaska (then known as Russian America) to the
				  United States, asserting that this would prevent the United Kingdom from
				  seizing the territory in case of war between the two countries and would allow
				  Russia to concentrate its resources on Eastern Siberia, particularly the Amur
				  River area. He also insisted that by doing so, Russia would avoid any future
				  conflict with the United States, viewing further U.S. expansion in North
				  America as inevitable. Stoeckl signed the Alaska Treaty in March 1867. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Deutsch, Herman Julius Karl (May 29,
				  1897 - November 12, 1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herman Deutsch received his PhD in History from the University
				  of Wisconsin in 1926. He taught at the University of Montana before coming to
				  Washington State University, where he served as a Professor of History from
				  1926 to 1962. After retiring, he taught at the University of Washington and
				  also traveled to Vienna, Austria as a Fulbright lecturer. Deutsch was
				  well-known for his expertise in Pacific Northwest history, and published
				  extensively in this area. He was an active participant in community, state, and
				  professional affairs, serving on many committees, boards, and commissions. He
				  was involved with the Washington State Historical Society, and served on the
				  editorial board of the <emph>Pacific Northwest Quarterly. </emph>He received
				  formal honors for his scholarly contributions, including an Award of Merit from
				  the American Association for State and Local History in 1978, and a Robert Gray
				  Medal for distinguished contributions to Washington State history. Return to
				  Top »His papers are held in WSU Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeutschHJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Herman Deutsch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Devin, William Franklin (March 28, 1898
				  - February 2, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Franklin Devin served four terms as mayor of Seattle,
				  Washington from June 1942 until June 1952. A graduate of the University of
				  Washington School of Law, he was a member of the American, Washington State and
				  Seattle-King County Bar Associations. In addition to serving as mayor, he also
				  served as a justice of the peace and a police court judge. A veteran of the
				  First World War, he was among the first American troops to land in Italy. He
				  served as chairman of the Seattle-Kobe Sister City Committee following the
				  Second World War and was a key figure in establishing post-war relations with
				  Japan. In 1944, he formed the Seattle Civic Unity Committee in response to
				  rising racial tension in the city to try to dampen this tension and reduce the
				  possibility of racial violence. After World War II, the Committee centered its
				  attention on housing and educational opportunities for minorities and worked
				  with local civil rights organizations.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DevinWF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Franklin Devin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">DeVore, Reverend John F. (December 7,
				  1817 - July 28, 1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> John F. DeVore was born in Kentucky and became a Methodist
				  minister in 1842. In 1853, he was transferred to the Oregon Conference, where
				  he established the first church on Puget Sound at Steilacoom, Washington
				  Territory. He served throughout Washington Territory and Oregon, establishing
				  churches and schools. Inn 1856, he started the Puget Sound Institute in
				  Olympia, W. T.; it merged with the University of Puget Sound in 1888. DeVore
				  served as an educational agent of the university in his later years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DeVoreJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John F. DeVore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dewey, Admiral George (December 26,
				  1837 – January 16, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Dewey was Admiral of the Navy, the only person in U.S.
				  history to have attained the rank. He is best known for his victory at the
				  Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McKinleyW1</container><unittitle> President William McKinley with Admiral Dewey on the
					 reviewing stand of the U. S. Capitol Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1899</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William McKinley subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dickinson, Anna Elizabeth (October 28,
				  1842 – October 22, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Anna Elizabeth Dickinson was an American orator and lecturer.
				  An advocate for the abolition of slavery and for women's suffrage, as well as a
				  gifted teacher, she was the first woman to speak before the United States
				  Congress, earning a standing ovation in 1864 for an impassioned speech on the
				  floor of the United States House of Representatives. During the 1863 elections,
				  Dickinson campaigned for several Republican candidates in New York,
				  Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, and Connecticut, speaking eloquently and
				  powerfully in support of the Republicans' anti-slavery platform and for the
				  preservation of the Union. After the Civil War, she remained one of the
				  nation's most celebrated lyceum speakers for nearly a decade, lecturing on the
				  rights of African Americans and women, Reconstruction and temperance. In 1873,
				  she became the first woman on record to climb Colorado’s Longs Peak.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DickinsonAE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Anna Elizabeth Dickinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">George Edward Perine, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Loaned from the Henry E. Huntington Gallery.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Dicks, Norman D. (December 16, 1940-
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norman Dicks was born in Bremerton, Washington. He attended the
				  UW, receiving a B. A. in political science in 1963 and a J.D. in 1968. He was
				  admitted to the Washington bar in 1968. He joined the staff of Senator Warren
				  G. Magnuson that same year as a legislative and appropriations assistant and
				  served as an administrative assistant to the Senator from 1973 until 1976. He
				  was elected to the Congress in 1976 as the Democratic representative for
				  Washington's 6th District and served until his retirement in 2012. He served on
				  the House Appropriations Committee and subcommittees on Defense, the Interior
				  and Military Construction. He also served for eight years on the House
				  Intelligence Committee.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DicksND1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Norm Dicks near the train station in
					 Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DicksND2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Norm Dicks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dietz, George Henry (December 6, 1902 -
				  September 4, 1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Henry Dietz was born in Oso, Washington and attended the
				  University of Washington. He was a colonel in the Air Force and served as
				  commander of the ROTC on the UW campus during the 1950s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DietzGH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George H. Dietz in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 10, 1952</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph made for the <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Diggles, James Arthur (August 10, 1872 - May 14, 1910)
				  -see Herbert Hoover collection</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>James Arthur Diggles was born in Fort Jones, Colorado and
				  graduated from Stanford University as a mining engineer in 1895. The same year,
				  he was employed as a millman by Utica Mining Company in Angels Camp,
				  California. He then became superintendent at American Development and Mining
				  Company in Idaho. In 1900, he became superintendent of the Mountaineer Mining
				  Company of Nevada City, California before returning to Utica Mining. In 1903,
				  he went to Australia where he worked as a superintendent in several mines. He
				  died near Adelaide following an attack of typhoid fever. </p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dille, James Madison (June 9, 1907 -
				  August 8, 1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Madison Dille was a University of Washington Pharmacy
				  faculty member and later chair of the department. In 1967, he was given an
				  award for distinguished service to pharmacology. He also designed, printed and
				  published books as a hobby using a platen press. Dille was a member of the
				  American Amateur Press Association and the National Amateur Press
				  Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DilleJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Madison Dille</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ritz Studio, Washington, D.C</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dilling, George W. (January 25, 1869 -
				  September 14, 1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Dilling was an American businessman and politician who
				  served as mayor of Seattle, Washington, from 1911 to 1912 and was also elected
				  to the Washington State Legislature. Dilling was born on his parents' farm near
				  Urbana, Illinois in 1869, leaving at the age of 14 to manage his own 100-acre
				  farm. He arrived in Seattle in 1898 to handle the estate of his uncle, John H.
				  Nagle. Dilling's real estate investments in Seattle and prospered during the
				  Klondike Gold Rush, making him among the wealthiest men in the city. Dilling
				  entered politics in 1902 when he was elected to the Washington House of
				  Representatives as a member of the Republican Party. He ran for mayor in 1910
				  as a Progressive reformer, but was defeated in the primary by Hiram C. Gill and
				  William Hickman Moore. Gill went on to be elected mayor, but was recalled in a
				  special election on February 7, 1911. In 1910, Washington had established
				  voting rights for women, which changed the political atmosphere in Seattle.
				  Vice was a significant issue to the new female voters, and Dilling ran on the
				  slogan “Dilling and Decency.” His supporters even established a campaign
				  headquarters for women. Dilling was elected by a large margin, carried by the
				  first female electorate in the city's history and the support of the Public
				  Welfare League. He began sweeping reforms to undo many of Gill's controversial
				  decisions. Dilling served out the rest of Gill's term and declined to run for
				  re-election in March 1912, endorsing George F. Cotterill. After his tenure as
				  mayor, Dilling moved to California to continue his real estate business. He
				  returned to Seattle in 1928 as head of the Economic Investing Corporation. He
				  died on September 14, 1951, at the age of 82, a year after suffering from a
				  stroke.Dilling Way, a one-block street near City Hall Park and the King County
				  Courthouse in Pioneer Square, is named in the mayor's honor</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW1</container><unittitle>Mayor Dilling on UW Campus Day speaking to students,
					 Denny Hall in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 28, 1911</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW2</container><unittitle>Mayor Dilling opening Lake Washington Ship Canal
					 project</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: First shovel of earth (illegible).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW3</container><unittitle>Mayor Dilling at Golden Potlatch celebration, standing
					 on speaker's platform with unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between July 17–21, 1911</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW4</container><unittitle>George Dilling seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1911 and 1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW5</container><unittitle>George Dilling and Theodore Roosevelt in a
					 car</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared on January 16, 1919 in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>; the photo was taken during
					 Roosevelt's visit to Seattle in 1911 when the city held a parade in his
					 honor.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dines, Isabella (February 5, 1855 -
				  November 11, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isabella Dines was born in California and moved with her family
				  to Walla Walla, Washington at an early age. She was married to Lawrence Pooler
				  in 1875; they were divorced in 1879. She then married Charles Allen Lampkin in
				  1884 and divorced him shortly thereafter. She married John Dines in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DinesJ1</container><unittitle>John Dines with wife Isabella</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Dines subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dines, John (November 5, 1848 -
				  December 22, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Dines was born in England and emigrated to Canada in the
				  1870s and to the United States a few years later. He moved to Seattle in 1887,
				  two years before the Seattle Fire. He was a plasterer and had a home on Fifth
				  and Virginia. He married Isabella Lampkin in 1899 after the death of his first
				  wife.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DinesJ1</container><unittitle>John Dines with wife Isabella</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dingwall, Ewen C. (February 11, 1913 -
				  October 25, 1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ewen Dingwall majored in political science and journalism at the
				  University of Washington. As a high ranking mayoral assistant, he gathered
				  support for the Seattle World's Fair in 1962 (Century 21) and had a large hand
				  in the success of the fair. The fair drew just under 10 million visitors during
				  its six months run, turned a modest financial profit and left the city the
				  74-acre site now known as the Seattle Center, one of the largest civic centers
				  in the nation. His role was so widely recognized that he went on to a career as
				  a consultant to other fairs and civic celebrations. He was interim director at
				  the Pacific Science Center for a time and the director of Seattle Center for
				  five years until 1988. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DingwallEC1</container><unittitle>Ewen Dingwall seated at desk with a copy of 
					 <emph>Life</emph> magazine featuring the World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1962</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansenG1</container><unittitle>Gracie Hansen with Ewan Dingwall at the 1962 Seattle
					 World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gracie Hansen subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Dix, John Adams (July 24, 1798 – April 21, 1879)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Adams Dix was an American politician and military officer
				  who was Secretary of the Treasury, Governor of New York and Union major general
				  during the Civil War. He was notable for arresting the pro-Southern Maryland
				  General Assembly, preventing that divided border state from seceding, and for
				  arranging a system for prisoner exchange via the Dix–Hill Cartel, concluded in
				  partnership with Confederate Major General Daniel Harvey Hill.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">10</container><container type="item">DixJA01</container><unittitle>James Adams Dix</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860-1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Ritchie after a portrait by Bogardus from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Doane, Harry (August 1847? - November 25,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Doane was a physician who practiced in Seattle and
				  Metaline, Washington. He married Bessie Keith in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornBA1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Osborn with Loren "Lote" Hastings and Dr.
					 Harry Doane, seated on bales of hay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1876?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. F. Dollarhide, Seattle, W. T.</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Ph Coll 334.</p><p>Filed under Benjamin Osborn subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Doane, Woodbury John (January 18, 1825 -
				  February 14, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Woodbury John Doane was born in Maine and became master
				  of a ship at a young age. He arrived in San Francisco in 1849 as part of the
				  Gold Rush and followed the gold rush to the Fraser River. He explored the
				  British Columbia interior and the Northwest Territory. He also piloted
				  steamships along the coast and in Puget Sound before settling in Olympia,
				  Washington where he was the owner of Doane's Oyster House. He was famous for
				  his Oyster Pan Roast and was among the first to ship oysters from Olympia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoaneWJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Captain Woodbury John
					 Doane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ida B. Smith, Olympia, Wash</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoaneWJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Captain Woodbury John
					 Doane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dobie, Edith (February 10, 1887 - April
				  24, 1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith Dobie, an expert on the British Empire and British
				  colonial affairs from 1830 to 1841, was born in Bradford, Pennsylvania. She
				  received an A.B. from Syracuse University in 1914, then taught as a history
				  instructor at Cortland Teachers College (later State University of New York
				  College). In 1922 she received an M.A. from the University of Chicago and
				  became an associate professor of history at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia.
				  Four years later, she earned her Ph.D. from Leland Stanford Junior University
				  (later Stanford University) and became an instructor in the problems of
				  citizenship. That same year, she became an instructor in history at the
				  University of Washington in Seattle, where she remained until 1957, when she
				  retired as a full professor and research consultant to the university. During
				  that time, Dobie received a Phi Beta Kappa grant-in-aid to do research in
				  London for the Social Research Council of New York City, and in 1953 she was a
				  Fulbright scholar in Malta. In 1975 she established a Syracuse University
				  scholarship for women graduate students in the department of history. She wrote
				  <emph render="italic">Malta's Road to Independence</emph> in 1967.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edith Dobie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 14, 1948</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS Series II S00170</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Dobie, Gilmore "Gil" (January 31, 1878 -
				  December 23, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gilmore "Gloomy Gil" Dobie was a football coach at the
				  University of Washington who never lost a football game at Washington. He
				  brought UW football into prominence with a nine-year unbeaten streak from 1908
				  to 1916 of 59-0-3 that has never been equaled. He was born in Hastings,
				  Minnesota and grew up in an orphanage. In 1908, he became one of the youngest
				  head football coaches in UW history. As a coach, he was demanding and a
				  perfectionist. His teams didn't just win, they annihilated their opponents who
				  either never scored a point or scored no more than a goal or two. Even though
				  he had a winning season, Dobie was fired in 1916 because of a conflict with the
				  UW President, Henry Suzzallo. He went on to coach at Navy, Cornell and Boston
				  College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gil Dobie standing near
					 bleachers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1916?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Coach Dobie on Denny Field,
					 University of Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1916?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA (25414)</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieG3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Coach Dobie at edge of football
					 field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1916?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Atelier, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieG4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Coach Dobie kneeling at the edge of
					 the football field during a game in Portland, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DobieG5</container><unittitle>Gil Dobie with William "Wee" Coyle sitting in the
					 bleachers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1908 and 1916?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Dobson, Thomas Sutherland (December 13, 1866 - June 4,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Dobson was a King County commissioner from 1918 to 1924
				  and mayor of Renton in 1911 He was born in Nova Scotia and started working in
				  the coal mines of Kentucky when he was 11. He later worked in mines in
				  California, Colorado, Illinois and Newcastle, Washington. In 1896, he moved to
				  Renton where he was in several business, including a clothing store, real
				  estate and insurance. Dobson was County Commissioner for the 3rd District of
				  King County, Washington, superintendent of maintenance with the State Highway
				  Department, and retired as a manager of the Seattle-Renton Stage Line. He was
				  the principal organizer of the waterway district which diverted water from the
				  Cedar River into Lake Washington and helped prevent floods in the area near
				  Renton. Dobson married Grace Currie Clark on October 5, 1895 in Newcastle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamsayCC1</container><unittitle> Claude Ramsay with Thomas Dobson, L. C. Smith and
					 William E. Boeing at the dedicatory exercises at Sandpoint</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 19, 1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: In the presence of a gathering of
					 distinguished citizens representative of the army, navy and air service of the
					 United States Government, Claude C. Ramsay, chairman of the Board of King
					 County Commissioners, in turning the first shovelful of earth declared: "I
					 hereby dedicate this field to the service of our country."</p><p>Filed under Claude C. Ramsay subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dodge, Grenville Mellen (April 12, 1831
				  – January 3, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grenville Dodge, a Union army officer on the frontier and a
				  pioneering figure in military intelligence during the Civil War, served as
				  Ulysses S. Grant's intelligence Chief in the Western Theater. He served in
				  several notable assignments, including command of the XVI Corps during the
				  Atlanta Campaign. He later served as a U.S. Congressman, businessman, and
				  railroad executive who helped direct the construction of the Transcontinental
				  Railroad. Fort Dodge in Kansas, an important army base during the settlement of
				  the western frontier, was named in his honor, as is Dodge City.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DodgeGM1</container><unittitle>Grenville Dodge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">A.H. Ritchie</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Copy of an engraving</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dodge, W. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DodgeWH1</container><unittitle>W. H. Dodge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on mat: As he appeared after discovering a pass into
					 and exploring the great Neekomanchie Valley, Washington Territory.</p></note><note><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dodwell, Arthur William (February 15,
				  1863 - August 27, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur W. Dodwell along with Theodore Rixon made the first
				  topographic map of the Olympic Peninsula during the period from 1898 until
				  1900. Dodwell worked as a timber cruiser, and at the time of his death, was a
				  candidate for the office of county assessor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DodwellAW1</container><unittitle>Arthur W. Dodwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>The original print is located in the museum of the Olympic
					 National Park in Port Angeles</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Doi, James Isaac (February 19, 1923 - June
				  5, 2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Doi was the Dean of Education at the University of
				  Washington from October 1, 1979 to June 30, 1988. Previously, he was the Dean
				  of Education at the University of Rochester, NY and the Director of the Center
				  for Higher Education at the University of Michigan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoiJI1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James Doi</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1979</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoiJI2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Doi seated at a desk, holding
					 newspapers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 30, 1988</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoiJI3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Doi leaning against the
					 wall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 30, 1988</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dole, Charles Sumner (October 25, 1873
				  - March 19, 1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Sumner Dole was born in Lihue, Hawaii. He attended
				  Punahou Academy; his grandfather, Daniel Dole, had been the first principal of
				  the school. He went to Stanford University and graduated in 1899. He passed the
				  California State Bar examination in 1901 and returned to Hawaii where he was
				  associated with firm of Kinney, Ballou &amp; McClanahan from 1901 until 1903.
				  He continued his legal practice in Honolulu and in Lihue, Kauai, specializing
				  in water rights and estates. Dole was the 1st District Magistrate for the
				  County of Kauai from 1907-16. He was the editor and manager of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Garden Island</emph> a weekly paper published in
				  Lihue from 1909-10. During World War I, he was in the Army Corps of Engineers.
				  Dole was a member of the Alumni Association, Stanford University; Kauai
				  Historical Society, Bar Association of Hawaii, and the Geographical Society of
				  America. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoleCS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles S. Dole in uniform as pole
					 vaulter, holding pole</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 20, 1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Aloha from Charles S. Dole</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dolliver, James Morgan (October 13,
				  1924 – November 24, 2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Morgan Dolliver was an American lawyer, politician and
				  justice of the Washington Supreme Court from 1976 to 1999, who also served as
				  chief justice from 1985 to 1987. Dolliver was born and raised in Fort Dodge,
				  Iowa. He graduated high school in 1942 and then joined the Navy Air Corps.
				  After the end of World War II, Dolliver enrolled at Swarthmore College, and
				  graduated in 1949. While attending Swarthmore College, he worked summers as a
				  ranger in Olympic National Park, falling so in love with Washington's geography
				  that eventually he attended law school at the University of Washington,
				  receiving his LL.B. from the University of Washington School of Law in 1952. He
				  took up private practice in Port Angeles and later in Everett, Washington. In
				  1953, Dolliver became the administrative assistant to Congressman Jack Westland
				  (R-Everett), then became an attorney for the state House Republicans. In 1964,
				  he managed the campaign of Daniel J. Evans, who was elected governor, and
				  Dolliver became Evan's chief of staff and political advisor. On May 6, 1976,
				  Governor Evans appointed Dolliver to the Supreme Court. On January 14, 1985, he
				  was sworn in as chief justice. Soon after a re-election in 1992, Dolliver
				  suffered a severe stroke, but was able to continue working; he served six more
				  years without missing a court date. He announced he would retire at the end of
				  his term. In 1993, Dolliver received the "Outstanding Judge of the Year" award
				  from the Washington State Bar., and in 2000, an endowed professorship was named
				  in honor of Dolliver at the University of Puget Sound, for which he had served
				  as a trustee.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DolliverJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Morgan Dolliver seated at
					 judge's bench in courtroom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 14, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NIS</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Donaldson, Jesse Monroe (August 17, 1885 – March 25,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse Monroe Donaldson was the first United States Postmaster
				  General to have started his career as a letter carrier. Donaldson began his
				  postal career in 1908, as the one of three mailmen for the Shelbyville,
				  Illinois, then rose through the ranks of the Department. He was appointed U.S.
				  Postmaster General by President Harry S. Truman on December 16, 1947, following
				  the resignation of Robert E. Hannegan. He served for the remainder from the
				  Truman's administration until January 20, 1953. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Donaldson, Richard Paul (October 3, 1931 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard P. Donaldson was the attorney for the Pharmacists and
				  Retail Drugstore Employees Union and later the director of the National
				  Foundation of Health, Welfare and Pension Plans. He was a partner in the law
				  firm of Bassett, Donaldson and Hafer in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonaldsonRP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard P. Donaldson with two
					 unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Doncaster, Hiram (1838 - August 29,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Doncaster was born in Nova Scotia in 1838 and came to the
				  West coast via Panama in the year 1856. He mined in California for two years
				  before leaving for the Fraser River mines in 1858. He then became a
				  shipbuilder, working in San Francisco at the shipyards of Middlemas &amp; Bool.
				  At Port Ludlow, Washington Territory, he built the bark <emph render="italic">Forest Queen</emph>. At the mouth of the Umpqua River, he built
				  the steamer <emph render="italic">Swan</emph>, which made the first and only
				  and probably last trip to Roseburg, on the Umpqua River. He built the steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">Enterprise</emph>, considered at the time the finest and
				  fastest boat on the coast. Returning to work for Middlemas &amp; Bool, he built
				  the bark <emph render="italic">Cassandra Adams</emph>; the team tug 
				  <emph render="italic">Holyoke</emph>; the barkentine <emph render="italic">Mary
				  Wilkerman</emph>; the barkentine <emph render="italic">Retriever</emph>; and
				  the single-deck ship <emph render="italic">Olympus</emph>, at the time the
				  largest single-decked ship in the world, capable of carrying one million, four
				  hundred thousand feet of lumber. His next construction was the schooner 
				  <emph render="italic">American Boy</emph>, and following this the stern-wheel
				  boat <emph render="italic">Louisa</emph>. Returning to Port Ludlow, he built
				  the steam tug <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph> and the barkentine 
				  <emph render="italic">Skagit</emph>. At Tacoma he built the steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">Mogul</emph> and the stern-wheeler <emph render="italic">Nellie Brown</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoncasterH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Doncaster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dondo, Pete (1874 - ?)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DondoP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Pete Dondo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">C. L. Judd, Anacortes, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pete Dondo, Austrian fisherman from
					 Anacortes, accompanied friend to photographers at end of successful fishing
					 season in Alaska. Decided to have his picture taken also, even though in work
					 clothes. Cost $2.50</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Done, Captain [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donnelly, Dorothy Agnes (January 28,
				  1880 - January 3, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dorothy Donnelly was an actress, playwright, librettist,
				  producer and director. After a decade-long acting career that included several
				  notable roles on Broadway, she turned to writing plays, musicals and operettas,
				  including more than a dozen on Broadway including several long-running
				  successes. Her first big hit on Broadway was <emph render="italic">Blossom
				  Time</emph>, a 1921 adaptation of a German operetta fictionalizing the romantic
				  life of composer Franz Schubert, using his music and adapting his music. She
				  then wrote and directed an original musical, <emph render="italic">Poppy</emph>
				  (1923) that had a successful run and was adapted for film, boosting the career
				  of W. C. Fields. Her most famous libretto was <emph render="italic">The Student
				  Prince</emph> (1924), in collaboration with composer Sigmund Romberg.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonnellyDA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Donnelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 - 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Autographed</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Donovan, Captain</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NickelsEA1</container><unittitle>Captain Edward A. Nickels with Captain
					 Donovan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1894?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photogrpaher">Elite (Jones &amp; Lutz), San Francisco</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Captain Edward A. Nickels subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donovan, John Joseph (September 8, 1858
				  - January 9, 1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Joseph Donovan was a civil engineer, railroad builder and
				  lumber baron. Born to Irish immigrant parents in Rumney, NH, he grew up on a
				  farm purchased by his father’s earnings as a railroad construction laborer.
				  After completing high school, he taught school to earn money for further
				  education. He studied civil engineering and surveying at Worcester, MA
				  Polytechnic School, graduating in 1882 as class valedictorian. He was hired as
				  a surveyor by the Northern Pacific Railway, which was constructing its
				  transcontinental line across the United States. Donovan came to Bellingham in
				  1888 as chief engineer of the Fairhaven and Southern Railroad and was an
				  important figure in shaping the area, helping to build the town of Fairhaven
				  and serving on the commission that framed the Bellingham city charter. He later
				  became chief engineer for the Blue Canyon Coal Mining Company. He entered the
				  lumber business with his friends Julius H. Bloedel and Peter Larson, starting
				  the Lake Whatcom Logging Company in 1898. By 1913, it was one of the largest
				  lumber firms in the Northwest. He served as a member of the State Commission on
				  Forestry Legislation, the State Highway Commission, the State Board of
				  Charities and Corrections, the National Municipal League for Civic Reform and a
				  trustee of the Bellingham State Normal School, now Western Washington
				  University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John J.
					 Donovan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Donovan, J. W. Jr. (May, 1916-?)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BouletJB2</container><unittitle>John Baptiste Boulet and J. W. Donovan, Jr. on
					 sidewalk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 15, 1916</unitdate></did><note><p>filed under John Baptiste Boulet subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donovan, Michael D. (December 1868? -
				  December 15, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael D. Donovan was born in Mount Forest, Ontario, Canada
				  where he learned the printing trade. He moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1881
				  and two years later moved to Seattle. He worked at the <emph render="italic">Post-Intelligencer</emph> before leaving to become the editor
				  and publisher of the <emph render="italic">Weekly News</emph> in Ballard,
				  Washington. He sold the paper in 1889 and returned to Minnesota where he
				  started <emph render="italic">The Retail Salesman</emph>. He sold that paper
				  and moved to Bowbells, North Dakota where he established a homestead. In 1907,
				  he froze to death during a blizzard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanMD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Michael D. Donovan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1882?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rugg, Minneapolis, MN</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Donworth, Charles Carey (October 8, 1924 - November 30,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>C. (Charles) Carey Donworth was a key player in creating and
				  leading Metro, the agency credited with cleaning up Lake Washington. A Medina
				  city councilman when Metro was created in 1958, he became the first chairman of
				  the Metro board. He was re-elected 10 times, leading the board for 22 years as
				  it developed a regional sewage system and countywide bus system. On the Metro
				  council, he was responsible for finding consensus among a group of elected
				  county and city officials with conflicting agendas. He stepped down from the
				  Metro board in 1980, 12 years before voters approved a merger of Metro into a
				  reconstituted King County government. In private life, he was a self-employed
				  management consultant and labor negotiator. Donworth was a member of numerous
				  corporate boards, civic groups and social clubs. One of his earlier
				  partnerships was Donworth Taylor &amp; Associates. In 1999, he formed
				  Donworth/McReynolds to advise corporate boards and executives on governance
				  issues. His grandfather, George Donworth, was a U.S. District Court judge and
				  later a founder of Seattle's largest law firm, Perkins Coie. His father,
				  Charles Donworth, was a justice on the state Supreme Court for 20 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Dorpat, Paul Louis (October 28, 1938 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Dorpat, a local historian, journalist and videographer,
				  helped instigate and organize Seattle's counterculture movement in the 1960s.
				  He managed the Free U, the alternative university that operated above a
				  University District restaurant. He also founded the city's first alternative
				  newspaper, the <emph render="italic">Helix.</emph> He wrote the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> magazine column "Now and
				  Then"starting in 1982 and received the Pacific Northwest Historical Guild
				  Lifetime achievement award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DorpatPL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Dorpat looking in a file cabinet
					 at Special Collections, UW Libraries, possibly with Dennis Anderson, who was in
					 charge of photographs and architectural drawings in Special
					 Collections</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1979</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DorpatPL2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Dorpat with Murray Morgan and
					 Lane Morgan holding a copy of <emph>Seattle, a pictorial
					 history</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1982</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dority, Ellis</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>In 1889, Ellis Dority was the quarterback on the first football
				  team organized at the University of Washington and participated in the first
				  college football game played west of the Mississippi, competing against a
				  Yale-Harvard team consisting of men who had been stars on their respective
				  college teams. The team played one more game against Washington College of
				  Tacoma before disbanding.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DawdyE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ellis Dawdy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1893 and 1896?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Faber, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ellis Dawdy (?); the team roster lists Ellis
					 Dority as the quarterback for the team.</p><p>Filed under Ellis Dawdy subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dosch, Henry Ernst (June 17, 1841 -
				  February 7, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Ernst Dosch was a German-born immigrant who served in the
				  American Civil War and later became a successful merchant, horticulturist and
				  author. He apprenticed at a large oil importing house in Mainz, Germany until
				  January 1860 when he sailed for America. He settled in St. Louis, Missouri
				  where he worked as a bookkeeper until he enlisted at the start of the Civil
				  War. In 1863, he resigned his position and headed west, settling in Portland,
				  Oregon where he worked as a wholesale boot and shoe merchant before turning his
				  attention to horticulture. In 1889 Oregon's governor appointed him a member of
				  the board of horticultural commissioners and succeeding governors reappointed
				  him to the office. He was executive commissioner from Oregon at the World's
				  Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893; at the Trans-Mississippi Exposition at
				  Omaha in 1898; at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo in 1901; at the
				  West-India Exposition in Charleston in 1901-2; and at the International
				  Exposition at Osaka, Japan in 1903. He was also commissioner general of the
				  Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis in 1904, was director of exhibits
				  and privileges at the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland in
				  1905, and occupied the same position at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at
				  Seattle in 1909. He was decorated by the emperor of Japan, receiving the emblem
				  of the Sacred Treasure and the insignia of the Rising Sun.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoschHE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Ernst Dosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Kizer Bros., Portland, OR</corpname></origination></did><note><p>This photograph was probably used by Dosch in 1905 when he was
					 the Director of Exhibits at the fair in Portland and in 1909 when he was the
					 Director of Exhibits at the A-Y-P Expo.</p><p>Written on verso: Col. Henry E. Dosch Director Division of
					 Exhibits. Photo by Kaiser Bros., Portland, OR.. Col. Henry E. Dosch Appointed
					 Director of Division of Exhibits A-Y-P Expo.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dose, Charles Paul Henry (February 24,
				  1843 - September 3, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles P. Dose was a German immigrant and real estate
				  businessman. In 1871 Dose and his partners, the Fricke Brothers, bought 40
				  acres of land on Lake Washington in Seattle. In 1898 Dose and his son, Charles
				  C. Dose began development on the land and in 1906 platted the Dose Addition on
				  10 acres along South Walker Street. This area would later become part of the
				  Mount Baker District, where the first house was built at 31st Avenue and Walker
				  Street. The Dose family lived in the Mount Baker district, and his wife was
				  instrumental in the creation of the Mount Baker Park Improvement Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DoseCPH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles P. Dose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Douglas, David (June 25, 1799 – July
				  12, 1834)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Douglas was born in the village of Scone, north-east of
				  Perth, Scotland. He studied botany and spent many years as a gardener before
				  being recommended to London's Royal Horticultural Society which sent him on a
				  plant-hunting expedition in the Pacific Northwest in 1824. Douglas identified
				  hundreds of plants during his lifetime, including the Douglas fir, the state
				  tree of Oregon. More than 80 species of plants and animal have douglasii in
				  their scientific names, in his honor. He introduced several hundred plants to
				  Great Britain and hence to Europe. The Douglas fir was first planted in 1826
				  outside of its native area from seeds brought to England by Douglas. He visited
				  Hawaii in 1830 on his way to the Pacific Northwest and returned in December
				  1833 intending to spend three months of winter there. He was only the second
				  European to reach the summit of the Mauna Loa volcano; he died under mysterious
				  circumstances while climbing Mauna Kea in Hawaii.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">David Douglas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Douglas, James (August 15, 1803 –
				  August 2, 1877)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir James Douglas was a company fur-trader and a British
				  colonial governor of Vancouver Island and British Columbia. He started working
				  in Canada at the age 16 for the North West Company and later worked for the
				  Hudson's Bay Company, becoming a high-ranking company officer. From 1851 to
				  1864, he was Governor of the Colony of Vancouver Island. In 1858, he also
				  became the first Governor of the Colony of British Columbia, in order to assert
				  British authority during the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, which had the potential
				  to turn the B.C. Mainland into an American state. He remained governor of both
				  Vancouver Island and British Columbia until his retirement in 1864. He is often
				  credited as "The Father of British Columbia.” </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Douglas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1877?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Douglas, John &amp; Dr. Benson
				  [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Douglas, John Francis (October 30, 1874 -
				  November 29, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Francis Douglas was born in Greenwood, Ontario, Canada; his
				  family moved to the United States in 1885. He graduated from the University of
				  North Dakota in 1896 and Yale University Law School in 1899. He arrived in
				  Seattle in 1900 and practiced law. During World War I, he was a Major in charge
				  of the Army Quartermaster Corps deport at the Bell Street Terminal. He was an
				  officer and director of many Northwest companies and was the director of the
				  Chamber of Commerce for fourteen years. He was the president and founder of the
				  Metropolitan Building Company and made the Metropolitan Tract the largest
				  private endowment for the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasJF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photo of painting of John
					 Douglas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Louis Betts</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasJF2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of John Douglas with
					 drawings of building details from the Metropolitan Tract</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Douglas, Rose Adele Cutts (Dec. 27,
				  1835 - January 26, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rose Adele Cutts grew up in Washington D.C.; Dolley Madison was
				  her great aunt. She met the widowed Senator Stephen A. Douglas in 1856, and
				  they wed after a short courtship. His fortune supported her literary salon, and
				  together they commanded substantial political power. She traveled with her
				  husband during the 1858 Lincoln-Douglas debates in Illinois, and she and
				  Stephen became friends with Abraham Lincoln. She also traveled with her husband
				  during the 1860 presidential campaign. In 1861, Stephen died. Five years after
				  his death, she married Captain Robert Williams, a career army officer from
				  Virginia who had remained loyal to the Union. She took on the life of an army
				  wife and raised their six children in the western territories. Williams ended
				  his long career in 1893 as Adjutant General of the Army. She is buried in
				  Arlington Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasRAC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rose Adele Cutts Douglas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">E &amp; H. T. Anthony, 501 Broadway, New York</corpname>.</origination></did><note><p>Original cartes-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Douglas, Stephan Arnold (April 23, 1813 –
				  June 3, 1861)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Stephen A. Douglas was an American politician from Illinois. He
				  was a U.S. Representative, a U.S. Senator, and the Democratic Party nominee for
				  President in the 1860 election, losing to Republican Abraham Lincoln. Douglas
				  had previously defeated Lincoln in a Senate contest, noted for the famous
				  Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858. He was nicknamed the "Little Giant" because he
				  was short in physical stature, but a forceful and dominant figure in politics.
				  Douglas was known as a resourceful party leader and was skilled in debate and
				  the passage of legislation. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DouglasSA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stephen A. Douglas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">J. Gurney &amp; Son, 707 Broadway, N.Y</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Doull, Alexander (January 28, 1836 -
				  March 29, 1865)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Doull, previously lieutenant in the Royal British
				  Artillery, enlisted October 26, 1861 at New York City in the 2nd Regiment, New
				  York Heavy Artillery. He became the inspector-general of artillery in the Army
				  of the Potomac and fought at the Battle of Fredericksburg in 1862.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoullA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alexander Doull</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1865?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alexander Gardner, Washington, D.C</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on the front: Colonel Doull, an Englishman, formerly
					 of the artillery now an Inspector Gen. of Artillery in Army of Potomac.</p><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dowell, Benjamin Franklin (October 31,
				  1826 - March 12, 1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Dowell was a native of Virginia and graduated
				  from the University of Virginia with a degree in law in 1847. He came overland
				  to California in 1850, but migrated to Oregon almost immediately. With little
				  legal business in Oregon, he taught school and then ran a pack train from
				  various points to the gold region of southern Oregon and northern California in
				  the 1850s. He resumed practicing law in Jacksonville, Oregon in 1857. He
				  specialized in pressing Indian war claims against the Federal government and
				  spent much of his time in Washington D.C. He purchased the 
				  <emph render="italic">Oregon Sentinel </emph>(Jacksonville) in 1864, and with
				  his wife and a series of eight editors, ran the paper remotely for fourteen
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DowellBF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Benjamin Franklin Dowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dowell, Mr. &amp; Mrs. </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">Dowell1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peterson, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mr. Dowell and Wife Preston, Washington</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Downes, David Anthony (August 17, 1927
				  - April 30, 2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Anthony Downes graduated from Regis University in Denver
				  in 1949 and received his Masters in English from Marquette University in 1950.
				  He taught English at Gonzaga University for three years before entering the
				  doctorate program at the UW. He received his PhD in English in 1955 where he
				  wrote his dissertation on Gerald Manley Hopkins. He taught at Seattle
				  University for 13 years, becoming chair of the English Department. In 1968, he
				  began a 25 year career at California State University Chico. He published over
				  ten books, including<emph render="italic">Gerald Manley Hopkins: A Study of his
				  Ignatian Spirit</emph>. His papers are held at Gonzaga University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DownesDA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">David Downes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Downey, William R. (March 6, 1808 -
				  November 14, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William R. Downey was born in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky and came
				  overland from Missouri in 1853. He served in the Indian War of 1855 and was
				  elected to term terms in the Washington Territorial Legislature. He was one of
				  the main figures in Fort Steilacoom in Washington Territory and served several
				  terms on the school board. He was instrumental in building the first church
				  there in 1859 and was one of the prime movers in the establishment of the first
				  community library in Washington Territory in 1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DowneyWR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William R. Downey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Doyle, Charles William (1871 - January 11,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles W. Doyle was born in Iowa and arrived in Seattle in
				  1888. He was elected business representation of the Seattle Central Labor
				  Council in 1908 and secretary-treasurer in 1923, serving until his retirement
				  in 1957. He also served on the Board of Commissioners of the Seattle Housing
				  Authority for 18 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Charles Doyle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hamilton Studio</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Doyle, secretary for the
					 Central Labor Council, and Charles Mentrin, assistant secretary, with a four
					 year old girl, Klee, who was the poster child for the American Federation of
					 Labor's United Good Neighbor Fund drive</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 10, 1955</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Forde Photographers, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Klee is wearing the buttons of over 100 American Federation of
					 Labor locals to urge labor support of the fund drive; her image appeared on the
					 Labor Council's poster endorsing the campaign. The photograph appeared in the
					 July 10, 1955 edition of the <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCW3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Doyle with Wallace H.
					 Campbell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Doyle, Chloe Ann Terry (March 6, 1827 -
				  August 6, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chloe Ann Terry wrote a book about her experiences crossing the
				  plains in 1852. In 1853, she married Reuben L. Doyle, a widower with two small
				  children. He was a printer and served in the Territorial Legislature for two
				  terms. They were married at the home of Isaac Ebey.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCAT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chloe Ann Terry Doyle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1895?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Chloe Ann of the Diary at the Age of 68.
					 Whidbey Island.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Draper, Edgar M. (November 7, 1894 -
				  December 30, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Draper was a specialist in secondary education at the
				  University of Washington and was the Executive Officer for the Department of
				  In-Service Teacher Training. He was born in Ontario, Oregon and attended New
				  York City University on a scholarship before graduating from the UW. He was a
				  major in the cadet corps while at the UW and served in the Naval Reserve during
				  World War I. He was the principal of schools on Bainbridge Island, WA before
				  joining the faculty of the UW in 1924; he retired in 1965. He wrote twelve
				  books on education and curriculum and supervised curriculum programs in
				  Washington, Texas and California. He also taught at the University of Texas,
				  the University of Ohio and UCLA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DraperEM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar Draper sitting at his desk
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DraperEM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar Draper pointing to a map of
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DraperEM3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar Draper at his desk with a book
					 opened in front of him</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1957</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The date is derived from a notation on the back that says "Nov
					 8." This photograph was used in the 1958 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>
					 which is prepared in the fall of 1957.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Drew, Edward L. (August 31, 1871 -
				  December 29, 1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Drew was a theater operator who owned the Third Avenue,
				  Seattle and Lyric Theaters in Seattle. He also built the Alhambra Theater on
				  Fourth and Pine Street in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DrewEL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward Drew</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Drew, Mary Stanley (November 26, 1912-1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Drew worked for United Way of King County for 38 years and
				  was active in the Seattle Soroptimists, serving as president and treasurer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE5</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with Mary Drew at the Seattle Soroptimist
					 Club luncheon at the Olympic Hotel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 31, 1959</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Drum, Henry (November 21, 1857 - March
				  19, 1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Drum was the mayor of Tacoma from 1886 to 1889 and was
				  elected to the first Washington State Senate in 1889. In 1913, he was appointed
				  warden of the State Penitentiary in Walla Walla, remaining there until 1922.
				  While he was there, he established the prison farm and model dairy and other
				  rehabilitation programs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DrumH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Drum</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Dryer, Alice A. (September 18, 1834 - July 24
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Garrison, the daugher of John Jefferson Garrison and
				  Margaret Myler Garrison, was born in Michigan. She married Hiram Dryer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DryerAA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alice Dryer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy; original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dryer, Hiram Brigs (May 29, 1822 -
				  March 4, 1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Brigs Dryer was born in New York. He enlisted in the Army
				  as a private, then was Sergeant, and finally First Sergeant, in Company H, US
				  Mounted Rifles, from 31 October 1846 - 24 July 1848. He was slightly wounded in
				  combat at Chapultepec (13-14 Sept 1847) during the war with Mexico. He was
				  commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, USA, on 31 July 1848, and promoted to 1st
				  Lieutenant 29 September 1853. Lieutenant Dryer volunteered to carry supplies to
				  a party of emigrants snowed-in, in the Cascade Mountains, in November of 1853.
				  He was engaged in an expedition against the Snake Indians from May to October
				  of 1855 and served at Fort Steilacoom and Fort Vancouver in the 1860s. At the
				  outset of the Civil War he was made Captain. He was cited by brevet in Civil
				  War service: to Major 13 December 1862 for the battle of Fredericksburg, VA,
				  and Lt Col 3 May 1863 for the battle of Chancellorsville, Va. He was in command
				  of Fort Randall, Dakota Territory until shortly before his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DryerHB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Brigs Dryer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R.W. Addis Photographer, McClees' Gallery, Washington, D.C</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photocopy; original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duane, John [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dubois, Fred T. (May 29, 1851 –
				  February 14, 1930) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fred Dubois' grandfather was a French-Canadian immigrant who
				  fought in the Battle of Tippecanoe. Dubois' father was involved in Illinois
				  state politics and was a close friend of Illinois Republican Abraham Lincoln.
				  Dubois studied at Yale from 1870 to 1872. In 1880, he moved to Idaho Territory
				  with his brother, Jesse Dubois Jr., a doctor. Dubois was the delegate to the
				  U.S. House of Representatives from Idaho Territory from March 4, 1887 to July
				  3, 1890. He served as Senator from Idaho in 1891 to 1897 and again in 1901 to
				  1907. He ran for his first term as senator as a Republican and his second as a
				  Democrat. He was a strong proponent of Idaho's application for statehood. In
				  his first term, he supported tariffs on Idaho produced goods, negotiated a
				  treaty with the Nez Perce and supported bimetallism. In his second term, he
				  opposed imperialism and Mormonism and supported Theodore Roosevelt's agenda of
				  environmental conservation. After losing favor as a senator, he continued to
				  remain active in political campaigns for the rest of his life. He was succeeded
				  in office by William E. Borah.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuboisFT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Fred Dubois as
					 senator-elect from Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuboisFT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Fred Dubois</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph is from the Idaho Historical Society. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorahWE1</container><unittitle>William Borah in kitchen of the Mayflower Hotel in
					 Washington, D.C. with chef Nicholas Sabatini and former Senator Fred T. Dubois,
					 inspecting potatoes for the Idaho State Society banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname>Tucker Photography, Boise, ID</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The banquet was held March 3, 1926. The photo was taken in
					 February.</p><p>Filed under William Borah subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duckering, William Elmhirst (April 5,
				  1854 - March 26, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Duckering began his career as a railroad engineer for
				  the Oregon Short Line Railroad designing bridges and working in construction
				  and maintenance. In 1914, he accepted a teaching position at the University of
				  Washington where he worked on new instruction methods for the engineering
				  program. In 1918, he was recruited to the War Department to develop instruction
				  for training of war-time engineers. In 1919, he went to Iowa State College as
				  the Head of the Department of Engineering Problems and in 1923, he became the
				  Head of the Department of Civil Engineering at the University of British
				  Columbia. He retired for two years due to ill health and afterward became head
				  of the Department of Civil Engineering and Mathematics at the Alaska
				  Agricultural College and School of Mines. In 1935, he was selected as Dean of
				  the Faculty.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuckeringWE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Duckering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1917</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dudley, Emma Leopole (January 1843 -
				  June 28, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Leopole was born in Ohio and moved to California in the
				  1860s where she taught school. She married George S. Dudley in Suisun, Solano,
				  California in 1869; the family moved to Seattle in 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DudleyGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Dudley with wife,
					 Emma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>The date of the photograph is given as "June 10" with no year.
					 It appears to be from around the early 1900s. There is a smaller copy of the
					 photograph as well as the large photograph.</p><p>Filed under George S. Dudley subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dudley, George Stephen (March 10, 1834
				  - February 18, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Dudley was a native of Oswego, NY who moved to California
				  in 1859. He married Emma Leopole in 1869, and the family moved to Seattle in
				  1875. He was president of the Dudley Fuel Company in the Rainier Valley area of
				  Seattle and was involved in civic and political activities.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DudleyGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Dudley with wife,
					 Emma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>The date of the photograph is given as "June 10" with no year.
					 It appears to be from around the early 1900s. There is a smaller copy of the
					 photograph as well as the large photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Dudley, Joseph (September 23, 1647 – April 2,
				  1720)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Dudley was an English colonial administrator, a native of
				  Roxbury, Massachusetts, and the son of one of its founders. He had a leading
				  role in the administration of the Dominion of New England, which was overthrown
				  in the 1689 Boston revolt. He served briefly on the council of the Province of
				  New York and then spent eight years in England in the 1690s as
				  Lieutenant-Governor of the Isle of Wight, including one year as a Member of
				  Parliament for Newtown (Isle of Wight). In 1702, he returned to New England
				  after being appointed governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay and
				  Province of New Hampshire, posts that he held until 1715. His rule of
				  Massachusetts was characterized by hostility and tension, with political
				  enemies opposing his attempts to gain a regular salary and regularly making
				  complaints about his official and private actions. Most of his tenure was
				  dominated by the French and Indian Wars. He orchestrated an unsuccessful
				  attempt to capture the Acadian capital of Port Royal in 1707, raised provincial
				  militia forces for its successful capture in 1710, and directed an unsuccessful
				  expedition against Quebec in 1711. Dudley's governorship initiated a hostility
				  in Massachusetts toward royal governance, most frequently over the issue of the
				  salaries of crown officials, and this hostility affected most of the governors
				  of Massachusetts up to the American Revolutionary War and the end of British
				  rule. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DudleyJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph Dudley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1680 and 1689?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving of a portrait by Sir Peter Lely.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duff, Howard (November 24, 1913 – July
				  8, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Duff was born in Bremerton, Washington and attended
				  Roosevelt High School in Seattle. While in high school he began acting in
				  school plays. He was a member of the Repertory Playhouse in Seattle. Duff
				  served with the U.S. Army Air Force radio service from 1941 to 1945. He became
				  a noted radio, film, and television actor and was married to film actress and
				  director Ida Lupino. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuffH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Howard Duff in army
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1941 and 1945</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dugan, Frank P. (1834 - August 27,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Dugan began as a watch maker in Iowa and left in 1862 for
				  the Washington Territory. In 1863, he was chosen to represent Walla Walla in
				  the Legislature and was re-elected the next year as Speaker in the House of
				  Representatives. In l867, he was elected Prosecuting Attorney for the First
				  Judicial District, and served for two years. He was a candidate for the
				  Democratic nomination for Delegate to Congress in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuganFP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Dugan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1863 and 1864</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: A member of the legislature with George W.
					 Beam 1863 and 1864 Olympia, Washington Territory. </p><p>Carte-de-visite (moved to PH Coll 1034</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duger, Mr. &amp; Mrs. H.
				  [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dunbar, Bonnie J. (March 3, 1949 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bonnie Dunbar is from Sunnyside, Washington. She graduated from
				  the University of Washington in 1971. Following graduation in 1971 from the
				  University of Washington, Dunbar worked for Boeing Computer Services for two
				  years as a systems analyst. From 1973 to 1975, she conducted research for her
				  master's thesis in the field of mechanisms and kinetics of ionic diffusion in
				  sodium beta-alumina and in 1983 earned her Doctorate in mechanical/biomedical
				  engineering from the University of Houston. Dunbar was a NASA astronaut from
				  1981 until she retired in September 2005; she flew on five Space Shuttle
				  missions between 1985 and 1998, including two dockings with the Mir space
				  station. She became president and CEO of The Museum of Flight in Seattle,
				  leaving in April of 2010 to lead the University of Houston's STEM Center.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarBJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Bonnie Dunbar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1980 </unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas,
						Bonnie J. Dunbar, Astronaut Candidate.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarBJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Bonnie Dunbar in astronaut uniform
					 holding a model of the space shuttle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1981</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas,
						Bonnie J. Dunbar, Mission Specialist Astronaut Candidate.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dunbar, Clara Asseneth White (June 28,
				  1852 - July 22, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clara White was a member of a pioneer family in Washington
				  Territory. Her father, William White, was killed in 1856, and a year later her
				  mother Margaret Stewart White married Stephen Duley Ruddell. Clara married
				  Ralph Oregon Dunbar, judge of the Washington State Supreme Court, on October
				  18, 1873.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarCAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clara White Dunbar wearing hat and
					 gloves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarCAW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clara White Dunbar sitting on
					 porch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dunbar, Ralph Oregon (April 26, 1845 -
				  September 19, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Dunbar was born in Schuyler County, Illinois and crossed
				  the plains with his family the following year. His parents christened him Ralph
				  Oregon in commemoration of his early introduction into that state. He studied
				  at the Institute at Salem and in 1867 went to Olympia to study law. In 1869 he
				  was admitted to the bar and was appointed clerk of the district court. In 1871
				  he moved to Yakima City, practicing law and raising cattle. In 1877 he moved to
				  Goldendale, his permanent home. In the autumn of 1878 he was chosen probate
				  judge, and at the same election as member of the territorial council. In 1870
				  he was chairman of the judiciary committee. In 1882 that he was elected
				  district attorney and also began to publish the <emph render="italic">Klickitat
				  Sentinel</emph>. In 1884 he was elected to the territorial legislature where he
				  was chosen speaker of the house. He married Clara White in 1873. His brother
				  was William Rice Dunbar.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarRO1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ralph Dunbar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dunbar, Walter Clifford (September 23,
				  1886 - December 30, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Dunbar coxed the first eight-oared race for Washington,
				  then left the team, came back in 1911, and finished his career in 1914. He lost
				  his life serving during WWI and is buried in France. He was commemorated by the
				  University of Washington for his service in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarWC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter Dunbar </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dunbar, William Rice (April 7, 1839 -
				  March 29, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Rice Dunbar was born in Illinois and moved to Oregon
				  with his parents in 1846. At the age of nineteen he began work of a temperance
				  organizer, joining the Sons of Temperance at Silverton in 1858. Two years later
				  he was elected grand conductor, and the next year grand scribe. In 1864 he
				  enlisted in the First Oregon Infantry. He was soon commissioned second
				  lieutenant, and held that position until 1866. When mustered out, he was in
				  command of the blockhouse on the Grande Ronde Indian Reservation in Yamhill
				  County. When he returned to civil life, he taught on the reservation. He was
				  also active as solicitor of stock for the Oregon &amp; California Railroad. He
				  was elected to the Oregon legislature in 1870, resigning his position in the
				  Indian service. In 1879 he moved to Goldendale and was appointed clerk of the
				  district court, serving until 1888. In 1882 he was appointed judge of the
				  probate court, serving several terms. He also served as mayor of Goldendale. He
				  was the brother of Ralph Oregon Dunbar.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DunbarWR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Rice Dunbar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duncan, James Anderson (December 28,
				  1879 - May 20, 1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Duncan was born in Fife, Scotland and arrived in Seattle
				  in 1904 as a marine engineer. He operated a machine shop and was a member of
				  the Machinists Union for over 60 years. He was the business manager of the
				  International Association of Machinists and was secretary of the Central Labor
				  Council from 1915 until 1923. He was secretary during the Seattle General
				  Strike of 1919 and actively spoke about the strike both during and after it. In
				  1920, he ran unsuccessfully for mayor on a labor platform, but received over
				  37,000 votes. He served on the Seattle School Board for over 24 years and was
				  president of the Board five times.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuncanJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Duncan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Barnet Braverman</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Photograph of an ink drawing.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Duncan, William (April 3, 1832 – August
				  30, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Duncan was an English-born Anglican missionary who
				  founded the Tsimshian communities of Metlakatla, British Columbia, Canada, and
				  Metlakatla, Alaska. Although sometimes referred to as "Father Duncan," he was
				  never ordained. Duncan was born in Yorkshire, England, the illegitimate son of
				  Maria Duncan, a teenaged servant. He was raised by his mother's parents,
				  William and Elizabeth Duncan. Duncan joined the Church Missionary School, and
				  in 1856 they sent him on a mission to the North Pacific coast of Canada at Port
				  Simpson. He did his work among the Tsimshians and learned to speak their
				  language. With a number of Tsimshians, Duncan founded a utopian Christian
				  community called Metlakatla near Prince Rupert British Columbia. He founded a
				  new Metlakatla in Alaska in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuncanW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Duncan standing on stairs,
					 Metlakatla, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1918?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuncanW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Duncan with George (Sergei)
					 Kostrometinoff (Father Sergius)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1915?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Duniway, Abigail Scott (October 22, 1834 – October 11,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abigail Scott Duniway was an American women's rights advocate,
				  newspaper editor and writer, whose efforts were instrumental in gaining voting
				  rights for women. She was born near Groveland, Illinois. In March 1852, her
				  father organized a party of 30 people and 5 ox-drawn wagons to emigrate to
				  Oregon, arriving in October; her mother and brother died during the journey.
				  Abigail taught school in Eola, Oregon, and then married Benjamin Charles
				  Duniway on August 1, 1853. The Duniways farmed in Clackamas County until 1857,
				  when they moved to a farm near Lafayette. They lost this second farm after
				  Benjamin endorsed notes signed by a friend who defaulted. Soon afterward,
				  Benjamin was permanently disabled in an accident, and Abigail had to support
				  the family. She opened and ran a small boarding school in Lafayette; in 1866,
				  she moved to Albany where she taught in a private school for a year, then
				  opened a millinery and notions shop, which she ran five years. Angered by
				  stories of injustice and mistreatment relayed to her by married patrons of her
				  shop, and encouraged by Benjamin, she moved to Portland in 1871 to found 
				  <emph render="italic">The New Northwest</emph>, a weekly newspaper devoted to
				  women's rights, including suffrage. She continued publication of the newspaper
				  for 16 years. She and her newspaper actively supported the Sole Trader Bill and
				  the Married Women's Property Act which, when passed, gave Oregon women the
				  right to own and control property. Her persistence paid off in 1912 when Oregon
				  became the seventh state in the U.S. to pass a women's suffrage amendment.
				  Governor Oswald West asked her to write and sign the equal suffrage
				  proclamation, and she was the first woman to register to vote in Multnomah
				  County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnthonySB1</container><unittitle>Group photograph with Susan B. Anthony, Abigail Scott
					 Duniway and Elizabeth Cady Stanton at Anthony's home in upstate New
					 York</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susan B. Anthony subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">DuPen, Everett G. (June 12, 1912 - May
				  25, 2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Everett DuPen studied architecture and sculpture at the
				  University of Southern California and graduated with a bachelor's degree in
				  sculpture from Yale University in 1937. He taught at Carnegie Institute of
				  Technology in Pittsburgh and at Washington University in St. Louis, and during
				  the war years worked as a marine draftsman for Sausalito Shipbuilding in
				  California before joining the UW art faculty. His work appeared in the St.
				  Louis Art Museum, the Seattle Art Museum, the Henry Art Gallery and the Frye
				  Art Museum. He was a fellow of the New York-based National Sculpture Society
				  and had been on the board of the Northwest Stone Sculptors Association. He did
				  many public commissions, including a bust of former university President
				  Charles Odegaard at the Odegaard Undergraduate Library. At the Seattle Center,
				  his "Tree of Life" sculpture, built in 1962 for the Seattle World's Fair,
				  stands in the DuPen Fountain at the north side of Key Arena, in the lower
				  courtyard of the Northwest Rooms.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuPenEG1</container><unittitle>Everett G. DuPen working on sculpture</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon (NIS S-3431-8)</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Durham, Merritt Ernest (September 1869
				  - February 12, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Merritt Ernest Durham was president of the University of
				  Washington Alumni Association from 1897 until 1898. He was also a teacher and
				  school principal.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DurhamME1</container><unittitle>Merritt Ernest Durham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Merritt Earnest Durham 1896-1897,
					 1912-1913.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Durkan, Martin James (June 30, 1923 – May 29,
				  2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin James Durkan was an American attorney, politician, and
				  lobbyist from the state of Washington. He served as a member of the Washington
				  House of Representatives from 1957 to 1959 and in the State Senate from 1959 to
				  1975. Durkan also ran unsuccessfully for Governor of Washington in 1972 and the
				  U.S. House of Representatives in 1977. After his retirement from the Senate,
				  Durkan became one of the state's top lobbyists. He raised eight children with
				  his wife Lorraine, including former Seattle mayor and U.S. attorney Jenny
				  Durkan. He earned a law degree from the University of Washington School of Law
				  in 1953. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD11</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini at his desk signing;
					 Martin Durkan and two unidentified men standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1959 - 1963</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Merle Junk, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Durkin, Martin Patrick (March 18, 1894 – November 13,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Durkin was born in Chicago, Ill. At the age of 17, Durkin
				  became involved in the plumber's and pipe fitter's union. He eventually became
				  president of that union, and then served as Director of Labor for the State of
				  Illinois from 1933 to 1941. He worked closely with the President Franklin D.
				  Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins. Durkin served as the Secretary
				  of Labor during the Eisenhower administration from January 21, 1953 to
				  September 10, 1953. A Democrat among Republicans, he unsuccessfully pushed for
				  his revisions in the Taft-Hartley Act. This led to his resignation after less
				  than eight months in office, the shortest tenure of any Secretary of Labor.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DurkinMP1</container><unittitle>Martin Durkin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Dusanne, Zoë (March 24, 1884 - March 6,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zoë Dusanne was an American art dealer, collector, and promoter
				  who operated the Zoë Dusanne Gallery in Seattle, Washington from 1950 to 1964.
				  She was an avid supporter of Northwest-based artists and played an important
				  role in bringing national attention to the Northwest School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesM1</container><unittitle>Jan Thompson, Morris Graves, and Zoë Dusanne at the
					 Seattle Art Museum</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of the original.</p><p>Filed under Morris Graves subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Dutton, William P. (November 23, 1852 - July 21,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William P. Dutton, the son of Azro and Ann Dutton, was born in
				  Vermont. He settled in Heppner, Oregon and was a member of the firm Dutton,
				  Fuller and Farnsworth, which raised sheep in eastern Oregon. Dutton later moved
				  to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW3</container><unittitle> John William Redington in scout uniform, holding
					 rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Pioneer pathfinders of the Pacific
					 Northwest. Photographs on page include: Hon Jackson Lee Morrow, Judge William
					 P. Dutton, Henry Heppner and Hon. James William Morrow.</p><p>Filed under John William Redington subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dwelley, Angeline Elizabeth Wells
				  (September 19, 1849 - July 13, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Angeline Elizabeth Wells was the daughter of Alonzo and Martha
				  (Bingham) Wells, natives of New York who had moved Wisconsin. She married
				  Joseph Dwelley on February 11, 1865 and moved to Washington Territory in 1870
				  to join her husband.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DwelleyAEW1</container><unittitle>Angeline Elizabeth Dwelley with young girl</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wingren, La Conner, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Dwelley, Joseph Franklin (April 19, 1839 -
				  December 6, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Franklin Dwelley was born in Kittery, Maine and ran away
				  to Wisconsin after the death of his mother. He served in the Fifth Wisconsin
				  Regiment in the Civil War. In 1870, he came to Skagit County and homesteaded at
				  the present site of Mt. Vernon and started the first store there. He was joined
				  by his wife and two children a year later. The family moved to La Conner in
				  1873 where Joseph Dwelley worked at various occupations including postmaster,
				  storekeeper, carpenter and boat builder. In 1876, he was appointed as a Justice
				  of the Peace to fill an unexpired term and served in that capacity for many
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DwelleyJF1</container><unittitle>Joseph Franklin Dwelley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dyment, Colin Victor (February 22, 1879
				  - October 20, 1928) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Colin V. Dyment was the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences
				  at the University of Oregon (1913) and Dean of Journalism at the UW (1917). He
				  served in WWI as a Red Cross "searcher" for the 91st Division on the
				  battlefields of France. He wrote letters to the families of fallen soldiers
				  explaining the circumstances of the soldier's death. He also wrote the 1922
				  Oregon Code of Ethics in Journalism.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DymentCV1</container><unittitle>Colin V. Dyment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 20, 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dysart, James S. (February 20,
				  1836-October 14, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Dysart was born in Delaware County, NY and moved to
				  California in 1855 to join his brother. He worked as a lumberman in
				  Placerville, CA and operated a hotel in Nevada on the overland stagecoach
				  route. He also worked as a miner and farmer in both Nevada and California
				  before moving to Washington Territory in 1871. He obtained a government land
				  claim near the present town of Ellensburg and operated the second sawmill in
				  the region. He was elected county commissioner in 1884 and served for four
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DysartJS1</container><unittitle>James Dysart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech><note><p>Image is from a page cut out from <emph render="italic">History of the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington</emph>
					 volume 1, page 648.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle type="item">E</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eagleson, Lt. James Mills (November 2,
				  1894 - February 19, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Mills Eagleson graduated in 1917 from the University of
				  Washington with a B.A. in Education, majoring in Natural Sciences. He was a
				  Yell King and a member of Phi Gamma Delta. Eagleson was an Army lieutenant in
				  the 69th Artillery C.A.C. and died during World War I. His papers are held in
				  UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EaglesonJM1</container><unittitle>James Mills Eagleson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Earhart, Rockey Preston (June 23, 1837
				  - May 12, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rockey P. Earhart was born in Franklin, Ohio and arrived in
				  Oregon in 1855. He served in the quartermaster department of the U. S. Army at
				  Fort Vancouver and The Dalles during the Yakima Indian War of 1855-6. After the
				  war, he went into general mercantile business in Yamhill and Polk counties
				  until he became the United States Indian Agent at the Warm Springs Agency. He
				  was later appointed the Secretary of the Board of Commissioners to work with
				  the Klamath and Modoc Indians. In 1868 he returned to the mercantile business
				  in Salem. He represented Marion County in the Oregon State House in 1870 and
				  was instrumental in securing the first appropriation for the erection of public
				  buildings in Oregon. In 1872, he became chief clerk in the office of
				  Superintendent of Indian Affairs. He then moved to Portland where he managed
				  the <emph render="italic">Portland Daily Bulletin</emph>. In 1874 he was
				  appointed chief clerk of the Surveyor General's office and served until 1878,
				  when he resigned to accept the office of Secretary of State. From 1885 to 1887
				  he was Adjutant General, and in 1888 was elected to the legislature from
				  Multnomah County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EarhartRP1</container><unittitle>Rockey P. Earhart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Earle, Ethel (January 30, 1867 -
				  October 19, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Earle was the stage name of Clara Agnes Pavey Proctor, a
				  theatrical and music-hall performer who was active between 1894 and 1934. She
				  was the daughter of Alfred Pavey, a builder and estate agent. She married
				  George Frederick William Proctor in 1886 and in 1896 married George Adney
				  Payne, a London music hall owner and producer, whom she divorced in 1902. She
				  appeared at the Adelphi Theater in London's West End.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EarleE1</container><unittitle>Ethel Earle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Earle, Frances Merritt (March 26, 1897
				  - November 12, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frances M. Earle was a graduate of Winthrop College and had
				  advanced degrees from Columbia University and George Washington University. In
				  1931, she came to the University of Washington from the University of Vermont
				  and remained at the UW until her retirement in 1967. Her specialty was the
				  geography of Southeast Asia and the Pacific Rim. During World War II, she was a
				  consultant about Japan for US Naval Intelligence. In 1948, she was trapped
				  behind battle lines in a fight between Indonesian and Dutch troops near
				  Jakarta. She was active in the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers and
				  served as president of the organization in 1940. She edited the 
				  <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>, the UW yearbook, from 1957 until 1964 and
				  was on the UW Geography Library Committee. Her husband, Howard H. Martin, a
				  professor of geography at the UW from 1930 until 1962 and was chair of the
				  department from 1935 until 1950.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EarleFM1</container><unittitle>Frances M. Earle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 8, 1954</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eastlake, Mary Flowers (1856 - August 5,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Eastlake was born in Warwick, England and made her debut as
				  an actress as a young girl in 1876 at the Crystal Palace, London. She became a
				  prominent actress on the London stage and joined Wilson Barrett's acting
				  company in 1882, where she transitioned from early comedic roles into serious
				  dramas. Particularly praised was her performance as Helle, opposite Wilson
				  Barrett in <emph render="italic">Clito</emph> at London's Royal Princess
				  Theatre in 1886.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EastlakeMF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Eastlake in costume</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. Thomson, London</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on mat: With [illeg.] Seasons [illeg.] Mary Eastlake
					 To dearest Brainerd 1890.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EastlakeMF2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Eastlake in long
					 robe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. Thomson, London</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on mat: Faithfully Yours, Mary Eastlake, 1890.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eastman, Emma J. Manning (May 2, 1856 -
				  January 8, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma J. Manning, the daughter of Joseph Phillip Manning and
				  Caroline Aubert Manning, was born in Lewis County, Washington Territory. She
				  married Charles Frank Eastman, a blacksmith, in 1876, and the couple moved to
				  Olympia. Charles Eastman was later the postmaster of Tumwater, WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EastmanEJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Emma Eastman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Mrs. C.F. Eastman, Olympia, 130-19th Street.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Eastman, Leslie Wakefield (March 6, 1906 - November 29,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leslie Wakefield Eastman was a Seattle real estate agent who was
				  served as president of the Seattle Real Estate Board in 1950.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eastwood, Everett Owen (February 5, 1876 -
				  December 15, 1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Everett O. Eastwood was educated at the University of Virginia
				  and MIT. He joined the UW staff in 1905 as head of the two person mechanical
				  engineering department. In 1929, he helped found the UW Aeronautical
				  Engineering department and chaired this department until his retirement in
				  1947, remaining as a research consultant on the faculty after his retirement.
				  He was the UW’s engineering consultant, served as consulting engineer for the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, and he helped develop the master plan for the
				  campus. He was a pioneer in the field of air conditioning, serving as president
				  of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers as well as vice
				  president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EastwoodEO1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Everett Eastwood in closet
					 kitchenette</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EastwoodEO2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Everett Eastwood playing
					 pool</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eaton, Abel Ellsworth ( May 30, 1834 -
				  January 15, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abel Eaton was born in Conway, New Hampshire. In 1854, he left
				  New Hampshire for Ohio and then moved on to Huntsville, Indiana where he taught
				  school. He returned to Ohio to teach; however, his teaching was halted by the
				  repurposing of the schoolhouse for the military under the new name Fort
				  Denison. He went west to the Pacific Coast where he became a business man
				  dealing in oxen and mules. He eventually settled in Union, Oregon where he
				  owned the Union Woolen Mills. He married Mary E. Baird on November 6, 1867. He
				  became a notable local public figure, serving as mayor and supporting the
				  development of educational and religious institutions. Eaton Hall at Willamette
				  University is named for him; he donated the money for its construction.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EatonAE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Abel Eaton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ebbert, George Wood (June 10, 1810
				  -October 1, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Ebbert was a mountain man, fur trader and early
				  settler in Oregon. Born in Kentucky, he settled on the Tualatin Plains in what
				  would become Oregon and participated in the Champoeg Meetings that created a
				  government prior to the formation of the Oregon Territory. During the Cayuse
				  War, he traveled with Joseph Meek across the Rocky Mountains to ask Congress
				  for the creation of a federal territory and assistance with the war. Ebbert was
				  one of the first purchasers of town lots in Hillsboro, Oregon. His land claim
				  in Washington County was adjacent to what became the town of Orenco, Oregon and
				  is the site of much of the Orenco Station development in Hillsboro.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbbertGW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George W. Ebbert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eberman, Ninian Alkanah (December 9,
				  1821 - April 19, 1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ninian A. Eberman was born in Henry County, Tennessee, in 1821
				  and at the age of ten went with his parents to settle in Madison County,
				  Illinois. In 1840, he moved to Missouri and on January 1, 1843 started the
				  journey to Oregon, arriving in October 1843. He initially worked in a sawmill
				  on the south side of the Columbia River opposite Cathlamet. The following
				  spring, he moved to the Clatsop Plains, where he raised potatoes and cattle. In
				  the fall of 1848 he went to California to search for gold, but soon returned to
				  Oregon. He married Emma Hobson in 1850; they lived in Seaside, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbermanNA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ninian A. Eberman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ebey, Eason Benton (July 22, 1844-July 13,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eason Benton Ebey was the eldest son of Isaac Ebey, an early
				  settler in Washington Territory who arrived in 1850. He was the son-in-law of
				  Phoebe Judson who started the Northwest Normal School, which later became
				  Western Washington University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyEB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eason Benton Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Copy of tintype</p></phystech><note><p>Original tintype in collection PH Coll 1030.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Ebey, George W. P. (July 4, 1833 -
				  October 18, 1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>In 1853, George W. P. Ebey was a member of the William Royal and
				  Barbara Ebey Royal wagon train to Oregon Territory. Subsequently he traveled to
				  California and Washington Territory, where he homesteaded on Protection Island
				  in Puget Sound. His uncle was Jacob Ebey; Isaac Neff Ebey and Winfield Scott
				  Ebey were cousins. The claims on Protection Island were sold in 1858, and he
				  returned to Illinois. He married Theodosia Burr Balsley on April 2, 1861shortly
				  before volunteering for the Union Army. He was wounded at Shiloh, and it was
				  believed that the wound contributed to his early death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyGWP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George W. P. Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Copy of tintype</p></phystech><note><p>Written on verso: Mother's cousin George W. Ebey now
					 deceased</p><p>Original tintype in collection PH Coll 1030.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Ebey, Isaac Neff (January 22, 1818 – August
				  11, 1857) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Ebey was born in Columbus, Ohio; his father, Jacob, moved
				  the family to Missouri where Isaac trained in the law. In 1843, he married
				  Rebecca Davis; they had two sons, Eason Benton and Jacob Ellison. Ebey left his
				  family to try gold-mining during the California gold-rush and then headed north
				  to Oregon Territory. After arriving in the Puget Sound region, he went to work
				  for the U.S. Customs service. He settled in Whidbey Island in October 1850,
				  establishing a Donation Land Claim, and his family joined him in 1854. Serving
				  as prosecuting attorney for the Whidbey Island community he also represented
				  Thurston County in the Oregon Territorial Legislature when that county still
				  stretched to the 49th parallel. He also assisted in helping persuade the
				  legislature to petition the U. S. Congress to form Washington Territory in 1853
				  and assisted in breaking Thurston County into four smaller counties (Island,
				  Jefferson, King, and Pierce). Appointed by President Franklin Pierce to be
				  collector for the Puget Sound district and inspector of revenues, Ebey
				  relocated his customs office to Port Townsend and made it the official port of
				  entry for Puget Sound. In 1857, Ebey was killed by a party of Native Americans
				  seeking revenge for the death of one of their chiefs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyIN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Isaac Neff
					 Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a daguerreotype probably made in the 1850s. Written on
					 verso: Col. Isaac N. Ebey, Whidbey Island Washington. From the daguerreotype
					 owned by Mrs. Edith Parker, Haywood, CA.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyIN2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Isaac Neff Ebey [copy
					 missing]</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">prior to 1857</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Murdered by Northern Indians on Whidbey Island 1857.
					 He was pioneer to Oregon 1848 to California 1849 and to California 1850. Was in
					 the legislature when Oregon and Washington were divided and named Olympia
					 Capital of Washington Territory. From Missouri was second collector of customs
					 on Puget Sound.</p><p>Original carte-de-visite in collection PH Coll 1030.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyIN3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Memorial stone commemorating the
					 murder of Isaac Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 27, 1928</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pratt's Ebey memorial, Ebey's Landing,
					 Whidbey Island; History Club trip.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ebey, Jacob Ellison (October 17,
				  1846-July 10, 1890) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Ellison Ebey was the second son of Isaac Ebey, an early
				  settler in Washington Territory who arrived in 1850.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyJE1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Jacob Ellison Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Shew, San Francisco</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: J. Ellison Ebey of Whidbey's Island
						Washington Territory Born in Schuyler, Missouri Second son of I. N. Ebey</p><p>Original carte-de-visite in collection PH Coll 1030.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyJE2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Jacob Ellison Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April, 1878</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John D. Godeus, People's Art Gallery, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ebey, Jacob Neff (November 4, 1793 - February 24,
				  1862)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Neff Ebey was the father of Isaac Ebey, an early settler
				  in Washington Territory, following his son from Missouri to Whidbey Island in
				  1854. Jacob Ebey served as a soldier under General William Henry Harrison
				  during the War of 1812 and as a colonel during the Black Hawk War of 1832.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyJN1</container><unittitle>Jacob Neff Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1862?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ebey, Winfield Scott (December 21, 1831
				  - February 21, 1865)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Winfield Ebey was born in Ohio and moved to Whidbey Island in
				  1854. In 1863 he was ill with tuberculosis and sailed for California in hopes
				  of finding a cure. He died in Petaluma in 1865. His body was shipped back to
				  Washington, and his sister, Mary Bozarth, buried him on their parents’ farm,
				  the first burial in the Sunnyside Cemetery in Coupeville, WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EbeyWS1</container><unittitle>Winfield Scott Ebey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: son of Jacob and Sarah Ebey. and brother of
					 I. N. Ebey. Came to Whidbey Island Washington Territory and died in Petaluma,
					 California Feb. 20, 1865. This [illeg.] was copied in Portland from one taken
					 in Port Townsend - an ambrotype.</p><p>Carte-de-visite copy of an ambrotype probably made in 1850s.
					 Original carte-de-visite in collection PH Coll 1030.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ebright, Carroll Malcom "Ky" (March 20, 1894 – November
				  25, 1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carroll Malcom "Ky" Ebright was the coach for the University of
				  California, Berkeley crew from 1923 through 1959. Ebright was born in Chicago,
				  Illinois to Frank Randall and Charlotte Ebright and attended Broadway High
				  School in Seattle. While attending college at the University of Washington, he
				  was a coxswain, lettering there in 1916 and 1917. During World War I, he was a
				  flying instructor. Ebright remained at the University of Washington after
				  graduating and was an assistant coach there through the 1923 season. In the
				  fall of 1923, he became the head coach for the rowing team at Berkeley; he took
				  the job only after he was assured that his job at Washington would be waiting
				  for him if things did not work well. During his tenure, the Cal Bears men's
				  varsity 8 (8+) won gold medals in the 1928, 1932 and 1948 Olympics and six IRA
				  national championships. He was inducted into the U. S. Rowing Hall of Fame in
				  1956. Ebright is the only man to coach three Olympic gold medal-winning
				  eight-oared boats.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY6</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Russell Callow, Carroll M. Ebright
					 and Alvin Ulbrickson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eckerson, Theodore John (January 22,
				  1820 - April 4, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Major Theodore J. Eckerson was born in New York City and entered
				  the United States Army in 1838. He served in the Seminole Indian War (1840-42)
				  and in the Mexican American War. He came to Oregon with the first troops sent
				  after the settlement with England, arriving at Fort Vancouver in 1849. He
				  established and taught the first school north of the Columbia River. He was
				  commissioned an officer in the storekeeper’s branch of the United States
				  ordnance department in 1853, and held the position until 1865, when he was
				  appointed to a commission in the United States quartermaster’s department. He
				  was brevetted a major March 21, 1865, and promoted to the full rank of major
				  January 24, 1881. He served actively until he retired on January 22, 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EckersonTJ1</container><unittitle>Major Theodore J. Eckerson in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Lithograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eckmann, Ray Laroy (February 19, 1899 -
				  February 14, 1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ray Eckmann was the star quarterback at Lincoln High School in
				  Seattle in 1918 and later was the quarterback for the University of Washington.
				  He was the team’s star for several years, team captain in 1922 and was
				  nominated for the National Football Hall of Fame. Also a UW track star, he
				  returned as an assistant football coach. In 1936, he became UW athletic
				  director and director of student affairs. He left in 1942 to spend more time on
				  Martin and Eckmann, his clothing store in the University District. In 1964 he
				  was appointed to the city council position vacated by Dorm Braman, the
				  long-time city councilman from Lake City who became mayor. Eckmann retired in
				  1967, but was reappointed to a two-month position on the council in 1970
				  following the death of Myrtle Edwards. He was elected to the Husky Hall of Fame
				  in 1982.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EckmannRL1</container><unittitle>Ray Eckmann</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eckstein, Nathan (January 10, 1873 –
				  October 21, 1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan Eckstein was a German-born businessman who came to
				  Seattle in 1898. In 1902 he married Mina Alice Schwabacher, the daughter of
				  Abraham Schwabacher, one of the original Schwabacher Brothers. Eckstein became
				  vice president and later chief executive officer of Schwabachers and guided the
				  company through World War I and II and the Great Depression. He opposed the
				  Seattle General Strike of 1919 and supported an open shop; however, by the late
				  1930's, he developed a better relationship with organized labor. In 1937 and
				  1938, he was part of a citizen's committee that successfully arbitrated in a
				  jurisdictional dispute between the International Longshoremen's Association
				  (ILA) under Harry Bridges and the Teamsters under Dave Beck over organizing
				  inland warehouse workers. He gained great acclaim in Seattle for his
				  involvement in business and for his volunteer work and membership in many
				  public organizations; in 1926 he received the honor of being named "Seattle's
				  Most Useful Citizen." Among these organizations were: the Rainier Club, B'nai
				  B'rith, the Shrine, the Scottish Rite Masons, Goodwill Industries, Seattle
				  Symphony Orchestra, Seattle School Board, the Washington State Tax Commission,
				  the Seattle Community Fund, and a commission to revise the City Charter. He was
				  particularly active and involved in the Seattle Jewish community. Seattle's
				  Nathan Eckstein Middle School is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EcksteinN1</container><unittitle>Caricature of Nathan Eckstein (as Kid Optimism) and
					 Worrall Wilson (as Old Man Pessimism) in a boxing ring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Fitgerald</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: "K.O." = Nathan Eckstein/"OMP" = Worrall
					 Wilson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ecton, Zales Nelson (April 1, 1898 –
				  March 3, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zales Nelson Ecton was born in Weldon, Decatur County, Iowa. He
				  attended Montana State College (later Montana State University) at Bozeman and
				  the University of Chicago law school. Entering politics, he was a member of the
				  Montana state House from 1933 to 1937 and the Montana state senate from 1937 to
				  1946. In 1946, he was elected the Republican United States senator from Montana
				  and served in the Senate for one term. He lost his bid for reelection in 1952
				  to U.S. Representative Mike Mansfield. Ecton returned to ranching after his
				  political career.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EctonZN1</container><unittitle>Zales Nelson Ecton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1946?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edens, John James (July 1, 1840 -
				  December 24, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John James Edens was born in Marshall County, Kentucky. He
				  enlisted in the Civil War and joined the Tenth Missouri Cavalry. Discharged in
				  1865, he moved to Washington Territory in 1867, settling in Olympia. In 1871 he
				  entered the timber business and moved to Guemes Island where he built and
				  operated a mill. He married Isabelle Eldridge in Bellingham in 1880. They
				  initially lived on Guemes Island, but moved to Bellingham in 1893. Edens became
				  the first representative to the state legislature from Skagit County after it
				  was separated from Whatcom County, serving in the Washington State Senate from
				  1889 until 1895. He was also a trustee of the Normal School and served on the
				  Whatcom County Council from February 1883 to January 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdensJJ1</container><unittitle>John James Edens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Cabinet card</p></phystech><note><p>On verso: J. J. Edens Guemes, Wash. Presented to Edmond S.
					 Meany by W. M. Chandler. Lewiston, Ida. March 1933.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edgar, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdgarJ1</container><unittitle>John Edgar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Edmundson, Clarence Sinclair "Hec" (August
				  3, 1886 – August 6, 1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence “Hec” Edmundson was born in Moscow, Idaho and graduated
				  from the University of Idaho in 1910. He competed in track for his the
				  University of Idaho. In 1908, he traveled to Stanford for the western U.S.
				  Olympic trials, where he won the 800 meters and finished second in the 400
				  meters, but did not make the Olympic team. He later held the title of top
				  half-miler in the country through 1912. He became the first Idahoan to compete
				  in the Olympic Games in Stockholm in 1912, finishing seventh in the 800 meters
				  and sixth in the 400 meters. He coached at his alma mater (1916–18). After a
				  track season at Texas A&amp;M, he headed to Seattle to coach the UW Huskies,
				  where he is credited with the creation of the fast-break offense style, which
				  he attributed to his track background. He was the basketball coach at the UW
				  from 1920 until 1947, compiling a 508–204 (.713) overall record. He also
				  coached the track teams and served on the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball
				  Committee from 1941-46. Edmundson was posthumously inducted into the Big W
				  Club, the UW athletics hall of fame, in the first class of 1979. The UW
				  Pavilion, opened in December 1927, was renamed "Hec Edmundson Pavilion" in his
				  honor in January 1948.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hec Edmundson sitting with young boy
					 and basketball players</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hec Edmundson with
					 megaphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clarence "Hec" Edmundson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hec Edmundson with two young
					 women</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hec Edmundson with
					 whistle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EdmundsonCS6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edmundson with starting pistol and
					 two young men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edsen, Edward Polonius (April 29, 1856
				  - August 6, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward [Eduard] Polonius Edsen was born in Germany in 1856. An
				  attorney by training, Edsen began practicing law in the Washington Territory in
				  1882. He represented a number of prominent figures and organizations during a
				  multi-decade career and argued several cases in front of the U.S. Supreme
				  Court. He was active in civic affairs and was a member of several fraternal
				  organizations including the Fraternal Order of the Eagles and the Order of the
				  Odd Fellows. He was also an author and poet.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdsenEP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward Edsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1918 and 1921?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">LaPine, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edson, Norman Stewart (May 11, 1879 -
				  January 20, 1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norman Edson, photographer, painter and writer, was born
				  Montreal, Canada. In 1905 he traveled to Everett, Washington and served as a
				  photographer’s apprentice. He opened his own studio and had success in
				  photographing Native Americans, logging camps and Northwest scenes until the
				  economic downturn of 1907 sent him back to Glen Sutton, Quebec. He returned to
				  the Northwest in 1911 with his wife and young daughter. In 1921, he moved to
				  Burton, Washington where he established his studio, now a designated King
				  County Community Landmark. He was known for his hand-tinted and orotone
				  photographs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdsonNS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Norman Edson standing next to
					 outboard motors, Burton, WA</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1968?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: He knew much Indian lore and had good
					 friendships with them. Could have done a book on them.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Edward, Prince of Wales (June 23, 1894 - May 28,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward VIII (Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick
				  David) was King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Empire,
				  and Emperor of India, from January 20, 1936 until his abdication on December 11
				  the same year, after which he became the Duke of Windsor. Edward was the eldest
				  son of King George V and Queen Mary. He was created Prince of Wales on his
				  sixteenth birthday, nine weeks after his father succeeded as king. As a young
				  man, he served in the British Army during the First World War and undertook
				  several overseas tours on behalf of his father. Edward became king on his
				  father's death in early 1936. He caused concern among politicians by his
				  apparent disregard for established constitutional conventions. Only months into
				  his reign, he caused a constitutional crisis by proposing to Wallis Simpson, an
				  American who had divorced her first husband and was seeking a divorce from her
				  second. The prime ministers of the United Kingdom and the Dominions opposed the
				  marriage, arguing a divorced woman with two living ex-husbands was politically
				  and socially unacceptable as a prospective queen consort. Additionally, such a
				  marriage would have conflicted with Edward's status as the titular head of the
				  Church of England, which at the time disapproved of remarriage after divorce if
				  a former spouse was still alive. Edward knew the British government, led by
				  Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, would resign if the marriage went ahead, which
				  could have forced a general election and would ruin his status as a politically
				  neutral constitutional monarch. When it became apparent he could not marry
				  Wallis and remain on the throne, Edward abdicated. He was succeeded by his
				  younger brother, George VI. With a reign of 326 days, Edward is one of the
				  shortest-reigning monarchs in British history. After his abdication, he was
				  created Duke of Windsor. He married Wallis in France on 3 June 1937, after her
				  second divorce became final. Later that year, the couple toured Germany. During
				  the Second World War, he was at first stationed with the British Military
				  Mission to France, but after private accusations that he held Nazi sympathies
				  he was appointed Governor of the Bahamas. After the war, Edward spent the rest
				  of his life in retirement in France. Edward and Wallis remained married until
				  his death in 1972. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">Edward1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward, Prince of Wales, in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1919</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on the slide: "Long live the King" and "God bless the
					 Prince of Wales."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwards, John Harrington (September 21,
				  1834 - September 16, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harrington Edwards was born in Acton, Massachusetts. He
				  moved to Rockford, Illinois and then to Beloit, Wisconsin to attend college. He
				  graduated from Beloit College and then Columbia University with a Doctor of
				  Divinity degree. His first parish was in West Lebanon, New Hampshire in 1862.
				  He then moved to Pennsylvania in 1870 and later was in charge of Presbyterian
				  churches in Minneapolis, Minnesota; Erie, Pennsylvania; and Brooklyn, New York.
				  In later years, he made his home with his son, John H. Edwards in Seattle. He
				  published <emph>God and Music</emph> in 1903. Edwards married Caroline Starr
				  (1829-1898) in 1862. After her death, he married Anna Van Veghten (1845-1914).
				  He was a member of the Borrowed Time Club in Seattle, a 70-and-over men's-only
				  club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdwardsJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Postcard with members of the Borrowed
					 Time Club in Seattle, including John Harrington Edwards and Thomas
					 Wardall.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Long's Photo Studio</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>Postcard</p></phystech><note><p>Written on front: The central figure is that of our 100 year
					 old "boy," Mr. Thomas Wardall.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwards, John White (April 2, 1836 -
				  May 26, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Edwards was born in Canada and came to Vancouver Island
				  at the time of the Caribou gold rush. He came to the United States in 1867
				  where he was associated with the lumber industry and at one time was in charge
				  of the books and the store at Port Madison. He moved to Seattle where he was a
				  real estate investor and one of the founding members of the Rainier Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdwardsJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John W. Edwards</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Moore, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwards, William Franklin (February 13,
				  1858 - January 12, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Franklin Edwards was born in Rock Island, Ill., on
				  February 18, 1856. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Michigan
				  in 1890, and was an instructor in physics and chemistry there until 1895, when
				  he became professor of physics and chemistry at the University of Washington.
				  After President Harrington’s resignation on March 24, 1897, Edwards was
				  appointed President. of the University. He served as President until October 1,
				  1897 when he was replaced by Charles Francis Reeves. Always deeply interested
				  in research, he gave up his work as an educator and turned to industrial
				  science. While director of research for a combined laboratory of four leading
				  automobile manufacturers during the World War he played an important part in
				  the development of high-strength alloy steels for automotive use. He
				  contributed extensively to scientific journals and was a member of many
				  organizations, among them the American Chemical Society, the American
				  Association for the Advancement of Science, American Society of Steel Treaters,
				  American Society of Dyers and Colorists, American Section of the Society of
				  Chemical Industry, British Royal Society of Art, British Textile Institute,
				  United States Institute of Textile Research, and American Society for Testing
				  Materials. He was director of research for the United States Testing Company of
				  New York from 1918 until his death in 1933. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdwardsWF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Franklin Edwards</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaRoche, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item photo">Eells, Abigail Ann "Abbie" (August 30,
				  1844 - December 28, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abigail A. Foster arrived in Washington Territory from Maine in
				  1865 via the Isthmus of Panama. She married Edwin Eells, the son of pioneer
				  missionaries Cushing Eells and Myra Fairbanks Eells in 1871.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsAA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Abbie A. Eells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ellison A. Lynn, Tacoma</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsEE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwin and Abbie Eells in front of
					 house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edwin Eells subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eells, Reverend Cushing (February 16,
				  1810 - February 16, 1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cushing Eells was born in Blandford, Massachusetts and graduated
				  from Williams College in 1834. He later entered East Windsor Theological
				  Institute in Connecticut and graduated in 1837. He was licensed to preach
				  December 14, 1836, and was ordained the following year as a Congregational
				  missionary. The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions sent him
				  to the Oregon Territory. He married Myra Fairbanks on March 5, 1838 in
				  Massachusetts, and the couple headed west the next day. They settled among the
				  Spokane Indians at Tshimakain. With the deaths of the Whitmans and others at
				  Waiilaptu in 1847 and the ensuing Northwest Indian Wars, the Eells moved from
				  Tshimakain under military escort to Oregon and settled in Forest Grove. He
				  taught at various schools in the Tualatin Plains, including the Oregon
				  Institute, now Willamette University. He also started the Tualatin Academy, now
				  Pacific University, in 1849. In 1859, Eells headed to the Walla Walla Valley
				  where he built a school in memory of the Whitmans. The first building of the
				  school, later Whitman College, was erected in 1866, and he served as principal.
				  He simultaneously served as superintendent of schools for Walla Walla County.
				  For several years, he traveled the Washington Territory, founding
				  Congregational churches and schools and raising money for the seminary. He
				  continued to do missionary work and was actively involved with Whitman College
				  until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsC1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Cushing Eells with book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: From Penrose Memorial Library Eels Northwest
					 Collection, Whitman College.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsC2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Cushing Eells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eells, Edwin Edward (July 27, 1841 - July 3,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Eells, the son of pioneer missionaries Cushing Eells and
				  Myra Fairbanks Eells, was born at the Tshimakain Mission near present-day
				  Spokane, Washington. He spent most of his childhood in the Willamette Valley.
				  When the family moved back to Walla Walla, Edwin took over much of the
				  responsibility for the family farm, located at the former Whitman Mission site.
				  In 1869, he moved to the territorial capital of Olympia, where he worked as the
				  enrolling clerk of the council and read law. In 1870, he was appointed Indian
				  Agent for the Skokomish Agency west of Puget Sound and was admitted to the bar
				  nine days after his appointment; he served as Indian Agent until 1895. He
				  married Abigail Foster in 1871. His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsEE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Edwin Eels</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jackson Studio, Tacoma, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsEE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwin and Abbie Eells in front of
					 house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eells, Myra Fairbanks (May 26, 1805 -
				  August 9, 1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Myra Eells and her husband Cushing, together with Mary and
				  Elkanah Walker, established the Tshimakain Mission northwest of Spokane in
				  1838, after crossing the continent on foot. Myra's two children, Edwin and
				  Myron, were born during their nine-year stay at Tshimakain, their births being
				  attended by Dr. Marcus Whitman. After the Whitman killings in 1848, the Eells
				  moved to the Willamette Valley, where they were active in educational and
				  church work. While in Oregon, Cushing Eells started the Tualatin Academy, which
				  became Pacific University. In 1860 the Eells moved back to Washington Territory
				  where they helped start the institution that eventually became Whitman
				  College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsMF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Myra Eells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eells, Myron (October 7, 1843 - January 4,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Myron Eells, the younger son of pioneer missionaries Cushing
				  Eells and Myra Fairbanks Eells, was born at the Tshimakain Mission near
				  present-day Spokane, Washington. He graduated from Pacific University in Forest
				  Grove, Oregon in 1866, and then worked on his father’s farm in Walla Walla for
				  two years before studying for the ministry. He graduated from Hartford
				  Theological Seminary in Connecticut in 1871. He led a Congregational Church in
				  Boise, Idaho, before moving in 1874 to the Skokomish Reservation, west of Puget
				  Sound, where his brother Edwin was the Indian Agent. Eells remained there for
				  the rest of his life, working as a missionary and studying religious,
				  historical and anthropological topics of the people and history of the
				  Northwest. His literary output included hundreds of articles, pamphlets, books
				  and manuscripts. He developed a collection of books on Northwest history, a
				  historical-manuscripts collection and a collection of Native American
				  artifacts. In 1892, he was appointed superintendent of the Department of
				  Ethnology for the Washington State Commission for the Columbian Exposition in
				  Chicago. Eells was a trustee and avid supporter of Whitman College and left
				  money in his estate to the College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Myron Eells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0031/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EellsM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Myron Eells standing
					 outside</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Contours of Eells' face and upper body have been filled in by
				  pencil or ink.</p></phystech><note><p>On verso: Rev. Myron Eells, Missionary for 31 years at
					 Skokomish. Handwritten note with photo: Photo provided to Edmond Meany for 1893
					 Columbia Fair Biography.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eikenberry, Ken (June 29, 1932 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ken Eikenberry was born in Wenatchee and graduated from
				  Washington State University in 1954 and the University of Washington Law School
				  in 1959. He was a member of the Washington State House of Representatives, 36th
				  District, from 1971 through 1976. He also served as the elected Chairman of the
				  Washington State Republican Party 1977 to June, 1980 and again from 1993
				  through 1996. He was Washington's Attorney General from 1981 to 1993.
				  Eikenberry ran for governor of Washington in 1992 and was defeated by Democrat
				  Mike Lowry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EikenberryK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Ken
					 Eikenberry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EikenberryK2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Ken
					 Eikenberry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Cascade Photographics, Olympia, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item">Eisenhower, Dwight David (October 14, 1890 –
				  March 28, 1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dwight D. Eisenhower was the 34th President of the United States
				  from 1953 until 1961. He was a five-star general in the United States Army
				  during World War II and served as Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in
				  Europe. He had responsibility for planning and supervising the invasion of
				  North Africa in Operation Torch in 1942–43 and the successful invasion of
				  France and Germany in 1944–45 from the Western Front. In 1951, he became the
				  first supreme commander of NATO.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EisenhowerDD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dwight D. Eisenhower standing in a
					 car and waving in front of the Olympic Hotel in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1953 and 1956?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EisenhowerDD2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of President
					 Eisenhower</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Tames, New York Times</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ela, Arthur John (December 12, 1883 - March 21,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur John Ela, a civil engineer, was the superintendent for
				  the U.S. Coast &amp; Geodetic Survey in Alaska in the 1920s. He married Mary
				  Bowlby on May 15, 1912.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElaAJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Newlyweds Arthur and Mary
					 Ela</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 16, 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: May 16, 1912 (The day after). Mr. and the
					 very new Mrs. A. J. Ella (awaiting street car at E. 52nd &amp; University Way,
					 Seattle).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ela, Mary Bowlby (October 27, 1885 - July 8,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Bowlby, the daughter of Charles John Bowlby and Mary
				  Elizabeth Bowlby, graduated from Nebraska State University and taught school
				  prior to her marriage to Arthur John Ela on May 15, 1912. Her father was a
				  lawyer and the owner and publisher of the Crete, Nebraska 
				  <emph>Democrat.</emph> Her brother, Henry Lee Bowlby, taught civil engineering
				  at the University of Washington. He left the University in 1909 to become
				  Washington State Highway Commissioner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElaAJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Newlyweds Arthur and Mary
					 Ela</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 16, 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: May 16, 1912 (The day after). Mr. and the
					 very new Mrs. A. J. Ella (awaiting street car at E. 52nd &amp; University Way,
					 Seattle).</p><p>Filed under Mary Ela subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eldridge, Edward (December 7, 1828 -
				  October 13, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Eldridge was born Alexander Braid Munro in Scotland. He
				  joined the British merchant marine service at an early age. In 1846, he left
				  the merchant marine service and hired on a schooner on Lake Erie. In 1849 he
				  traveled to the California gold fields before eventually settling in Bellingham
				  Bay in 1853. He worked at a mill, in the Sehome coal mines and at a school
				  before taking up a claim near Squalicum Creek. Between 1856 and 1858, he served
				  as the first probate judge for Whatcom County; his other political offices
				  included County Commissioner, County Auditor, County Treasurer and Deputy
				  Collector of Customs. Over the next two decades, he became the political voice
				  for Whatcom County in the Territorial Legislature, serving in the House in
				  1864, 1865, and 1866. He was Speaker in 1866 and was a vocal advocate for
				  women's suffrage. He officially changed his name from Alexander Braid Monro in
				  1873, although he had been using the name “Eldridge” for many years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EldridgeE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward Eldridge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellenwood, Lee</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE2</container><unittitle>Ella McBride, Lee Ellenwood and Lena Hemphill
					 performing in Luncheon Program: <emph render="italic">The Ballet Dancers</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.McBrideEE2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The director was Mary Ann Wells.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Alice Amanda (December 22, 1894 - March 26,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Amanda Ellingson, the daghter of Amund and Eline
				  Ellingson, was born in New London, Washington. She married Raymond Curtis
				  Johnson in 1922.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Amund (July 22, 1851 - December 20,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amund Ellingson, the son of Elling Johansen and Karen
				  Morthensdatter, was born in Oslo, Norway and immigrated to the United States in
				  1868. He married Eline Thompson in 1880, and they moved to Hoquiam in 1887. He
				  founded Ellingson Logging Company which was taken over by Polson Logging
				  Company following Amund's death when he fell through a gap in a log raft. The
				  couple had twelve children (in order, oldest first): Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna
				  Mary, Emma, Eddie Clarence (December 22, 1888 - June 13, 1889 and not
				  pictured), Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice, Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and
				  Floyd. Amund was also the founder of the town of New London, Washington and was
				  one of the first loggers in the state to use oxen.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Anna Mary (September 22, 1885 - October 12,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Mary Ellingson, the daughter of Amund and Eline Ellingson,
				  was born in Nebraska. She married Ray Enick Connell in 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Bennett Halstine (July 19, 1896 - November 3,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bennett Halstine Ellingson, the son of Amund and Eline
				  Ellingson, was born in Nebraska. He married Florence E. Kuhn. He worked as a
				  logging company superintendent.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Eline Thompson (March 5, 1860 - February 22,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eline Thompson, the daughter of Knudt Thompson and Anna
				  Nordfjord Thompson, was born in Wisconsin and married Amund Ellingson in 1880.
				  She and her husband moved to Hoquiam in 1887; they had twelve children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Ella (June 13, 1884 - January 8,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ella Ellingson, the daughter of Amund and Eline Ellingson,
				  married Christian D. Hansen (1864 -1935) in 1905 and later married Clarence
				  Consolver (1898 - 1984) in 1937.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Emma Lena (April 4, 1887 - March 9,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Lena Ellingson, the daughter of Amund and Eline Ellingson,
				  was born in Nebraska. She married Lee Reasoner (1881-1953) on July 28,
				  1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Ernest Ray (March 12, 1881 - September 11,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest Ray Ellingson, the son of Amund and Eline Ellingson, was
				  born in Nebraska. He married Beulah Burton in 1910. He was the president of a
				  logging company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Ethel Marie (March 13, 1898 - September 28,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Marie Ellingson, the daughter of Amund and Eline
				  Ellingson, was born in Hoquiam, Washington. She married Charles Hubert Jacka in
				  1920. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Eva Clara (May 4, 1891 - March 4,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eva Clara Ellingson, the daughter of Amund and Eline Ellingson,
				  was born in New London, Washington. She married Walter Jerome Galusha in
				  1910.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Floyd Leonard (April 23, 1901- December 24,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Floyd Leonard Ellingson, the son of Amund and Eline Ellingson,
				  was born in Hoquiam, Washington. He married Nellie G. Martin in 1946.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Harold Carl (October 22, 1899 - August 21,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Carl Ellingson, the son of Amund and Eline Ellingson, was
				  born in Grays Harbor, Washington. He married Nancy Johnson. He worked in the
				  logging industry and died in Riverside, California in 1990.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellingson, Ole Herman (May 21, 1893 - April 25,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ole Herman Ellingson, the son of Amund and Eline Ellingson, was
				  born in New London, Washington. He married Mary Alona Stacie in 1914.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllingsonA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amund and Eline Ellingson with
					 children Ernest Ray, Ella, Anna Mary, Emma, Eva Clara, Ole Herman, Alice,
					 Bennett, Ethel Marie, Harold and Floyd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: Ellingson Family Group. The mother and father came
					 to Hoquiam in 1887 from Wisconsin. A pioneer family of the finest type, they
					 eventually sold timber holdings to the Polson Bros. Logging Co. Several of
					 Hoquiam's largest buildings today are on land owned by the Ellingsons.</p><p>Filed under Amund Ellingson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Elliott, Nancy Sconce (Mrs. William) (June 11, 1816 -
				  January 27, 1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Sconce Elliot was the niece of Alexander Hamilton and the
				  daughter of John Sconce, who had fought with Zachary Taylor during the Florida
				  War of 1837. She married William Elliott who also fought in the Florida War,
				  and the family crossed the plains to Oregon in 1846, settling in Clackamas
				  County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElliottNS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nancy Sconce Elliot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Elliott, William (September 14, 1815 - February 27,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Elliott was born in Knox County, Indiana. He was a
				  volunteer in the Florida War and married Nancy Sconce in 1838. He crossed the
				  plains in 1846 and settled in Clackamas County where Elliot’s Prairie was named
				  in his honor. In 1872, he sold his farm and moved to Canemah, Oregon. He was
				  one of the first members of the Oregon State Agricultural Society and a member
				  of the Oregon Pioneer Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElliottW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Elliott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Elliott, William O.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Elliott was a fireman in the Seattle Fire Department
				  Engine Company #2.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElliottWO1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Elliott in fireman's
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1892 and 1894?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Boyd and Braas Photographic Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>Cabinet Card</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellis, Isaac Chase "Ike" (April 10, 1832 - June 9,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Chase Ellis was born in Maine and arrived in Washington
				  Territory in 1854. He was a businessman, logger, builder, and property-owner.
				  He initially logged in what is now West Seattle before moving to the Olympia,
				  Washington area where he built the Lacey racetrack and a stable complex in the
				  1880s. He was mayor of Olympia in the 1880s and served two terms on the city
				  council.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllisIC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Isaac Chase Ellis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ellsworth, Stuckeley Stafford (December 18, 1826 -
				  January 28, 1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stuckeley Stafford Ellsworth was born in Stockton, Chautauqua
				  County, New York. He graduated from Yale College in 1847 and studied law at
				  Buffalo, New York. He was admitted to practice before the U. S. Supreme Court
				  in 1855. He moved to Eugene, Oregon the same year and established a practice.
				  In 1856, he married Mary Stevens, a daughter of General J. H. Stevens, one of
				  the first pioneers of the state. In 1872, they moved to LaGrande, Oregon. He
				  was involved in railroad development and was on the Board of Directors of the
				  Oregon &amp; California Railroad. He helped to locate the State University at
				  Eugene (now the University of Oregon). He died in La Grande in 1876 after a
				  brief illness.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EllsworthSS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stuckeley Stafford
					 Ellsworth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ely, Richard Theodore (April 13, 1854 – October 4,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Theodore Ely was an American economist, author, and
				  leader of the Progressive movement. His platform called for more government
				  intervention in order to reform what they perceived as the injustices of
				  capitalism, especially regarding factory conditions, compulsory education,
				  child labor, and labor unions. He is best remembered as a founder and the first
				  Secretary of the American Economic Association (1885) and as a founder and
				  secretary of the Christian Social Union (1891), a membership organization
				  advocating the application of Christian principles to the social problems of
				  the world. He was the author of a series of widely-read books on the organized
				  labor movement, socialism, and other social questions, such as 
				  <emph render="italic">Socialism: An Examination of Its Nature, Its Strength and
				  Its Weakness</emph> (1894), <emph render="italic">Monopolies and Trusts</emph>
				  (1900), and <emph render="italic">Property and Contract in their Relation to
				  the Distribution of Wealth</emph> (1914). A large portion of his library was
				  purchased by Louisiana State University and is now a part of LSU's Special
				  Collections division.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ElyRT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Theodore Ely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. R. Curtiss, Madison, WI</persname></origination></did><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Professor Edmond S. Meany with my
					 regards, Richard T. Ely Madison Wisc March 4, 1909.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Emerick, Lucetta Zachary (January 28, 1825 - August 22,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucetta Zachary was born in Hemstead County, Arkansas and
				  immigrated with her family from Ohio to Oregon in 1843. She married Solomon
				  Emerick, also an immigrant of 1843, in 1845. The couple settled in the
				  Willamette Valley near Cornelius, Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmerickLZ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lucetta Zachary Emerick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Emerick, Solomon (November 30, 1821 - February 6,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Solomon Emerick, was born in Ohio and moved to Buchanan County,
				  Missouri in 1830. In 1843 he accepted the job of driving oxen to Oregon,
				  arriving with one of the large migrations. He initially settled near present
				  day Forest Grove, Oregon. In 1845, he married Lucetta Zachary, who had been in
				  the same wagon train; after a trip back to Missouri to help move Solomon’s
				  parents to Oregon, they settled on a farm in the Willamette Valley, near
				  Cornelius, Oregon. Both died in 1899 in Fletcher, Idaho where they had moved in
				  1898 to be near one of their daughters. Tualatin Academy (later Pacific
				  University) is located on land that was part of Solomon Emerick’s original land
				  claim; the land was purchased by Harvey Clark who donated a portion of it to
				  the new school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmerickS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Solomon Emerick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Emerson, George Harry (February 18, 1845 - August 2,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Emerson was born in New Hampshire and was a Civil War
				  veteran, having enlisted in a Massachusetts regiment. After the war and a brief
				  period at Harvard University, he set out for the American West. As an agent and
				  eventual partner with San Francisco lumber baron Captain Asa M Simpson, Emerson
				  moved to the city of Hoquiam, Washington Territory and founded the city's first
				  lumber mill as President of the North Western Lumber Company. He would soon
				  also become president of the Hoquiam Board of Trade and member of the first
				  town council. As a prominent citizen, Emerson took a hand in the physical and
				  economic development of the city, and so was eventually known as the 'Father of
				  Hoquiam.' At the time of his death, Emerson was President of the Harbor Land
				  Company, the Frank H. Lamb Timber Company and Grays Harbor Tug Boat Company,
				  Vice-President of the Grays Harbor Company, Hoquiam Water Company, Northwestern
				  Lumber Company and First National Bank. He was a stockholder and trustee of the
				  Metropolitan Building Company of Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmersonGH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Emerson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Emerson, Ralph Waldo (May 25, 1803 – April 27,
				  1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist, lecturer,
				  philosopher, abolitionist, and poet who led the transcendentalist movement of
				  the mid-19th century. He was seen as a champion of individualism and a
				  prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society, and his ideology
				  was disseminated through dozens of published essays and more than 1,500 public
				  lectures across the United States. Emerson gradually moved away from the
				  religious and social beliefs of his contemporaries, formulating and expressing
				  the philosophy of transcendentalism in his 1836 essay<emph> Nature.</emph>
				  Emerson wrote most of his important essays as lectures first and then revised
				  them for print. His first two collections of essays, <emph>Essays: First
				  Series</emph> (1841) and <emph>Essays: Second Series</emph> (1844), represent
				  the core of his thinking. Together with <emph>Nature</emph>, these essays made
				  the decade from the mid-1830s to the mid-1840s Emerson's most fertile period.
				  Emerson wrote on a number of subjects, never espousing fixed philosophical
				  tenets, but developing certain ideas such as individuality, freedom, the
				  ability for mankind to realize almost anything, and the relationship between
				  the soul and the surrounding world. He remains among the linchpins of the
				  American romantic movement, and his work has greatly influenced the thinkers,
				  writers and poets that followed him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">12</container><container type="item">EmersonRW1</container><unittitle>Ralph Waldo Emerson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Munroe from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Emmons, Della Gould (August 12, 1890 – November 6, 1983)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Della Gould Emmons was an American author of historical fiction.
				  Born in Glencoe, Minnesota, Emmons moved west with her husband Allen B. Emmons.
				  The couple lived in Seattle for nineteen years. Her first and most notable
				  novel, <emph render="italic">Sacajawea of the Shoshones</emph> (1943), was
				  later adapted into the film <emph render="italic">The Far Horizons</emph>
				  (1955). Her other books include <emph render="italic">Nothing in Life Is
				  Free</emph> , the story of the first wagon train to cross the Cascade Mountains
				  into the Puget Sound region; <emph render="italic">Leschi of the
				  Nisquallies</emph> , the story of a Tacoma-area Native American leader during a
				  tense period in the 19th century, and <emph render="italic">Northwest History
				  in Action</emph> a collection of plays and stories. Emmons also served as a
				  curator for the Washington State Historical Society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmmonsDG1</container><unittitle>Della Emmons with the great-great-grand-daughter of
					 Sacajawea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmmonsDG2</container><unittitle>Della Emmons with statue of Sacajawea in Bismarck,
					 North Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmmonsDG3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Della Emmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Emmons, Samuel Franklin (March 29, 1841 - March 28,
				  1911) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Franklin Emmons was an American geologist. He was born in
				  Boston, Massachusetts and graduated from Harvard University in 1861. He studied
				  at the Ecole des Mines in Paris, France from 1862–1864 and at the Frieberg
				  (Saxony) mining school from 1865-1865. In May 1867, he was appointed assistant
				  geologist under Clarence King on the U. S. geological exploration of the
				  fortieth parallel, and in July 1879, became geologist in charge of the Colorado
				  division of the United States Geological Survey. He traveled extensively
				  throughout the United States in connection with his work, and in 1870 made a
				  survey, along with A.D. Wilson, of Mount Rainier. The largest glacier in the
				  contiguous United States, Emmons Glacier, is located along their survey route
				  and is named after Emmons. During the autumn of 1872, with Clarence King,
				  Emmons discovered the locality of the supposed diamond fields in Colorado and
				  was active in exposing their fraudulent character. Emmons is the namesake of
				  Mount Emmons, Colorado, and Mount Emmons, Utah.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EmmonsSF1</container><unittitle>Samuel Franklin Emmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Endecott, John (before 1600 – March 15,
				  1664/5)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Endecott, (or Endicott) regarded as one of the Fathers of
				  New England, was the longest-serving Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony,
				  which became the State of Massachusetts. He served a total of 16 years
				  including most of the last 15 years of his life. Endecott was a Puritan with
				  Separatist attitudes toward the Anglican Church which sometimes put him at odds
				  with Nonconformist views that were dominant among the colony's early leaders.
				  He gave shelter to the vocally Separatist Roger Williams and issued judicial
				  decisions banishing individuals who held religious views that did not accord
				  well with those of the Puritans. He defaced the English flag because he saw St
				  George's Cross as a symbol of the papacy, and had four Quakers put to death for
				  returning to the colony after their banishment. An expedition he led in 1636 is
				  considered the opening offensive in the Pequot War, which practically destroyed
				  the Pequot tribe as an entity. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EndecottJ1</container><unittitle>John Endecott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1650 and 1669?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">D. L. Glover, Sr</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: From the original picture in possession of
					 Wm. P. Endicott Esq, Salem, Mass.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>England, Margaret Anne Calvert (April 15, 1912 - April
				  6, 1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Anne "Peggy"Calvert, the daugher of James and Margaret
				  Calvert, married Negley Frank England in 1933. After they divorced, she married
				  George Royal Kneeland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnglandNF1</container><unittitle>Negley Frank England with Peggy Calvert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Negley Frank England subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>England, Negley Frank (October 17, 1910 - September 20,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Negley Frank England was on the University of Washington
				  football team and the track team in the 1930s and was the school heavyweight
				  boxing champion of 1932. He later served in the Navy. He married Margaret
				  "Peggy" Calvert in 1933 and after they divorced, married Mary Jane Russell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnglandNF1</container><unittitle>Negley Frank England with Peggy Calvert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR2</container><unittitle>Students posing with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ed Rulis, Frank
					 "Fritz" Waskowitz, unidentified, unidentified; Back row (left to right):
					 unidentified, Vic Markov, Bob Ingram, Negley England.</p><p>Written on verso: The Lindbloom bunch, Tri-Alpha House,
					 1933.</p><p>Filed under Robert Ingram subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Engle, Flora Augusta Pearson (October 20, 1850 - March
				  7, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Flora Augusta Pearson was born in New Hampshire. In May, 1866,
				  she moved to the Washington Territory with her mother and brother as part of
				  the second Asa Mercer expedition. Her father, Daniel Pearson, had traveled to
				  Washington Territory earlier with two of Flora’s older sisters as members of
				  the first Mercer party. He eventually settled on Whidbey Island, where he
				  became the keeper of the Red Bluff Lighthouse. The next year, Flora became the
				  assistant lighthouse-keeper, a position she held until 1878. She married
				  William B. Engle in 1876, and the couple moved to Coupeville in 1878. They
				  lived on a farm in Coupeville until William’s death in 1907. In later years,
				  Flora was a notable local historian.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngleFP1</container><unittitle>Flora Engle with husband William</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Flora A.P. Engle (a Mercer
					 girl).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Engle, William Ballinger (September 7, 1831 - November
				  10, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Engle was born in Burlington, New Jersey and traveled to
				  California during the Gold Rush before eventually moving north. He laid out a
				  Donation Claim in Oregon Territory and registered it on November 20, 1852. He
				  married Flora Pearson in 1876, and the couple moved to Coupeville, Washington
				  in 1878.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnglandNF1</container><unittitle>Flora Engle with husband William</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Flora A.P. Engle (a Mercer
					 girl).</p><p>Filed under Flora Engle subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>English, Genevieve M. Schaffner (August, 1849 - March 8,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Genevieve Schnaffer was born in Missouri and crossed the Isthmus
				  of Panama in 1856, with her parents Matthias and Ann Schaffner, who were
				  wealthy plantation owners in St. Louis. She married William Dutton English, a
				  prominent Democratic politician, vice president of the Contra Costa Water
				  Company and surveyor of the port at San Francisco under President
				  Cleveland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnglishGM1</container><unittitle>Genevieve English</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 7, 1895</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Louis Thors, San Francisco</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Engstrom, Emil (March 14, 1879 - October 25,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emil Engstrom was born in Sweden. He immigrated to the United
				  States with his brothers John and Erick when news of the Alaska and Klondike
				  Gold Rush has reached Europe. The brothers worked as loggers in Oregon and
				  Washington and as fur trappers and miners in Alaska. Emil never married. In
				  1956, he wrote <emph render="italic">John Engstrom, the last
				  frontiersman</emph> about his brother and their early life.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromE1</container><unittitle>Photo of Emil Engstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Autographed on front</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromE2</container><unittitle>Emil Engstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Autographed on front</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromE3</container><unittitle>Emil and John Engstrom at John's cabin in Graehl,
					 Fairbanks, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate></did><note><p>See John Engstrom for duplicate of photo.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromE4</container><unittitle>Photo of Emil Engstrom's place claim</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 10, 1908</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Engstrom, John (1869 - 1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Engstrom was born in Sweden. He immigrated to the United
				  States with his brothers Emil and Erick when news of the Alaska and Klondike
				  Gold Rush has reached Europe. The brothers worked as loggers in Oregon and
				  Washington and as fur trappers and miners in Alaska. In 1956, Emil Engstrom
				  wrote <emph render="italic">John Engstrom, the last frontiersman</emph> about
				  his brother and their early life.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromJ1</container><unittitle>Emil and John Engstrom at John's cabin in Graehl,
					 Fairbanks, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate></did><note><p>See Emil Engstrom for duplicate of photo.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromJ2</container><unittitle>John Engstrom and Spud, the malamute, in Graehl,
					 Fairbanks, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Summer 1925</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EngstromJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of antlers and pelts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Summer 1925</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph; photograph combined with
					 photograph of John Engstrom and his dog </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Enloe, Maggie</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnloeM1</container><unittitle>Maggie Enloe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">F. F. Finch, East of Court House, Lebanon, Ohio</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Carte de visite.</p></phystech><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Maggie Enloe, 25 Aug 57 D. Hoffman
					 N. W.</p><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Enoch, W. [missing]</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnochW1</container><unittitle>W. Enoch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undertermined</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ensign, Allan B.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allan B. Ensign was the president and manager of the Seattle
				  Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington
				  Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. He lived in Seattle in
				  the 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Enthoven, Jacqueline Camerlynck (May 8, 1902 - November
				  10, 1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacqueline Enthoven was born in Nancy, France and emigrated the
				  United States in 1932. She was a notable author of instructional works on
				  stitching and embroidery, including<emph render="italic">The Stitches of
				  Creative Embroidery</emph> (1987).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EnthovenJC1</container><unittitle>Jacqueline Enthoven</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Enthoven, Jacqueline (Camerlynck),
					 born Nancy, France.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Epperson, Gordon (January 18, 1921 - May 9,
				  2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Epperson was born in Williston, Florida and began playing
				  piano at 7 and cello at 9. He earned a bachelor of music degree at Cincinnati
				  Conservatory of Music in 1941, a master’s degree in music at Eastman School of
				  Music at the University of Rochester in New York in 1949 and a doctor of
				  musical arts degree at Boston University in 1960. He was a concert cellist and
				  teacher with symphony orchestras in Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Seattle, and
				  Rochester. He had a Town Hall debut in New York City in 1956 and a Carnegie
				  Hall recital in 1963. He served as a faculty member at the University of Puget
				  Sound (1946-1952), Louisiana State University (1952-1961) and Ohio State
				  University (1961-1967) before joining the University of Arizona in 1967. His
				  books include <emph render="italic">The Art of Cello Teaching,</emph><emph render="italic">The Musical Symbol,</emph> as well as a biography, a
				  volume of poetry, and a novel. In 1973, he was named an Outstanding Music
				  Educator in America. Four years later, he was given the University of Arizona
				  Foundation Creative Teaching Award, and in 1981 was recipient of a Fulbright
				  grant to teach and perform in New Zealand. On March 24, 1947, he performed
				  George F. McKay's concerto for cello and orchestra with the Spokane
				  Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Harold Paul Whelan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EppersonG1</container><unittitle> Gordon Epperson with Harold Paul Whelan and George
					 McKay examining the score of McKay's cello concerto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1947</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Erdal, Oscar Wilson (February 2, 1877 - January 28,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oscar Wilson Erdal was born in Queenstown, South Africa, and
				  attended Columbia University in New York City, graduating in 1901. He married
				  Astrid Engelsted on December 19, 1901. He worked as a surveyor for the
				  Treadwell Gold Mining Company in Alaska and died in Juneau, Alaska in 1907. His
				  son and namesake joined the Royal Army Service Corps during the Second World
				  War and was killed in France in 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErdalOW1</container><unittitle>Oscar Wilson Erdal</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten note on verso: Oscar W. Erdal, Treadwell 1906.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Erickson, Selma Inez (August 23, 1903 -
				  November 6, 2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The daughter of Norwegian and Norwegian-American parents, Selma
				  Inez Erickson was born in 1903 in Turtle Lake, North Dakota, the third of
				  eleven children. When she was seventeen, she took her fourth year of high
				  school as teachers' training and began teaching at Osakis High School.
				  Encouraged to become a nurse, she trained at Deaconess Hospital in Minneapolis,
				  Minnesota. She then studied at the Lutheran Bible Institute in Minneapolis and
				  became a mission nurse. She was stationed in South Africa until 1945. She
				  returned to the United States and continued nursing in Oregon, Washington, and
				  California. When she moved to Seattle in 1957, she joined the Genealogical
				  Society at the Seattle Public Library and in 1966, became the chairman of the
				  Scandinavian interest group. An oral history interview with her from 1979 is in
				  the Scandinavian Immigrant Experience Collection at Pacific Lutheran
				  University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EricksonSI1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Selma Erickson with large cake
					 decorated with Scandinavian flags</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1987</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EricksonSI2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Selma Erickson with her sister (?) in
					 front of a map of Scandinavia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1987</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Erskine, Josephine Ingeborg Ridgeway (December 22, 1877
				  - October 22, 1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josephine Ridgeway was born in England and came to the United
				  States with her parents in 1880. She married Robert C. Erskine in 1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Erskine sitting with his wife
					 Josephine in a garden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1945</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: R. C. Erskine et wf sitting beside the stump
					 of the Madrona tree 3' 11/2" across which J. W. Wheeler and Mr. Swan cut up for
					 bowls and on which Mr. Wheeler mounted the vase shown - and for which we again
					 thank him.</p><p>Filed under Robert C. Erskine subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Erskine, Robert Chase (August 22, 1876 - December 17,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert C. Erskine was born in Wheeling, West Virginia and
				  arrived in Seattle on March 23, 1899. His real estate firm was located in
				  several buildings in the downtown area for over 50 years. He was president of
				  the Seattle chapter of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers in 1941
				  and was elected to the Seattle Planning Committee in 1949, serving for fifteen
				  years. Erskine Way SW in Seattle is named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Erskine with Warren L. Morris and
					 James W. Wheeler at Sunrise Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1941</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Erskine sitting with his wife
					 Josephine sitting in a garden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1945</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: R. C. Erskine et wf sitting beside the stump
					 of the Madrona tree 3' 11/2" across which J. W. Wheeler and Mr. Swan cut up for
					 bowls and on which Mr. Wheeler mounted the vase shown - and for which we again
					 thank him.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC3</container><unittitle>Erskine standing on ocean cliff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Eshom, Enid Parks (October 24, 1912 - March 11,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Enid Parks Eshom was born in the Palouse to Mr. and Mrs. A.W.
				  Parks. She grew up in Seattle and attended Lincoln High School (class of 1930),
				  Washington State Collecge and the University of Washington. She married Leonard
				  Foley Eshom in 1934, and they moved to Bainbridge Island. She was talented in
				  the art of bonsai and visited China in 1981 to see several renowned bonsai
				  collections. She was a founding member of the Dr. James H. Mathews Guild of
				  Children's Hospital and a member of the Arboretum Foundation, the Bloedel
				  Reserve and the Pacific Northwest Ornamental and Horticultural Society</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EshomE1</container><unittitle>Enid Parks Eshom and Leonard Foley Eshom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Hudlett, Cleveland, Ohio</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Eshom, Leonard Foley (May 14, 1912 - September 23, 1995)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leonard Eshom was the chairman of Seattle Trust &amp; Savings.
				  He married Enid Parks in 1934.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EshomLF1</container><unittitle>Enid Parks Eshom and Leonard Foley Eshom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Enid Parks Eshom</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Escobosa, Hector (February 17, 1907 -
				  November 22, 1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hector Escobosa was born in Arizona. He started working as a
				  window dresser for San Francisco's Emporium department store when he was in
				  high school. While attending the University of California, he moved to sales
				  promotion and dress buying at Hale Brothers. After a stint as vice president
				  and manager of Kansas City's big-volume Jones department store, he was hired as
				  director of fashion and specialty departments for Seattle's Frederick &amp;
				  Nelson department store, later becoming executive vice president and general
				  manager in the 1930s-1940s. He was president of I. Magnin &amp; Co.'s women's
				  stores in San Francisco and 15 other Western cities in the 1950s. He was also
				  author of the book <emph render="italic">Seattle Story (Here's Seattle
				  Today)</emph> (1948).</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EscobosaH1</container><unittitle>Hector Escobosa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1950</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dexter, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Estes, Gustavus Kendall (October 11,
				  1863 - December 18, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gustavus Kendall Estes was born in Vassalboro. Kennebec County,
				  Maine. His father was killed at the battle of Hatchers Run, Virginia on October
				  27, 1864, and his mother died when he was 17 years old. By the time he was 22,
				  he was the publisher of the <emph render="italic">Pioneer Democrat</emph> in
				  Lakin. Kansas. He moved to Topeka, where he published <emph render="italic">The
				  Tribune</emph>. He studied law while at Topeka and in 1891, sold his interest
				  in the paper. He then attended St. Louis Law School and was admitted to the
				  bar. He moved to the Pacific Coast, locating first at Port Angeles, Washington,
				  where he was the editor and publisher of <emph render="italic">The
				  Beacon</emph>. In 1893, he moved to San Jose, California. He purchased 
				  <emph render="italic">The Register</emph> in Mountain View, Santa Clara County.
				  He married Mary Agnes Thompson in 1897. He was a campaigner for the Democratic
				  Party and co-author of <emph render="italic">Naturalization made easy; what to
				  do and what to know; a book of instruction for aliens wishing to become
				  citizens of the United States</emph> (1913).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EstesGK1</container><unittitle>Gustavus Kendall Estes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H.T. Martin, Topeka, Kansas</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ettinger, Josephine Wagner (February 4,
				  1850 - February 23, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josephine Ettinger was the alternate Lady Manager for the
				  World's Fair Commission of the State of Washington for the World's Columbian
				  Exposition in 1893 in Chicago, IL She was born in Philadelphia and married Amos
				  Ettinger; they moved first to Idaho and later to Eugene, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EttingerJW1</container><unittitle>Josephine Ettinger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1893?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H.C. Phillips, Philadelphia, PA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Josephine Ettinger, Lady alternate
					 Washn.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Evans, Charlotte Taylor (December 9, 1836 - November 24,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charlotte Taylor Evans was the daughter of Francis Taylor, a
				  prominent Washington, D.C. businessman and was the wife of Admiral Robley D.
				  Evans, marrying him in 1871.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robley Dunglison Evans in an
					 automobile with others in front of a building, during a tour of the site of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Seated in front, next to chauffeur: J. A. Kruikshank, manager
					 of Admiral Evans' lecture tour; in second seat: President of A-Y-P Board John
					 E. Chilberg and Captain Alfred W. Lewis, director of concessions; seated in
					 back: Admiral Evans and Mrs. Evans. The photo appeared in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> on March 30, 1909.</p><p>Filed under Robley Dunglison Evans subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Evans, Daniel J. (October 16, 1925 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel J. Evans served three terms as the 16th Governor of the
				  state of Washington from 1965 to 1977, and represented the State in the United
				  States Senate from 1983 to 1989. He was born in Seattle, Washington, and served
				  in the United States Navy (1943–1946) after high school. He graduated from the
				  University of Washington with degrees in civil engineering (BS, 1948, MS, 1949)
				  and then returned to the United States Navy (1951–1953) before working as a
				  structural engineer (1953–1956). He served in the Washington State House of
				  Representatives from 1956 to 1965 before being elected governor. As governor,
				  he founded the country's first state-level Department of Ecology, which became
				  Nixon's blueprint for the federal EPA and provided support of the state's
				  higher education system, including founding Washington's system of community
				  colleges and authorizing the formation of Evergreen State College. From 1977 to
				  1983, Evans served as the second president of Evergreen; the Evergreen State
				  College library is named in his honor. In 1983, he was appointed to the U. S.
				  Senate to fill a seat left vacant by the death of longtime senator Henry M.
				  Jackson. He was appointed to the U. W. Board of Regents in 1993; he served as
				  the Board's president from 1996 to 1997, and in 1999 the Daniel J. Evans School
				  of Public Affairs at the University was named for him. In 2007, the UW gave him
				  the distinction of Alumnus Summa Laude Dignitatus, the highest distinction the
				  University confers on its graduates.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansDJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Dan Evans</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1973</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0032/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansDJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Dan Evans as US
					 Senator</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0034/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansDJ3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Governor Daniel J. Evans signing
					 House Bill 74 before assembled dignitaries</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0033/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Possibly at the signing of HB 74 in 1969 which established the
					 LEOFF (Law Enforcement Officers and Fire Fighters) retirement system. This was
					 a major piece of legislation and would explain the large group attending the
					 bill signing. Representative Sam Smith is second from the left.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Evans, Elwood (Dec. 29, 1828 - Jan. 28,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elwood Evans was appointed a Deputy Collector of Customs under
				  Simpson P. Moses and arrived in Olympia with the Moses brothers in 1851.
				  Admitted to the bar shortly after, he became one of the Territory’s earliest
				  lawyers. In late 1852 he went to Washington, D.C. to campaign for the creation
				  of a territory separate from Oregon. He served as the Chief Clerk of the House
				  during the First Session (1854) and was later elected to fill an unexpired term
				  of a House member, while also serving as Thurston County School Superintendent.
				  In 1859 he was instrumental in the incorporation of Olympia and was elected the
				  President (Mayor) 1859-1861. In 1868 he once again served as Chief Clerk in the
				  House and helped compile the Code of 1869. He was elected to the House in the
				  mid-1870s, rising to the office of Speaker. He took over the office of
				  Territorial Librarian during this time. In 1881 he compiled, along with fellow
				  past Librarian John Paul Judson, the <emph render="italic">Laws of Washington
				  Territory</emph>. He was elected as a member of the First Session of the
				  Washington State House.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Elwood Evans</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansE2</container><unittitle>Engraving of Elwood Evans </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evans, George Watkin (March 5, 1876 -
				  January 11, 1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Watkin Evans, a mining engineer whose work in the North
				  American coal fields gained him an international reputation, began his career
				  working in the coal mines of King County when he was 11. Long associated with
				  both government and private industry as a consulting engineer, he had surveyed
				  nearly every major coal field in the United States. Born in Wales, he came to
				  the United States with his family as a child. His father was a coal miner, and
				  the family lived in Pennsylvania before coming west to the coal fields of
				  Washington. Working in the mines near Black Diamond, he had no schooling and
				  taught himself to read at the age of 17. He took a correspondence school course
				  and entered the mining school at Washington State College. His schooling was
				  interrupted several times before he graduated in 1912. He went to Alaska and
				  the Yukon Territory in search of coal in 1897 and worked in the mines of
				  Colorado to earn his tuition. In 1911, he became a consulting engineer for the
				  U. S. Bureau of Mines and spent several years developing coal fields, including
				  the Bearing River and Matanuska fields. When the Northwest Experiment Station
				  of the Bureau of Mines was organized at the University of Washington in 1917,
				  he became a staff member in charge of coal mining engineering. In 1929, he
				  consulted with George S. Rice, chief government mining engineer, to work on the
				  problem of deep mining and tunnel collapse in Pennsylvania. Evans later worked
				  with the Bureau of Mines in studying the conversion of coal to oil. He was the
				  author of a Bureau of Mines bulletin on coal mining problems in Washington and
				  a book on the coal fields of King County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansGW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Watkin Evans with George S.
					 Rice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Evans, Robley Dunglison (August 18, 1846 - January 3,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robley Evans served in the United States Navy from the American
				  Civil War to the Spanish–American War, attaining the rank of rear admiral.
				  Evans held numerous important sea commands during the 1890s. In 1891 and 1892,
				  commanding <emph render="italic">Yorktown</emph> on the Pacific Squadron, he
				  won great acclaim for his handling of a tense situation with Chile, becoming
				  known as "Fighting Bob" Evans. During the Spanish–American War he commanded the
				  battleship <emph render="italic">USS Iowa</emph> in the Battle of Santiago de
				  Cuba. He was later named Commander-in-Chief-Asiatic Fleet and
				  Commander-in-Chief-North Atlantic Fleet. He commanded the Great White Fleet in
				  1907 from Hampton Roads, Virginia in its passage from the Atlantic Ocean
				  through the Straits of Magellan to the Pacific Ocean. He retired from the Navy
				  upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 62 in 1908. Two destroyers, 
				  <emph render="italic">USS Evans</emph>, launched October 30, 1918, and 
				  <emph render="italic">USS Evans</emph>, launched October 4, 1942, were named in
				  his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robley Dunglison Evans in an
					 automobile with others in front of a building, during a tour of the site of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Seated in front, next to chauffeur: J. A. Kruikshank, manager
					 of Admiral Evans' lecture tour; in second seat: President of A-Y-P Board John
					 E. Chilberg and Captain Alfred W. Lewis, director of concessions; seated in
					 back: Admiral Evans and Mrs. Evans. The photo appeared in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> on March 30, 1909.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Everest, Harold P. "Dick" (October 6,
				  1893 - August 24, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold P. "Dick" Everest was born in Fond Du Lac Wisconsin and
				  moved to Kirkland, Washington in 1906. He attended the University of
				  Washington, where he received his bachelor’s and master's degrees in science.
				  Everest served as a professor in the School of Communications and became
				  president of the school in 1944. He was appointed acting President from 1951 to
				  1952, after which he served as Vice President, retiring in 1957. He then spent
				  two years as the UW representative for the Metropolitan Tract. He was also
				  president of the Kirkland Investment Company and was the publisher of 
				  <emph render="italic">The East Side Journal</emph> for 16 years. During World
				  War II, he was Chairman of Civil Defense for Washington and Oregon. He served
				  as chairman of the King County School Reorganization committee, was a member of
				  the King County Planning Commission, president of the Washington Newspaper
				  Publishers Association, president of the Seattle Central Association and served
				  on the Kirkland City Council. Everest Park in Kirkland was named for him in
				  1958.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EverestHP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Harold P.
					 Everest</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on photo: To a sincere friend, H.P. 'Dick' Everest.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EverestHP2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Harold P.
					 Everest</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of News Services, University of Washington (S-3883-D)</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH1</container><unittitle>Group photo. Left to right: Edwin Adams and H.P.
					 Everest, directors of the journalism school; Mrs. Esther Seering, public
					 relations counsel; Mrs. Mary Coyle Osmun, Seattle Times women's editor; Carroll
					 Foster, special events director at KIRO</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Many professional publicity workers turned
					 out for the recent conference on publicity methods, originally planned just for
					 amateur publicity chairmen. Due to scores of requests, the conference, first of
					 its kind on campus, will be followed next fall by an expanded series of
					 lectures.</p><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Everest, Nathan Wesley (December 29, 1890 - November 11,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan Wesley Everest was an American member of the Industrial
				  Workers of the World (IWW) and a World War I veteran. After serving in World
				  War I, he worked in Centralia, Washington as a lumberjack. During the
				  celebration of Armistice Day in 1919, members of the American Legion stormed
				  the IWW Union Hall. The American Legion claimed that they were fired upon
				  before they attacked the hall; the IWW claimed that the Legion attacked before
				  they fired. The result was a fight that resulted in deaths of six men, while
				  others were wounded. After firing from inside the hall, Everest ran out the
				  back door and was pursued by a mob. He killed a man before he was arrested.
				  During the evening of November 11, he was turned over to the mob by jail guards
				  and lynched.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EverestNW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Wesley Everest in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Hand-colored photographs</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EverestNW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">IWW fund-raising card with portrait
					 of Wesley Everest in uniform </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on card: "Tell the boys I did my best" Wesley Everest,
					 Victim of the Mob Centralia, Wash., Armistice Day, 1919.</p><p>Printed on verso: Proceeds go to help free the Centralia
					 Victims Washington Branch General Defense, Box 1873, Seattle, Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evey, Isaac N. [missing]</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EveyIN1</container><unittitle>Isaac Evey</unittitle></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ewell, Harry Albert (August 20, 1909 - January 23,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Albert Ewell, the son of Harry Ewell and Ida Clark Ewell,
				  was born and raised in Pierce County, Washington. He worked as a tinsmith and
				  sheet metal worker. He married Edith Mattson in 1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EwellHA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry Albert Ewell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Christy Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ewing, Robert Lee (July 10, 1884 -
				  March 3, 1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Lee Ewing was born in Pendleton, Oregon and attended the
				  University of Washington where he played right tackle on the varsity football
				  team. He was secretary of the Young Men's Christian Association while at the
				  UW. In 1903, he was selected as the general secretary for the Colleges of the
				  Pacific Northwest and later worked as a civil engineer for the Montana Highway
				  Department. He married Florence Johnson in 1911.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EwingRL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert Lee Ewing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the January 4, 1903 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>F</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fabbe, Harry F. (February 15, 1899 -
				  December 8, 1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Fabbe was born Gustaf Harry Fabianson in 1899 in
				  Stockholm. He emigrated to the United States in 1915 on the advice of his
				  father, who was in Pennsylvania at the time. While working at various jobs and
				  during five years as a mining engineer at Kennicott mines in Alaska, Fabbe
				  wrote articles and poems for publication in Swedish-American newspapers and
				  magazines, including <emph render="italic">Svenska Socialisten</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">Verdandi</emph>, and <emph render="italic">Svenska
				  Journalen</emph>. Being a valued contributor to <emph render="italic">Svenska
				  Journalen</emph> ("Svenska Posten" after 1935) in Seattle, he was offered the
				  editorship in 1927. He accepted and maintained this position for 46 years with
				  only short interruptions. During the 1930s, Fabbe participated in a film-making
				  expedition with brothers John and Sven Utterstrom. This gave him material for
				  many articles which he then sold to Swedish-American and Swedish publications.
				  He also published a book in Sweden, <emph render="italic">I slagbjornens
				  spar</emph> . Although he returned to Sweden only twice in the 55 years spent
				  in the United States, Fabbe maintained his Swedish heritage through his writing
				  activity and contact with Swedes in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. He was
				  honored twice by the Order of the Vasa for his efforts in furthering Swedish
				  culture. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FabbeHF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry F. Fabbe in snow-covered
					 landscape</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fabian, John M. (January 28, 1939 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John M. Fabian is a former NASA Astronaut, Air Force officer,
				  and director who flew two space shuttle missions and worked on satellite
				  deployment and retrieval activities, including development of the Canadian
				  Remote Manipulator System. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in
				  Mechanical Engineering from Washington State University in 1962; a Master of
				  Science in Aerospace Engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology in
				  1964; and a doctorate in Aeronautics and Astronautics from the University of
				  Washington in 1974. He was an Air Force ROTC student at Washington State
				  University and was commissioned upon his graduation in 1962. He was selected as
				  an astronaut candidate by NASA in 1978 and became an astronaut in 1979. He left
				  NASA in 1986 to become Director of Space, Deputy Chief of Staff, Plans and
				  Operations, Headquarters USAF. He retired from the USAF in 1987 and joined
				  Analytic Services Inc., a non-profit aerospace public service research
				  institute in Arlington, Virginia, retiring as President and Chief Executive
				  Officer in 1998. He retired to Port Ludlow, Washington, and in 2002 helped form
				  the Hood Canal Coalition, an environmental watchdog group. Among his awards are
				  Washington State University Distinguished Alumnus Award (1983), University of
				  Washington Distinguished Alumnus Award, Aeronautics and Astronautics, (1984)
				  and Washington State Service to Humanity Award (1983).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FabianJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John M. Fabian</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 24, 1980</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NASA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fabianson, Gustaf Harry (February 15, 1899 - December 8,
				  1973) - see Harry Fabbe</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fackler, St. Michael (September 29,
				  1813 - January 7, 1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>St. Michael Fackler was the first clergyman of the Protestant
				  Episcopal Church in Oregon. A native of Staunton, Virginia, he first moved to
				  Missouri and Wyoming before arriving in Oregon in 1847. He initially settled on
				  a farm in Butteville, Oregon and held services in Portland and on the Tualatin
				  Plains. He was also principal of Trinity school, a boarding school for boys in
				  Oswego that under the supervision of the church. In 1864, he went to Boise
				  where he established a parish. He died in 1867 of cholera while on his way back
				  to New York by ship to visit his family. He worked to help the sick but died of
				  cholera himself while at sea. After his death, the parish where he had worked
				  was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FacklerM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">St. Michael Fackler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Failing, Josiah (July 9, 1806 -August
				  14, 1877)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josiah Failing was a businessman and the fourth mayor of
				  Portland, Oregon, United States. Born in New York, he moved to Portland when it
				  was still a small town of a few hundred. Through letters from early Baptist
				  missionaries, Failing had been fascinated by the Oregon Territory for 20 years
				  when he moved his family there in 1851. He and his son Henry, who also became a
				  noted businessman and mayor of the city, started a general merchandising
				  business that became very successful. In 1853, he was elected as the fourth
				  mayor of Portland; he served until 1854. He was particularly concerned with
				  education, and as one of the trustees of the public schools, devoted much of
				  his time to their establishment and management. Failing started the local
				  chapter of the Sons of Temperance in 1856. A Republican, he was a delegate to
				  the 1864 Republican national convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for a
				  second term, and to the 1868 convention that nominated Ulysses S. Grant.
				  Failing School was named in his honor in 1882–83, and the name carried over to
				  a replacement built in 1912 which still stands and is currently the National
				  College of Natural Medicine. Failing Street in Northeast Portland also carries
				  the family name.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FailingJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Josiah Failing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1877?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fairbairn, James Edward (May 24, 1856 - June 5, 1930)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James E. Fairbairn was born in Iowa and came to Seattle in 1856.
				  He was operated locomotives and steamboats in Washington and during the Gold
				  Rush, including one of the first steamboats on Lake Washington. He erected the
				  state’s first electric power plant at Newcastle in 1885. Fairbairn was the
				  pitcher for the Seattle Reds baseball team in 1884 and was known for his curve
				  ball. The Seattle Reds were the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon,
				  Washington Territory and British Columbia) during the 1894 season.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fairbanks, Charles Warren (May 11, 1852
				  – June 4, 1918) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles W. Fairbanks was a Senator from Indiana (1897–1905) and
				  the 26th Vice President of the United States (1905–1909). Born in rural Ohio,
				  he worked as a journalist and political advisor to his uncle, then-Ohio
				  Governor and later U.S. President, Rutherford B. Hayes. He was elected as a
				  Republican to the United States Senate in 1896, after having delivered the
				  keynote address during the convention that nominated William McKinley for
				  President. During his eight years in the U.S. Senate, Fairbanks served as a key
				  adviser to McKinley during the Spanish-American War and was also the Chairman
				  of the Committee on Immigration and the Committee on Public Buildings and
				  Grounds. Fairbanks was elected Vice President of the United States in 1904 on
				  the Republican ticket with Theodore Roosevelt and served all four years.
				  Fairbanks sought the Republican nomination for President but Roosevelt (who
				  chose to not seek reelection) supported William Howard Taft as his potential
				  successor in 1908, sending Fairbanks back to the practice of law. The city of
				  Fairbanks, Alaska was named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairbanksCW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Fairbanks with group at Lewis
					 and Clark Centennial Exposition, Portland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate></did><note><p>A caption on the back identifies the Assistant Secretary of
					 the Treasury Horace A. Taylor and H. W. Goode, the exposition president.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairbanksCW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Fairbanks speaking at Lewis
					 and Clark Centennial Exposition, Portland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fairclough, Henry Rushton (July 15,
				  1862 - February 12, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Rushton Fairclough was born in Barrie, Ontario and
				  received his B. A. and his M. A. at the University of Toronto in 1883 and 1886,
				  and was awarded his Doctorate in Classics by Johns Hopkins University in 1896.
				  He went to Stanford in 1893 as an associate professor of Greek and Latin and
				  continued as Professor of Latin and Head of the Department until he became
				  professor emeritus in 1927. He also taught at Harvard, and Amherst
				  Universities. During his time at Stanford, he taught and did research while
				  contributing to hundreds of books, texts, translations, articles, reviews and
				  addresses. His research focused on the Roman poets, translating the comedies of
				  Plautus and Terence, the works of Virgil and the Satires and Epistles of
				  Horace. He served overseas in World War I in the American Red Cross and was in
				  command of the Commission to Montenegro; he advanced to the rank of
				  Lieutenant-Colonel, the highest rank in this branch of the service. Three years
				  after his death, his autobiography, <emph render="italic">Warming Both
				  Hands</emph> , was published, in which he described his career and his
				  experiences during the First World War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaircloughHR1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Henry Rushton Fairclough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 27, 1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaircloughHR2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Henry Rushton Fairclough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 10, 1897</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Louis Thors, Portraits, 14 Grant Avenue, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on verso: With sincere regards, H. Rushton
						Fairclough.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fairweather, Hanford Wentworth (May,
				  1852 - March 31, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hanford Wentworth Fairweather was born in St. Johns, New
				  Brunswick, and found work on railroads as engineer and clerk across the
				  American East. He came to the Washington Territory in 1871 and filled a number
				  of prominent positions on rail lines across the Pacific Northwest, including
				  the Walla Walla &amp; Columbia Railroad and the Northern Pacific Railroad
				  Company. He was prominent in territorial politics, having been secretary of the
				  territorial Republican central committee, state senator in 1880, and mayor of
				  Sprague, Washington in 1885. He was one of the founders of the First National
				  Bank of Sprague, later the Fidelity National Bank of Spokane. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairweatherHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Hanford Wentworth
					 Fairweather</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairweatherHW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Hanford Wentworth
					 Fairweather</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Falconer, Walter Maxwell (January 6,
				  1876 - July 4, 1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Maxwell Falconer was an officer of the United States
				  Navy. He was born in Kansas and as a boy moved with his family to Cadiz, Ohio,
				  where he attended local schools. He earned his Navy commission upon graduation
				  from the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Class of 1897. Upon graduation he was
				  assigned to the <emph>USS Albany</emph>, a cruiser, and sailed to the European
				  Station. He was later assigned to the <emph>USS Buffalo,</emph> a cruiser. In
				  1908 Lt. Falconer was stationed at the Washington Navy Yard, in the Ordnance
				  Department. He had previously been detailed to the Naval Gun Factory and was an
				  expert in munitions. The final ship he commanded was the <emph>USS Leonidas
				  </emph>(AD-7) a survey ship in 1914. Falconer retired from the Navy in June
				  1914, after 14 years of service. His break from the Navy was brief as the
				  United States entered the Great War in 1917. Falconer was called back to serve
				  in World War I. He first was aide to the Commandant of Naval District
				  Philadelphia in early 1917 and then was sent to the battleship <emph>USS
				  Vermont</emph> (BB-20) to serve as navigator. Falconer finished the war serving
				  on the Receiving Ship<emph> New York </emph>in New York City until his release
				  from duty in January 1919. Falconer died July 4, 1943 and was buried with full
				  military honors at Arlington National Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FalconerWM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter Maxwell Falconer in naval
					 cadet uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Buffham, Annapolis, MD</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Walter Maxwell Falconer, class '97 U.S.N.A.
					 cadet</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fares, Joseph (February 11, 1838 - May
				  3, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Fares was born in Lobo, Middlesex County, Ontario,
				  Canada. In 1857, he left Ontario for Kansas. Fares joined a wagon train in 1859
				  and arrived in Oregon that same year. During the winter of 1859-1860, he was a
				  government employee at Fort Walla Walla. He relocated to Seattle in 1860 and
				  then went to the Fraser River gold fields by steamer. Returning to Seattle, he
				  married Lucinda Collins; their property near North Bend was known as Tollgate
				  Farm. Fares went to Arizona in 1875 to mine at the Tip Top gold camp; he
				  remained there until 1886 when he moved to Park City, Utah. He died there in
				  1922. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaresJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph Fares</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 28, 1919</unitdate></did><note><p>Photographed in Park City, Utah.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Faris, Robert E. Lee ( February 2, 1907
				  - January 25, 1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Faris was a sociology professor at the University of
				  Washington from 1948 until 1973. He served as the 51st President of the
				  American Sociological Association and was the editor of <emph render="italic">Handbook of Modern Sociology</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FarisREL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert Faris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1955 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">ASUW Photo Lab</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Farquharson, Frederick Burt (July 28,
				  1895 - June 17, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Burt Farquharson was born in Boston, Massachusetts and
				  studied at the University of Washington, earning his Bachelor of Science in
				  Mechanical Engineering in 1923. He spent two years working for Boeing before
				  returning to the University of Washington to earn his Master’s degree. He
				  taught in the University of Washington's Department of Civil Engineering from
				  1927 until his retirement in 1963, when he was made professor emeritus. From
				  1945 to 1963, he directed the Engineering Experiment Station of the University
				  of Washington. His professional interests included various aspects of airplane
				  design, aerodynamics, and the use of wind tunnels for bridge design testing. He
				  is noted for the use of wind tunnels for his studies of the Tacoma Narrows
				  bridge collapse and for the development of the new Tacoma Narrows Bridge. He
				  served on a number of committees concerned with engineering education and
				  research for such professional engineering societies as the American Society of
				  Civil Engineers and the American Society for Engineering Education. He was
				  politically active during the economic depression of the 1930's and had
				  associations with such organizations as the League for Industrial Democracy and
				  the National Council for the Prevention of War. His papers are held in UW
				  Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FarquharsonFB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Burt Farquharson standing
					 in front of machine for testing the strength of materials</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee (possibly News &amp; Information Service)</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appears on page 91 of the 1953 edition of 
						<emph>The Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Farragut, David Glasgow (July 5, 1801 – August 14, 1870)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Glasgow Farragut was a flag officer of the United States
				  Navy during the American Civil War. He was the first rear admiral, vice
				  admiral, and admiral in the United States Navy. He is remembered for his order
				  at the Battle of Mobile Bay usually paraphrased as "Damn the torpedoes, full
				  speed ahead" in U.S. Navy tradition. Farragut's naval career began as a
				  midshipman when he was nine years old, and continued for 60 years until his
				  death at the age of 69. This included service in several wars, most notably
				  during the American Civil War, where he gained fame for winning several
				  decisive naval battles.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">12</container><container type="item">FarragutDG01</container><unittitle>David G. Farragut</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860-1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hollyer after a portrait by Brady from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Farrar, Victor John (December 31, 1885
				  - September 21, 1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor J. Farrar, a graduate of the UW, was a historian and
				  instructor at the University of Washington as well as Professor Edmond S.
				  Meany’s research assistant. During World War I, he took two years leave to
				  serve in France. After the war, he returned to the UW to complete his work for
				  his Doctor of Philosophy degree. He specialized in Northwest history and wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The Purchase of Alaska</emph>among other books. He is
				  buried in Arlington National Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FarrarVJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Victor J. Farrar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1917 and 1918</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Yours over there, Victor J. Farrar.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Farrish, William Thomas (August 9, 1835
				  - June 12, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Farrish was born in Richibucto, New Brunswick Canada. He
				  moved to the US in the 1860s, eventually settling in Asotin, Washington
				  Territory. He invested in Lewiston Water and Power in 1896 as well as several
				  sawmills. In 1903, he started the Blue Lumber Company which controlled most of
				  the commercial timber in the county. He served in the first Washington State
				  legislature in 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FarrishWT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Farrish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 17, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Farwell, George W. (February 15, 1920 - April 11,
				  2003)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Farwell was a professor of physics and Vice President
				  for Research at the UW. He graduated from Harvard and received his PhD from the
				  University of Chicago. He worked at Los Alamos during World War II before
				  joining the UW in 1948 where he did nuclear physics research with the UW
				  cyclotron. He headed the committee that laid the groundwork for the division of
				  Marine Resources at the UW and developed the Sea Grant and Science Development
				  programs at the UW. In 1960, he was awarded a National Science Foundation
				  fellowship. His father, Raymond, was a member of the UW Business Administration
				  faculty for over 30 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FarwellGW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George W. Farwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Faucett, Rachel Ann Cullen (September
				  22, 1824 - May 27, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rachel Ann Cullen was born in Kentucky and raised in Tennessee.
				  She married John Twiggs Faucett, and the couple, with their three children,
				  moved west in 1854, settling in Pierce County. Ten years later they moved to
				  the Slaughter Precinct area of the White River Valley where she worked as a
				  nurse and midwife while taking care of her fourteen children. The Faucetts
				  hosted the Auburn area's first church congregation and first school sessions in
				  their log home. A portion of their land became the community Pioneer
				  Cemetery.</p></bioghist><note><p>Written on verso: The old Faucett homestead was a part of Auburn
				  Wa, built in late '50s. "Grandma Faucett" in foreground.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaucettRAC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rachel Faucett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Faulkner, Ethel Merle (September 19,
				  1889 - November 2, 1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Merle Faulkner was the daughter of Jonas and Mary
				  Faulkner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaulknerJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jonas Morton Faulkner with wife Mary
					 and daughter Ethel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1895?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Carpenter, Kansas City</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Jonas Faulkner subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Faulkner, Jonas Morton (March 7, 1864 -
				  May 3, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jonas Morton Faulkner, the son of Jesse Faulkner and Elizabeth
				  Morton Faulkner, was born in Missouri. He married Mary Elizabeth Martin in
				  1889, and the family moved to Everett, Washington in 1902 where he established
				  a plumbing business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaulknerJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jonas Morton Faulkner with wife Mary
					 and daughter Ethel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1895?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Carpenter, Kansas City</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Faulkner, Mary Elizabeth Martin (July
				  1864 - November 21, 1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Faulkner, the daughter of Griffin and Mariah Martin, was
				  born in Missouri and married Jonas Faulkner in 1889. The family moved to
				  Everett, Washington in 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FaulknerJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jonas Morton Faulkner with wife Mary
					 and daughter Ethel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1895?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Carpenter, Kansas City</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Jonas Faulkner subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fauntleroy, Robert Henry (March 23,
				  1806 - December 13, 1849)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Henry Fauntleroy was an engineer who was awarded two
				  patents, one for an improved gun lock and the other for a “fly dive” for the
				  use of sick in the summer. He married Jane Dale Owen, the daughter of social
				  reformer Robert Owen in 1835. Six weeks after the wedding, he joined the
				  Topographical Bureau in Washington to begin a preliminary survey of Indiana for
				  a system of internal improvements. He was then appointed Resident Engineer of
				  one of these transportation projects, a line of railroad on the Jeffersonville
				  &amp; Crawfordsville Road. After funding ended, he joined James Sampson in a
				  mercantile business, Sampson &amp; Fauntleroy, in New Harmony; the partnership
				  lasted three years. In 1846, Fauntleroy began work for the U. S. Coast Survey,
				  largely along the Gulf of Mexico. He died of cholera there in 1849. George
				  Davidson, a member of the U.S. Navy Exploring Expedition and the principal
				  surveyor of the American West Coast, was engaged to Fauntleroy’s daughter,
				  Ellinor. He named Fauntleroy Cove in Seattle after his future father-in-law as
				  well as a Coast Survey brig after his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FauntleroyRH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert Henry Fauntleroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>The photograph is a copy of a daguerreotype.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fay, Dorothy Wheaton -see Carl Gould</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fechter, Maud Nash Allen (January 11, 1882 - July 29,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maud Nash was born in Minnesota. She married Guy Allen in 1899,
				  Oscar Fechter (1864 - 1935) in 1917, and Charles P. Lund (1875 - 1960) in
				  1937.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH3</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Oscar A. Fechter, Maud Fechter,
					 Riley Harris Allen, and Edith Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Taken in Honolulu on a trip to the South
						Seas, Australia and New Zealand, made by the Fechters and the Suzzallos in
						1927.</p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fechter, Oscar Augustus (September 2, 1864 - February
				  24, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oscar Augustus Fechter was a pioneer banker and a memver of the
				  University of Washington Board of Regents for over thirteen years. He was
				  president of Yakima Valley Bank for over thirty years, president of Yakima
				  Mortgage and Loan Company, president of the Kennewick Investment Company, and
				  president of the North Pacific Irrigation Company. He married Maud Nash Allen
				  in 1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH3</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Oscar A. Fechter, Maud Fechter,
					 Riley Harris Allen, and Edith Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Taken in Honolulu on a trip to the South
						Seas, Australia and New Zealand, made by the Fechters and the Suzzallos in
						1927.</p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fee, James Anders (April 28, 1855 -
				  August 27, 1941) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Anders Fee was a circuit court judge in Oregon. He was
				  admitted to the Oregon bar in 1885 and began his legal practice in Pendleton,
				  Oregon. Elected to the circuit court in 1885, he served until 1895. After his
				  service as judge, he became a criminal defense lawyer. Son of a pioneer
				  Wisconsin farmer, he was always interested in agricultural and had extensive
				  land holdings. His son, James Alger Fee, was a United States federal judge from
				  Oregon who served as a federal district court judge in Portland, Oregon, and as
				  a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in the
				  1950s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FeeJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Anders Fee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Feighan, John W. (April 5, 1845 – May
				  28, 1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Feighan was a politician and a prominent member of the
				  Washington Bar. He was born in Buffalo, New York and joined the Eighty-third
				  Indiana Regiment during the Civil War. He was at the siege of Vicksburg, the
				  battles of Chickasaw Bayou, Jackson, Mississippi, Tuscumbia and Missionary
				  Ridge, the Atlanta campaign, and Sherman’s march to the sea. At the close of
				  the war, he entered Miami University at Oxford, Ohio, graduating in 1870. Two
				  years later he graduated from Cincinnati Law School. He then practiced law in
				  Owensboro, Kentucky until 1880, and during that time was a candidate for
				  Presidential elector, and also for member of Congress. From 1880 to 1888 he was
				  a resident of Emporia, Kansas, and was three times elected Prosecuting
				  Attorney, served on the Governor’s staff as Judge Advocate General and was
				  Commander of the G. A. R. for the department of Kansas. He moved to Spokane,
				  Washington in 1888 and was soon elected the Spokane City Attorney. He was a
				  member of the first Legislature of the State of Washington and was elected
				  Speaker of the House of Representatives without opposition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FeighanJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John W. Feighan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1889</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Feldman, Martin Jay (January 31,
				  </unittitle><unittitle type="itemphoto">1948 - October 20, 1975)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FeldmanMJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Martin Jay Feldman standing with
					 large group in front of The Print Mint</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The Print Mint in San Francisco was a major publisher of
					 underground comics during the genre's heyday. Starting as retailer of
					 psychedelic posters, it soon evolved into a publisher, printer, and
					 distributor.</p><p>Text on front of postcard: Join the Army. Written on verso:
					 Print Mint in SF. Tall, prominent figure in plaid coat, glasses is Martin
					 Feldman who was well known as a University Ave [of Seattle, Washington] street
					 person in 1972-1973. He committed suicide by stabbing himself as he fell out a
					 window at 4728 19th Ave. An early hippie acid head he had gone thru Synannon
					 [sic] in New York. Lived mostly on welfare after that.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fell, Theron Edwin (June 19, 1858 -
				  January 29, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theron Fell was born in Bloomington, Illinois and arrived in
				  Oregon in 1884. He established the Morrow Land Trust and was involved in sheep
				  ranching. He was manager of the Portland Wool Warehouse and later the
				  vice-president of the Western Wool Warehouse. He incorporated the Pendleton
				  Wool Scouring and Packing Company in 1893; this later became the Pendleton
				  Woolen Mills where he originated the Pendleton blankets. In 1900, he
				  established the Mastodon hydraulic Company in the Yukon, which he managed for
				  almost 20 years. He also served in the Oregon State legislature as a Morrow
				  County representative.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FellTE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Theron Edwin Fell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Felt, Margaret Elley (December 19, 1917
				  - January 20, 2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Elley Felt was born in Payette, Idaho; her family moved
				  to Sequim Bay, WA in 1931. She graduated from Sequim High School in 1935 and
				  attended Murphy Business School &amp; University of Washington. She and her
				  husband, Horace W. “Sonny” Felt, owned and operated a logging business near Mt.
				  Rainier from 1945 through 1960. Her book,<emph render="italic">Gyppo
				  Logger</emph>, originally published in 1963, tells a story of the emergence of
				  family-based, independent contract or "gyppo" loggers in the post-World War II
				  timber economy, and the crucial role of women within that economy. She wrote
				  thirteen other books that focused on the Pacific Northwest and the timber
				  industry, contributed to popular magazines, and was an editor and public
				  information officer for several Washington State agencies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FeltME1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Margaret Elley Felt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Merle Junk, Olympia Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ferguson, Clark (October 13, 1835 -
				  March 16, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clark Ferguson was born in Westchester County, NY and went west
				  with his brother, Yates, to the California gold fields in 1855. He returned to
				  the east in 1857 and then took the overland route west to the mine fields of
				  Colorado and Idaho. In 1865, he joined his brother, Emory C. Ferguson, in
				  Snohomish, Washington Territory. He served as one of the original Snohomish
				  City Mill Company commissioners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FergusonC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clark Ferguson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ferguson, Emory Canda (March 5, 1833 -
				  October 7, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emory Canda Ferguson was born in Westchester County, New York,
				  apprenticed as a carpenter, and spent five years in the trade before venturing
				  to San Francisco in 1854 to search for gold. After opening a general store in
				  1856, running a sawmill, and joining gold seekers, he moved to Washington
				  Territory in 1858 and took a homestead claim in Cadyville, the future
				  Snohomish. Often referred to as "The Father of Snohomish," he was heavily
				  involved in a variety of deals and activities including postmaster, mayor,
				  relator, saloon keeper, legislator, and justice of the peace in Snohomish
				  County. He was a member of the commission that formulated the proceedings that
				  led to the admission of Washington as a state.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FergusonEC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Emory C. Ferguson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ferguson, Lucetta Gertrude Morgan (Mrs.
				  Emory C. Ferguson) (June 29, 1849 - June 20, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucetta Gertrude Morgan, the daughter of Hiram and Mary Morgan,
				  was born in Iowa and came to Washington Territory with her parents in 1852. She
				  married Emory C. Ferguson, co-founder of Snohomish County, in 1868. Emory and
				  Lucetta had four children.</p></bioghist><note><p>Emery Canda Ferguson lived with a Native American woman, and
				  they had a daughter. While in Olympia, he met Lucetta Morgan whom he married in
				  1868. After his marriage to Lucetta, he continued to support his common-law
				  wife. Her name and the name of the daughter are unknown. There are two
				  portraits, one labeled the first Mrs. E. C. Ferguson and the other labeled the
				  second Mrs. E. C. Ferguson. Neither appears to be Native American, and Emory
				  Ferguson had no other recorded marriages.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FergusonLM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Mrs. Emery Canda
					 Ferguson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso: The first Mrs. E.C. Ferguson.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FergusonLM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Mrs. Emery Canda
					 Ferguson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso: The second Mrs. E.C. Ferguson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ferry, Clinton Peyre (May 24, 1836 - August 1,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clinton Peyre Ferry was born at Fort Wayne, Indiana and moved
				  with his family to Indianapolis, where he attended preparatory school and
				  business college. He worked as a printer and telegraph operator before heading
				  to Portland, Oregon in 1858. He invested in real estate and also worked as a
				  bookkeeper for Henry W. Corbett, the merchant and United States senator. He was
				  treasurer of the city of Portland for four years, and then started a real
				  estate and insurance business. In 1868 he visited Tacoma and met Matthew Morton
				  McCarver, one of the founders of city. Ferry served as McCarver’s private
				  secretary and married one of McCarver’s step-daughters. He also worked as agent
				  for the Tacoma Land Company, pioneered the development of South Tacoma and was
				  appointed U. S. Commissioner to the Paris Exposition in 1889. On his return, he
				  donated the art he had collected in Paris to Tacoma’s new art museum, which he
				  helped finance and which was named for him. He also donated two statues to
				  Wright Park in Tacoma and the land for Ferry Park, one of Tacoma's first parks.
				  He liked to be referred to as "the Duke of Tacoma." He was Elisha P. Ferry's
				  nephew, the son of his brother Lucien.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FerryCP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Clinton P. Ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ferry, Elisha Peyre (August 9, 1825 - October 14,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elisha P. Ferry, the first Governor of the State of Washington,
				  was born in Monroe County, Michigan and graduated from Fort Wayne Law School,
				  Indiana. He practiced law in Waukegan and became the first mayor of Waukegan in
				  1859. During the American Civil War, he joined the Union Army, helping to
				  organize the Illinois regiment. In 1869 President Grant appointed Ferry to the
				  position of Surveyor General of the rapidly developing Washington Territory,
				  and in 1872 Grant appointed him as Territorial Governor, reappointing him at
				  the end of his four year term. He was the only Governor of the Washington
				  Territory to serve two terms. Both as Surveyor and Governor, he was closely
				  involved with the building of the Northern Pacific Railway, and took a personal
				  hand in planning the extension from Tacoma to Olympia. On Washington's
				  admission as a state on November 11, 1889, he became its inaugural governor,
				  serving one term, stepping down in 1893 through failing health. He was
				  successful in putting Washington Territory on a sound financial footing. He
				  also regulated the rail fares, and centralized the penal system on a state
				  rather than a county basis. He supervised the rebuilding of three major cities
				  that had been largely destroyed by fire: Seattle, Ellensburg and Spokane Falls.
				  Ferry County in Washington State is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">FerryEP1</container><unittitle>Elisha Peyre Ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FerryEP2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Elisha P. Ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination label="photographer"><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FerryEP3</container><unittitle type="item">Portrait of Elisha P. Ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>This is an engraving based on the photograph listed above.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FerryEP4</container><unittitle>Photograph of a bust of Elisha P. Ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fife, William Hutchinson (October 1,
				  1833 - January 21, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Fife was born in Ontario and apprenticed at 17 to
				  work in a general goods store. He owned his own store by the time he was 20 and
				  ten years later joined the rush to the Caribou gold fields in British Columbia.
				  In 1874, he and his family moved to Tacoma, establishing the first general
				  merchandise store there. He was appointed the city’s first postmaster and
				  invested in timberland, mineral claims and nearby farmland, one section of
				  which is now the city of Fife. He built tanks to capture spring water,
				  providing Pacific Avenue with its first tap water and fire protection. He
				  became vice president of the Tacoma Coal Company, organized the Puget Sound Dry
				  Dock Company and was a director in the Crescent Creamery, the Tacoma Exposition
				  Company and the Tacoma Opera Theatre Company. During the Panic of 1893, he lost
				  his fortune. His grandson, William Fife Knowland, became publisher of the 
				  <emph>Oakland Tribune</emph> and a United States senator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FifeWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Fife</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fifield, James William (June 5, 1899 –
				  February 25, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> James William Fifield was an American Congregational minister
				  who led the First Congregational Church in Los Angeles and was co-founder and
				  president of the conservative free-market organization Spiritual Mobilization.
				  In 1935 he co-founded the Mobilization for Spiritual Ideas with the president
				  of Carleton College, Donald J. Cowling, and Fifield became its president. The
				  movement advanced a blend of conservative religion, economics and politics that
				  one observer called “Christian libertarianism.” In 1949, Spiritual Mobilization
				  started a radio program called "The Freedom Story,” eventually broadcasting on
				  more than 800 radio stations. The organization also published a magazine, 
				  <emph render="italic">Faith and Freedom</emph>, with William Johnson as editor
				  and James C. Ingebretsen as a major contributor. The movement encouraged
				  American Christian clergy, educators, students, and business leaders to take a
				  stand against statist, collectivist trends in church, state, economics, and
				  culture and to promote free-market ideas. Social Mobilization dissolved in
				  1961.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FifieldJW1</container><unittitle>James Fifield at a meeting in the Hotel Statler in Los
					 Angeles with Dr. Donald J. Cowling and James C. Ingebretsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1955 </unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fillmore, Millard (January 7, 1800 -
				  March 8, 1874)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Millard Fillmore was the 13th President of the United States. In
				  1830, after taking the bar in 1823, he moved his law practice to Buffalo, New
				  York. He was an associate of the Whig politician Thurlow Weed and was a member
				  of the House of Representatives. He was elected Vice President in 1848 while
				  Comptroller of New York. He presided over the U. S. Senate during the debates
				  over the Compromise of 1850. After President Zachary Taylor's unexpected death
				  on July 9, 1850, Fillmore became the 13th President of the United States and
				  was the last of the Whig party to hold the office.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FillmoreM1</container><unittitle>Millard Fillmore, standing with hand on
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting of Fillmore.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">12</container><container type="item">FillmoreM2</container><unittitle>Millard Fillmore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Baker from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Findley, Howard Malcolm (August 24, 1877 - July 10,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Malcolm Findley was born in Independence, Missouri and
				  graduated from Monmouth College, Illinois in 1899. He received his law degree
				  from the University of Michigan in 1904. He practiced law in Seattle from 1905
				  until his appointment to the King County Superior Court in 1926. Findley
				  retired from the bench in 1957 after 31 years, but continued to serve as judge
				  pro tempore until a week before his death. He served as the chair of the
				  Committee of Law Examiners of the Washington State Bar Association and was
				  remembered as a champion of the rights of bailiffs, clerks, court reporters and
				  stenographers throughout his years on the bench. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Finlay, Gordon Alvin (June 3, 1913 - May 9,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Finlay graduated from Oregon State College (now Oregon
				  State University) in 1936. He was a member of the U. S. Navy Band where he
				  became the first chair cornet. He later taught cornet and trumpet at the
				  University of the Pacific. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FinlayG1</container><unittitle>Gordon Finlay in U. S. Navy uniform holding a
					 cornet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Finley, John Arthur (October 10, 1913 - November 9,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Arthur Finley was a graduate of the University of Michigan
				  College of Mines. He worked as a research metallurgist at Battelle Memorial
				  Institute in Columbus, Ohio before joining the University of Washington in
				  1946.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LimbachRW3</container><unittitle>Roberta Limbach with Professor John A. Finley, Kate S.
					 Underhill, unidentified man and unidentified child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1946?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Roberta W. Limbach subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Finley, Robert Corpening (November 7,
				  1905 - March 23, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Corpening Finley was born in Marion, North Carolina. He
				  received his Bachelor of Arts from Duke University in 1930 and his law degree
				  from the same school in 1934. While working for the federal government in
				  Washington, D.C., he attended Georgetown University and received his Master of
				  Laws degree in 1936. Finley worked for a number of federal agencies in the
				  Roosevelt "New Deal" administration: Federal Housing Administration, 1934-1935;
				  Alcohol Control Administration, 1935-1937; Department of Justice, probation
				  officer for U. S. District Court, Bureau of Prisons, Western District of North
				  Carolina, 1937-1938; and, Department of Justice, Alien Property, Custodian and
				  Claims Division, 1938-1940. In 1940 Finley moved to Olympia to take a position
				  as Assistant Attorney General for the State of Washington. He served in that
				  position until 1942. He continued to serve the state of Washington in various
				  capacities until 1945 when he entered private law practice in Seattle and
				  Renton. In the fall of 1950 Finley was elected to the Washington State Supreme
				  Court. While on the Court he served as Chief Justice from 1961 to 1962 and
				  again from 1967 to 1968. He was a possible nominee to the U. S. Supreme Court
				  in 1963 and from 1967 to 1970. Judge Finley served on the high court of
				  Washington until his death on March 23, 1976.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FinleyRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Finley with fellow Washington State Supreme
					 Court Justices Joseph Mallery and Thomas Grady</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Finney, Gertrude Elva (May 13, 1882 -
				  May 14, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Elva Finney was the author of several books for
				  children and young adults, including <emph render="italic">The plums hang
				  high</emph> and <emph render="italic">Is this my love?</emph>, a novel about
				  the Jamestown settlement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FinneyGE1</container><unittitle>Gertrude Elva Finney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fish, Byron (August 12, 1908 - March 7,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Byron Fish was a well-respected<emph> Seattle Times</emph> humor
				  columnist and travel writer, often focusing on tales of life in the Northwest.
				  He earned a journalism degree at the University of Washington. In addition to
				  his work at the <emph>Seattle Times</emph>, he was a Boeing publications
				  director and the author of numerous stories for magazines. He was mayor of
				  Normandy Park in the early 1960s. His books featured the work of nature
				  photographers Bob and Ira Spring.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FishB1</container><unittitle>Byron Fish in parka with child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bob and Ira Spring, Edmonds Washington</persname></origination><note><p>In 1969, Byron Fish wrote a series of articles about the
						working conditions on the Arctic North Shore during the oil boom of the 1960s.
						Bob Spring took photographs for the articles, which appeared in the 
						<emph>Seattle Times</emph>. This photograph may have been taken during the
						research for the articles.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fishback, Onna D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FishbackOD1</container><unittitle>Onna D. Fishback</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fisher, Elmer H.
				  (1840?-1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer H. Fisher was an architect best known for his work during
				  the rebuilding of Seattle after it was devastated by fire in 1889. His career
				  in the region began with designing buildings in the cities of Victoria and
				  Vancouver in Canada and Port Townsend in Washington. He is considered the most
				  prolific of the architects involved in rebuilding the city for designing almost
				  half of the major downtown buildings between 1889 and 1891 Fisher favored the
				  Richardsonian Romanesque style which lead to a unity of appearance in the
				  district. His best-known work is the Pioneer Building in Seattle, completed in
				  1892 for Henry Yesler. It won an award from the American Institute of
				  Architects for “being the finest building west of Chicago.” After the economic
				  crash of 1893, he tried and failed to re-establish a career in Los Angeles.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FisherEH1</container><unittitle>Elmer H. Fisher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0192/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fitch, Edson J. (1839? - May 31,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edson J. Fitch enlisted on November 1, 1861 at Bolton, NY as a
				  1st lieutenant and was promoted to captain on November 19, 1863. On December
				  25, 1863 he was commissioned into "K" Co. NY 93rd Infantry and mustered out on
				  November 26, 1864. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitchEJ1</container><unittitle>Edson J. Fitch in Union army uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Crandell &amp; Conkey's Gallery, Glen's Falls, N.Y</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fitterer, John Angus (July 1, 1922 -
				  2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John A. Fitterer was born in Ellensburg, WA. He entered the
				  Jesuit order in 1940, was ordained in Rome in 1953 and took his final vows in
				  1957. He was president of Seattle University from 1965 until 1970 and then
				  spent the next year as chancellor of the university. He was president of the
				  Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities in Washington D.C. in the
				  1970s. In 1976, he was the provincial assistant for education for the Oregon
				  Province of the Society of Jesus. In 1977, he took a leave of absence from
				  Jesuit order and announced he was seeking ordination as an Episcopal priest. He
				  became an Episcopal priest in the Diocese of California and chaired the
				  Episcopal Homes Foundation, overseeing its seven residences for the elderly.
				  Fitterer married Barbara Trombley in December 1977.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FittererJA1</container><unittitle>John A. Fitterer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Kennell-Ellis Inc., Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fitzgerald, Maurice J.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Maurice Fitzgerald was a Sergeant in Troop K 1st Cavalry who
				  served in the Modoc War and was at one time the National Commander of the
				  National Indian Wars Veterans Association. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitzgeraldMJ1</container><unittitle> Maurice Fitzgerald with Colonel Frazier Augustus
					 Boutelle and Histo, also known as Topplish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 18, 1923</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Caption on front of photo: Three veterans of Modoc Indian War
					 1872-73. Note from back of photo: Presented to my esteemed friend C.B. Bagley
					 this 1st day of December 1923. Maurice Fitzgerald.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fitzsimmons, Robert James "Ruby Bob"
				  (May 26, 1863 – October 22, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert James "Bob" Fitzsimmons was a British-born New Zealand
				  professional boxer who made boxing history as the sport's first three-division
				  world champion in the Middleweight, Heavyweight, and Light Heavyweight
				  divisions. Nicknamed "Ruby Bob" and "The Freckled Wonder,” he was also known
				  for his pure fighting skills. He was elected into <emph render="italic">The
				  Ring</emph> magazine’s Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitzsimmonsRJ1</container><unittitle>Robert James Fitzsimmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. M. O'Brien, N.Y</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fix, Wilbur James (August 14, 1927 - October 16,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilbur James Fix was born in North Dakota, and his family moved
				  to Longview, Washington in 1936. He joined the Army after high school
				  graduation and was assigned to monitor foreign communications out of
				  Washington, D.C. After he left the Army, he earned a degree in industrial
				  management from the University of Washington in 1950. He found a job at a Bon
				  Marche store in Yakima selling men's shirts, something he said he never
				  expected would evolve into a career. He stayed with the company for over forty
				  years, eventually becoming Chairman and CEO of in 1980, serving until 1993. He
				  was Senior Vice President of Allied Stores Corporation, the parent company of
				  The Bon Marche, Chairman of the Fix Management Group, and from 1995 to January
				  1998, he served as Vice Chairman of Access Long Distance Telephone Company. He
				  also served as a Director of Building Materials Holding Corporation from 1991
				  to May 3, 2004 and a Director of VANS, Inc. In 2010, he wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Go to the Edge of Disaster</emph>, in which he outlined
				  the business strategies he used during his 12-year tenure as corporate
				  executive officer at the Bon Marche.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FixWJ1</container><unittitle>Wilbur James Fix</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1987?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Flanagan, Daniel Vincent (March 2, 1909 - June 2,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Flanagan was a trade union organizer. He was the
				  secretary-treasurer of the Warehousemen's Local 38-44 of the International
				  Longshoremen's Association (1934-1936), charter member and organizer of
				  Warehouse Local 860 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters in 1937, and
				  general organizer and regional director of AF of L Western Division. He also
				  served as the deputy director of the Labor Division of the Office of Defense
				  Mobilization (1951-1953). In 1948, he was president of the Sierra Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlanaganDV1</container><unittitle>Daniel Flanagan with unidentified woman at a labor
					 council dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 17, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Washington State Labor News</corpname></origination><note><p>On verso: Newspaper article describing his visit to
						Seattle.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlanaganDV2</container><unittitle>Daniel Flanagan with two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Flanders, Alvan (August 2, 1825 – March
				  14, 1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Hopkinton, New Hampshire, Alvan Flanders moved to
				  Humboldt County, California in 1851 and worked in the lumber business until
				  1858. He then moved to San Francisco and was one of the founders and
				  proprietors of the <emph render="italic">San Francisco Daily Times</emph>. He
				  served as member of the California State Assembly in 1861 and as an officer of
				  the United States branch mint. Flanders moved to the Territory of Washington in
				  1863, engaged in mercantile pursuits in Wallula and became the first postmaster
				  of the town in 1865. He was elected as a Republican to the Fortieth Congress,
				  serving from March 4, 1867 until March 3, 1869; he was not a candidate for
				  re-nomination. He was appointed by President Grant as Governor of Washington
				  Territory on April 5, 1869 and served until 1870. He returned to San Francisco,
				  at the expiration of his term.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlandersA1</container><unittitle>Alvan Flanders</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Flauhaut, Martha [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fleetwood, Keziah Belle Ruddell (September 21, 1865 -
				  September 14, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Keziah Belle Ruddell was born in Thurston County, Washington,
				  the daughter of Olympia pioneers Stephen and Margaret Ruddell; Ruddell Road in
				  Olympia is named for the family. She married William Washington Fleetwood
				  in1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FleetwoodKBR1</container><unittitle>Keziah Fleetwood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Betman (sic) Block 4th Street.</p><p>The Bettman Block, built in 1891, was located at the northwest
					 corner of Adams and Fourth Avenue in Olympia, near the center of town.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fleetwood, William Washington (November
				  18, 1850 - August 6, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Washington Fleetwood was born in Jackson County,
				  Indiana. In 1865, when he was 15 years old, the family started across the
				  plains with a team of oxen. They first settled in the Puyallup Valley before
				  moving to Olympia. He married Keziah Belle Ruddell in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FleetwoodW1</container><unittitle>William Fleetwood and granddaughter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Betman (sic) Block 4th Street.</p><p>The Bettman Block, built in 1891, was located at the northwest
					 corner of Adams and Fourth Avenue in Olympia, near the center of town.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fleming, Matthew (October 9, 1826 - March 13,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew Fleming was born in Ireland and came to the United
				  States in 1849. He served under Major Haller during the Indian Wars and met
				  Governor Stevens during this time. After he retired, he raised livestock at the
				  Quarantine Station farm. He married Celia Fitzgerald, a member of the S’Klallem
				  Tribe, on September 12, 1879. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlemingM1</container><unittitle>Matthew Fleming</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fleming, Philip Bracken (October 15, 1887 – October 6,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Bracken Fleming was a United States Army general and
				  United States Ambassador to Costa Rica. During his military career, he held the
				  following ranks: August 1, 1935 Lieutenant-Colonel, January 1, 1940, Colonel,
				  February 14, 1941, Brigadier-General (Army of the United States), October 25,
				  1942 Major-General (Army of the United States), January 31, 1947 Major-General
				  (Regular Army, Retired). Still serving in the U. S. Army through January 1947,
				  he held several posts in the late 1930s as District Engineer in Maine and
				  Minnesota, then two jobs in the Labor Department, and from December 4, 1941, to
				  May 26, 1949, as Federal Works Administrator. In 1949 he became Chairman of the
				  US Maritime Commission, and in May 1950 Under-Secretary of Commerce. From 1951
				  to 1953, he served as ambassador to Costa Rica.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fleming, Richard Howell (September 21,
				  1909 - October 25, 1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard H. Fleming was born in Victoria, British Columbia and
				  attended the University of British Columbia, where he received a B.A. and an
				  M.A. in chemistry. He then studied at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
				  of the University of California, receiving his Ph.D. in oceanography in 1935.
				  He taught at the Scripps Institution for several years and also worked for the
				  Division of War Research at the University of California from 1941 to 1946,
				  applying the study of oceanography to problems of undersea warfare. He
				  continued his work in the military applications of oceanography as the chief
				  oceanographer for the U.S. Navy Hydrographic Office in Washington, D.C. from
				  1946 to 1951 before joining the faculty of the University of Washington in 1951
				  as the chairman of the Oceanography Department. He served as chairman until
				  1967 and continued as a professor of oceanography until 1980, when he retired
				  as professor emeritus. He participated in several major projects, including
				  NORPAC (Northern Pacific Survey) project (1955-1956), the first comprehensive
				  synoptic survey of the Northern Pacific Ocean and Project Chariot (1959-1962),
				  conducted for the Atomic Energy Commission as part of Operation Plowshare. He
				  belonged to numerous scientific organizations and worked on many committees
				  including an organizing committee of the International Union of Geodesy and
				  Geophysics and several committees of the National Research Council. He was
				  interested in the development of education in oceanography and worked to
				  promote the training of secondary school teachers and the publication of
				  textbooks in the field. He was the author, with Harold Sverdrup, of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Oceans</emph>, one of the standard works on
				  oceanography.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlemingRH1</container><unittitle>Richard H. Fleming with lab equipment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University of Washington The Tyee yearbook</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Original photograph and two cropped copies</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fletcher, Francis (March 1, 1814 -
				  October 7, 1871)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Fletcher was born in Allerston, Yorkshire, England and
				  immigrated with his parents, William and Mary Fletcher and his four brothers to
				  Ontario, Canada in 1825. He moved to Peoria, Illinois as a young man, where he
				  joined the Oregon Dragoons and traveled overland on what was to become the
				  Oregon Trail. He arrived in the Willamette Valley in 1840, where he took a
				  Donation Land Claim along the Yamhill River. He was present during the vote to
				  create the Provisional Government of Oregon, the first American government west
				  of the Rocky Mountains. Fletcher volunteered for service in the Cayuse War of
				  1848 and was on the first Board of Trustees of Willamette University. His home
				  in Dayton, Oregon is on the National Register of Historic Places.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FletcherF1</container><unittitle>Francis Fletcher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="item photo">Flett, John (August 5, 1815 - December
				  12, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Flett moved to Oregon territory from Manitoba in 1841 and
				  was present at many of the conferences between the territorial officers and the
				  Indians, both in Washington and Oregon. At several of these councils, he acted
				  as an interpreter for the Superintendent of Indian Affairs, helping negotiate
				  treaties. He was also present at the final grand council held by Governor Isaac
				  Stevens and General Joel Palmer with several tribes near Walla Walla, in 1855.
				  In 1859 he settled at South Prairie, in Pierce County, where he had a farm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlettJ1</container><unittitle>John Flett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley (August 7, 1890 - September
				  5,1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Gurley Flynn was a labor leader, activist, and
				  feminist who played a leading role in the Industrial Workers of the World
				  (IWW). Flynn was a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union and a
				  visible proponent of women's rights, birth control, and women's suffrage. She
				  joined the Communist Party USA in 1936 and in 1961 became its chairwoman. She
				  died during a visit to the Soviet Union, where she was accorded a state
				  funeral. She is buried at Forest Home Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois, near
				  the Haymarket Martyrs Monument.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlynnEG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Gurley Flynn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. Ricci, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR2561/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: return to Stewart H. Holbrook, Portland,
					 Oregon</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlynnEG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Gurley Flynn speaking to a
					 crowd at the Paterson New Jersey strike</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1913</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Brown Brothers, New York</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Caption on front: Miss E. G. Flynn addressing ladies
					 [illegible] Paterson, June 1913.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlynnEG3</container><unittitle type="item photo">Portrait of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
					 as a young woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, age 17</p></note><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR2560/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Flynn, Robert Joseph (September 18,
				  1881 - June 17, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Flynn was a University of Washington alumnus and chief
				  land surveyor for the Seattle Engineering Department. He joined the Seattle
				  Engineering Department in 1902 as a survey chainman; when he retired in 1951,
				  he was the most senior municipal employee in years of service. During his
				  career, he worked on the construction of all of the city's bascule bridges
				  built during his employment. The original photograph was taken at the
				  University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FlynnRJ1</container><unittitle type="item photo">Robert Flynn in UW cadet
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1901</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Foch, Ferdinand (October 2, 1851 –
				  March 20, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maréchal Ferdinand Foch was a French soldier, military theorist
				  and the Allied Généralissime during the First World War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXF1</container><container type="item">FochF1</container><unittitle type="item photo">Ferdinand Foch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921?</unitdate></did><note><p>Translation of inscription: To the University of Washington in
					 memory of my reception. 30 Nov. 21. F. Foch.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fogg, Charles Mason (August 19, 1911 - February 6,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Fogg was the son of Frederick Fogg and Letitia Mason
				  Fogg, and the grandson of Charles Fogg, pioneer Tacoma attorney, and Allen
				  Chase Mason, one of the leading builders of the city. He attended the
				  University of British Columbia and graduated from the University of Washington.
				  He began his career with the Commonwealth Title Insurance Company of Tacoma,
				  then joined Tacoma Title Company in 1938, and served as vice president and
				  manager for several years. He left that post to become executive vice president
				  of Puget Sound Title Insurance in 1960. In 1963, Fogg joined the trust
				  department at Puget Sound National Bank and was elected vice president in 1965.
				  In 1971, he was promoted to vice president and senior trust officer. He retired
				  from the bank in 1976. During his professional career, he was elected director
				  of the State Savings and Loan Association and secretary-treasurer of the
				  Trustmen’s Association of Western Washington. He was president of the Tacoma
				  Rotary Club in 1950, president of the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce in 1953 and
				  chairman of the government and education division of the United Good Neighbor
				  Fund drive. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fogg, Elizabeth (May 26, 1910 - April 6,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Fogg was the daughter of Frederick Fogg and Letitia
				  Mason Fogg; her grandparents were Charles Fogg, pioneer Tacoma attorney, and
				  Allen Chase Mason, one of the leading builders of the city. She attended Annie
				  Wright School, Stadium High School, Mills College, and graduated from the
				  University of Washington with a degree in history. She became the secretary to
				  Professor Edmund S. Meany, the chair of the department, and she maintained a
				  lifelong interest in history, especially that of Tacoma and her pioneer
				  heritage. She married Dr. Charles A. Green in 1936. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fogg, Letitia (November 21, 1908 - August 5,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leitia Fogg was the daughter of Frederick Fogg and Letitia Mason
				  Fogg; her grandparents were Charles Fogg, pioneer Tacoma attorney, and Allen
				  Chase Mason, one of the leading builders of the city. She attended Annie Wright
				  School in Tacoma and graduated from Castilleja School in Palo Alto, California.
				  In 1935, she married Philip Doerr, a mining engineer who worked for American
				  Smelting and Mining. His work sent him to Chihuahua, Mexico, where she lived
				  until her death in 1945. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foley, Thomas Stephen (March 6, 1929 – October 18,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas “Tom” Foley was an American lawyer and politician from
				  the state of Washington. He was born in Spokane and attended first Gonzaga
				  University and then the University of Washington, where he earned a B.A. in
				  1951 and a law degree in 1957. In 1958, he began working in the Spokane County
				  prosecutor's office as a deputy prosecuting attorney and taught at Gonzaga
				  University Law School from 1958 to 1959. In 1960, he joined the office of the
				  State of Washington Attorney General before moving to Washington, D.C., where
				  he joined the staff of the United States Senate Committee on Interior and
				  Insular Affairs as assistant chief clerk and special counsel. In 1964 he was
				  elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, representing Washington's 5th
				  congressional district for 30 years as a Democratic member until 1995. He
				  served as majority whip, House majority leader and was the 57th Speaker of the
				  United States House of Representatives, serving in that capacity from 1989 to
				  1995. He was defeated for re-election in 1995, the first Speaker of the House
				  since 1862 to be defeated in a re-election campaign; President Bill Clinton
				  attributed his defeat to Foley’s support for the Federal Assault Weapons Ban of
				  1994. He served as the United States Ambassador to Japan from 1997 to 2001.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FoleyTS1</container><unittitle>Thomas "Tom" Foley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1995?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FoleyTS2</container><unittitle>Thomas "Tom" Foley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1995?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fonda, William Clark (January 25, 1858 - August 31,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Clark Fonda, also known as "Skagway Bill," was an
				  adventurer and early gold prospector during the Klondike Gold Rush of
				  1896-1899. Born in the town of Fonda, New York, he left at age seven to work on
				  the Erie Canal. By age nine, he was painting the Brooklyn Bridge, and, by age
				  21, he owned a steam boat company operating on the Hudson River. In 1888, he
				  took a job on a ship that sailed around South America to Seattle where he
				  settled and lived much of his life. In 1897, word of the discovery of gold in
				  Alaska reached Seattle, he headed to Skagway. While he never struck it rich, he
				  spent many years in Alaska, helping to build the Alaska Railroad, schools, and
				  hospitals. In Seattle, he was a painting contractor and an active member of the
				  Seattle chapter of the Alaska-Yukon Pioneers (AYP). He is also famous for being
				  the model two sculptures by Alonzo Victor Lewis, one called "The Prospector,"
				  which stands outside of the Pioneer Home in Sitka, Alaska, and a smaller
				  version which is affiliated with the Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park
				  in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FondaWC1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Fonda's cabin in Skagway, AK</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Miner's cabin of "Skagway Bill," Skagway AK,
					 built 1897. This picture was taken 1934. Originally built on beach. Tide has
					 washed up silt and now it is blocks from the water.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FondaWC2</container><unittitle>Photocopy of a portrait of Fonda</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of portrait from<emph render="italic">The Alaska
					 Yukon Gold Book</emph> .</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Forbes, Peter Dewar (February 18, 1845
				  - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter D. Forbes was born in St. Johns, New Brunswick and came to
				  the United States in 1868, locating in Minneapolis, where he became a
				  well-known architect and builder. In 1873, he moved to Seattle where he was the
				  superintendent of depot and bridge construction for the Northern Pacific
				  Railroad. In 1874 he built the headquarters building for the company in Tacoma.
				  He owned a coastal steamer, purchased an interest in the New Tacoma Sawmill,
				  and became a member of the firm of Smith, Hatch &amp; Company. In 1884 he
				  became a member of the wholesale grocery firm of John S. Baker &amp; Company,
				  before returning to work on the railroad. He later invested in real estate in
				  Tacoma and was instrumental in the growth of business and construction in the
				  city. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">ForbesPD1</container><unittitle>Peter D. Forbes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Forbush, Alonzo Bascomb (December 6, 1895-May 27, 1957)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alonzo "Lon" Bascomb Forbush was the secretary-treasurer of the
				  Washington Association of Realtors and had served as the executive secretary of
				  the Seattle Real Estate Board for 17 years. As a young man, he was secretary to
				  Supreme Court Judge Matthew W. Hill, then a Seattle attorney. A native of Santa
				  Barbara, California, he graduated in languages from the University of
				  California and also studied at the Universities of Mexico and Illinois. He
				  moved to Seattle from California in the 1920s. Forbush was regional governor of
				  the Secretaries Council of the National Association of Realtors and was a past
				  officer in the Seattle Royal Knights of the Round Table. He was an Army veteran
				  of World War I.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Force, Peter (November 26, 1790 -
				  January 23 1868)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Force was an American politician, American lieutenant in
				  the American Revolutionary War and in the War of 1812, newspaper editor,
				  archivist, and historian who served as the 12th mayor of Washington, D.C., and
				  whose library of historical documents became the Library of Congress's first
				  major Americana collection. His grave marker is a marble obelisk, 16 feet high,
				  with a relief of a bookshelf filled with books.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">ForceP1</container><unittitle>Peter Force</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 26, 1848</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ford, D.A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FordDA1</container><unittitle>D.A. Ford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: D. A. Ford, 1025 Granville St., Vancouver,
					 B. C.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ford, David (July 27, 1837 - March 30,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Ford, was born in Indiana and married Mary Medler on
				  October 11, 1857. When the Civil War started, he served as a soldier in the
				  Union army, serving in Company A, Eighty-fourth Indiana Volunteers. After the
				  war he went to Missouri and California before moving to Washington, first to
				  Yakima and then to Ellensburg. He was a farmer, served as a trustee of the
				  Ellensburg Academy and as a Justice of the Peace, and was quartermaster for the
				  Grand Army of the Republic, James Parsons Post #11.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FordD1</container><unittitle>David Ford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ford, Gerald Rudolph (July 14, 1913 -
				  December 26, 2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gerald R. Ford (born Leslie Lynch King Jr.) was born in Omaha,
				  Nebraska; he later took the name of his step-father. A star college football
				  player, he graduated from Yale with an undergraduate degree in economics and a
				  law degree and served in the Navy during World War II. He was elected to the
				  House of Representatives in 1948 and represented Michigan's 5th District for
				  nearly 25 years, serving as House minority leader for eight years. He was
				  elevated to vice president when Spiro Agnew resigned, and then became the 38th
				  U.S. president following the resignation of Richard Nixon. Ford was defeated by
				  Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FordGR1</container><unittitle>Gerald R. Ford sitting in the Oval Office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1974?</unitdate></did><note><p>Matted photo with note and signature on mat: "To Roscoe
					 Torrance With best wishes, Gerald R. Ford." </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Forrestal, James Vincent (February 15, 1892 – May 22,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Vincent Forrestal was the last cabinet-level United States
				  secretary of the Navy and the first United States secretary of defense.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Forsyth, James W. (August 8, 1835 -
				  October 24, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James W. Forsyth was a U.S. Army officer and general, primarily
				  a Union staff officer during the American Civil War and cavalry regimental
				  commander during the Indian Wars. He attended West Point from 1851 to 1856 and
				  was instrumental in the completion of the frontier fort on San Juan Island. He
				  served as the company's acting commander when Captain George E. Pickett was
				  away on leave. After serving in Washington Territory at Fort Bellingham and
				  Camp Pickett, San Juan Island, he joined the Union Army as colonel of the 64th
				  Ohio Infantry on November 9, 1861. In 1862 he transferred to the Army of the
				  Potomac where he served as the assistant U.S. inspector general during the
				  Peninsular Campaign and was later General Philip Sheridan’s chief of staff.
				  Forsyth remained in the Regular Army after the end of the Civil War. He
				  commanded a brigade of cavalry for two years and took part in military
				  campaigns against the Comanche, Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Kiowa Indians in
				  1868-69. He commanded the 1st U.S. Cavalry in the Bannock War in 1878 and was
				  in command of the 7th Cavalry at the Wounded Knee Massacre on December 29,
				  1890. In 1894, he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general and appointed
				  commander of the Department of California. He retired from the Army in
				  1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">ForsythJW1</container><unittitle>James W. Forsyth in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 28, 1873</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fortson, George Harley (October 19,
				  1860 - March 27, 1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George H. Fortson was born in Elberton, Georgia and completed
				  his law studies at Washington, Georgia. He practiced in Georgia and Florida
				  before moving to the West Coast in 1885. He worked in the U. S. Land Office
				  until the fire of 1889, when he returned to the practice of law. He became City
				  Attorney in 1892. In 1889, he joined Company B, First Regiment National Guard
				  of Washington, and became captain of the Company during the Philippine
				  Insurrection. He died from wounds received in a skirmish in the Pasig Delta
				  Campaign. He was memorialized in 1901 with dedication of a small public park,
				  Fortson Square, at the southeast corner of Yesler Way and 2nd Avenue in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FortsonGH1</container><unittitle>George H. Fortson in United States Volunteer
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1898?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foss, Andrew (Andreas) Olsen (January 25, 1855 – March
				  13, 1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Andrew Foss came to the United States from Rodenes, Marker,
				  Ostfold, Norway and married Norwegian immigrant Thea Christiansdatter in
				  Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1881. They started the Foss Launch Company on the
				  Tacoma waterfront in the summer of 1889; it eventually became the Seattle-based
				  Foss Maritime, the largest tugboat company in the western United States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss,
					 Lillian Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p><p>Filed under Thea Foss subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foss, Anne (October 4, 1922 - August 7, 2007)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anne Foss was born in Seattle to Marco and Norma Florito
				  Ganzini. She graduated from West Seattle High School and was a Marine Corps
				  veteran of World War II. She married Gerald Foss in 1949. In 1957 they moved to
				  Edmonds, Washington, where she worked as a claims manager for the Washington
				  State Employment Security Department. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB3</container><unittitle>Betty George standing with Anne Foss and Gene Evelyn
					 Walch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1984</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Foss, Christian Arthur (February 13, 1885 - October 19,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Christian Arthur Foss, the son of Andrew and Thea Foss, was born
				  in Minneapolis, Minnesota and moved to the Puget Sound region as a young boy.
				  At an early age, he piloted launches of Foss Launch &amp; Tug, a company
				  started by his parents. He eventually became chairman of the board of the
				  company He also served as the president of the Norwegian Commercial Club,
				  Pacific Northwest Director of the Boy Scouts of America, president of the
				  Ballard Kiwanis Club, president of the Scandinavian-American Good Government
				  League, and president of the Scandinavian-American Republic Club. He was a
				  charter member of the Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society. Foss was elected
				  Maritime Man of the Year by Puget Sound Maritime Press in 1951. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss,
					 Lillian Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p><p>Filed under Thea Foss subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Foss, Henry Osander (September 5, 1891 - April 6,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry O. Foss was the president and board chairman of the Foss
				  Launch and Tug Company, a company founded by his parents, Andrew and Thea Foss.
				  Foss spent much of his life around the Tacoma waterfront and was engaged in
				  marine-salvage jobs from an early age. After the deaths of his parents, Foss
				  and his brother, Christian and Wedell, took over the family operation. Foss
				  attended Tacoma High School (now Stadium High School) and Stanford University.
				  During his life, he was the recipient of many awards, including the Norwegian
				  Sesquicentennial Award from the Norwegian American Anniversary Commission in
				  1975. As a commander in the U.S. Navy Reserves, Foss served as deputy salvage
				  officer of the Pacific Fleet in the 1940s, and received the Navy's Legion of
				  Merit Medal and Marine Life Saving Medal. Foss resigned as president of the
				  company in 1965; he was named honorary chairman of the board and remained an
				  active part of the firm's management team until 1969, when the firm was sold to
				  Dillingham Maritime Services. He was the oldest member of Tacoma's downtown
				  Kiwanis Club and was a member of the Tacoma Elks, and was past potentate of the
				  Afifi Shriners Temple in Tacoma. During the 1930s, he was a Republican state
				  senator from the 29th District in Tacoma. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss,
					 Lillian Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p><p>Filed under Thea Foss subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Foss, Lillian Deborah (October 10, 1889 - May 24,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lilian Deborah Foss was the daughter of Andrew and Thea Foss.
				  She died of tuberculosis in 1914.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss,
					 Lillian Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p><p>Filed under Thea Foss subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foss, Thea Christiansdatter (June 8, 1857 – June 7,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Thea Foss came to the United States from Eidsberg, Ostfold,
				  Norway and married Norwegian immigrant Andrew Foss in Minneapolis, Minnesota in
				  1881. They started the Foss Launch Company on the Tacoma waterfront in the
				  summer of 1889; it eventually became the Seattle-based Foss Maritime, the
				  largest tugboat company in the western United States. In Tacoma, the former
				  City Waterway was renamed the Thea Foss Waterway in honor of the
				  tugboat-company pioneer. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss, Lilly
					 Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Foss, Wedell O. (April 16, 1887 - January 6,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wedell Foss was the son of Andrew and Thea Foss. Born in
				  Minneapolis, he came to Tacoma with his parents and older brother, Arthur, in
				  1891. He studied law at the University of Washington and practiced admiralty
				  law in Tacoma until the start of World War I, when he entered the Navy. At the
				  end of the war, he joined a Seattle tugboat firm which later merged with the
				  Foss organization. For years after his service in the Navy, much of spent
				  aboard the battleship <emph>South Dakota,</emph> he was active as a lieutenant
				  commander in the Naval Reserves. Much of his post-college non-professional work
				  centered around his alumni work for his fraternity, Kappa Sigma. He was also a
				  member of the Propeller, Arctic, Rainier and Washington Athletic Clubs, as well
				  as the Marine Historical Society. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FossTC1</container><unittitle>Thea Foss with children Wedell Foss, Henry Foss, Lilly
					 Foss, Christian Foss, and husband Andrew Foss.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Ives, Tacoma WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 334: Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers Collection.</p><p>Filed under Thea Foss subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Foss, L.W. - See John F.
				  Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foster, Carroll Baldwin (January 11, 1908-October 29,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carroll Foster was a radio announcer and special events director
				  at KIRO.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH1</container><unittitle>Group photo. Left to right: Edwin Adams and H.P.
					 Everest, directors of the journalism school; Mrs. Esther Seering, public
					 relations counsel; Mrs. Mary Coyle Osmun, Seattle Times women's editor; Carroll
					 Foster, special events director at KIRO</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Many professional publicity workers turned
					 out for the recent conference on publicity methods, originally planned just for
					 amateur publicity chairmen. Due to scores of requests, the conference, first of
					 its kind on campus, will be followed next fall by an expanded series of
					 lectures.</p><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Foster, Charles E. (September 3,, 1844
				  - July 13, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles E. Foster was born in Maine and served in the Union Army
				  during the Civil War from November 6, 1861 until October 15, 1865. He lived in
				  South Bend, Pacific County, Washington and worked as an expressman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterCE1</container><unittitle>Charles E. Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia Wash</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Presented to Edmond S. Meany by H.M.
					 Chandler, Lewiston Ida., March 1933.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Foster, Joseph (April 10, 1828 -
				  January 16, 1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Foster was born in Ontario, Canada; the family moved to
				  Ohio when he was a young child. In early 1852, Joseph and his brother Stephen
				  decided to go west, crossing by ox team and completing much of the trip on
				  foot; they reached the West Coast in July of 1852. Joseph first found work on
				  the small boats moving freight from the mouth of the Columbia upstream. The
				  brothers then worked in the gold mines of Oregon and California; when their
				  funds dried up, they did farm labor. In April 1853, the brothers returned to
				  the Puget Sound area where they took up land claims. In 1855, Joseph enlisted
				  in the Indian War at Fort Steilacoom, serving as a packer and scout. He was
				  elected to the Territorial Legislature in Olympia in 1858; he would be elected
				  eleven times. In 1860, he introduced a bill to build a military road from
				  Seattle by way of Snoqualmie Pass to Colville, which became the first road over
				  the mountains. He introduced and got a bill passed in 1861 locating a single
				  university in Seattle on the condition that the city donate 10 acres, providing
				  an endowment and location for the new university. A donation from Arthur Denny,
				  Charles C. Terry, and Edward Lander provided the land, and the cornerstone for
				  the university was laid in May 1861. He was also known to be a fighter for
				  women’s suffrage. The area where he settled, which was known as Foster is now
				  part of Tukwila, Washington. There is a Joseph Foster Memorial Park and a
				  Foster Golf Course in the area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Joseph Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Joseph Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph from History of the Pacific
					 Northwest: Oregon and Washington</extent></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph after a photograph taken by Rogers, Olympia,
						Washington</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterJ3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Joseph Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Foster, Nettie Amelia Low (October 8,
				  1852 - October 30, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nettie Amelia Low was born in the first log cabin built at Alki
				  Point. Her parents, John Nathan Low and Lydia Colborn Low, had crossed the
				  plains by ox team from Illinois to Oregon in the company of Arthur Denny and
				  Carson D. Boren. They then traveled on the schooner <emph render="italic">Exact</emph>, landing at Alki Point in 1851. Nettie Low married
				  George Herman Foster on August 20. 1873. He had arrived in 1862 when he was
				  sixteen and was employed by Henry Yesler as a superintendent on Yesler’s wharf.
				  Her name, along with those of her parents and siblings, is engraved on the
				  tablet at Alki Beach commemorating the Denny Party’s landing.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterNAL1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Nettie Amelia Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Nettie Low Foster. Born at Alki Oct. 1852,
					 second white child born in King County.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterNAL2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Nettie Amelia Foster sitting in an
					 armchair with carved dragon heads</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bushnell, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Foster, Stephen Collins (July 4, 1826 – January 13,
				  1864)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Collins Foster was an American songwriter known
				  primarily for his parlor and minstrel music. Foster wrote over 200 songs; among
				  his best-known are <emph render="italic">Oh! Susanna</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">My Old Kentucky Home</emph> and <emph render="italic">Camptown Races</emph> . Many of his compositions remain popular
				  more than 150 years after he wrote them.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FosterSC1</container><unittitle> Stephen Collins Foster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fougberg, Violet</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Violet Fougberg was a correspondent for <emph render="italic">The New York Daily Mirror</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GipsonJH2</container><unittitle>James Gipson in Piraeus, Greece with Violet Fougberg
					 and Alec Kitroeff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 2, 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso describes Violet as employee of 
					 <emph render="italic">New York Daily Mirror</emph>, and Alec as "INS
					 Correspondent in Athens."</p><p>Filed under James H. Gipson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fowler, Andrew Jackson (January 8, 1842
				  - October 12, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Jackson Fowler was born in St. Louis, Missouri and came
				  west with his parents in 1850. He married Sarah LaDu, the daughter of Crumeline
				  LeDu, who had settled in Mount Coffin (now Longview) in 1850; LeDu had
				  represented Cowlitz, Wahkiakum and Pacific Counties in the fifth and sixth
				  Territorial Councils. The Fowlers also lived in Mount Coffin and had twelve
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FowlerAJ1</container><unittitle>Andrew Jackson Fowler cutting wheat with a
					 scythe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture is as he is now if this is any
					 benefit to you. This is where he was cutting wheat last summer. You kneed (sic)
					 not send it back if this is all right, you kneed (sic) not go and get them at
					 F. H. (illegible).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fowler, David Covington (January 3, 1921 - April 30,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David C. Fowler was a longtime University of Washington
				  professor who defended the University's right to teach the Bible as literature.
				  An expert on Cornish language and literature, he taught at the University for
				  more than three decades, retiring in 1986. A native of Kentucky, he attended
				  the University of Florida on a music scholarship and joined the Navy after the
				  bombing of Pearl Harbor, serving in the Pacific. After earning his master's and
				  doctorate in Chicago, he taught at the University of Pennsylvania. He joined
				  the UW in 1952 and won two Guggenheim Fellowships that took him to Oxford. His
				  interest in Cornish literature was sparked by the Middle English poem "Piers
				  Plowman.” Fowler's work included the study of the 14th-century scholar John
				  Trevisa (whom Fowler believed wrote the poem), the history of the English
				  ballad and the Bible in medieval English literature. A court case relating to
				  Fowler's class, Bible as Literature, went to the Supreme Court in 1966-1967 and
				  was decided in favor of the University of Washington. He served as chair of the
				  Faculty Senate, associate dean of the Graduate School and director of graduate
				  studies in English. His papers are held in UW Special Collections. .</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FowlerDC1</container><unittitle>David Covington Fowler playing a guitar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fowler, Enoch S. (November 19, 1813 -
				  November 27, 1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Enoch S. Fowler was born in Lubec, Maine. He came to the Pacific
				  coast in 1849 as master and part owner of the brig <emph render="italic">Quoddy
				  Bell</emph>, which he sold in San Francisco, joining the brig 
				  <emph render="italic">George Emery</emph> as mate, and made his first voyage in
				  her to Puget Sound in 1850. He subsequently owned several boats, carrying
				  goods, mail and passengers. He moved to Port Townsend, WA in 1857 where he
				  worked in mercantile, owned two newspapers and built the first wharf. In 1874
				  he built the five-story building in town as well as a jail and other buildings.
				  In 1863 the legislature elected him brigadier-general of the territory. He was
				  treasurer of Jefferson County and chairman of the board of Pilot Commissioners
				  from the time the pilot law was passed in 1868 until 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FowlerES1</container><unittitle>Enoch S. Fowler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1876?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Franklin, Benjamin (January 17, 1706 - April 17,
				  1790)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin was an American who was active as a writer,
				  scientist, inventor, statesman, diplomat, printer, publisher, and political
				  philosopher. Among the leading intellectuals of his time, Franklin was one of
				  the Founding Fathers of the United States, a drafter and signer of the United
				  States Declaration of Independence, and the first United States Postmaster
				  General. As a scientist, he was a major figure in the American Enlightenment
				  and the history of physics for his studies of electricity, and for charting and
				  naming the current still known as the Gulf Stream. As an inventor, he is known
				  for the lightning rod, bifocals, and the Franklin stove, among others. He
				  founded many civic organizations, including the Library Company, Philadelphia's
				  first fire department, and the University of Pennsylvania. Franklin earned the
				  title of "The First American" for his early and indefatigable campaigning for
				  colonial unity, and as an author and spokesman in London for several colonies.
				  As the first United States ambassador to France, he exemplified the emerging
				  American nation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">13</container><container type="item">FranklinB01</container><unittitle>Benjamin Franklin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Charles Balthazar Julien
					 Févret de Saint-Mémin from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American
					 Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Franklin, Charles Herbert "Chuck" (October 13, 1899 -
				  April 8, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Herbert Franklin was a graduate of the University of
				  Washington. He was a national bank examiner in Seattle until 1940 when he was
				  transferred to San Francisco. He joined the Naval Reserve 1918, was
				  commissioned in 1936 and promoted to commander inn 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FranklinCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Franklin seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1, 1937</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frazer, Jacob (October 19, 1820 - May
				  13, 1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Frazer was born in Ohio and crossed the plains to
				  California with a team of horses in 1850, joining his brother in the gold
				  fields. After four years, he began raising cattle to sell to the miners. He
				  moved to the Willamette Valley in 1866 where he raised sheep. In 1880, he began
				  constructing buildings in Pendleton, including the First National Bank and the
				  Frazer Opera House. He became vice president of the bank and was involved in
				  the Customers Flouring Mills and the Pendleton Foundry and Machine Shops. He
				  was one of the promoters of the Washington &amp; Oregon Railway. `</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrazerJ1</container><unittitle>Jacob Frazer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph from History of the Pacific
					 Northwest: Oregon and Washington</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frazier, Neta Lohnes (April 18, 1890 -
				  June 2, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Neta Lohnes Frazier (Mrs. Earl Cooper Frazier) was a children's
				  book author who wrote fiction and nonfiction works set in the Pacific
				  Northwest. Of her fourteen books for young readers published between 1947 and
				  1973, four received awards from the Junior Literary Guild. Her books include 
				  <emph render="italic">Stout-Hearted Seven</emph>,<emph render="italic">The
				  Magic Ring</emph>,<emph render="italic"> Secret Friend,</emph>. 
				  <emph render="italic">My Love Is a Gypsy</emph> and<emph render="italic">
				  Little Rhody</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrazierNL1</container><unittitle>Neta Lohnes Frazier at her typewriter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frazier, Washington Pierce (October 18,
				  1853 - October 26, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Washington Pierce Frazier was born in Fort Steilacoom where his
				  parents had settled after arriving in 1853 with the Longmire Party; he was on
				  of the first settlers' children born in Puget Sound. The following year, the
				  family moved to South Bay, near Olympia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrazierWP1</container><unittitle>Photo postcard of Washington Pierce Frazier sitting on
					 a porch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Frederick, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">Frederick1</container><unittitle>Photo of Mr. Frederick with two other members of the
					 Signal Corps</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photo: The one in the middle is Mr. Frederick. He
					 is at Fort Leavenworth Kansas with the Signal Corps.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">Frederick2</container><unittitle>Photo of Mr. Frederick's son</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photo: He is walking all over now. Mr. Frederick's
					 kid.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">Frederick3</container><unittitle>Mr. Frederick holding his son</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">Frederick4</container><unittitle>Mr. Frederick in chair, smoking a pipe and
					 reading</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Freedheim, Mr. </unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">Freedheim1</container><unittitle>Mr. Freedheim</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Freeman, Legh R. (December 4, 1842 -
				  February 7, 1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Legh R. Freeman (also known as Leigh R. Freeman) was born in
				  Virginia and travelled to the West following the Civil War, taking the first
				  printing press across the Missouri River. He published a newspaper 
				  <emph render="italic">The Frontier Index I</emph>n the 1860s in various towns
				  along the Union Pacific railway route; while on the railroad, the newspaper was
				  called <emph render="italic">The Frontier Index on Wheels</emph>. He and his
				  wife Ada served as editors and publishers of the Ogden, Utah semi-weekly
				  newspaper <emph render="italic">Ogden Freeman</emph> from 1875-1879 and in
				  Yakima, the monthly <emph render="italic">Northwest Farm and Home</emph>.
				  Freeman ran unsuccessfully as a Republican for U.S. senator in Washington State
				  in 1910. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FreemanLR1</container><unittitle>Legh R. Freeman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Negative photo print portrait signed "Legh R. Freeman."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Frein, Pierre Joseph (July 22, 1869 - August 18,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Pierre Joseph Frein taught French and Romance Languages at the
				  University of Washington from 1903 until his retirement in 1947. He was born in
				  Berkshire County, Massachusetts and was a graduate of Williams College (1892).
				  He received his PhD from Johns Hopkins in 1899. After teaching in Honolulu and
				  Stanford University, he came to the UW in 1903. He was head of the French
				  Department, and from 1918 head of the Department of Romance Languages. In
				  recognition of his wide influence in the spread of French culture in the United
				  States, Dr. Frein was made an Officer de l’Instruction Publique in 1931 and a
				  Chevalier of the Legion of Honor in 1935 by the Republic of France. During his
				  long service with the University, the department which he headed gained
				  national acclaim for high scholastic and classical standards and attainments.
				  He was a founder and trustee of the University Unitarian Church in Seattle, a
				  charter member of the Seattle Fine Arts Society, and a founder and for many
				  years the president of the Alliance Française in Seattle. He married Emma
				  McLeod in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fremont, John Charles (January 21, 1813
				  – July 13, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Charles Fremont was an American military officer, explorer,
				  and politician who became the first candidate of the anti-slavery Republican
				  Party for the office of President. In the 1840s, he led four expeditions into
				  the American West. Frémont became one of the first two U.S. senators elected
				  from the new state of California in 1850. He was the first presidential
				  candidate of the new Republican Party, carrying most of the North, but losing
				  the election to James Buchanan. During the American Civil War, he was given
				  command of Department of the West by President Abraham Lincoln. After the Civil
				  War, he served as Governor of Arizona from 1878 to 1881.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FremontJC1</container><unittitle>John Charles Fremont</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Engraved portrait signed "J. C. Fremont."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>French, Franklin Pierce (November 4, 1854 - June 19,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Franklin Pierce French was born in Morrow County, Ohio on the
				  same day that Franklin Pierce was elected president. French went to California
				  in February, 1877, and worked at contracting and building before moving to
				  Klickitat County, Washington, where he was employed by the Oregon Railroad and
				  Navigation Company as a carpenter. He was made deputy sheriff, an office he
				  held for two years. He rented a farm near Silverton before moving to Ritzville
				  in 1886 where he filed a homestead claim. He was elected sheriff of Adams
				  County in 1889 and also served as census taker. In 1891 he was elected assessor
				  of the county. In 1892, he was appointed United States court commissioner, an
				  office he held eight years. After he left office, he returned to farming and
				  real estate. His second wife, Alice Cunningham French, was the U.S. Court
				  Commissioner for Adams County, the only female commissioner in the state at
				  that time. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrenchFP1</container><unittitle>Franklin Pierce French</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>French, Richard Eber (November 15, 1856 - January 11,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Eber French was an actor and the business manager of the
				  Third Avenue Theater in Seattle. He was married to Eva Earle, a stock company
				  actor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrenchRE1</container><unittitle>Richard Eber French</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Freud, Sigmund (May 6, 1856 – September 23,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sigmund Freud was an Austrian neurologist, now known as the
				  father of psychoanalysis. He qualified as a doctor of medicine at the
				  University of Vienna in 1881 and then carried out research into cerebral palsy,
				  aphasia and microscopic neuroanatomy at the Vienna General Hospital. In
				  creating psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology through
				  dialogue between a patient and a psychoanalyst, Freud developed therapeutic
				  techniques such as the use of free association and discovered transference,
				  establishing its central role in the analytic process. In his later work Freud
				  developed a wide-ranging interpretation and critique of religion and
				  culture.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FreudS1</container><unittitle>Sigmund Freud</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed photograph. Written on verso: Giovani Costigan bequest
					 1997.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Frey, Oscar Frederick (September 26, 1894 - August 1,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oscar Frederick (Fred) Frey was a meatcutter and later business
				  representative and financial secretary for Seattle Local 81 of the Meatcutters
				  Union. He retired in 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FreyOF1</container><unittitle>Oscar Frey with two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did><note><p> Frey is holding a sign that says "I don't shop on Sundays. Do
					 you?" during a campaign to close non-emergency business enterprises on
					 Sundays.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Friend, Royell Dewayne (March 31, 1896
				  - February 6, 1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Royell Dewayne Friend was born in Ohio. He worked as a sales
				  promotion manager and director of sales and publicity for Frederick &amp;
				  Nelson department store in Seattle, starting in the 1930s. In 1944, Frederick
				  &amp; Nelson won both the Socrates Advertising high award and the Socrates
				  display high award for advertising and sales promotion prepared under his
				  direction; it was the first time an American or Canadian store had won both
				  awards in one year.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FriendRD1</container><unittitle>Royell D. Friend</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dexter, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the October 15, 1944 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frink, John Melancthan (January 21,
				  1845 - August 31, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John M. Frink was born in Pennsylvania and attended Washington
				  College in Topeka. He began a teaching career in Kansas. Arriving in Seattle in
				  1874, he both taught and served as principal at Seattle's Belltown School. He
				  formed a successful foundry business, Washington Iron Works, the first
				  manufacturing company in Seattle. He later established the Seattle Electric
				  Company, was a director of the Seattle Savings Bank, president of the Board of
				  Education in Seattle and served as a Washington State senator and member of the
				  Seattle City Council. In 1900, he lost a bid to unseat John Rankin Rogers as
				  governor of the state. In 1906, Frink became a member of the Seattle Board of
				  Park Commissioners and was later its president. That same year, he donated the
				  property that became Frink Park on Lake Washington Boulevard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrinkJM1</container><unittitle>John M. Frink</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fritz, Chester (March 25, 1892 - July 28,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester Fritz was born in Buxton, North Dakota. He attended the
				  University of North Dakota and completed his baccalaureate degree in economics
				  at the University of Washington in 1914. He travelled extensively through China
				  and lived in Shanghai and Hong Kong for much of his life, working as an export
				  agent and metal trader, then joining an investment firm. When he left China in
				  the 1950s, Fritz became a philanthropist and investor. The main library and an
				  auditorium at the University of North Dakota are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FritzC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of Charles Fritz on a
					 small horse in front of a large, heavily decorated Chinese sculpture shaped
					 like a vessel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FritzC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait photograph of Charles
					 Fritz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frost, Mary Perry (June 26, 1846 -
				  February 26, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Perry Frost was born Mary Ann Perry in Garden Grove, Iowa.
				  In April 1854, her father sold his farm and started west with his family,
				  initially intending to go no further than Nebraska. Instead, he joined a large
				  emigrant train headed for Oregon. Her father, along with her uncle and her
				  father's teamster, were killed in an Indian raid near White Horse Creek in
				  Idaho on August 19, 1854. The train continued west, reaching the Puget Sound
				  region in October 1854. She and her brother worked for the Hudson Bay Company
				  herding sheep to help support the family. Mary married Andrew Jackson Frost in
				  1859 when she was thirteen, and they settled in Hillhurst, Pierce County,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrostMP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait photograph of Mary Perry
					 Frost</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1918?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Frost, Robert (October 25, 1835 - December 16,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Frost was born in Tunbridge Wells, England and was
				  apprenticed to a plasterer. In 1853, he became a sailor, working on a coal brig
				  along the English coast. Later, he worked on deep sea vessels that visited both
				  the Atlantic and Pacific ports. He arrived in Portland in 1856 and decided to
				  stay, finding work as a plasterer. He traveled north to the gold fields along
				  the Frazier River before returning south to Olympia where he worked as printer
				  and plasterer. In 1870, he purchased an interest in the hardware store of F. A.
				  Hoffman, eventually becoming the sole owner. He also became County Treasurer,
				  judge of the Police Court and a director of the First National Bank of Olympia.
				  He was one of the original stockholders of the first gas works and electric
				  plant in the city, and upon its consolidation with the Olympia Light &amp;
				  Power Company, he was elected Vice President. He also organized and was the
				  director of the Capital National Bank and owned the Six Eagles mine in
				  Okanagon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FrostR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Studio portrait of Robert
					 Frost</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jeffers Art Studio, Olympia WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fry, Minerva Alsora Hayner (December 3,
				  1847 - July 28, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Minerva Alsora Hayner came to Seattle from the East Coast in the
				  1880s. She was one of the ten founding members of The Women's Century Club in
				  1891 and was a supporter of women's suffrage and prohibition. She married Judge
				  Daniel Fry in 1882. In 1893, she successfully campaigned to designate the coast
				  rhododendron at the official state flower of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FryMAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Matted portrait of Alsora Haynor
					 Fry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1888?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Jay Haynes, Fargo, Dakota Territory</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frye, George Frederick (June 15, 1833 -
				  May 2, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Frederick Frye (Freye) was born in Drakenburg, Germany in
				  1833. In 1849, he immigrated to Missouri where an older sister lived. In 1852,
				  he drove four yokes of oxen to Oregon. The following year he came on to
				  Seattle, logged for Henry Yesler, then moved into Yesler's Mill as sawyer.
				  Arthur Denny and George Frye later became partners, operating the mill for six
				  years. In 1860, Frye married Louisa, the eldest daughter of Arthur and Mary
				  Denny. Frye established the first meat market in the city and the second
				  bakery. He then served as master of the <emph render="italic">J. B.
				  Libby</emph> for four years. He owned a farm along the White River where he
				  raised hay, stock and produced butter. After selling the farm, he returned to
				  Seattle where he and his father-in-law opened a tin shop. By 1884, Frye was a
				  major owner of real estate and that year built the Frye Opera House; when it
				  burned in the 1889 fire, he built the Stevens Hotel on the site. With his
				  father-in-law, he owned several other hotels including the Northern, the Frye
				  and the Barker.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FryeGF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Frederick Frye</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1833 and 1912?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0050/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Frye, Theodore Christian (September 15, 1869- April 5,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore Christian Frye was on the faculty of the University of
				  Washington from 1903 until 1947. After his retirement from teaching, he
				  remained as senior research consultant, conducting studies in the cryptogamic
				  herbarium. He was widely known for his research in mosses and liverworts, and
				  was instrumental in assisting the University to obtain a site for the Friday
				  Harbor Laboratories. He was director of the biological station from 1914 to
				  1930; much of his work there was with algae. He was born in Illinois and
				  received his bachelor of science from the University of Illinois in 1894 and
				  his PhD from the University of Chicago in 1902. He had been a high school
				  principal in Monticello, Illinois (1894-1896), a superintendent of school in
				  Batavia, Illinois (1897-1900) and a professor of biology at Morningside College
				  (1901-1902) before joining the University of Washington in 1903. From 1903 to
				  1907, Frye was the only botany professor at the UW. He collaborated with Dr.
				  George B. Rigg on two books, <emph render="italic">Northwest Flora</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">Elementary Flora of the Northwest</emph>. He also wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The Ferns of Washington</emph> and co-authored the
				  two-volume <emph render="italic">Hepaticae of North America</emph>. In his
				  early career, he was associated in reconnaissance studies of the Alaskan kelp
				  beds for the Bureau of Soils. He was a member of the Botanical Society of
				  America, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and Sigma Xi,
				  science honorary. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiggGB1</container><unittitle>Group photo of George Rigg, Theodore C. Frye and John
					 W. Hotson, taken at the time of Dr. Rigg's retirement</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the Ecological Society Bulletin for the
					 District Ecologist Award.</p><p>Filed under George B. Rigg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fukutani, Shizuyo Molly (January 3, 1915 - September 19,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Shizuyo Molly Fukutani, the daughter of Shukichi and Iyo
				  (Fukushima) Fukutani, was born in Portland, Oregon. She received her degree
				  from the University of Washington in 1937, and moved to New York City in 1951
				  where she worked at Fuji Bank Ltd. as an executive secretary. On June 9, 1940,
				  she married Tom Tateki Iriye, who received his undergraduate and doctorate
				  degrees in pharmacy from the University of Washington. She represented
				  Seattle's Japanese community in the Potlatch parade in 1934. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FukutaniSM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Shizuyo Molly Fukutani in
					 kimono.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle
					 Times</emph> on August 19, 1934. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fuller, Almon Homer (December 29, 1871
				  - March 31, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Almon Homer Fuller was born in Camptown, Pennsylvania. He
				  received his C.E. (1897) and M.S. (1900) in engineering from Lafayette College
				  and a Master of Civil Engineering (1898) from Cornell University. He received a
				  Doctor of Science degree (1936) from Lafayette College, and Iowa State College
				  (University) conferred upon him the Doctor of Engineering degree in 1955. He
				  served as professor (1898-1917) of Civil Engineering and Dean of Engineering
				  (1899-1917) at the University of Washington. In 1917 he left Washington to
				  become Professor and Head (1917-1920) of Civil Engineering at Lafayette
				  College. He joined the staff at Iowa State College (University) as Professor
				  and Head of Civil Engineering (1920-1938). In 1938 he stepped down from
				  administrative duties, but continued to serve Iowa State until 1957. His
				  research interests were in field tests of bridges and buildings, the flow of
				  concrete under continuous load, and impact on highway bridges. He co-authored
				  the textbook <emph render="italic">Analysis and Design of Steel
				  Structures</emph>. His papers are held at Iowa State University Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Almon Homer Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Curtis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fuller, Evelyn Fay (October 10, 1869 – May 27,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Evelyn Fay Fuller was an American journalist, mountaineer and
				  schoolteacher. In 1890, she became the first woman to reach the summit of Mount
				  Rainier. Her column in a number of Tacoma newspapers helped popularize mountain
				  climbing in the Pacific Northwest. Fuller also played a significant role in
				  developing the Pacific Northwest climbing community: she helped to found the
				  Washington Alpine Club in 1891, the Tacoma Alpine Club in 1893, and the Mazama
				  mountaineering club in Portland, Oregon in 1894. Fuller left Tacoma in 1900 to
				  continue her career in journalism in Chicago, Washington, D.C., and New York
				  City. In New York, she met and married Fritz von Briesen, an attorney. They
				  later moved to Santa Monica, California, where Fuller died in 1958 at the age
				  of 88. Mount Rainier's Fay Peak is named in her honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evelyn Fay Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of a page from a book. The page includes photographs
					 of Philemon B. Van Trump, Hazard Stevens and Helen Holmes.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fuller, Richard E. (June 1, 1897 - December 10,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard E. Fuller was an internationally respected art collector
				  and patron. He was born on in New York City and earned a Ph.D. in geology from
				  the University of Washington in 1930. He worked as a research professor of
				  geology at the UW, studying volcanoes and other geological formations in
				  Washington State. After extensive world traveling, he developed an interest in
				  collecting Asian art and antiquities. He founded the Seattle Art Museum at
				  Volunteer Park, which now houses the Seattle Asian Arts Museum, in the early
				  1930s and served as the director for its first forty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerRE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard E. Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photocopy of a photograph.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fullerton, Ray Glenn (December 8, 1929
				  - January 14, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ray Glenn Fullerton, captain of the North Kitsap High School's
				  1947 football team, was killed in a car accident on January 14, 1948 while
				  returning from an evening science class at the high school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullertonRG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ray Fullerton receiving a watch after
					 winning the Port Gamble Junior Fish Derby.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 28, 1940</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pt. Gamble Junior Fish Durby (sic) 7/28/40.
					 My sponsored kid Ray Fullerton. Recd wrist watch.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Fulton, Robert (November 14, 1765 – February 24,
				  1815)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Fulton was an American engineer and inventor who is
				  widely credited with developing the world's first commercially successful
				  steamboat, the North River Steamboat (also known as Clermont). In 1807, that
				  steamboat traveled on the Hudson River with passengers from New York City to
				  Albany and back again, a round trip of 300 miles (480 km), in 62 hours. The
				  success of his steamboat changed river traffic and trade on major American
				  rivers. In 1800, Fulton had been commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte, leader of
				  France, to attempt to design a submarine; he produced <emph>Nautilus</emph>,
				  the first practical submarine in history. Fulton is also credited with
				  inventing some of the world's earliest naval torpedoes for use by the Royal
				  Navy. From October 1811 to January 1812, Fulton worked together on a project to
				  build a new steamboat sturdy enough to take down the Ohio and Mississippi
				  rivers to New Orleans, Louisiana. This was less than a decade after the United
				  States had acquired the Louisiana Territory from France. By achieving this
				  first breakthrough voyage and also proving the ability of the steamboat to
				  travel upstream against powerful river currents, Fulton changed the entire
				  trade and transportation outlook for the American heartland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">13</container><container type="item">FultonR01</container><unittitle>Robert Fulton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by West from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Funston, Frederick N. (September 11, 1865 – February 19,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Funston was a General in the United States Army, best
				  known for his role in the Spanish–American War and the Philippine–American War.
				  He worked for the U. S. Department of Agriculture in Alaska (1891-1893) before
				  joining the Cuban Revolutionary Army in 1896. In 1898, he was commissioned as a
				  colonel in the U. S. Army in the early days of the Spanish-American War,
				  landing in the Philippines as part of the U. S. Forces that would engage in the
				  Philippine-American War. He was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General of
				  Volunteers and awarded the Medal of Honor on February 14, 1900. In 1906, he was
				  in command of the Presidio of San Francisco when the 1906 San Francisco
				  earthquake hit. After two years as Commandant of the Army Service School in
				  Fort Leavenworth, he served three years as Commander of the Department of Luzon
				  in the Philippines, then served the same role in the Hawaiian Department. He
				  was active in the conflict with Mexico from 1914 to 1916 and served as the head
				  of the American Expeditionary Force during World War I. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FunstronFN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Funston in winter
					 parka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Photocopy of a photograph.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Furgueson, John B. (June 29, 1825 -
				  September 16, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John B. Furgueson, an Oregon pioneer of 1847, was born in
				  Richland County, Ohio. He married May Waldroup in 1846; in the spring of 1847,
				  they started to Oregon with one wagon, six yoke of oxen and four cows, arriving
				  first in The Dalles and then traveling to Portland. They eventually settled in
				  the Willamette Valley, where he engaged in general farming and stock raising.
				  After Mary died in 1879, he married Elizabeth Hinton, the daughter of Thompson
				  Hinton, a pioneer of 1846. He served one term as Commissioner of Lane
				  County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FurguesonJB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John B. Furgueson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph clipping from 
					 History of the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and
					 Washington.</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Furth, Jacob (November 14, 1840 - June 2,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Furth was an entrepreneur and banker who played a key role
				  in consolidating Seattle's electric power and public transportation
				  infrastructure. Born in Schwihau, Bohemia, Furth moved to San Francisco in
				  1856. Arriving in Seattle in 1882, he helped organize the Puget Sound National
				  Bank (later Seattle National Bank) and the First National Bank of Snohomish.
				  Furth invested in Seattle real estate and Pacific Northwest timber lands and
				  provided loans to help rebuild Seattle after the fire of 1889. In 1900 he
				  became president of the Seattle Electric Company, later Puget Sound Energy. He
				  also served as president of the Puget Sound Electric Railway and Seattle's
				  Vulcan Iron Works. He served on the Seattle City Council from 1885 to 1891 and
				  helped raise funds for the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FurthJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jacob Furth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Fyfer, Julius Theo (June, 1843 - September 3,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julius T. Fyfer was born in Germany in 1843. He moved west in
				  the 1870s and worked in mining, railroad construction, and hauling iron via the
				  newly built railroads. He built a dry goods store in Huntington, Oregon in 1887
				  where he also served as postmaster.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FyferJT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Julius T. Fyfer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph clipping from History of
					 the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington.</extent></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FyferJT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">J. T. Fyfer Building in Huntington,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph clipping from History of
					 the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington.</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>G</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gaches, Charles Ernest (November 22,
				  1881 - June 29, 1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Ernest Gaches was born in La Conner, Washington and
				  attended the University of Washington where he later taught civil engineering.
				  He was vice-president of People's National Bank in Seattle and served as a
				  regent for the University of Washington from 1914 to 1917. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GachesCE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Ernest Gaches</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Krug, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gagnier, Jean-Baptiste (1801? -
				  1890?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jean-Baptiste Gagnier was employed by the Hudson's Bay Company
				  from the 1830s until the 1850s. He was posted to the Umpqua River area in the
				  1830s, where he established Fort Umpqua near the present town of Elkton,
				  Oregon; the fort was intended to serve the company's fur trade operations. He
				  was the superintendent of the fort and also acted as an interpreter for the
				  company. Gagnier planted apples, wheat, corn and other vegetables in compliance
				  with orders from the Hudson’s Bay Company to make the outpost self-sustaining;
				  he is recognized as Douglas County’s first resident farmer and merchant.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GagnierJB1</container><unittitle>Jean-Baptiste Gagnier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1890</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph clipping from History of
					 the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gallagher, George</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Gallagher served as the first clerk of the Supreme Court
				  of Washington in 1854. He was elected as the first public printer for
				  Washington Territory in 1861 but was unable to serve. He was adjutant general
				  of the Territorial Militia in 1863 and was admitted to the bar in 1865.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GallagherG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Gallagher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gamble, Thomas Liggett (1825 - November
				  25, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas L. Gamble, along with his friend Walter J. Reed, was one
				  of the founders of Cle Elum, Washington. A pioneer from Yakima, he staked a
				  quarter-section claim on what is today the eastern part of the city of Cle Elum
				  in April, 1883. Coal was discovered on Gamble's property in 1894. He sank a
				  mine shaft, and the town was soon producing coal for the railroad. When the
				  town was incorporated in 1902, Gamble was elected the first mayor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GambleTL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas L. Gamble</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Lithograph clipping from History of
					 the Pacific Northwest: Oregon and Washington</extent></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gandy, Joseph Edward (October 9, 1904 - June 13,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Edward Gandy, the son of pioneer Lloyd Edward Gandy, was
				  born and raised in Spokane, Washington. He received his undergraduate degree
				  from the University of Michigan in 1926 and graduated from the University of
				  Washington Law School in 1929. Following law school, he settled in Seattle and
				  practiced law. During World War II he served as chief deputy regional director
				  of the War Production Board for the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. In 1946 he
				  founded the partnership of Smith Gandy Inc., a Ford automobile dealership while
				  continuing his law practice. Gandy was President of the Seattle Chamber of
				  Commerce from 1956-57. In 1959 he took a leave of absence from Smith Gandy to
				  serve as President of Century 21 Exposition Inc., the non-profit corporation
				  formed in 1957 to run the 1962 Seattle World's Fair. He helped pilot the first
				  American world's fair since World War II to its successful conclusion. Century
				  21 exceeded expectations for attendance, and when it closed, it was the first
				  to finish with a profit. After the Fair, in 1963, Gandy and his family went on
				  a world tour of 30 countries to personally thank them for their participation.
				  In 1966 he led the campaign for a stadium bond issue as chairman of King County
				  Citizens for All-Purpose Stadium Now and represented the state, county and city
				  in discussions with the National Football League to obtain a football
				  franchise. He served in numerous other civic organizations and headed many of
				  them. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">XH2</container><container type="item">PrincePhilip1</container><unittitle>Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh with Joseph E. Gandy
					 at the Seattle Space Needle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Prince Philip visited the Seattle World's Fair on June 1, 1962
					 and had lunch at the Space Needle with Joseph Gandy, president of the Fair.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Prince Philip subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gann, Ernest Kellogg (October 13, 1910
				  - December 19, 1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest K. Gann was known as an writer of fiction, non-fiction
				  and screenplays, as well as a pioneer airline pilot, sailor and
				  conservationist. His most famous work is the novel <emph render="italic">The
				  High and the Mighty</emph>, based upon a flight he made from Portland, Oregon
				  to Honolulu, Hawaii. Gann was also an avid sailor and supported a number of
				  environmentalist causes. He died in Friday Harbor, San Juan Island, Washington.
				  Washington Governor Gary Locke posthumously awarded the Medal of Merit (the
				  state's highest honor) to Gann on July 9, 2003.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GannEK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ernest K. Gann standing in a farmyard
					 next to a bell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ganzer, Victor Martin (December 23, 1911 - September 23,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Ganzer designed the swept wing that made possible the
				  modern jetliner and trained a generation of aeronautical engineers in a 30-year
				  career at the University of Washington. He received bachelor's degrees from
				  Augustana College in Moline, Illinois and a master's in aeronautical
				  engineering from the University of Washington. After graduating from the UW in
				  1941, he worked for three years for the National Advisory Committee for
				  Aeronautics, or NACA, the agency that developed into the National Aeronautics
				  and Space Administration, or NASA. At NACA Ganzer worked with what was at that
				  time the world's most powerful wind tunnel to correct problems with the tail
				  section of the Lockheed P-38, a famous World War II-era fighter that was known
				  for its twin fuselages. In 1944, he left NACA to work for The Boeing Company,
				  where he helped design the B-47, the first operational jet bomber, where his
				  contribution was the design of the B-47's wing. The B-47 wing design made
				  possible Boeing's pioneering 707 jetliner and laid the cornerstone of wing
				  design for future transports. Ganzer left Boeing to teach at the UW in 1947. He
				  became professor of aeronautics and astronautics and later served as department
				  chairman. He was chosen a distinguished alumnus of the university. In addition
				  to teaching, Ganzer owned several airplanes, was an avid sailor, and built many
				  model airplanes. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GanzerVM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Victor Ganzer sitting in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GanzerVM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Victor Ganzer at his desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1957 edition of <emph>The
						Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GanzerVM3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Victor M. Ganzer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1953 and 1954 editions of 
						<emph>The Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gardner, Admiral Sir Alan (February 12,
				  1742 – January 1, 1809) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alan Gardner was a well-respected member of the Royal Navy who
				  rose to high command during his 53 years of service. Enlisting in 1755, he
				  commanded ships around the world, fought in a number of battles, and eventually
				  died as the Commander-in-Chief of the Channel Fleet in 1808. Captain George
				  Vancouver named several locations after Gardner, including Mount Gardner in
				  Australia, the Gardner Channel in Canada and Port Gardner Bay in Puget Sound.
				  Port Susan in Puget Sound is named for his wife, Susannah.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alan Gardner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1832?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">Fenner &amp; Co., London</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>Engraving after a painting by William Beechey.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gardner, Helen Louise (April 23, 1920 - November 27,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Louise Paine, the daughter of Morris and Henrietta Paine,
				  was born in Eagle Grove, Iowa. She married Owen Gardner in 1942.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gardner, Jean M. (July 26, 1938 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jean M. Forstrom married Booth Gardner, the future Washington
				  State Governor, on July 30, 1960; they divorced in 2001. She was co-chair of
				  the Washington Centennial Committee and president of the Seattle Symphony.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerJM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jean M. Gardner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1989</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gardner, Ray Earl Hatfield (July 5,
				  1845 - January 28, 1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Colonel Ray Earl “Arizona Bill” Gardner fought with the Union
				  Army during the Civil War and served with George Armstrong Custer as a scout
				  for the 7th Cavalry. He was also a pony express rider for Wells Fargo and
				  performed in Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. In the 1930s, he had his own
				  radio show in San Antonio, Texas. He died in San Antonio and is in buried in
				  Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery in Texas.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerREH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ray Gardner with Jack Hudson and pack
					 mules</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Col. Ray E. Gardner, U. S. Geographic Soc.,
					 Jack Hudson, on the way to Snoqualmie Pass.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gardner, William Booth (August 21, 1936 - March 15,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Booth Gardner was the 19th Governor of Washington state,
				  serving between 1985 and 1993. He also served as the ambassador of the General
				  Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Before his terms as governor, he served in the
				  Washington State Senate and was Pierce County Executive. While governor, he
				  signed into law a health care program that provided state medical insurance for
				  the working poor. He helped develop land-use and growth-management policies
				  that made Washington an early environmental leader, increased spending toward
				  state universities and increased standardized testing in public education. He
				  was a graduate of the University of Washington and Harvard Business School. His
				  diagnosis with Parkinson’s disease after he left office helped motivate him to
				  lead a successful voter initiative to allow physician-assisted suicide, the
				  Washington Death with Dignity Act.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Booth Gardner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1985?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB2</container><unittitle type="itemphotoGov">Governor Booth Gardner and Carla
					 Rickerson at Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Booth Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garfield, James Abram (November 19, 1831 – September 19,
				  1881) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James A. Garfield was the 20th President of the United States,
				  serving from March 4, 1881 until his assassination later that year. Garfield
				  had served nine terms in the House of Representatives and had been elected to
				  the Senate before his candidacy for the White House, though he declined the
				  senatorship once he was president-elect. He is the only sitting House member to
				  be elected president. Garfield's accomplishments as president included a
				  resurgence of presidential authority against senatorial courtesy in executive
				  appointments, energizing American naval power, and purging corruption in the
				  Post Office, all during his extremely short time in office. He was succeeded by
				  Vice-President Chester A. Arthur.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarfieldJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James A. Garfield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1881</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">14</container><container type="item">GarfieldJA2</container><unittitle>James A. Garfield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1881?</unitdate></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Napolean Sarony from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garnett, Robert Selden (December 16, 1819 – July 13,
				  1861) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Selden Garnett was a career military officer. After
				  graduation from West Point, Garnett served in the Mexican-American War, the
				  Seminole Wars and on the Texas frontier. He served at the Presidio in Monterey,
				  California in 1849 and in Washington Territory where he served in the 1856
				  Yakima Expedition and the 1858 Indian Wars. He designed and supervised the
				  construction of Fort Simcoe and also California’s State Seal during his brief
				  service in Monterey. When Virginia seceded from the United States, he resigned
				  his commission to became a Confederate States Army brigadier general. He was
				  the first general officer killed in the Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarnettRS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert Garnett in
					 Confederate uniform holding sword</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarnettRS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of portrait of Robert
					 Garnett in Confederate uniform holding sword</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">General and Mrs. Russell C. Langdon</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: General &amp; Mrs. Russell C. Langdon took
					 this picture from the portrait of General Robert Selden Garnett in the
					 courthouse of Essex County Virginia at Rappahannock.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarnettRS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert
					 Garnett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: This splendid portrait was secured after
					 much expenditure of time and expense by my brother-in-law General Russell C.
					 Langdon U.S.A. for the Fort Simcoe restoration. The picture was given to Ethel
					 D. Swaustrom by Brigadier General Jay L. Benedict (Superintendent, West Point
					 Military Academy), 1940.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Garrecht, Francis Arthur (September 11, 1870 - August
				  11, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Arthur Garrecht, Jr. was born in Walla Walla, Washington
				  and graduated from Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington. He was elected to
				  the Washington State House of Representatives and later became U. S. attorney
				  for the Eastern District of Washington. He was appointed to the U. S. Circuit
				  Court of Appeals for the 9th District in 1933 and became presiding judge in
				  1945. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garrett, Garfield Arthur (July 23, 1880 - December 20,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Garfield Arthur Garrett was born and raised in Cedarville,
				  Indiana, where his father farmed and operated a general store. He attended
				  Valparaiso University, graduating with a law degree in 1902. He traveled to
				  Seattle in 1904 and met Maud Lemon Goldstein; they were married in Olympia in
				  1906. He initially worked as a bookkeeper in a jewelry store and later
				  practiced law. In 1909 he joined the Metropolitan Bank in Seattle; the bank was
				  acquired by Seattle-First National Bank in 1929. He retired as the Assistant
				  Vice President in 1949. He also served as treasurer of the Seattle King County
				  Red Cross for over 26 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garrett, Maude Lemon Goldstein (April 12, 1882 - April
				  23, 1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Lemon Goldstein was born in The Dalles, Oregon and married
				  Garfield A. Garrett in 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garrett, Robert Max (July 18, 1881 - July 8,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Max Garrett was born in Iowa and received his bachelors
				  degree from University of Idaho and a master's degree in English literature
				  from the University of Washington. From 1906 to 1909 he studied in Germany,
				  first in Leipzig and then in Munich where he received a doctor of philosophy in
				  1909. Upon his return to America he accepted a permanent appointment at the
				  University of Washington and was a member of the English department until his
				  death in 1924. His subject specialty was the Middle English period. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The Pearl: An Interpretation</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">Precious Stones in Old English Literature</emph>. His
				  papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarrettRM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert Max
					 Garrett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarrettRM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert Max
					 Garrett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Photograph mounted in brown folder with photographer's logo
						on the front</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Garrison, Tillman K. (January 25, 1907 - August 1,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tillman Garrison was a member of the Typographical Union,
				  Secretary of the Socialist Party of Washington in 1936, Secretary of the
				  Washington State Federation of Labor in 1948, executive director the Labor
				  Education and Political League (American Federation of Labor) in 1949 and
				  served on the executive board of the Seattle Union Card and label League. He
				  ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Seattle in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GarrisonTK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tillman Garrison speaking at a Labor
					 Day rally in Vancouver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 6, 1948</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gasch, Frederick (February 20, 1843 - October 20,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Gasch was born in Helmstedt, Germany. Trained as a
				  machinist, he emigrated to San Francisco in 1861 and eventually made his way to
				  the Seattle area where he opened a machine shop. He soon became involved in
				  local politics and was elected Councilman of the Second Ward in 1883. In 1889,
				  he ran as the Republican nominee for King County Commissioner and won the
				  position, serving for eight years. His most notable accomplishment was
				  overseeing the construction of the county courthouse which was completed in
				  1901.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GaschF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Gasch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lothrop, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gaston, Joseph P. (November 14, 1833 –
				  July 20, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph P. Gaston was born in St. Clairsville, Ohio. He read law
				  in St. Clairsville, and in 1856 was admitted to practice. He immigrated to
				  Oregon in 1862 and practiced law in Jacksonville where he also served as editor
				  of Jacksonville’s <emph render="italic">Oregon Sentinel</emph>. He became
				  interested in surveying the route of rail traffic north from the California
				  border and was the first president of the Oregon Central Railroad. He was
				  involved in disputes about the proposed route of the railroad and was
				  eventually forced to sell his interest in the railroad to his opponents. During
				  this time, he also served as editor of the <emph render="italic">Statesman
				  Journal</emph> in Salem, Oregon. From 1874 to 1875, he served as editor of
				  Portland's <emph render="italic">Daily Bulletin</emph>. In 1875 he bought a
				  farm in Washington County, drained Wapato Lake to reclaim the acreage and
				  donated land for a school and a church to the community; the town was named
				  Gaston in his honor. In the 1890s, he began working on two major works of
				  history and biography. He published <emph render="italic">Portland, Its History
				  and Builders</emph> in 1911 and <emph render="italic">The Centennial History of
				  Oregon </emph>in 1912.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GastonJP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph P. Gaston</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gatch, Thomas Milton (January 28, 1833
				  – April 23, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Gatch was born in the town of Milford, Ohio and attended
				  Ohio Wesleyan University, graduating in 1855. He moved west to California,
				  where he mined gold and taught school for three years. In 1859, he moved to
				  Olympia, Washington, where he was the principal of Puget Sound Wesleyan
				  Institute. The following year, he was appointed president of Willamette
				  University in Salem, serving until 1865 and later served a second term from
				  1870 until 1879. During this time he earned a Doctor of Philosophy from Indiana
				  Asbury University (now DePauw University). He also served as mayor of Salem
				  from 1877 to 1878. From 1879 until 1881 he was a professor of history at the
				  University of Oregon and helped found the Wasco Independent Academy in The
				  Dalles, Oregon in 1881, serving as president of the latter until 1886. He
				  served as president of the University of Washington from 1887 until 1895. In
				  1895 he left the UW, and in 1897 became the president of Oregon Agricultural
				  College (now Oregon State University), serving until 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatchTM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas Gatch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gates, Charles Marvin (August 25, 1904 - March 24,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Marvin Gates was born in Hanover, New Hampshire. He
				  graduated from Yale College in 1926, received an M.A. in history from Harvard
				  University in 1928 and a doctorate from the University of Minnesota in 1934.
				  During his career, he was a professor of history at the University of
				  Washington (1936 - 1963), a charter member of the Society of American
				  Archivists, and a member of various historians' organizations. In the
				  mid-1940s, Gates and Herman J. Deutsch of the State College of Washington
				  developed the Pacific Northwest History Project for collecting and preserving
				  documents concerned with Northwest history. He co-authored 
				  <emph render="italic">Empire of the Columbia: A History of the Northwest</emph>
				  with Dorothy Johansen and wrote the centennial history of UW, 
				  <emph render="italic">The First Century at the University of Washington</emph>,
				  published in 1961. For the last twenty years of his life, he edited the 
				  <emph render="italic"> Pacific Northwest Quarterly</emph>. His papers are held
				  in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatesCM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Charles M. Gates
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Mulholland Studios, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatesCM2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Charles M.
					 Gates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1963?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gates, John (December 31, 1827 - April
				  27, 1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Gates was the mayor of Portland, Oregon from 1885–1888.
				  Born in Maine, he studied engineering in Massachusetts. He moved to California
				  in 1849 and to Oregon in 1853. He found employment with the Oregon Steam
				  Navigation Company, becoming its chief engineer in the early 1860s and worked
				  for the company for 27 years. He designed 72 steamboats and was an inventor,
				  filing more than 30 patents. He was elected in 1885 to a three-year term as
				  mayor of Portland. Gates died while in office, two months before the end of his
				  term.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatesJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Gates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1888?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gatzert, Bailey (December 29, 1829 – April 19,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bailey Gatzert was born in 1829 in Darmstadt, Germany and
				  immigrated to Natchez, Mississippi, in 1849, coming west four years later. In
				  1869, he opened a Seattle branch of Schwabacher Brothers and Company, a
				  hardware and general store he managed with his brothers-in-law Abraham, Louis,
				  and Sigmund Schwabacher. He soon became active in civic affairs, and in 1875,
				  he was elected Seattle’s first (and to date, only) Jewish mayor. In addition to
				  being the city’s eighth mayor, he was a charter member of the Seattle Chamber
				  of Commerce, served on the City Council (1872-1873 and 1877-1878), and was
				  president of Puget Sound National Bank and Peoples Savings Bank. He co-founded
				  Washington’s second synagogue (Seattle’s first), Ohaveth Shalom, in 1892. The
				  sternwheeler <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph> is named for him as is
				  an elementary school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry
					 L. Yesler, and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1890</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0051/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Nineteenth Annual
					 Greeting.</p><p>Every year, from 1870 until Henry Yesler's death in 1892,
					 Gatzert, Yesler and Maddocks made social calls on New Year's Day, and the cards
					 were left as mementos of their visit.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB2</container><unittitle>Copy photo of cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry L.
					 Yesler and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1885 and 1886</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Judkins, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Our Fifteenth Annual Call,
					 Beauty Unadorned.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Bailey Gatzert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Caption: Bailey Gatzert, President Seattle Chamber of
					 Commerce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB4</container><unittitle>Photograph of illustration of Bailey Gatzert
					 residence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The illustration may have been in the <emph render="italic">West Shore</emph> magazine. The house was located at Third and
					 James in Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gay, George Kay (August 15, 1810 –
				  October 7, 1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Gay was born in Gloucestershire, England and became an
				  apprentice sailor at age 11, traveling much of the world before coming to the
				  United States in 1833. He worked with fur trappers and invested in the
				  Willamette Cattle Company; Gay became wealthy due to his investment in the
				  enterprise. He claimed land along the Willamette River and started farming,
				  building the first brick house in the region. In 1843, he participated in the
				  Champoeg Meetings that established the Provisional Government which would last
				  until the Oregon Territory's government superseded it in 1849. Gay’s home
				  served as one of the markers of the boundaries within the government. In 1848,
				  he went south to the California Gold Rush and mined for a time before returning
				  to Oregon. He was considered one of the wealthiest people in what had become
				  the Oregon Territory; however, he lost his fortune and died in poverty.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GayGK1</container><unittitle>George Gay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1882?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gayton, Carver (October 18, 1938 -)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carver Clark Gayton graduated from Garfield High School and the
				  University of Washington where he starred in football and track and was a
				  student leader. All of his degrees (B.A., M.P.A. and Ph.D.) are from the UW.
				  Other than four years as a Special Agent for the F.B.I. (the first appointment
				  of an African American by the U.S. Department of Justice in the state of
				  Washington) and a short stint as a Special Security Representative for the
				  Lockheed Missiles and Space Company in California, his career for more than 35
				  years has focused on education and training. He has published numerous articles
				  and presented many papers, and has been a keynote speaker throughout the United
				  States, Europe, the Caribbean, and Canada. After working as an executive in
				  education and training programs for the Corporate Offices of The Boeing Company
				  for 18 years, Gayton was appointed by Washington Governor Gary Locke in 1997 to
				  serve on his Executive Cabinet as Commissioner of the Employment Department. He
				  left the Governor’s office in 2001, and became a lecturer at the Dan Evans
				  Graduate School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington and a
				  consultant in the fields of education and workforce development. He was a
				  member of the Seattle Women's Commission in 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Geddis, Sylvanus Ray (February 12, 1838
				  - February 3, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sylvanus R. Geddis was born in Pennsylvania. His parents moved
				  to Iowa in 1844, where his father died the following year. In 1846 his mother
				  remarried, and the family traveled across the plains to Oregon that same year.
				  They had a farm in Linn County, where he lived until the Rogue River War of
				  1855. Geddis served with the Army until the close of hostilities in 1865. He
				  moved to Umatilla where he worked in farming and freighting until 1869. He then
				  moved to Eastern Washington and established a farm near the present town of
				  Ellensburg. After the town burned in 1889, he played a major role in its
				  reconstruction, building a number of Ellensburg's most prominent buildings,
				  including the Geddis Building and the S.R.G. Building, both in 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeddisSR1</container><unittitle>Sylvanus R. Geddis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Geiger, William Edward (June 1865 - July 25,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain William E. Geiger arrived in Alaska in 1894 over the
				  Chilkoot Pass, transporting his dredging equipment by block and tackle. After
				  his mining operations ended, he was employed by the N. A. T. &amp; T. Co. as
				  master of the steamer <emph render="italic">P. B. Weare</emph> He unloaded the
				  first expedition of prospectors at the mouth of Indian Creek, twenty-five miles
				  above the Klondike. After the Klondike strike ended, he went to Nome, where he
				  saw the need for a bridge over the Snake River. Despite having no money, he was
				  able to build a toll bridge which quickly paid for itself. He later built two
				  bridges over the Nome River. He was on the first city council of Nome, Alaska
				  and also served as the postmaster in McGrath, Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Geoghegan, John Dennis (December 25,
				  1842 - June 22, 1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Dennis Geoghegan was born in Galway, Ireland, the 17th of
				  21 children of Michael and Mary Geoghegan. He came to New York with his family
				  in 1851. When the Civil War broke out, he enlisted in the 18th Regiment US
				  Infantry and was captured and incarcerated at Andersonville Prison. After the
				  war, he enlisted in the regular army. He served as quartermaster at Fort
				  Vancouver from 1871 until 1885 and was a member of the House of Representatives
				  during the first Washington State Legislature in 1889. He was City Officer and
				  treasurer of the city of Vancouver, Washington and also worked for the Yakima
				  Railroad Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeogheganJD1</container><unittitle>John Dennis Geoghegan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on the back: Yours Sincerely, John Geoghegan, Olympia,
					 Washington, March 10, 1890. </p><p>Presented to Edmond S. Meany by W. M. Chandler, Lewiston,
					 Idaho, March 1933.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">George, Cassandra Eckler (January 29,
				  1840 - March 9, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cassandra Eckler, the daughter of Jacob and Cassandra (Perrin)
				  Eckler, came to Oregon with her brothers and sisters in 1853. Her mother died
				  while she was a baby, and her father died on the trip across the plains. She
				  married Jessie George in 1860; they had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeCE1</container><unittitle>Cassandra Eckler George</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Arthur McAlpine, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Elizabeth Bender "Betty" (August 8, 1918 -
				  February 8, 2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth "Betty" Bender was born in Tacoma, Washington to Elmer
				  and Nanna Bender. She attended Garfield High School and graduated from the
				  University of Washington. She married Gene George on December 20, 1941; they
				  had three children. She was active in her sorority (Pi Beta Phi), Girl Scouts,
				  the Seattle Milk Fund, and University Methodist Temple where she was a member
				  for over 60 years. She retired from Pacific NW Bell when she was 70. In
				  retirement, she traveled and at Christmas time was part of the Santa Goodwill
				  Tours, visiting those in need throughout the world.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB1</container><unittitle>Betty George standing on a pier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1984</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB2</container><unittitle>Betty George standing on a beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1984</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB3</container><unittitle>Betty George standing with Anne Foss and Gene Evelyn
					 Walch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1984</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Jean King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">George, James (September 18, 1835 - May
				  28, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James “Yankee Jim” George was originally from the East. He
				  headed west in the 1860s and worked as a government scout and hunter. In 1871,
				  he built a cabin and toll gate on the new wagon road from Bozeman, Montana to
				  Mammoth Hot Springs located within today’s Yellowstone National Park boundary,
				  four months before Yellowstone was designated America’s first National Park. He
				  ran the toll road for the next twenty years, maintaining the road and feeding
				  and lodging travelers. The building of the railroad severely lowered his toll
				  business, and in 1893, he sold his road to Park County although he continued to
				  offer food and lodging to tourists. Highway 89 between the North Entrance of
				  Yellowstone National Park and Livingston, Montana goes though Yankee Jim
				  Canyon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeJ1</container><unittitle> James George in buckskins and holding
					 musket</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Hugh Nickerson (November 9, 1828 - May 9,
				  1871)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Nickerson George, the son of Presley and Mahala George, was
				  educated at Granville College and then taught school for nearly thirteen years.
				  He was twice elected school superintendent of Linn County. He was admitted to
				  the bar in 1863 and practiced as an attorney. For a time, he was editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Albany Journal</emph>. In 1864, he was elected one of the
				  presidential electors of Oregon, voting in favor of the re-election of Abraham
				  Lincoln.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeP1</container><unittitle>Presley George, Mahala George, Hugh Nickerson George,
					 Jessie W. George and Melvin Clark George </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Presley George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Jessie W. (November 11, 1835 - March 23,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse W. George, the son of Presley and Mahala George, married
				  Cassandra Eckler in 1860. They established a farm near Lebanon. He served for
				  several years as trustee of Santiam Academy at Lebanon. In May, 1872, he moved
				  to Seattle where he entered into the business development of the city,
				  acquiring extensive real-estate and property interests. He was one of the three
				  original organizers of the Washington Iron Works and assisted in the building
				  of the first railroad from Seattle up the White River Valley to Puyallup. He
				  also worked for the Union Pacific railroad company and the Seattle and Montana
				  railroad company. In July, 1884, he was appointed by President Arthur as United
				  States Marshal for the Territory. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeP1</container><unittitle>Presley George, Mahala George, Hugh Nickerson George,
					 Jessie W. George and Melvin Clark George </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Presley George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Mahala Nickerson (August 22, 1808 - December 4,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mahala Nickerson was the daughter of Hugh Nickerson, who had
				  served in the Revolutionary Army. Her ancestors were among the founders of the
				  Plymouth Colony. She married Presley George in 1826. They had eight children;
				  five died of diphtheria and scarlet fever. In 1851, Presley and Mahala with
				  their three remaining children, crossed the plains to Oregon where he
				  established a farm near Lebanon, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeP1</container><unittitle>Presley George, Mahala George, Hugh Nickerson George,
					 Jessie W. George and Melvin Clark George </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Presley George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Melvin Clark (May 13, 1849 - February 22,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melvin Clark George, the son of Presley and Mahala George,
				  graduated from Willamette University. He studied law, was admitted to the bar
				  and began practicing in Portland in 1875. He served as member of the Oregon
				  State Senate from Multnomah County from 1876 to 1880. In 1880, he was elected
				  to Oregon's At-large congressional district in the United States House of
				  Representatives and was re-elected in 1882. During his time in Congress, he
				  promoted construction of jetties at the mouth of the Columbia River and the
				  establishment of a territorial government in Alaska; he did not seek a third
				  term in 1884. Following his term in Congress, he served as a professor of
				  medical jurisprudence at Willamette University from 1885 to 1889. He served on
				  the Portland school board, and in 1891, was appointed chairman of the Portland
				  bridge commission which sought to provide free bridges throughout the city. He
				  was instrumental in the construction of the Burnside Bridge. George Park in the
				  St. Johns neighborhood of Portland is named in his honor. He also served as a
				  Multnomah circuit court judge from 1897 to 1905, and then practiced law in
				  Portland until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeP1</container><unittitle>Presley George, Mahala George, Hugh Nickerson George,
					 Jessie W. George and Melvin Clark George </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Presley George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>George, Presley (March 23, 1798 - December 23,
				  1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Presley George was born in Virginia and moved to Ohio where he
				  married Mahala Nickerson in 1826. They had eight children; five died of
				  diphtheria and scarlet fever. In 1851, Presley and Mahala with their three
				  remaining children crossed the plains to Oregon where he established a farm
				  near Lebanon, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeP1</container><unittitle>Presley George, Mahala George, Hugh Nickerson George,
					 Jessie W. George and Melvin Clark George </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Geraghty, James M. (February 2, 1870 –
				  April 29, 1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James M. Geraghty was born in Ireland and with his family,
				  immigrated to the United States in 1880. He was a member of the Washington
				  State House of Representatives, elected in 1897 to represent the 3rd
				  legislative district from Spokane, Washington. An attorney by trade, he served
				  as Spokane's city attorney from 1905 to 1907, and again from 1916 to 1932. In
				  1933, he was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court, by Governor
				  Clarence D. Martin.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeraghtyJM1</container><unittitle>James M. Geraghty wearing judge's robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gerber, Anne Convisar (July 23, 1910 -
				  January 22, 2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Anne Gerber, a collector of contemporary art and a supporter of
				  the Seattle art scene, was born in Seattle and studied art at the University of
				  Washington. She married Sidney Gerber in 1935; the couple collected
				  contemporary art and Northwest Native American art. Much of their Native
				  American art is part of the collection of the Burke Museum while their European
				  and American paintings are in the collection of the Seattle Art Museum. She
				  served on the Seattle Arts Commission and was a member of the Contemporary Art
				  Council. She worked to end segregated housing in Seattle and was a president
				  and board member of Neighborhood House, a nonprofit organization. She received
				  a Governor’s Art Award in 1984. In 1987, the Anne Gerber Fund was established
				  to bring contemporary conceptual artists to the Seattle Art Museum. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GerberAC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Anne Gerber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin Tipp, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">XD3</container><container type="item">GerberAC2</container><unittitle>Anne Gerber on sailboat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin Tipp, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Geronimo (June 16, 1829 – February 17, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Geronimo (Goyathlay or Goyahkla) was a prominent leader of the
				  Bedonkohe Apache who fought against Mexico and Arizona for their expansion into
				  Apache tribal lands for several decades during the Apache Wars. After an attack
				  by a company of Mexican soldiers killed his family in 1858, he joined in
				  revenge attacks on the Mexicans and later against American locations across
				  Arizona, New Mexico, and western Texas. In 1886 he surrendered to U.S.
				  authorities after a lengthy pursuit. He and other Apaches were sent as
				  prisoners to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio Texas. The Army held them there
				  for about six weeks before sending them to Florida, Alabama and finally Fort
				  Sill, Oklahoma. In later years, he became a celebrity, appearing at fairs,
				  including the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis. He also rode in President
				  Theodore Roosevelt’s 1905 inaugural parade. He died at Fort Sill, Oklahoma in
				  1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">Geronimo1</container><unittitle>Geronimo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">M. De Haafe</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Photogravure by M. De Haafe after a painting by Elbridge Ayer
					 (E. A.) Burbank who was believed to be the only person to paint Geronimo from
					 life.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gessell, Stanley Paul (October 16, 1916 - May 13,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Gessell was a professor of forestry and associate dean
				  at the University of Washington. He was also the Forest Biome Director at the
				  UW. The Stanley P. Gessel Research and Scholarship Fund provides financial
				  assistance to students in the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences with
				  preference to undergraduate students interested in forest health and graduate
				  students pursuing studies in forest soils, mineral cycling, or tree
				  nutrition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GessellSP1</container><unittitle>Stanley Gessell in a greenhouse looking at a
					 tree</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gibboney, Samuel R. (Noember 2, 1873 - January 27,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel R. Gibboney was the business representative for the
				  Laundry Drivers and Dye Workers Union Local 866 and was later president of the
				  Central Labor Council.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GibboneySR1</container><unittitle>Samuel R. Gibboney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hamilton, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gibbs, George (July 17, 1815 - April 9,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Gibbs was a naturalist, geologist and ethnologist who
				  contributed to the study of the languages of the indigenous peoples in
				  Washington Territory and participated in numerous treaty negotiations between
				  the U.S. government and the native tribes in what is now Oregon and Washington
				  State. Born in New York, he had studied law at Harvard. In 1849, he went west
				  during the California Gold Rush, but was diverted from his plans and instead
				  settled in Astoria, Oregon Territory as a collector of customs. Skilled in the
				  study of languages, he compiled dictionaries of a number of native languages.
				  His expertise in cartography produced the first accurate map of the region.
				  From 1853 to 1855, he worked as a geologist and mapped the homelands and
				  languages of native people as an ethnologist for the Pacific Railroad Survey.
				  He was also instrumental in gathering and preserving zoological specimens for
				  the Smithsonian. In 1854, he reported on the Indians of Washington Territory
				  providing information on Native American societies prior to the treaty period,
				  and later was hired by Governor Isaac Stevens to help with the treaties and to
				  take a census of the tribes. He joined the Northwest Boundary Survey in 1857
				  and served as geologist and interpreter until 1862. The last decade of his life
				  was spent in Washington, DC, where he undertook studies of Indian languages
				  while working at the Smithsonian Institution.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GibbsG1</container><unittitle>George Gibbs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1873?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gibbs, James Atwood (January 17, 1922 –
				  April 30, 2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Gibbs was a United States author, lighthouse keeper, and
				  maritime historian. In 1948, he was one of the five founders of the Puget Sound
				  Maritime Historical Society and was the editor of <emph render="italic">Marine
				  Digest</emph> until 1972. He built and lived in Cleft of the Rock Light near
				  Yachats, Oregon, a privately owned working lighthouse in Oregon, until his
				  death. Considered an expert on lighthouses and shipwrecks of the Northwest
				  coast, he wrote several works, including <emph render="italic">Pacific
				  Graveyard: A Narrative of the Ships Lost Where the Columbia River Meets the
				  Pacific Ocean</emph> and <emph render="italic">Lighthouses of the
				  Pacific</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GibbsJA1</container><unittitle>James Gibbs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Giese, Julius Frederick (November 23, 1862 - June 17,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julius Giese (sometimes spelled Guise) was the first mayor of
				  Nome, Alaska in 1901. He made his fortune crafting sheet iron and stovepipes
				  and was one of Nome's leading merchants and hotel keepers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gilbert, Kenneth Adrian (June 10, 1889
				  - December 21, 1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kenneth Gilbert was born in Wisconsin and joined the Navy where
				  he served as a radio operator in the American Asiatic Fleet. In 1913, he joined
				  the staff of the <emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>, working as a
				  reporter, city editor and news editor. In 1922, he left to become a free-lance
				  writer. He was the author of over 15 books as well as numerous articles and
				  short stories. He was a member of the Washington State Press Club and served on
				  its Board of Governors. He originated and served as the first president of the
				  Freelancers, an organization of established authors.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilbertKA1</container><unittitle>Kenneth Gilbert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Gilbert is cut out of a larger photo, possibly with other
					 subjects. Note on verso: Gilbert, Kenneth 1889-, Seattle author.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gilbreath, Margaret Hannah (June 24,
				  1844 - September 26, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Gilbreath was born in Jacksonville, Illinois in 1844.
				  In 1852, she crossed the plains to the Willamette Valley with her parents, the
				  Reverend Levi Fanning and Nancy Jones Fanning. She married Samuel Gilbreath, a
				  cattle rancher, in 1859, and the couple moved to Dayton in southeastern
				  Washington where they built the first settler's cabin in the area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilbreathMH1</container><unittitle>Margaret Gilbreath</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">C. S. Ricker, Colfax, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gilchrist, Madeline (August 20, 1898 -
				  August 19, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Madeline Gilchrist was born in New Jersey and earned a B. A. in
				  Latin from Whitman College. She moved to Seattle and worked at the Seattle
				  Public Library while earning her degree in library science at the UW. She began
				  working in the reference department at the UW after graduation. In 1932, she
				  organized the library of the English and Speech Departments and headed it until
				  her retirement in 1962. In retirement, she started Northwest Copy Company, a
				  firm that produced educational visual aids and offered copying services.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilchristM1</container><unittitle>Madeline Gilchrist standing in front of a table
					 displaying early editions of the works of Edmund Spenser, donated from the
					 personal library of Frederick Padelford.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington (943D)</persname></origination></did><note><p>Taken on the occasion of a donation of early editions of the
					 work of Edmund Spenser to the Padelford Library from the personal library of
					 the late Frederick Morgan Padelford (1875-1942). Padelford was a Professor of
					 English at UW and later the Dean of the Graduate School.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Giles, Frederic Thomas (July 11, 1916 - November 14,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederic Thomas Giles was born in Sprague, Washington and was
				  educated at the University of Washington. He served as president of Everett
				  Community College from 1953-1961. He then began work at the University of
				  Washington as the director of junior college relations and professor of
				  education. In the former position, he was responsible for junior college
				  curricula as it pertained to university curricula. He also acted as general
				  liaison between junior colleges and university academic staff. Giles became the
				  dean of the UW College of Education in 1967 and held that position until 1982.
				  He was interested in the development of the community college as an
				  institution, was a strong advocate for public school education and participated
				  in several national associations concerned with higher education.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilesFT1</container><unittitle>Frederic Thomas Giles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington (S7850A)</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Gill, Hiram C. (August 23, 1866 – January 7,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram C. Gill was an American lawyer and two-time Mayor of
				  Seattle, Washington, identified with the "open city" politics that advocated
				  toleration of prostitution, alcohol, and gambling. Gill was born in Watertown,
				  Wisconsin and graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School. He moved
				  to Seattle in 1889, working as a stenographer in a law firm and entering
				  practice himself in 1892. He was elected to the city council in 1898, reelected
				  in 1900, defeated in 1902, but elected again in 1904, after which he held onto
				  his seat, serving three years as council president before running for mayor in
				  1910 on an "open town" platform. Gill also opposed municipal ownership of
				  utilities, arguing not only for privatized transit, but for privatized
				  waterworks, and opposing the then-young Seattle City Light electric utility. He
				  was generally anti-tax and anti-union. Gill and a Republican slate won the
				  March 8, 1910 election. A petition to recall Gill began circulating on October
				  8, 1910; a sufficient number to force an election were turned in by December
				  20. Gill was the first U.S. mayor to undergo a recall election. Gill ran again
				  for mayor in March 1912, but was defeated, and he resumed the practice of law.
				  In 1914 Gill ran on a "closed town" platform and was re-elected in 1916. When
				  Washington prohibited alcohol in 1916, Gill enforced it aggressively with
				  police raids. He took labor's side in several strike actions, and even spoke
				  out on behalf of the IWW after the 1916 Everett Massacre. Despite his early,
				  dramatic prohibition raids, Seattle was soon back to being, in effect, an "open
				  town", so much so that the U.S. Army declared it off-limits. In January 1918,
				  Gill was disbarred for a year for unethical solicitation of legal work. Gill
				  ran for unsuccessfully for reelection in 1918 and died less than a year
				  later.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">14</container><unittitle>Cartoon of Hiram C. Gill as "Gillikan, the god of
					 things as they were in Seattle."</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">G. B. Lindsley</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of orginal cartoon</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gillespie, Caroline C. (February 6,
				  1852 - September 11, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline Gillespie, the daughter of Frederick Girlock and
				  Christine C. Zimmerman Girlock, was born "on the ocean" and spent her first
				  years in Maryland. Her parents were from Germany. She married John W. Gillespie
				  in 1871, and they moved to Whidbey Island where they had a farm. They later
				  moved to Yakima before settling in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GillespieCC1</container><unittitle>Caroline Gillespie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1911 and 1912</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Angelus Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gillespie, John W. (April 8, 1847 -
				  July 12, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Gillespie, the son of George Gillespie and Margaret
				  Welch Gillespie, was born in Wisconsin. He married Caroline Girlock in 1871,
				  and the couple moved to Whidbey Island where they had a farm. They later moved
				  to Yakima before settling in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GillespieJW1</container><unittitle>John W. Gillespie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herpick, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gillgren, Nils (February 12, 1860 -
				  September 16, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nils Gillgren, the son of Nils Gillgren and Johanna Anderson
				  Gillgren, was born in Gulbarga, Sweden. He went to school in Karlstad, Sweden
				  and graduated from the University of Uppsala in 1884. For a time, he taught
				  school. In 1888, he became the editor for a daily newspaper in Stockholm, and
				  in 1889, he was the editor for a daily newspaper in Uppsala. He came to
				  American in 1904 and in 1905 became the editor of the <emph render="italic">Pacific Tribune</emph>, a weekly newspaper for the Swedish
				  community in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GillgrenN1</container><unittitle>Nils Gillgren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1906 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John L. Johnson, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gilman, Daniel Hunt (February 8, 1845 –
				  April 27, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Hunt Gilman was an American attorney and railroad builder
				  who made his career in Seattle. Born in Maine, Gilman fought as a cavalryman in
				  the American Civil War, earned a law degree from Columbia in 1877, and
				  relocated to Seattle in 1883. Gilman was notable as a key figure in local
				  railroad development, including the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway
				  (SLS&amp;E). Along with the SLS&amp;E, he helped create the Seattle and Montana
				  Railroad (part of the Great Northern system) and the West Street and North End
				  Electric Railway in the city. He was also involved with various ventures
				  connected with his railroad business. One of these was the establishment of the
				  Seattle Coal and Iron Co. in the town of Squab; the SLS&amp;E inevitably served
				  the coal town. Squab was incorporated in 1892 as Gilman, and later became the
				  city of Issaquah. His personal papers are held in UW Libraries Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilmanDH1</container><unittitle>Daniel Hunt Gilman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gilman, James Madison (August 4, 1826 -
				  July 12, 1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain James M. Gilman was born in New Hampshire. Trained as a
				  ship's machinist and engineer, he sailed to California during the Gold Rush of
				  1849. Gilman soon became employed on several steamships navigating the Columbia
				  River and Oregon coast, eventually becoming captain of his own vessels and
				  partner in the lucrative Oregon Steam Navigation Company (later the Oregon
				  Navigation &amp; Railway Company). He invested his earnings in Portland and
				  Astoria real estate, which proved highly profitable.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GilmanJM1</container><unittitle>James M. Gilman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gipson, James Herrick (June 18, 1885 - February 19,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Herrick Gipson was a member of the prominent Gipson family
				  of Caldwell, Idaho. His father, Albert, founded Canton Printers, Ltd.. a
				  commercial printing company which James began administering as managing editor
				  in 1907. Under his leadership, Canton Printers grew to be a prominent book
				  printer and binder throughout the Western U.S. , as well as a publisher of
				  original works. He also served as an Idaho delegate to the 1952 Republican
				  National Convention.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GipsonJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Gipson speaking at a Chamber of
					 Commerce meeting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 2, 1956</unitdate><origination><persname role="phototgrapher">Pete Hackworth</persname></origination></did><note><p>Note on verso states Gipson is speaking at "C. of C.
					 meeting"</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GipsonJH2</container><unittitle>James Gipson in Piraeus, Greece with Violet Fougberg
					 and Alec Kitroeff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 2, 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso describes Violet as employee of 
					 <emph render="italic">New York Daily Mirror</emph>, and Alec as "INS
					 Correspondent in Athens."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Giovine, Peter Richard (January 9, 1919 - March 7,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Richard Giovine was the Washington State Employment
				  Security Commissioner and had served with the Employment Security Department
				  for ten years at the time of his death. Governor Arthur B. Langlie named him to
				  the post of acting director, and he was appointed commissioner in 1957 by
				  Governor Albert D. Rosellini. Prior to entering state service in 1946, he was
				  the capital correspondent with the United Press.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD4</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini with Peter R.
					 Giovine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1957 and 1959</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Girard, Harry C. (June 13, 1875 -
				  December 24, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry C. Girard was an actor, singer, and composer, prominent in
				  the New York performance community including Broadway and Vaudeville. He was
				  the composer of and performer in the musical <emph render="italic">The
				  Alaskan</emph>(1907), the first show staged at the Moore Theater. He also
				  starred in the Broadway Opera <emph render="italic">Dolly Varden</emph> (1902),
				  as well as the silent films <emph render="italic">The Prairie Mystery</emph>
				  (1922) and <emph render="italic">White Eagle</emph> (1922). In 1932, he moved
				  to Houston to conduct the first performance of the Houston Opera. He remained
				  in Houston as a teacher and performer until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GirardHC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry C. Girard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bangs, New York</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gish, Lillian (October 14, 1893 - February 27,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG3</container><unittitle>Glenn Hughes with Lillian Gish during a production of 
					 <emph render="italic">Mrs. Carlyle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Glenn Hughes subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Glavis, Louis Russell (June 10, 1883 - November 23,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Louis R. Glavis was an American lawyer and employee of the
				  United States Department of the Interior. He was a prominent figure in the 1910
				  Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy, a political dispute between President Taft's
				  Secretary of Interior, Richard Ballinger and conservationist Gifford Pinchot
				  over Governmental conservation policies. In 1909, Glavis was an agent of the
				  Department's General Land Office's Field Division in the northwestern United
				  States and was based in Portland, Oregon. He provided Pinchot with information
				  about land deals in Alaska which he, Glavis, believed were illegal. Pinchot, in
				  turn, accused Secretary Ballinger of providing Clarence Cunningham's syndicate
				  land claims that did not respect Roosevelt's conservation policies, policies
				  Taft claimed to uphold in his administration. These accusations led to the
				  controversy. After a Senate hearing, Ballinger was exonerated and Glavis was
				  fired on the grounds of insubordination by President Taft who supported
				  Ballinger's position. In 1933, Glavis was rehired by incoming Secretary of
				  Interior Harold L. Ickes as Chief of the Division of Investigation which was
				  responsible for investigating charges of corruption involving all the
				  Department's many business contracts. Made notorious for his unauthorized
				  surveillance of supposedly disloyal employees, Glavis resigned from the
				  Department in the summer of 1936 and was transferred to a Senate investigating
				  committee. He later returned to a private law practice</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Louis Glavis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 23, 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso states that photo is from the "Outlook,"
					 presumably a newspaper.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Circular portrait of Louis
					 Glavis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Louis Glavis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Louis Glavis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Political cartoon with Louis Glavis
					 as Quixote and President Taft as a windmill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 21, 1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="illustrator">John "Dok" Hager, Seattle Times cartoonist, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Political cartoon, "That Boy
					 Glavis"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 21, 1910</unitdate><origination><corpname role="illustrator">Louisville Herald</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Young Louis Glavis is berated by a large man. Glavis grows
					 older while the other man shrinks.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR7</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Political cartoon, "The Branding
					 Iron"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 19, 1910</unitdate><origination><corpname role="illustrator">Los Angeles Daily Times</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Louis Glavis, along with Gifford Pinchot, are cowering under a
					 giant arm marked "Investigating Committee" with a branding iron marked
					 "Discredited." Signature at corner illegible.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gleason, Aaron B. (May 22, 1829 -
				  September 13, 1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aaron B. Gleason was born in Indiana and crossed the plains to
				  the Pacific Coast via wagon train in 1851. After brief stints as a farmer and
				  Indian fighter, he made a substantial fortune in grain milling and trade. He
				  was one of the founding citizens of Hubbard, Oregon and built the first store
				  there in 1870, one year before the Oregon-California railroad was built through
				  the town.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GleasonAB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Aaron B. Gleason</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Glenn, Allen D. (August 12, 1942 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allen D. Glenn is a political scientist, educator and former
				  Dean of Education (1989-2000) at the University of Washington. He graduated
				  with a PhD from the University of Michigan in 1970 and taught at the University
				  of Minnesota where he was also Associate Dean of Academic Affairs (1986 -
				  1989). He was the director of the Ackerley Network for Teacher Professional
				  Development (2006 - 2008) and in 2011, became the Dean Emeritus and Professor
				  in Curriculum &amp; Instruction in the UW College of Education. Best known for
				  his writing on the field of teacher education, he is the author of numerous
				  articles, and with Linda Knapp, wrote <emph render="italic">Restructuring
				  Classrooms with Technology</emph> in 1996.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlennAD1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Allen Glenn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1990 and 1999?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mary Levin, University Photography, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlennAD2</container><unittitle>Allen Glenn sitting in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1990 and 1999?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mary Levin, University Photography, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Glicksberg, Barbara (March 2, 1929 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Barbara Greenstone Glicksberg was born in Cleveland, Ohio. She
				  went to high school in Los Angeles and graduated from UCLA. She married Irving
				  Glicksberg in 1950, shortly after she graduated. The couple first to South
				  Bend, Indiana and then Princeton, NJ, before moving to Seattle. Glicksberg
				  returned to school, receiving her master's degree in librarianship from the
				  University of Washington. After retiring from library work, she was the
				  volunteer librarian at the Woodland Park Zoo for 14 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirkREK2</container><unittitle>Ruth Kirk and Barbara Glicksberg at the Friends of the
					 Library book sale</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Ruth Kirk subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Glisan, Rodney L. (January 29, 1827 -
				  June 3, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rodney Glisan was born in Maryland and graduated from the
				  University of Maryland Medical School in 1849. In 1850, he appointed assistant
				  surgeon in the United States Army and served as medical officer for eleven
				  years, including five years on the Great Plains and six years in Oregon during
				  the Indian wars. He resigned his commission in 1861 and practiced medicine in
				  San Francisco before moving to Portland, Oregon. In 1863, he married Elizabeth
				  Couch, the youngest daughter of John H. Couch, one of the founders of Portland.
				  He was president of the Multnomah County Medical Society (1872–1876) and
				  president of the Oregon State Medical Society (1875-1876). He later became a
				  professor at Willamette University School of Medicine. He was widely published
				  and known as an authority in his field. He published <emph render="italic">Journal of Army Life</emph> about his years as a surgeon in the
				  Army as well as a text on obstetrics that was widely used in the United States
				  and Great Britain. In 1893 the donation of his library became the basis for the
				  library of the Oregon Health and Sciences University. Glisan Street in Portland
				  is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlisanRL1</container><unittitle>Rodney Glisan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goddard, Albert James (July 15, 1863 -
				  April 20, 1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Iowa, Albert J. Goddard was trained as an engine
				  designer. He owned a large metal foundry in the Fremont area of Seattle. With
				  the help of his wife, Clara, he planned to take two steamboats into the Yukon
				  over the White Pass during the winter of 1897 so that they could take the first
				  cargo down the river in the spring; however, they discovered that moving the
				  boats over the pass was not as easy as they thought. He and his wife were
				  forced to move the vessels in pieces across the steep White Pass, a job that
				  took the entire winter. The Goddards’ determination paid out in the end, as
				  they established the first steamboat link between the gold fields and the
				  Pacific coast. After building the boats at Lake Bennett, they plied the Yukon
				  River in 1898, and then left the Yukon in 1901 when their boat, the 
				  <emph render="italic">A. J. Goddard</emph>, sank. Goddard was a member of the
				  Seattle City Council (1892-1894 and 1908-1915) and a member of the State
				  legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoddardAJ1</container><unittitle>Albert J. Goddard with William H. Murphy and George F.
					 Cotterill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1956</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Goetz, Herman (August 1, 1867 - September 13,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herman Goetz was a pioneer contractor, financier and
				  manufacturer who came to Seattle in 1888 from his native Germany. He was
				  president of Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, which he founded in 1926. He was
				  also the president of Stirrat &amp; Goetz Investment Company, a member of the
				  board of Pioneer Sand &amp; Gravel and of the Superior Portland Cement Company.
				  The firm of Stirrat &amp; Goetz installed the first permanent paving in Seattle
				  and also laid the first water main in the city.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMSr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Sr., with William Russell
					 Nichols, James R. Stirrat, Herman Goetz and Fred T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Lawton Gowey Street Railroad
						Photograph Collection, PH Coll. 209.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Sr. subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goldman, Emma (June 27, 1869 – May 14,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Goldman was an anarchist known for her political activism,
				  writing and speeches. She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist
				  political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the
				  twentieth century. Born in Kovno in the Russian Empire (present-day Kaunas,
				  Lithuania), Goldman emigrated to the US in 1885 and lived in New York City,
				  where she joined the burgeoning anarchist movement. In 1906, she founded the
				  influential anarchist journal <emph render="italic">Mother Earth</emph>. A
				  writer and renowned lecturer on anarchist philosophy, women's rights, and
				  social issues, Goldman was imprisoned multiple times, notably for planning the
				  attempted assassination of industrialist Henry Clay Frick in 1892 and for
				  opposing the draft during the First World War. After her release for the latter
				  act, Goldman was deported to Russia, only returning to the U.S. for a short
				  book tour in 1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoldmanE1</container><unittitle>Emma Goldman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goldmyer, William (October 3, 1843 -
				  April 4, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Goldmyer was a Seattle-area pioneer and the first
				  settler on what is now the Sandpoint neighborhood of Seattle. Born in
				  Triadelphia, Virginia, he arrived in the Washington Territory from San
				  Francisco in 1863. He supported himself and his family as a logger. In 1878, he
				  moved to Fall City and began farming and prospecting. During the 1900s, he also
				  founded a lodge for miners and loggers on the site of what is now known as
				  Goldmyer Hot Springs, 25 miles north of North Bend, WA.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoldmyerW1</container><unittitle>William Goldmyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Napier, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Goldstein, Isadore (February 1, 1883 - June 19,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isadore Goldstein was born in San Francisco, shortly before his
				  family moved to Alaska. As a young man, he worked in the fishing industry,
				  eventually owning a fishing fleet and a fisherman’s supply business in Juneau.
				  In 1910, he left the business in his sister’s hands to become a miner during
				  the Iditarod gold rush. Instead of finding gold, he opened a department store
				  and a curio shop with his brother. He joined the army in World War I, serving
				  in Europe until 1919. Goldstein served as mayor of Juneau for six terms and
				  also served two terms on the city council. He and his wife were among the last
				  people to see Will Rogers and Wiley Post.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW2</container><unittitle>Will Rogers with Isadore Goldstein, Wiley Post, Rex
					 Beach and Joe Crosson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under William "Will" Rogers subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Golitzen, Natalia (October 13, 1906 - March 28,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Natalia (aka Natalie) Golitzen was born in Russia to a
				  prosperous aristocratic family. Forced to flee their country during the 1920s
				  after the Russian Revolution, the Golitzens settled in Seattle. Natalia became
				  an actress, appearing in John Ford's <emph render="italic">Napoleon's
				  Barber</emph> (1928), and Cecil B. DeMille's <emph render="italic">King of
				  Kings</emph> (1927). Her brother Alexander (1908-2005), was an art director on
				  over 300 films and won three Academy Awards for his work; he graduated from the
				  UW with a degree in architecture.</p></bioghist><note><p>Photograph from a magazine (listed as "Princess Natalia
				  Golitzen") taken from May 1926 issue of <emph render="italic">Charmed Land
				  Woman's Magazine</emph>, published in Seattle</p></note><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GolitzenN1</container><unittitle>Natalia Golitzen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Leonid Fink, Curtis Studios, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gompers, Samuel (January 27, 1850 – December 13,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Gompers was an English-born American cigar maker who
				  became a labor union leader and a key figure in American labor history. As a
				  young worker in New York City, Gompers' leadership of the local cigar makers'
				  union elevated him into a prominent position within American labor. He founded
				  the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and served as that organization's
				  president from 1886 to 1894 and from 1895 until his death in 1924. Gompers
				  exerted a largely conservative influence upon the organized working class,
				  eschewing socialist politics and radical causes in favor of gradual economic
				  gains within the present capitalist system. Under his administration, the AFL
				  would become the most powerful union organization in the country.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GompersS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Samuel
					 Gompers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Art Gravure Corporation, New York</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GompersS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Samuel
					 Gompers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gonzales, Boyer (February 11, 1909 - July 27,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Boyer Gonzales, Jr. was born in Galveston. He received a B.S. in
				  architecture from the University of Virginia in 1931 and then spent four years
				  studying painting in Woodstock, NY. He taught at the Museum School of Art and
				  later the University of Texas in Austin. In 1954 he accepted a position as
				  director of the School of Art at the University of Washington in Seattle, a
				  post he held until 1966; under his leadership, the school became one of the
				  largest in the College of Arts and Sciences. Gonzales was a member of the
				  Seattle Municipal Art Commission from 1957 to 1960 and served as vice president
				  and director of the National Association of Schools of Art. He continued to
				  teach until his retirement as professor emeritus in 1979. During his career, he
				  had participated in over forty group exhibitions and thirteen solo exhibitions.
				  Examples of his work are in the permanent collections of the Dallas Museum of
				  Art, the Witte Memorial Museum, the Henry Art Gallery, the Seattle Art Museum,
				  and the Tacoma Art Museum. In 1975 he received the Governor's Award of Special
				  Commendation "For a Distinguished Artistic Career as a Teacher and Inspiration
				  to Young Artists in the State of Washington." His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GonzalesB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Boyer Gonzales talking to a woman who
					 is painting a portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, UW Office of Public Information (S-6186D)</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GonzalesB2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Boyer Gonzales at his
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appears on page 17 of the 1957 edition of the
						<emph> Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GonzalesB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Boyer Gonzales standing next to a
					 picture</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso misidentifies as "Prof. N. V. M. Gonzales."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gonzalez, Nestor Vicente Madali
				  (September 8, 1915 - November 28, 1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nestor Vicente Madali Gonzalez was a influential Philippine
				  author, essayist and educator. Gonzales began his career as a magazine writer
				  in the Philippines and soon gained national and international acclaim as the
				  author of numerous short stories, essays, and novels. Some of his most
				  celebrated work was collected in <emph render="italic">The Bread of Salt and
				  Other Stories</emph> (1993). He is considered a very significant figure in the
				  field of Philippine letters and was proclaimed a National Artist for Literature
				  there in 1997. In addition to writing, Gonzalez taught in a number of positions
				  both in his native country and the U.S., including as a professor of English
				  and Asian-American literature at the University of Washington (1976-1979).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GonzalezNVM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nestor Vicente Madali
					 Gonzalez</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goodall, James Pleasant (February 14,
				  1818 - December 11, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James P. Goodall, a soldier, prospector and Oregon pioneer, was
				  born in Milledgeville, GA. He began his military career as a fighter against
				  the Creeks and the Seminoles during the 1830s-1840s. After fighting in the
				  Texas War of Independence and the Mexican-American War, he made his way to
				  California and then to Jackson County in Southern Oregon as a prospector. He
				  raised several bands of settler militiamen for clashes with local tribes during
				  the 1850s. He then spent time in the Eastern U.S., Europe, North Africa and in
				  the Confederate Army before returning to Oregon in 1877 to settle as a farmer
				  and school teacher.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoodallJP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James P. Goodall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goodburn, Robert [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goode, Henry Walton (September 26, 1862 - April 1,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Walton Goode was born in Newcastle, Indiana. His father
				  died when he was seven, and he left school when he was fifteen. He was largely
				  self-educated, but made rapid progress in the business world. When he was
				  nineteen, he was the head bookkeeper of the largest whole grocery firm in
				  Minneapolis. He later worked in the electrical machinery business. Between 1895
				  and 1892, he worked for Westinghouse in Pittsburgh and General Electric in New
				  York before moving to Portland, Oregon where he became the general manager and
				  vice president of the Portland General Electric Company. He later consolidated
				  all of the different electrical interests in the city under the name Portland
				  Railroad, Light and Power, which he headed. He was also president of the Lewis
				  and Clark Exposition of 1905. He married Edith Fairclough in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairbanksCW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Fairbanks with group at Lewis
					 and Clark Centennial Exposition, Portland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate></did><note><p>A caption on the back identifies the Assistant Secretary of
					 the Treasury Horace A. Taylor and H. W. Goode, the exposition president.</p><p>Filed under Charles W. Fairbanks subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goodell, Rebecca Euphemia Byles
				  (December 11,1841 - September 2, 1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rebecca Euphemia Byles was the daughter of Charles and Sarah
				  (Wright) Byles; the family was part of the first wagon train to cross Natches
				  Pass over the Cascades in 1853. She married Melancthon Goodell in Grand Mound,
				  Washington Territory in 1858. The couple had eight children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoodellRE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rebecca Euphemia Goodell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Peterson &amp; Bros, Seattle, Washington Territory</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goodell, Melancthon Zwingle (November
				  6, 1837 - June 9, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melancthon Zwingle Goodell was born in Vermillion, Ohio. In 1850
				  the family crossed the plains, reaching Portland in 1851. They made their first
				  home in Polk County, Oregon, but in 1853 moved to Grand Mound, Washington
				  Territory. When the Indian War broke out, Melancthon enlisted, serving ten
				  months. He then leased a farm in Lewis County, before moving to a farm near
				  Elma, where he lived for more than twenty years. In 1883 he moved to Montesano,
				  Washington, where he worked in lumber and real estate. He was twice elected
				  sheriff and assessor of Chehalis County, was elected a member of the
				  territorial legislature for two terms, and was mayor of the city of Montesano
				  for two terms. He married Rebecca Byles in 1858.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoodellMZ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Melancthon Zwingle
					 Goodell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goodrich, Forest J. (January 23, 1889 - June 19,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Forest J. Goodrich received his Bachelor’s, Master’s and
				  Doctorate from the University of Washington. He started teaching at the UW in
				  1914 and became dean of the College of Pharmacy in 1939. Goodrich was
				  interested in the relationship of plants to medicine and was instrumental in
				  the establishment of the garden of medicinal plants. He retired as dean in 1956
				  and from teaching in 1959. He served as an army officer during World War I and
				  was a chemist in the Washington State Department of Agriculture. Goodrich also
				  served as president of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoodrichFJ1</container><unittitle>Dr. Forest Goodrich in his laboratory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 11, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Donald Erickson, Renton, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1952 edition of the 
						<emph>Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoodrichFJ2</container><unittitle>Dr. Forest Goodrich in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 12, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 35 of the 1955 edition of
						the <emph> Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Goodspeed, Harry Banfield (May 29, 1898
				  - May 27, 1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry B. Goodspeed, the son of Willis E. and Genevieve A.
				  Goodspeed, was born in Spokane and served in World War I from June 2, 1917
				  until June 15, 1919. He was stationed in France with the Lambert unit. After
				  the war, he graduated from the UW and received his medical degree from the
				  University of Pennsylvania. He married Dorothy Thompson in 1927.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoodspeedHB1</container><unittitle>Harry B. Goodspeed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goodwin, Ervin Shirley (November 25, 1869 - April 15,
				  1937)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Ervin S. Goodwin, who came to Seattle in 1900, was the former
				  owner of the Republic Building at Third Avenue and Pike Street and of the Pike
				  Place Market. He was also a vice president of the Seaboard National Bank and
				  president of the Goodwin Real Estate Company. He served as president of the
				  King County Planning Commission and as a member of the city planning board.
				  </p></bioghist><note><p>His portrait is on the reverse of a drawing of Augustus Warren
				  Gould.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">15</container><container type="item">GoodwinES1</container><unittitle>Ervin S. Goodwin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Filed under Augustus Warren Gould subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goodwin, George William (1846 - January 9,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Goodwin was born in Illinois in 1846, the second son
				  of Lewis H. and Priscilla Thompson Goodwin. In 1865 the family crossed the
				  plains with ox-teams, establishing a claim in the Upper Yakima. Goodwin and his
				  father were among the first to raise stock in Yakima, and their store was the
				  first in the region. He also operated the Beshapal mines, seventy miles
				  northwest of North Yakima, engaged in real estate and other business
				  operations. Being a man of strong temperance views, he accepted a nomination to
				  run on this issue as a member of the lower house of the territorial legislature
				  in 1886 and was defeated by thirteen votes. He married Alice V. Bailey in
				  1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoodwinGW1</container><unittitle>George W. Goodwin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goodyear, William (May 21, 1865 – June 18,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William "Billy" Goodyear was born in New Haven, CT. He was an
				  American football coach, newspaper editor, publisher, and politician in Whitman
				  County in Eastern Washington. He was the first head coach of the Washington
				  State Cougars football team, holding that position for the 1894 college
				  football season. His coaching record was one win, one loss, and zero ties.
				  Goodyear was also a newspaper publisher and editor. His newspapers included 
				  <emph render="italic">The Pullman Herald</emph>, <emph render="italic">The
				  Pullman News</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Colfax Commoner</emph> in
				  Colfax, Washington,<emph render="italic"> The Paillasse City News</emph> in
				  Paillasse, Washington, and <emph render="italic">The Pacific Farmers'
				  Union</emph>. He was active in Democratic Party politics and was the party's
				  candidate for United States Congress in Washington's 3rd congressional district
				  in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoodyearW1</container><unittitle>William Goodyear</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1890</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Maxwell, Spokane Falls, Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gordon, Richard F. Jr. (October 5, 1929- November 6,
				  2017)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard “Dick” F. Gordon was born in Seattle and graduated from
				  the UW with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry in 1951. He was an
				  American naval officer and aviator, chemist, test pilot and NASA astronaut, one
				  of the third group of astronauts named by NASA in 1963. He was one of only 24
				  people to have flown to the moon, serving as the Command Module Pilot for the
				  Apollo 12 mission. He also served as the pilot for the Gemini XI mission and
				  served as backup spacecraft commander for Apollo 15. Gordon won the Bendix
				  Trophy Race from Los Angeles to New York City in May 1961, in which he
				  established a new speed record and a transcontinental speed record. He had
				  numerous awards, including the NASA Distinguished Service Medal, NASA
				  Exceptional Service Medal, two Navy Distinguished Flying Crosses, Navy
				  Astronaut Wings, and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal. Gordon was a fellow
				  of the American Astronautical Society, an associate fellow of Society of
				  Experimental Test Pilots, a member of the Navy League, and a member of Phi
				  Sigma Kappa. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GordonRF1</container><unittitle>Richard F. Gordon Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1971</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NASA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gorham, George Congdon (July 6, 1890 -
				  October 10, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Congdon Gorham, the son of William Hills Gorham and
				  Kathleen Walton Gorham, was born in Seattle and served as a private in the
				  Borden Battery, 1st Motor Machine Gun Brigade, Canada. He was killed in action
				  in World War I in Douai, France and is buried in Cantimpre Canadian Cemetery,
				  Sailly, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GorhamGC1</container><unittitle>George Congdon Gorham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1917 and 1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gorsuch, William Pierce (October 2, 1871 - January 11,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Pierce Gorsuch taught at dramatic arts at the University
				  of Chicago before joining the UW in 1913. He taught public speaking and was
				  head of the Dramatic Arts Department at the UW until his death. He was
				  president of the Seattle Drama League; the Players Art Guild was formed by
				  people in Seattle who had studied with him. He married Augusta Willoughby
				  Tunnicliff in 1900.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GorsuchWP1</container><unittitle>Portrait of William Gorsuch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GorsuchWP2</container><unittitle>William Gorsuch sitting outside on a bench</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1924?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gorton, Thomas Slade (January 8, 1928- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Slade Gorton is an American politician. A Republican, he
				  was a U.S. senator from Washington State from 1981 to 1987, and from 1989 to
				  2001. He held both of the state's Senate seats in his career and was narrowly
				  defeated for re-election twice as an incumbent: in 1986 by Brock Adams, and in
				  2000 by Maria Cantwell after a recount. He was born in Chicago, Illinois and
				  served in the United States Army from 1945 until 1946. He graduated with a B.
				  A. in International Relations from Dartmouth College and a law degree from
				  Columbia Law School. Gorton served in the United States Air Force from 1953
				  until 1956, and continued to serve in the Air Force reserves until 1980 when he
				  retired as Colonel. In 1958, he was elected to the state legislature of
				  Washington, serving from 1959 until 1969 and was house majority leader from
				  1967 until 1968. He was Attorney General of Washington from 1969 until he
				  entered the United States Senate in 1981. In the U.S. Senate, he served on the
				  Commerce, Science and Transportation, Banking, Housing, Urban Affairs, and
				  Budget committees of the Senate along with the select committees on Small
				  Business and Native American Affairs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GortonTS1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Slade Gorton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Wallace Ackerman Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GortonTS2</container><unittitle>Portrait Slade Gorton in shirt and tie with dark
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GortonTS3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Slade Gorton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Goslin, Martin Leland (November 26, 1910 - January 6,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The Reverend Dr. Martin Goslin was a Protestant participant in a
				  Northwest interfaith television program in the 1960s and senior minister of
				  Plymouth Congregational Church in Seattle from 1953 to 1962. While serving in
				  Seattle, Rev. Goslin participated in <emph>Challenge</emph> with leaders of two
				  other faiths, reportedly the first interfaith program in the United States. The
				  program featured Rev. Goslin, Rabbi Raphael Levine and the Rev. William Treacy,
				  a Catholic priest. In 1962, Rev. Goslin created a controversy when he denounced
				  the visit to Seattle of Robert Welch, founder of the John Birch Society, and
				  Dr. Fred Schwarz, founder of the Christian Anti-Communist Crusade. From
				  Seattle, Goslin went to the First Congregational Church in Webster, Missouri, a
				  suburb of St. Louis. After retirement, he lived in Seattle for a time before
				  moving to California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LevineRH2</container><unittitle>Rabbi Raphael Levine, Rev. Martin Goslin and Father
					 William Treacy during the KOMO-TV Challenge Panel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1988</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Rabbi Raphael Levine subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Goss, Erwin Lyle (January 27, 1904 - February 3,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erwin Lyle Goss was general manager of the University of
				  Washington Bookstore from 1946-1969, during which time the store grew from a
				  relatively small business into a multi-million dollar operation. Goss started
				  working at the bookstore in 1923 as a clerk, and except during his service in
				  World War II, was a store employee for nearly 46 years. Goss was also a Seattle
				  Park Board from 1949-1955 and helped lead the efforts to develop the Woodland
				  Park Zoo and Carkeek Park. From 1955 to 1962, he was a Seattle School Board
				  member, a leader in the construction of Ingraham High School, where an annual
				  scholarship was created in his honor for outstanding athlete/scholar students.
				  In addition, he was on the board for Independent College Bookstores of America
				  1948-1949 for University of Washington.</p><p>Goss earned a degree in economics from the UW, where he lettered
				  in track; he eventually taught classes and seminars at UW. He was a member of
				  the Beta Theta Pi fraternity and UW Faculty Association, and later founded the
				  Foundation for International Understanding Through Students (FIUTS), a support
				  and advocacy group for international students. During World War II, he was a
				  lieutenant commander in the Navy and served in the Panama Canal.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GossEL1</container><unittitle> Erwin Lyle Goss seated in UW Bookstore
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1950</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R.H. Anderson, for the UW Daily</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Gottfried, Alex (October 23, 1919 - March 18,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alex Gottfried, professor of political science and civil
				  liberties leader, was born in in Hungary and immigrated to the United States at
				  the age of nine, with his mother and sister, joining his father and brothers in
				  Chicago. Gottfried attended Chicago Teachers College, graduating in 1941 with
				  an undergraduate degree in education. He joined the United States Army Air
				  Corps in 1942 and rose to the rank of major, serving in the European Theater in
				  the Civil Affairs Division for the U.S. military government. After his
				  discharge from the military, he entered the University of Chicago, receiving a
				  Master’s degree in 1948, and a PhD in Political Science in 1952. Gottfried
				  joined the political science faculty of the University of Washington in 1950
				  where he taught until his retirement in 1982. He was a leader in the movement
				  to end the war in Vietnam, and an active participant in and supporter of the
				  local civil rights movement. He was a member of the Washington State ACLU Board
				  of Directors of the Washington affiliate, serving terms totaling 21 years,
				  between 1961 and 1988. In 1988, the ACLU of Washington presented Dr. Gottfried
				  with its highest honor, the William O. Douglas award, “in recognition of
				  outstanding contributions to the cause of civil liberties and freedom.” Other
				  organizations in which he served included the national ACLU and the National
				  Committee to End Repressive Legislation (whose boards he served on), Congress
				  of Racial Equality, the American Political Science Association and Western
				  Political Science Association, and Caucus for New Political Science. Gottfried
				  was the author of <emph> Boss Cermak of Chicago: A Study of Political
				  Leadership.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD14</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, Professor Hugh Bone,
					 Wing Luke, Alex Gottfried and internship class</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Professor Hugh Bone's (Pol. Sci.) first
						internship class in Olympia. Far right (w/ cigarette) is Alex Gottfried who
						later became a faculty member in Pol. Sci. Wing Luke is in front row to the
						Gov.'s right.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gould, Augustus Warren (January 15,
				  1872 - October 15, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Augustus Warren Gould, prominent architect, was born in Nova
				  Scotia and studied architecture at MIT in Boston. He worked in Boston in
				  architecture, building and contracting before coming to Seattle in 1904. He
				  originated the municipal plans amendment to the city charter and saw the
				  creation of the Municipal Plans Commission. He was the president of the
				  Washington State Society of Architects (1917) and was a member of the State
				  Architects Examining Board (1919). He was the principal architect of A. Warren
				  Gould, Architects, and a partner with Edouard Champney (1909 – 1912). Among his
				  many buildings in Seattle are the Arctic Club (1916), the King County
				  Courthouse, the Standard Furniture Building, the YWCA, and the Georgian Hotel.
				  He died of a heart attack in the Tacoma Union Railroad Station. The Arctic
				  Hotel is a National Trust Historic Hotel and is a registered landmark on the
				  National Register of Historic Places.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GouldAW1</container><unittitle>Cartoon of Augustus Gould at his drawing board with
					 pictures of the Arctic Club and the American Savings Bank &amp; Trust behind
					 him</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gove, Warren A. (July 27, 1816 -
				  October 8, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Warren Gove was born in Edgecomb, Maine and went to sea when he
				  was thirteen. In 1851, he traveled west to San Francisco and two years later
				  moved to Steilacoom, Washington Territory where he established a Donation Land
				  Claim. That same year, he began operation of <emph render="italic">The
				  Fairy</emph>, the first steamboat on Puget Sound to have a formal schedule; the
				  boat was launched on October 31, 1853. During the Indian Wars, he was appointed
				  quartermaster at Steilacoom and was later in charge of the Puyallup Indian
				  Reservation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoveWA1</container><unittitle>Warren Gove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gowen, Herbert Henry (May 29, 1864-November 6,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>An Episcopal minister, Dr. Herbert H. Gowen served in the
				  department of Oriental Studies at the University of Washington (UW) teaching
				  from 1909 until 1944. A voracious reader who was reputed to have read a book a
				  day, he taught the history and literature of China, Japan, India and the Near
				  East along with the Sanskrit, Arabic and Hebrew languages and the history of
				  religion. Gowen Hall, built in1932, is in the Liberal Arts Quadrangle on the UW
				  campus; it was dedicated in 1977 to the memory of Dr. Gowen and his
				  contributions to the UW.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Herbert Gowen wearing
					 pince-nez glasses, clergy collar and cross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Herbert Gowen in clergy
					 robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Reverend Herbert
					 Gowen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Reverend Herbert Gowen receiving a
					 certificate of recognition from the Japan Society of Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1956</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Herbert Gowen holding bird
					 in front of plants indoors</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Photo in Christmas card. Printed on facing page: Birds at my
					 window singing/What is the news you are bringing?/Tidings of joy and mirth/To
					 all who dwell on earth/Tidings of peace and love/To man from Heav'n
					 above/Wherefore let us rejoice/Singing with heart and voice/Singing with one
					 accord/To Christ the newborn Lord/Allelujah! Herbert H. Gowen, Christmas
					 1956.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Reverend Herbert
					 Gowen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GowenHH7</container><unittitle>Twenty-two photographs of Herbert Gowen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: For personal use only. Do not reproduce.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gowey, Clarence Lawton (November 27, 1921 - March 6,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lawton Gowey, who went by his middle name, was an accountant and
				  director of finance for the Seattle Water Department. He was a collector of
				  historical photographs. His collection was often cited in the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>and portions of his collection are
				  held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GoweyCL1</container><unittitle>Lawton Gowey standing outside at Stanley Park in
					 Vancouver, British Columbia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 23, 1946</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graban, Alan Winston (February 13, 1929 - July 23,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alan Graban was a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971. He was a banking executive in Seattle and Bellingham.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Grady, Thomas Eugene (November 19, 1880 - April 5,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Eugene Grady was a Washington State Supreme Court
				  justice. He was born in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin and graduated from the
				  University of Minnesota Law School. In 1905, Grady moved to Yakima, Washington.
				  He was appointed a Superior Court judge in 1911 and served until 1917. In 1917,
				  he became Yakima city attorney and served as a member of the Yakima City
				  Council. He went on to be a member of the Supreme Court twice, from 1942 to
				  1945 and from 1949 to 1955. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FinleyRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Finley with fellow Washington State Supreme
					 Court Justices Joseph Mallery and Thomas Grady</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Robert C. Finley subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, David (October 2, 1835-May 19,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Graham was born in New York and followed his brother,
				  Walter, west, arriving in Seattle in April 1857. He worked as a surveyor's
				  helper and then taught school. In 1861, he married Susanna Mercer, the daughter
				  of Thomas Mercer; the Reverend Daniel Bagley officiated. Their first home was
				  at First and Columbia, and he opened the first butcher shop in Seattle at First
				  and Jackson. The first two settlers in the area now known as Seward Park in
				  Seattle, Edward A. Clark and John Harvey, sold their claim of property to David
				  Graham in 1858. Graham farmed the land for ten years before trading it to his
				  brother for land on the Duwamish River. He and Susanna farmed there for twelve
				  years before returning to Seattle in 1901.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamD1</container><unittitle>David Graham standing in front of a group of
					 unidentified people, possibly by Pioneer Hall in Seattle.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graham, Gene Evelyn (April 1, 1919 - February 2,
				  2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gene Evelyn Graham, the daughter of Clara and Grover Graham, was
				  born in Colville, Washington. She attended college at the University of
				  Washington, graduating in 1941 with a B.S. degree and a teaching certificate.
				  She was active in the Pi Beta Phi sorority and its president in 1940. After
				  teaching high school in Lynden, Washington for one year, she married Edgar
				  Filion. Edgar joined the Navy during World War II, and his service resulted in
				  moves to different bases throughout the U.S. They finally settled in California
				  in 1959. After Edgar’s death, Gene married Ralph Walch in 1977. Gene taught
				  English at the Berlitz Language School and volunteered at the Palo Alto
				  Congressional Church, the P.E.O. Sisterhood, the Carmel Woman's Club and the
				  Monterey Bay Aquarium. She was a prolific painter and a member of the Central
				  Coast Art Association where she served on the executive board for over 30
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graham, Janette Sargeant (November 7, 1881 - February
				  17, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Janette Sargeant Graham was an author of young adult fiction in
				  the 1950s. She lived in Spokane, Washington and published such works as 
				  <emph render="italic">Madcap Jeanie, </emph><emph render="italic">The Secret of
				  Plenty House, </emph><emph render="italic">Challenge of the Coulee</emph>, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Venture at Lake Tahogan</emph>. She was born in England
				  and used episodes of her own childhood in her stories.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamJS1</container><unittitle>Janette Sargeant Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1955 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graham, Lance L. (March 13, 1953-)</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpurrellJM1</container><unittitle> Lance Graham, Jack Spurrell and Norman Mattson with
					 the Longshoremen's Statue in Raymond, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>In 1937 the International Longshoremen's Association Local
					 38-92 (AFL) became the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union
					 (ILWU) Local 1, the first CIO local of the ILWU chartered in the state of
					 Washington. ILWU Local 1 was based in Raymond, Washington (on Willapa Bay), and
					 existed until it merged with Aberdeen Local 24 in 1976. The Pacific Coast
					 Pensioner's Association was intended to provide union workers with accident or
					 retirement benefits; in 1988, the Pensioner's Association had a statue carved
					 to commemorate the history of shipping industry in the port of Raymond. The
					 statue is a full-length figure of a longshoreman, dressed in overalls and cap.
					 He is standing on a crate, with a rolled object under his proper right arm.</p><p>The back of the photo indicates that Graham was the carver;
					 however, the Smithsonian lists John Dempsey as the sculptor.</p><p>Filed under Jack Spurrell subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graham, Martha Wheeler (November 21, 1864 - May 14,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Wheeler, the daughter of Jonas A. and Tabitha (Wilson)
				  Wheeler, married Thomas Lockie Graham on March 20, 1895.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamTL1</container><unittitle>Wedding portrait of Thomas and Martha
					 Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 20, 1895</unitdate></did><note><p>Two copies. Written on one photograph: Tom and sister Martha.
					 This probably means that the owner of the photograph was related to Martha
					 since the second photograph has written on verso: Just married.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Thomas Lockie Graham subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, Robert Victor (April 12, 1921 -
				  April 16, 2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Victor Graham grew up on a dairy farm at Copalis
				  Crossing, along the Humptulips River in rural Grays Harbor County. He received
				  his education at Moclips High School and Grays Harbor College in Aberdeen.
				  During World War II, he was a flight engineer with the Army Air Transport
				  Service, carrying cargo into the South Pacific. After the war, he secured his
				  first job at the state Capitol, as a claims adjustor for the Department of
				  Labor &amp; Industries. He soon joined the staff of the Auditor’s Office and
				  steadily worked his way up to become chief deputy, serving in every major
				  administrative post in the office . When the State Auditor announced his
				  retirement in 1963, Graham sought and won the office, becoming the state’s
				  seventh auditor. He was re-elected six times and served until his retirement in
				  1993. During his tenure the Auditor’s Office underwent rapid modernization. He
				  fought off an effort to privatize municipal audits, focused on preventing and
				  detecting fraud and instituted comprehensive training programs for his staff.
				  He and his wife, Lloydine, were married 68 years and had five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamRV1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Robert Victor Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamRV2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Robert Victor Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1985 and 1988?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamRV3</container><unittitle> Robert Victor Graham sitting in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1989 and 1992?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, Robert Weston (April 17, 1915 -
				  January 5, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Weston Graham was a Seattle attorney noted primarily for
				  his antitrust work. In addition, he focused on a variety of issues in and
				  around Seattle, usually on matters pertaining to health care, education, and
				  the arts. Powerful connections put him on the international stage late in his
				  career, first as a political appointee of President Lyndon Johnson (1908-1973)
				  and later as an arms negotiator during the Reagan administration. For his
				  record of service at home and abroad, the Seattle-King County Association of
				  Realtors named him First Citizen of 1986.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamRW1</container><unittitle>Robert Weston Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, Stephen Victor (March 4, 1874 –
				  September 2, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Victor Graham was a United States Naval Rear Admiral and
				  the 18th Governor of American Samoa from September 9, 1927 to August 2, 1929.
				  He attended the United States Naval Academy and served on numerous ships before
				  being posted to the governorship. As governor, he established a strong charter
				  for the former Bank of American Samoa and reworked Samoan fiscal law. After his
				  governorship, he worked at the Naval Academy as the head of the Modern
				  Languages department.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamSV1</container><unittitle>Stephen Victor Graham in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taber, San Francisco</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Stephen Victor Graham. When he was
					 young.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, Thomas Lockie (May 29, 1858 -
				  January 3, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Lockie Graham, the son of John and Marian Graham, was
				  born in Ontario, Canada. He worked as a farmer and carpenter in Preston,
				  Washington. Graham married Martha Wheeler March 20, 1895.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamTL1</container><unittitle>Wedding portrait of Thomas and Martha
					 Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 20, 1895</unitdate></did><note><p>2 copies.</p><p>Written on one photograph: Tom and sister Martha. This
					 probably means that the owner of the photograph was related to Martha since the
					 second photograph has written on verso: Just married.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graham, Walter (October 13, 1828 -
				  September 15, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Graham was born in Putnam, New York and went west in
				  March 1853, arriving in Seattle in the fall of that year. He worked in Yesler's
				  mill before buying a farm on the Duwamish River. During the Battle of Seattle
				  in 1856, he was famous for leaving the blockhouse and making his way to Thomas
				  Mercer's house to bake biscuits so the children would have something to eat.
				  The smoke of his fire caught the attention of the Indians, who fired on him,
				  and he fled with the biscuits to the blockhouse, providing the only food of the
				  day. His farm on the Duwamish was burned in the war. Later that year, he
				  married Elizabeth Ann (Eliza) Mercer, the daughter of Thomas Mercer; she died
				  in 1864. In 1864, he married Catherine Adams Stickney, one of the first group
				  of “Mercer girls.” When Catherine died in 1869, he married Elizabeth Crommon, a
				  childhood friend. In 1868, he traded his land on the Duwamish to his brother,
				  David for land on Lake Washington; he eventually owned 334 acres of lakeshore
				  near what is now Seward Park. He never owned the main part of the peninsula of
				  the lake, but it was later referred to as "Graham's peninsula." Graham Hill
				  Elementary School in Seward Park is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamW1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Walter Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamW2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Walter Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>This is a copy of the previous photograph which has been
					 retouched.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graham, William Thomas (February 1, 1858 - January 26,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Thomas Graham was the son of Walter Graham and Elizabeth
				  Ann Mercer Graham; his grandfather was Thomas Mercer. He married Annie May
				  Crouten in 1881; the couple had four children. He had a farm in the Seattle
				  area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrahamWT1</container><unittitle>William Thomas Graham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Granberg, Wilbur John "Bill" (September 9, 1906 -
				  December 2,1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilbur J. Granberg was born in Minneapolis and grew up in
				  Tacoma. He was an author and editor who published nine books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Voyage Into Darkness: To Alaska with Bering</emph>
				  (1960), <emph render="italic">The World of Joseph Pulitzer</emph> (1965), and 
				  <emph render="italic">People of the Maguey; the Otomi Indians of Mexico</emph>
				  (1970). </p><p>He also worked as a reporter in Seattle, Yakima and Wenatchee.
				  During World War II, he served on Attu with the Army Signal Corps. He married
				  Mary Ann Mallon in Seattle, Washington, on October 21, 1937; she died in 1942.
				  He married Grace Grindall in 1945.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GranbergWJ1</container><unittitle> Wilbur J. Granberg working at a
					 typewriter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle
					 Times</emph> on August 2, 1970.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grandy, Benjamin W. (March 1835 - June 2,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin W. Grandy, a native of New York, moved with his parents
				  to Ohio and later Iowa. In 1859 he went to Siskiyou County to search for gold.
				  In 1862, he left Yreka for the Salmon River mines. Grandy returned to Ohio the
				  following year before heading west to Oregon in 1864. He worked in mines in the
				  Grande Ronde Valley and engaged in freighting across the Blue Mountains from
				  Umatilla to Idaho. He later took a claim near La Grande, which was incorporated
				  in 1884. Grandy was elected mayor in 1886 and again in 1888. He also served on
				  the Union Central Committee to represent La Grande for the Union State
				  Convention of 1896. In 1865, he married Lydia Palmer, a pioneer of 1864; they
				  had eight children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrandyBW1</container><unittitle>Benjamin W. Grandy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Granlund, Winslow Arnold (February 4, 1927 - August 22,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Winslow Granlund, a native of Minnesota, was a resident of
				  Pierce and Kitsap counties in Washington for over 40 years. He graduated from
				  the University of Puget Sound with a B.A. in Political Science and Education
				  and an M. A. in Educational Administration. He retired in December 1985 after
				  serving 33 years in the South Kitsap School District as a teacher, coach,
				  counselor, and administrator. He also served on the Kitsap County Juvenile
				  Court Advisory Committee and on Kitsap County Project Family. His wife,
				  Barbara, was also a State Representative (1979-1983) and State Senator
				  (1983-1985); she resigned in 1985 for family reasons, and her husband was
				  appointed to fill her vacant seat. He represented the 26th District of
				  Washington in the State Senate from 1985 until 1988.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GranlundWA1</container><unittitle>Winslow Granlund</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1986</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Grant, Francis William (April 28, 1867 - November 24,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis William Grant was born in Ontario, Canada, and came to
				  the United States as a young boy. He trained as an architect. In 1903, the
				  United States Treasury sent him to Seattle to superintend the construction of
				  the post office on Third and Union. He became Superintendent of Buildings for
				  the city and in later years had his own architecture firm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grant, Frederick Dent (May 30, 1850 – April 12,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Dent Grant, a soldier and United States minister to
				  Austria-Hungary, was the first son of General of the Army and President of the
				  United States Ulysses S. Grant and Julia Grant. He was with George Armstrong
				  Custer during the Black Hills expedition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Armstrong Custer and staff,
					 7th Cavalry in the Black Hills of South Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William H. Illingworth, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Included in the photograph are Captain Tom Custer, Marcus A.
					 Reno, Bloody Knife and Colonel Fred Grant.</p><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p><p>Filed under George Armstrong Custer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grant, Frederic James (August 17, 1862 - September 30,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederic James Grant was born in Ohio and graduated from
				  Lafayette College in 1883. He moved to Seattle and obtained a job at the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post- Intelligencer</emph> shortly after
				  arriving; he later became editor-in-chief. In 1891, he wrote a history of
				  Seattle. He served as a member of the first Washington State Legislature and
				  was appointed as an envoy to Bolivia by President Harrison. He served as the
				  envoy from April 12, 1893 until October 24, 1893. Grant in 1894 died when the
				  ship <emph render="italic">Ivanhoe</emph> on which he was traveling sank. He
				  was given an honorary degree by the University of Washington after his death.
				  An organization, the Frederic James Grant Memorial Association, was created
				  after his death to raise money for books to create an American history
				  collection at the UW Library.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrantFJ1</container><unittitle>Frederic Grant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Frederic James Grant, ex Minister of the
					 United States to Bolivia.</p><p>Photo made for first general assembly of the Washington House
					 of Representatives in 1889.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrantFJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frederic James Grant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">LaRoche Studio, Seattle Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grant, Frederic James (April 13, 1895 - September 28,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederic James Grant was born in Zanesville, Ohio, the son of
				  Frederic James Grant and Elizabeth Hoge Grant; he was born after his father
				  perished in a shipwreck in 1894. He graduated from Yale University in 1917 and
				  attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard Business School. He
				  was one of twenty American air servicemen who were honored for spending the
				  longest continuous front line duty in World War I. Grant was promoted to the
				  rank of captain and served in the Second Balloon Company of the U.S. Air
				  Service in France. He was the president and treasurer of the S. A. Weller Co.,
				  pottery manufacturer and vice president and head of the Franciscan China
				  Division of Gladding and McBean Co. of Glendale, CA. He was also known as an
				  expert philatelist and a collector of Confederate packet boat cancellations and
				  stamps.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrantFJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frederic J. Grant as infant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 13, 1896</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Smith, Zanesville, Ohio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrantFJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frederic Grant at age thirteen seated in
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1908</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grant, Ulysses S. (April 27, 1822 - July 23,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Ulysses S. Grant was the 18th President of the United States
				  (1869–77). As Commanding General, Grant worked closely with President Abraham
				  Lincoln to lead the Union Army to victory over the Confederacy in the American
				  Civil War. He implemented Congressional Reconstruction, often at odds with
				  Lincoln's successor, Andrew Johnson. Twice elected president, he led the
				  Republicans in their effort to remove the vestiges of Confederate nationalism
				  and slavery, protect African-American citizenship, and support economic
				  prosperity nationwide. His presidency has often come under criticism for
				  tolerating corruption and in his second term leading the nation into a severe
				  economic depression; however, historians' views have grown more favorable since
				  the 1990s, appreciating Grant's protection of African Americans and his peace
				  policy towards Indians, even where those policies failed.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrantUS1</container><unittitle> Ulysses S. Grant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a portrait by Kurtz</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">15</container><container type="item">GrantUS2</container><unittitle> Ulysses S. Grant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Kurtz from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graves, Dorsett Vandeventer "Tubby" (November 27, 1886 –
				  January 16, 1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dorsett “Tubby” Graves was a college head coach in baseball,
				  football, and basketball, as well as a player of football and baseball. He was
				  primarily a baseball coach and led three college programs for a total of 32
				  seasons. He began at the University of Alabama for four seasons (1912–1915),
				  spent another four at Texas A&amp;M University (1916–1919), and finished with
				  24 seasons the University of Washington (1923–1946). In football, he was a
				  college head coach for seven seasons: at Alabama (1911–1914), Texas A&amp;M
				  (1918), and the Agricultural College of the State of Montana, now Montana State
				  University, (1920–1921), compiling a career record of 32–18–4. In basketball,
				  he served as a head coach for six years: at Alabama (1912–1915), Texas A&amp;M
				  (1915–1916), and Montana Agricultural (1920–1922). At Washington, he was a
				  longtime assistant coach in football and basketball, and later an assistant
				  athletic director under head coach Hec Edmundson. Graves had met Edmundson at
				  Idaho when they were undergraduate athletes, and both were head coaches at
				  Texas A&amp;M in the spring of 1919, Edmundson in track and Graves in baseball.
				  After stepping down as baseball coach at Washington, Graves became an assistant
				  athletic director at the university, where he remained until his death. He was
				  also involved with horse racing in the state as a race steward at Longacres in
				  Renton and Playfair Race Course in Spokane. The UW athletic office building and
				  the two former baseball fields (through 1997) were named for Graves; he was
				  posthumously inducted into the Big W Club, the UW athletics hall of fame.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesDV1</container><unittitle>Dorsett “Tubby” Graves talking to baseball team on the
					 field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1946?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graves, Frank Pierrepont (July 23, 1869 - September 13,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Franklin Pierrepont Graves was born in Brooklyn, NY, and
				  attended Columbia University where he received a Bachelor and Master of Arts as
				  well as a PH.D. in Philosophy. He taught Greek at Columbia, became professor of
				  classics at Tufts College, and President of the University of Wyoming. In 1898
				  Graves became President of the University of Washington, serving until 1902.
				  After his service he attended Columbia University again and received a
				  doctorate in education. Between his doctorate in education and his appointment
				  as State Commissioner of Education in 1921 Graves served as the dean of
				  education at the University of Missouri, University of Pennsylvania, and Ohio
				  State University. He also served on the faculty of the Teachers College of
				  Columbia University. He was elected as the Education Commissioner and President
				  of the New York State University in 1921 and served as State Commissioner of
				  Education for nineteen years until he retired in 1940 at age 71. After
				  retirement, he enrolled in the Albany Law School and completed his dream of
				  receiving a law degree. In 1943 he passed State Bar Examinations. When he died,
				  he held a total of 43 degrees.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Frank Pierrepont
					 Graves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Frank Pierrepont
					 Graves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Pierrepont Graves as
					 Commissioner of Education and President of the University of the State of New
					 York in Albany, New York</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Frank Pierrepont
					 Graves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: Professor Edmond S. Meany with the
					 professional regards of his friend and old time associate, Frank Graves.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Retirement portrait of Frank
					 Pierrepont Graves in academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesFP6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Frank Pierrepont
					 Graves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graves, Jessie (November 13, 1872 - November 3,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jessie Graves was the daughter of Edward O. Graves, first
				  president of Washington National Bank. She married Francis Henry Burr in
				  1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Graves, Morris (August 28, 1910 - May 5,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Morris Graves was an American painter and one of the earliest
				  Modern artists from the Pacific Northwest to achieve national and international
				  acclaim. His style, referred to by some reviewers as Mysticism, used the muted
				  tones of the Northwest environment, Asian aesthetics and philosophy, and a
				  personal iconography of birds, flowers, chalices, and other images to explore
				  the nature of consciousness. He lived and worked mostly in Western Washington,
				  but spent considerable time traveling and living in Europe and Asia, and spent
				  the last several years of his life in Loleta, California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesM1</container><unittitle>Jan Thompson, Morris Graves, and Zoe Dusanne at the
					 Seattle Art Museum</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of the original.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesM2</container><unittitle>Copy of negative set from the Art Hupy
					 collection</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of the original.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Graves, Russell Corloe (November 14,
				  1841 - July 25, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Russell Corloe Graves was born in New York and moved to Seattle
				  before 1880. He was a pioneer Seattle cooper and builder who built the original
				  Dexter Horton home. The 1880 Federal Census lists his occupation as "picture
				  dealer." He married Lydia Upson in 1868; after her death in 1889, he married
				  Lucy Harris (1852 - 1904) in 1896 and Margaret McGettuck in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesRC1</container><unittitle>Russell C. Graves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gray, L. E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrayLE1</container><unittitle>L. E. Gray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H.C. Katterle, Sultan, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: L. E. Gray, Mossy Rock, Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gray, Robert (May 10, 1755 - July,
				  1806)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Robert Gray was an American merchant sea captain known
				  for his achievements in two trading voyages to the northern Pacific coast of
				  North America between 1790 and 1793 which pioneered the American maritime fur
				  trade in that region. In the course of those voyages, Gray explored portions of
				  that coast and, in 1790, completed the first American circumnavigation of the
				  world. Perhaps his most remembered accomplishment from his explorations was his
				  arrival at and naming of the Columbia River in 1792 while on his second voyage.
				  His discovery gave the United States a strong claim to the Oregon Territory. He
				  was born in Tiverton, Rhode Island and may have served in the Continental Navy
				  during the American Revolutionary War. After his two famous voyages, he carried
				  on his career as a sea captain, mainly of merchantmen in the Atlantic. This
				  included what was meant to be a third voyage to the Northwest Coast, but was
				  ended by the capture of his ship by French privateers during the
				  Franco-American quasi-war. He died at sea in 1806, near Charleston, South
				  Carolina, possibly of yellow fever. Many geographic features along the Oregon
				  and Washington coasts bear his name.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrayR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of an ink sketch portrait
					 of Captain Robert Gray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrayR2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Robert Gray's ship chest</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Eaton, Portland, OR</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gray, Mary Augusta Dix (January 2, 1810 - December 8,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Augusta Dix was born at Ballston Spa, New York and married
				  William Henry Gray in February 1838 after his recent return from the
				  Spalding-Whitman Mission. The couple went to Oregon that same year, traveling
				  by steamer, stage coach and horseback; the journey took 129 days. She taught at
				  the Whitman Mission before the family moved to the Willamette Valley. In 1846
				  they assisted in forming the first Presbyterian Church in the Northwest. The
				  couple had nine children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrayWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William Henry Gray with wife
					 Mary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under William Henry Gray subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gray, William Henry (September 8, 1810 - November 14,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> William Henry Gray was a pioneer politician and historian of
				  the Oregon Country in the present-day U.S. state of Oregon. He came to the
				  Oregon Country as a lay member of the Spalding-Whitman missionary group.
				  Resigning his post in 1842, he went to the Salem area to work at the Oregon
				  Institute. Gray later became a farmer and a sawmill operator. In the spring of
				  1843, Gray's house was the site of the first "Wolf Meeting", as part of the
				  ongoing Champoeg Meetings. On May 2, 1843, the group voted on what would become
				  the basis of the Provisional Government of Oregon. Gray became a member of the
				  provisional legislature and of the committee that drafted the First Organic
				  Laws for the provisional government. He later wrote the book <emph>A History of
				  Oregon, 1792-1849 </emph>and was instrumental in the establishment of the
				  Oregon Pioneer Society. He married Mary Augusta Dix in 1838; the couple had
				  nine children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrayWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William Henry Gray with wife
					 Mary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Greeley, Horace (February 3, 1811 – November 29, 1872)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Greeley was an American newspaper editor and publisher
				  who was the founder and editor of the <emph>New-York Tribune</emph>. Long
				  active in politics, he served briefly as a congressman from New York, and was
				  the unsuccessful candidate of the new Liberal Republican Party in the 1872
				  presidential election against incumbent President Ulysses S. Grant, who won by
				  a landslide. Greeley was born to a poor family in Amherst, New Hampshire. He
				  was apprenticed to a printer in Vermont and went to New York City in 1831 to
				  seek his fortune. He wrote for or edited several publications and involved
				  himself in Whig Party politics, taking a significant part in William Henry
				  Harrison's successful 1840 presidential campaign. The following year, he
				  founded the <emph>Tribune</emph>, which became the highest-circulating
				  newspaper in the country through weekly editions sent by mail. Among many other
				  issues, he urged the settlement of the American West, which he saw as a land of
				  opportunity for the young and the unemployed. He popularized the slogan "Go
				  West, young man, and grow up with the country." He endlessly promoted utopian
				  reforms such as socialism, vegetarianism, agrarianism, feminism, and
				  temperance.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">15</container><container type="item">GreeleyH1</container><unittitle>Horace Greeley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Bogardus from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Greely, Adolphus Washington (March 27,
				  1844 – October 20, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adolphus Washington Greely was a US Army officer, polar
				  explorer, and the recipient of the Medal of Honor. He served in the Army from
				  1861 to 1908, serving in the Civil War, the Indian Campaign, and the Spanish
				  American War. In 1881, Greely led Lady Franklin Bay Expedition on the ship 
				  <emph>Proteus</emph>. The arctic expedition was commissioned by the US
				  government to collect astronomical and polar magnetic data and to search for a
				  missing ship, <emph>USS Jeannette</emph>. During his tenure in Alaska, he
				  constructed a telegraph system of nearly 4,000 miles, consisting of submarine
				  cables, land cables and wireless telegraphy, at the time of installation the
				  longest commercial system in the world. In 1888 he helped found the American
				  Geographical Society. In 1906, he served as military commander over the
				  emergency situation created by the San Francisco earthquake. He retired as a
				  Major General. On March 21, 1935, a special act of Congress awarded Greely the
				  Medal of Honor in recognition of his long and distinguished career. The 
				  <emph>USS General A. W. Greely</emph>, launched November 1944, and Fort Greely,
				  Alaska, were named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreelyAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Adolphus Washington
					 Greely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: My dear Meany: Here I am as first we
					 met. Yours, A. W. Greely, Major General.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Green, Axel Morton (July 27, 1873- March 5,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reverend Axel M. Green was born in Sweden and came to the U.S.
				  in 1892. In 1903, he graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter,
				  Minnesota with a degree in divinity. He was the pastor of the Emanuel Lutheran
				  Church of South Tacoma and in 1909, included Gloria Dei Lutheran Church in
				  Olympia in his pastorate. He served the congregation until June 1915 when he
				  became the superintendent at Emanuel Hospital in Portland, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreenAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Axel Morton
					 Green</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><corpname>Steffens-Colmer, Portland, OR</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Green, Donald R.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald R. Green was a 2nd lieutenant, probably during the
				  Spanish-American War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreenDR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donald R. Green in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Elite, San Francisco, CA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Green, Elmer Cole (January 25, 1880 - April 8,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer C. Green was the Editor-in-Chief of the <emph>Tyee
				  Yearbook</emph> for University of Washington. He graduated with a degree in
				  economics and later taught school in Seattle and Bellevue. He married Olga
				  Bucholtz in 1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreenEC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elmer C. Green</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Green, Floyd Evered (February 27, 1921 - October 1,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Floyd Evered Green served as a Navy Hospital Corpsman in the
				  Pacific theater during World War II. After the war, he worked in wholesale
				  magazine distribution before becoming a Methodist minister. He served in the
				  Washington towns of Vancouver, Kelso, Aberdeen and Kennewick as well as in the
				  Crown Hill neighborhood of Seattle. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG2</container><unittitle>Martin G. Johanson with Reverend Floyd Green, Father
					 Paul Luger, Judge Charles Stokes and Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Greene, Grace Wooster (May 2, 1833 - September 4,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grace Wooster Greene, the daughter of Jessie Wooster and Rhoda
				  Brockett, was born in Connecticut. She was commissioned into the Northwestern
				  Freedmen's Aid Commission (Chicago) during the Civil War. While in service, she
				  met a young Union Captain, Roger S Greene, whom she married in 1866. In 1870,
				  the couple settled in Washington Territory where Judge Greene practiced law.
				  She was supportive of the Women's Suffrage movement, prohibition, and was
				  active in Seattle community activities. The couple had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneGW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Grace Wooster Greene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph is damaged.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneRS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Roger Sherman Greene, Grace Wooster
					 Greene and extended family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lynn &amp; Cram, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Note on verso: presented to Prof. E. S. Meany by the family,
					 November 17, 1915.</p><p>Filed under Roger Sherman Greene subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Greene, Nathanael (August 7, 1742 – June 19,
				  1786)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Nathanael Greene was a major general of the Continental Army in
				  the American Revolutionary War. He emerged from the war with a reputation as
				  General George Washington's most talented and dependable officer, and is known
				  for his successful command in the southern theater of the war. Born into a
				  prosperous Quaker family in Warwick, Rhode Island, Greene became active in the
				  colonial opposition to British revenue policies in the early 1770s and helped
				  establish the Kentish Guards, a state militia. After the April 1775 Battles of
				  Lexington and Concord, the legislature of Rhode Island established an army and
				  appointed Greene to command it. Later in the year, Greene became a general in
				  the newly established Continental Army. Greene served under Washington in the
				  Boston campaign, the New York and New Jersey campaign, and the Philadelphia
				  campaign before being appointed quartermaster general of the Continental Army
				  in 1778. In October 1780, General Washington appointed Greene as the commander
				  of the Continental Army in the southern theater. After taking command, Greene
				  engaged in a successful campaign of guerrilla warfare against the numerically
				  superior force of General Charles Cornwallis. He inflicted major losses on
				  British forces at Battle of Guilford Court House, the Battle of Hobkirk's Hill,
				  and the Battle of Eutaw Springs, eroding British control of the American South.
				  Major fighting on land came to an end following the surrender of Cornwallis at
				  the Siege of Yorktown in October 1781, but Greene continued to serve in the
				  Continental Army until late 1783. After the war, he became a planter in the
				  South, but his rice crops mainly failed. He died in 1786 at his Mulberry Grove
				  Plantation in Chatham County, Georgia. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">15</container><container type="item">GreeneN1</container><unittitle>Nathanael Greene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1770 and 1780?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by John Trumbull from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Greene, Roger Sherman (December 14, 1840 – February, 17,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roger Sherman Greene was a lawyer, judge, politician and
				  military officer and the grandson of Roger Sherman, a signer of the Declaration
				  of Independence. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1859 and practiced law
				  after graduation. During the Civil War, he joined the Union Army, rising to
				  Captain of Company C, 51st U. S. Colored Infantry. After the war, he served as
				  judge advocate in Virginia and Louisiana. He practiced law in Chicago until
				  1870 when he was appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court of Washington
				  Territory. He became Chief Justice and served for 17 years. He also practiced
				  law in Seattle, was a trustee and secretary of the Seattle Trust Co. and vice
				  president of Rainier Power Railway Co. from 1890 to 1893. He was a Prohibition
				  Party candidate for US Congress from Washington in 1888 and the Prohibition
				  candidate for Governor of the State of Washington in 1892. He was a supporter
				  of the Women's Suffrage movement and worked to protect the Chinese in Seattle
				  during the anti-Chinese riots of 1886. He also framed the legislation for the
				  Lake Washington Ship Canal. He married Grace Wooster in 1866; the couple had
				  four children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneRS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Roger Sherman Greene in
					 military uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Summer 1864</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneRS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Judge Roger Sherman
					 Greene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Reproduction from book.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneRS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Roger Sherman Greene, Grace Wooster
					 Greene and extended family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lynn &amp; Cram, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Note on verso: presented to Prof. E. S. Meany by the family,
					 November 17, 1915.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Greene, Samuel (December 9, 1835 - December 28,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Reverend Samuel Greene was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts and
				  moved to Washington Territory in 1874. He worked as a missionary in Neah Bay,
				  White River and Puyallup before moving to Seattle. He founded several churches,
				  including the First Congregational Church of Kirkland. From May 15, 1887 until
				  1910, he served as the State Superintendent of the Congregational Sunday School
				  and Publishing Society for Washington and Northern Idaho. He married Sarah
				  Elizabeth Moore in 1861; their daughter was Hettie Louise Greene. After Sarah
				  died in 1905, he married Flora Theresa Bunnell in 1907. His brother was Judge
				  Roger Sherman Greene, and his grandfather was Roger Sherman, one of the signers
				  of the Declaration of Independence.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreeneS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Reverend Samuel Greene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Merrihew Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gregg, Eduma (February 8, 1901-May 18, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eduma Gregg was born in Colorado in 1901. Her father, Okey J.
				  Gregg, built the Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort in the Olympic National Park. He
				  joined Sound Construction and Engineering (later Peter Kiewit &amp; Sons),
				  which built the Northern Life Tower, the Washington Athletic Club, the
				  Washington State Capital Building and many other buildings. She married
				  Lawrence Buhtz in 1921. He was the assistant manager for Western Cooperage,
				  which had been started by his grandfather, Albert Buhtz, who had arrived in
				  Seattle in 1889. Western Cooperage was the first company in Seattle to make
				  barrels on an extensive scale. It later made boats, which Lawrence raced. The
				  couple moved to Freeland, WA in 1946. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GreggE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eduma Gregg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Gregor, George B. (1870 - September 3, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Geroge B Gregor was born in Wisconsin. He lived in North Bend,
				  Washington, where he worked as a railroad foreman. He married Janet Pyper in
				  1903. Gregor's last name is also spelled "Greger."</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Greive, Raymond Robert (October 6, 1919-July 1,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Raymond Robert (Bob) Grieve was an American politician who
				  served in the Washington State Senate from 1947 to 1975. He graduated from West
				  Seattle High School in 1938 and then studied commercial art at the Cornish
				  School, where he was a skilled illustrator and cartoonist. When the United
				  States entered World War II in 1941, he joined the Coast Guard. He illustrated
				  the Coast Guard’s publications from his station in Puget Sound. After the war
				  ended, he attended law school, first at Seattle University and later at the
				  University of Washington. He received his law degree in 1951 after attending
				  classes at the University of Idaho and then graduating from the University of
				  Miami. Grieve ran for the Washington State Senate in 1946 while he was still a
				  law student. During his first year in the Senate, Representative Albert F.
				  Canwell introduced a resolution to create the Joint Legislative Fact-finding
				  Committee on Un-American Activities in Washington, to investigate Communism in
				  the state government. Grieve was one of twelve senators to oppose the
				  resolution. Throughout his time in the legislature, he supported organized
				  labor and environmental issues, helping to create the Municipality of
				  Metropolitan Seattle in 1958 and the Washington State Department of Ecology. He
				  also focused on affordable housing and supported laws to limit air pollution.
				  In 1956, Grieve was chosen by the Democratic caucus to replace Albert D.
				  Rosellini as the Senate majority leader, a position that he would hold for the
				  next 12 years. He lost his seat in the 1974 election to Republican Nancy
				  Buffington. Grieve ran for a position on the King County Council for the 8th
				  district in 1975, challenging Democratic incumbent Ed Heavey. He was focused on
				  his district, working with Ron Sims to fill potholes, create bus stops and
				  obtain funding for the West Seattle Bridge. He was re-elected twice, but in the
				  1987 Democratic primary, he lost to Greg Nickels. Following his retirement from
				  politics, Grieve received a Ph.D. in political science from Claremont Graduate
				  University in 1991. He continued his law practice until 2002. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grenville, William Wyndham (October 25, 1759 - January
				  12, 1834)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville, was a British
				  Whig statesman who entered the House of Commons in 1782. He soon became a close
				  ally of the Prime Minister, his cousin William Pitt the Younger, and served in
				  the government as Paymaster of the Forces from 1784 to 1789. In 1789 he served
				  briefly as Speaker of the House of Commons before he entered the cabinet as
				  Home Secretary. He became Leader of the House of Lords when he was raised to
				  the peerage the next year as Baron Grenville. In 1791, he became Foreign
				  Secretary, serving in that position during the French Revolution and the
				  Napoleonic Wars. He served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1806 to
				  1807; during his term as Prime Minister, slave trade was abolished.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrenvilleWW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Wyndham Grenville</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1800 and 1809?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Walker &amp; Cockerell, London</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting by John Hoppner in the National
					 Portrait Gallery in London.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Grey, Lady Jane (c. 1537 – 12 February 1554)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lady Jane Grey, later known as Lady Jane Dudley after her
				  marriage, and as the "Nine Days' Queen", was an English noblewoman who claimed
				  the throne of England and Ireland from 10 July until 19 July 1553. Jane was the
				  great granddaughter of Henry VII through his younger daughter Mary, and was a
				  first cousin once removed of Edward VI. In May 1553, she married Lord Guildford
				  Dudley, a younger son of Edward's chief minister John Dudley, Duke of
				  Northumberland. In June 1553, Edward VI wrote his will, nominating Jane and her
				  male heirs as successors to the Crown, in part because his half-sister Mary was
				  Catholic, while Jane was a committed Protestant and would support the reformed
				  Church of England, whose foundation Edward laid. The will removed his
				  half-sisters, Mary and Elizabeth, from the line of succession on account of
				  their illegitimacy, subverting their claims under the Third Succession Act.
				  After Edward's death, Jane was proclaimed queen on July 10, 1553, and awaited
				  coronation in the Tower of London. Support for Mary grew quickly, and most of
				  Jane's supporters abandoned her. The Privy Council of England suddenly changed
				  sides, and proclaimed Mary as queen on July 19, 1553, deposing Jane. Her
				  primary supporter, her father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland, was accused
				  of treason, and executed less than a month later. Jane was held prisoner in the
				  Tower, and was convicted of high treason in November 1553. Mary initially
				  spared her life; however, Jane soon became viewed as a threat to the Crown when
				  her father, Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, became involved with Wyatt's
				  rebellion against Queen Mary's intention to marry Philip II of Spain. Jane and
				  her husband were executed on February 12, 1554.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">15</container><container type="item">GreyLJ1</container><unittitle>Lady Jane Grey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Engraving by R. Graves after a portrait by Hans Holbein</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Griffin, Frank (August 1844 - March 29,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Griffin came to Washington Territory in 1869 and built
				  many of the early Puget Sound steamers, including the first stern-wheeler on
				  the Yukon that traveled from St. Michael to Dawson City. He was born in Ireland
				  in 1845, arriving in New Orleans in 1867. He worked on river boats between St.
				  Louis and Fort Benton, Montana, then turned to gold mining in Henderson Gulch,
				  Montana. Griffin then headed west to Snoqualmie where he worked as a carpenter
				  and boat builder. He entered government employment when he was employed at the
				  opening of the Bremerton Navy Yard. His son, John Griffin, was the president of
				  the Griffin-Murphy Business College. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffinF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank Griffin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Griffin, John Smith (November 23, 1807 - February 5,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Smith Griffin was a minister in the Congregational Church
				  who was sent to Oregon to work with Native Americans. He arrived in Oregon
				  Territory in 1839, crossing the plains on horseback with his new wife, Desire
				  C. Smith. The couple initially stayed at Lapwai, where Griffin’s
				  brother-in-law, Henry H. Spaulding, had a mission. They then moved to Hudson’s
				  Bay Company’s Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River where Griffin tutored
				  children and served as chaplain. In 1841, the couple settled on the Tualatin
				  Plains in what is now Washington County, Oregon, where he established the first
				  church in the area. In 1843, he attended the meetings at Champoeg on the
				  Willamette River and voted in favor of the formation of a temporary government
				  which continued until the government of the Oregon Territory was formed in
				  1849. Griffin took possession of the Oregon Mission Press and began printing 
				  <emph render="italic">The Oregon American and Evangelical Unionist</emph> in
				  1848. Griffin invested in the Portland &amp; Valley Plank Road Company in 1851
				  and began building a road from Portland to the Tualatin Valley. After Desire’s
				  death in 1884, he married Lina Harvey Kenyon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffinJS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Smith Griffin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Austin Edwards (December 25, 1863 - July 2,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Austin Edwards Griffiths was a Superior Court judge in Seattle.
				  He was born in Worcester, England and raised by foster parents who moved to
				  Nebraska in 1872. Griffiths graduated from the University of Michigan and
				  arrived in Washington Territory in 1889. He practiced law in Grays Harbor
				  County before moving to Seattle in 1897. He was an active public servant
				  throughout his career. He served on the Seattle City Council from 1901 to 1913
				  and 1934 to 1937, ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 1913, was appointed chief of
				  police in 1914, served as a superior court judge (1921 – 1929) and was elected
				  twice to the Seattle School Board (1929 - 1930 and 1931 - 1934). Grtiffiths
				  founded the Seattle Playground Association in 1908 and became known as the
				  "Father of Seattle Playgrounds" for his dedicated effort to establish
				  recreational space throughout Seattle; his work helped popularize the
				  playground movement nationwide. He held leadership positions in the Seattle
				  Chamber of Commerce, Young Men's Christian Association, the Seattle Charity
				  Organization Society, and the Cascade Tunnel Association. An important voice in
				  Progressive Republican affairs in Washington State, he supported Theodore
				  Roosevelt's Bull Moose campaign in 1912 and helped lobby for the United States'
				  participation in the League of Nations. In later life, Griffiths was a prolific
				  writer and commentator on national and international affairs, writing a column
				  in the <emph render="italic">Washington Weekly Review</emph> and publishing
				  articles on police and reform.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE1</container><unittitle>Austin Edwards Griffiths</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE2</container><unittitle>Austin Edwards Griffiths</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE3</container><unittitle>Photocopy of authored work by Austin Edwards Griffiths
					 <emph render="italic">George Washington: World Court; League of Nations; the
					 Farewell Address in the Light of Its Historic Setting and Present International
					 Conditions</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE4</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, David Burke (1935? - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Burke Griffiths, the son of Burke Montgomery Griffiths and
				  Gertrude Vercoe Griffiths, received his PhD in history from the University of
				  Washington in 1967. He published several books, including<emph>Thinking and
				  Judging, Home and Exile.</emph></p></bioghist><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
				  their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
				  Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
				  Maude.</p><p>Filed under Austin Edwards Griffiths subseries.</p></note></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Gertrude Vercoe (September 5, 1909 - June 3,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Vercoe, the daughter of William and Edith (Thurman)
				  Vercoe, was born in Bellingham, Washington and graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1931 with a degree in Liberal Arts. She married Burke Montegomery
				  Griffiths in 1932. Burke Griffiths, the son of Austin E. and Margaret
				  Griffiths, graduated from the University of Washington where he was a member of
				  Coach Gil Dobie's championship football teams for three years. After
				  graduation, he was a real estate broker. Burke andf Gertrude Giffiths had two
				  children, David and Miriam. Gertrude later married Kenneth Harold Johnson. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE3</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p><p>Filed under Austin Edwards Griffiths subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Margaret Ella Montgomery (September 6, 1865 -
				  May 13, 1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Ella Montgomery married Austin Edwards Griffiths in
				  1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE3</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p><p>Filed under Austin Edwards Griffiths subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Maude D. Lyons (November 5, 1887 - March 8,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude D. Lyons was born in Minnesota. She married Thomas E.
				  Griffiths in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE4</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Miriam Ruth (1934? - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Miriam Ruth Griffiths, the daughter of Burke Montgomery
				  Griffiths and Gertrude Vercoe Griffiths, graduated from Washington State
				  College (now Washington State University) in 1956 with a degree in nursing. She
				  married Roderick Faubion the same year.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE4</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Ragna Mohn (May 20, 1894 - March 1,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ragna Mohn, the daughter of Jacob and Anna (Ness) Mohn, was born
				  in Bothell, Washington. She married Austin Edward "Ted" Griffiths in 1919 and
				  was active in club work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE4</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Griffiths, Thomas Erskine (July 15, 1890 - January 7,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Erskine Griffiths, the son of Austin E. and Ella
				  Griffiths, was born in Grays Harbor, Washington. He was a superintendent at
				  Stimson Lumber Company. Griffiths married Maude Lyons in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GriffithsAE4</container><unittitle>Group portrait of Austin Edwards Griffiths and family
					 on his 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. E. Griffiths and Mrs. A. E. Griffiths on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary. Tom at far right with wife, Maude. Gertrude,
					 Burke's wife at far left, with David and Miriam. Ragna, Ted's wife, next to
					 Maude.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grimm, Daniel K. (April 5 1949- )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel K. Grimm was born in Aberdeen, Washington and attended
				  the University of Washington (1969), Uppsala University in Sweden (1971) and
				  received his B.A. in English Literature from Columbia University in 1972. He
				  was a Representative in the Washington State House of Representatives
				  (1977-1989) and Washington State Treasurer (1989-1997) During his time in the
				  House of Representatives, he served as the Chairman House Ways &amp; Means
				  Committee (1983-1987), on the State Economic &amp; Revenue Forecast Council
				  (1983-1987), as a member of the House Democratic Caucus (1981-1983), as a
				  member of the House Democratic Campaign Committee (1981-1983), and on the House
				  Higher Education Committee(1978-1981). He was later an Investor Relations
				  Director at Doughty Hanson &amp; Company. He has also served as the President
				  of the Board of Trustees for the Washington State Historical Society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrimmDK1</container><unittitle>Daniel K. Grimm</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1990 and 1999?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grimshaw, Albert Austin (October 26, 1905 - January 14,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Austin Grimshaw was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts and
				  received an engineering degree from Harvard in 1927. This degree was followed
				  by masters (1934) and doctorate (1938) degrees in Business Administration, both
				  from Harvard. He was employed at the War Production Board in Washington, D.C.
				  during World War II and subsequently taught at the University of Illinois. In
				  1949, he moved to the University of Washington, where he was appointed Dean of
				  the Business School. He held that position until 1963, when he gave up the
				  deanship and returned to teaching. He left the University in 1964. He was
				  president of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business and a
				  member of the Board of Visitors at Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base in
				  Alabama. He used his middle name during his professional career.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrimshawAA1</container><unittitle>Austin Grimshaw leaning against a window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1955 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrimshawAA2</container><unittitle>Austin Grimshaw standing behind a model
					 airplane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1955 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Grondal, Bror Leonard (May 15, 1889 -
				  March 12, 1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bror Leonard Grondal was born in Round Rock, Texas and was
				  raised in the Swedish community of Lindsborg, Kansas. After graduating from
				  Bethany College in 1908, he came to the University of Washington to pursue his
				  graduate studies. He received his graduate degrees and became a faculty member.
				  A professor of forestry at the UW from 1913-1959, he was one of the founders of
				  the modern wood products research field. He was an early associate of the UW
				  College of Forestry (later called the College of Forest Resources), founded the
				  National Forest Products Research Society, and served as the director of the
				  Forest Products laboratory at the University of Washington. His pioneering work
				  in the forest products industry led to important innovation and expansion in
				  many areas, including the plywood industry, the red shingle industry, wood
				  pulp, wood chips, and programs to improve methods for kiln-drying lumber. This
				  was a crucial factor in the use of hemlock, which was used in airplane
				  construction during World War II. During World War II, he helped develop
				  methods and machines for separating cork content from the bark of Douglas fir,
				  thereby averting a cork shortage early in the war. He won a prestigious
				  membership in the Swedish Society of Foresters. Grondal married Florence
				  Armstrong in 1912. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrondalBL1</container><unittitle>Bror Leonard Grondal in testing lab with George H.
					 Schroeder, chief of forestry for Crown Zellerbach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, UW, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grondal, Florence Armstrong (October 8, 1899 - April 30,
				  1977) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Florence Armstrong was born in New York, graduated from
				  Broadway High School in Seattle, and attended the University of Washington. She
				  was an astronomer, photographer and author who wrote articles for the Puget
				  Sound Academy of Science. She originated the Pacific Northwest Authors Book
				  Shelf at the Seattle Public Library and was chair of the Pacific Northwest Book
				  Fair. In 1945, she made a nationwide broadcast from a plane of a solar eclipse
				  and four years later obtained the first photograph made of the spectrum of the
				  green flash from the setting sun. In 1952, she was appointed assistant director
				  for Western Washington of the American Meteor Society. She was also president
				  of the Seattle and state branches of the National League of American Pen Women
				  and president of the Pacific Northwest Academy of Art. She wrote several books,
				  including a popular astronomy book, <emph render="italic">The Music of the
				  Spheres</emph>. She married Bror Grondal in 1912; they had two children. Her
				  papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrondalFA1</container><unittitle> Florence Armstrong Grondal</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Groniger, Mary Helen</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grose, William (August 10, 1835 - July 27,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Grose (also spelled Gross) was an African-American
				  pioneer of Seattle. He was born in Washington D.C. and joined the U. S. Navy in
				  1850, where he was a member of the expedition in search of Sir John Franklin.
				  He received his discharge in San Francisco and took part in the gold rush in
				  California and later on the Fraser River in Canada. In 1859, he arrived in
				  Seattle where he owned a hotel and restaurant on Yesler Way called “Our House.”
				  It was popular with Seattle’s largely white population and also provide lodging
				  for many of Seattle's earliest African-American residents. After the hotel
				  burned in the Great Seattle Fire in 1889, he moved his home to land he owned
				  along East Madison Street; his twelve acre tract became the hub of the
				  African-American community. He was a member of the Washington Pioneers
				  Association, a trustee of the First A.M.E Church, and a Mason. His son, George,
				  was the first African-American graduate of the UW. A park on Capitol Hill in
				  Seattle is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GroseW1</container><unittitle>William Grose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grover, Cuvier (July 24, 1828 – June 6,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>General Cuvier Grover was a career officer in the United States
				  Army and a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. An 1850
				  graduate of the United States Military Academy, he was stationed in the western
				  frontier before being transferred to help in defense preparations of
				  Washington, D.C., at the outbreak of the Civil War. He was appointed brigadier
				  general of volunteers in April 1862, but with a date of rank of April 14, 1861,
				  the day after the evacuation of Fort Sumter, making him one of the more senior
				  generals in the Army. He served as a brigade commander in the III Corps of the
				  Army of the Potomac, was brevetted lieutenant colonel in the regular army, and
				  won promotion to full colonel for gallantry at the Battle of Seven Pines. He
				  later led a bayonet charge against Confederate forces of Stonewall Jackson at
				  the Second Battle of Bull Run and commanded a division during the capture of
				  Baton Rouge and the Siege of Port Hudson. Before the war's end, he was
				  brevetted to major general in the regular army, before returning to frontier
				  and garrison duty with the U.S. Cavalry. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GroverC1</container><unittitle>General Cuvier Grover</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grover, La Fayette (November 29, 1823 – May 10,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>La Fayette Grover was a Democratic politician and lawyer from
				  the US state of Oregon. He was born in Bethel, Maine, and was educated at
				  Bethel's Gould Academy and Brunswick's Bowdoin College. He studied law and
				  earned entry into the bar association in Philadelphia in 1850. He moved to
				  Oregon in 1851 and began his law practice in Salem. He was the fourth Governor
				  of Oregon (1870-1877), represented Oregon in the United States House of
				  Representatives (1859, when Oregon gained statehood), and served one term in
				  the United States Senate (1877-1883). In 1883, he resumed his law practice,
				  declining to run for re-election. His brother was General Cuvier Grover.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GroverLF1</container><unittitle>La Fayette Grover</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Grumbine, Lucy Coates (December 1, 1878 - December 11,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucy Coates Grumbine was the daughter of Samuel Grumbine, a
				  lawyer, and Rebecca Coats Grumbine. She was born in Titusville, Pennsylvania
				  and graduated from Smith College in 1901. She later worked at the Drexel
				  Institute Library.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrumbineLC1</container><unittitle>Lucy Coates Grumbine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bates, Titusville, PA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guberlet, Muriel Lewin (June 5, 1889 - November 24,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Muriel Lewin Guberlet was an English professor at the UW for
				  over sixteen years and wrote several non-fiction books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Animals of the Seashore,</emph><emph render="italic">The
				  Windows To His World: The Story Of Trevor Kincaid,</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">Seaweeds at Ebb Tide.</emph>Her husband, John Guberlet, a
				  zoologist and a member of the UW Oceanography Department, worked at Friday
				  Harbor Labs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GuberletML1</container><unittitle>Muriel Lewin Guberlet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gunther, Erna (November 9, 1896 - August 25, 1982
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erna Gunther was a student of the anthropologist, Franz Boas and
				  received her MA in anthropology from Columbia University in 1920. In 1921, she
				  moved with her husband, Leslie Spier, to the University of Washington. She was
				  part of the newly formed anthropology program at the University of Washington
				  in the 1920s, along with Spier and Melville Jacobs. She became the director of
				  the Washington State Museum in 1930 and in 1966 moved to the University of
				  Alaska Fairbanks. An American Indian specialist, her research focused on the
				  Salish and Makah peoples of western Washington State, with publications on
				  ethnobotany, ethnohistory, and general ethnology.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GuntherE1</container><unittitle>Erna Gunther and unidentified man with Northwest
					 Indian carvings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guggenheim, Isaac (June 7, 1854 - October 10,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Guggenheim, known as the American copper king, was the
				  director of the Mexican Union Railroad, the American Smelting and Refining
				  Company, the American Smelter Securities Company, and the Yukon Gold Company.
				  He was the son of Meyer Guggenheim and the brother of Solomon Guggenheim.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GuggenheimI1</container><unittitle>Isaac Guggenheim</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guggenheim, Meyer Robert (May 17, 1885 – November 16,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Meyer Robert Guggenheim was an American diplomat and a member of
				  the prominent Guggenheim family. Born in New York City, he was the son of
				  Daniel Guggenheim, brother of Harry Frank Guggenheim, and nephew of Simon
				  Guggenheim. He attended Columbia College with the class of 1907, but left
				  before graduation. In 1909 he donated the trophy and prize money for the Ocean
				  to Ocean Automobile Endurance Contest that coincided with the
				  Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition. He served with the United States Army during
				  World War I. Guggenheim was appointed United States Ambassador to Portugal,
				  serving between 1953 and 1954.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GugenheimMR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">M. Robert Guggenheim standing in
					 front of a large car, possibly a 1909 Allen-Kingston, on the grounds of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 28, 1909</unitdate><note><p>A different version of the photograph appeared on page 22 of
						<emph>The Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> on February 28, 1909. </p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Guiberson, Dorothy (March 22, 1918 -
				  May 26, 2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dorothy Guiberson was on the executive board of the
				  Communication Workers of America, Local 910, in the 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guinean, Thomas (November 23, 1836 - November 23,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Guinean was born in Quebec and orphaned at an early age.
				  In 1852, he went to New York and took passage on the steamer California to
				  California. He spent time in San Francisco and later Sacramento, where he
				  worked in a restaurant. In 1855 Guinean sought a new location at Coloma in El
				  Dorado County where he leased the American Hotel. In 1858, he returned to
				  Sacramento and opened the Bank Exchange Oyster Saloon and Chop House and the
				  Crescent City Hotel, which he sold in 1859. He opened the Arcade Hotel, which
				  he ran until 1865, when he tore down the original frame building and erected a
				  new Arcade Hotel. The hotel became the headquarters of the state Supreme Court
				  and bar for nineteen years . In 1881 he arrived in Portland, Oregon, buying the
				  St. Charles Hotel and leasing the Esmond Hotel. He also operated the
				  Rainier-Grand Hotel in Seattle. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GuineanT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Guinean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gulick, Grover C. (February 22, 1916 - October 25,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grover C. “Bill” Gulick was a nationally known western author,
				  playwright and historian. He graduated from Classen High School in Oklahoma
				  City, OK and attended the University of Oklahoma. He moved to New York City
				  where he worked as a writer for the <emph render="italic">Saturday Evening
				  Post</emph>. He later moved to Walla Walla, WA. He had 20 novels published,
				  three of which were made into movies. His other works included non-fiction
				  books, historical dramas, movie scripts, an autobiography, and hundreds of
				  articles &amp; stories. Movies made from his novels include 
				  <emph render="italic">The Hallelujah Trail</emph> and <emph render="italic">Bend in the River</emph>. According to his autobiography, his
				  grandmother wanted him to be named after his father, Grover Cleveland Gulick;
				  however, his mother resisted, and they eventually compromised with Grover C.
				  (only) Gulick. His mother told him he could choose his own middle name. He
				  later acquired the nickname 'Bill.' </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GulickGC1</container><unittitle>Grover C. Gulick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">DeBunce, Walla Walla WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gunn, Arthur (March 21, 1866 - May 23, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Gunn was born in Kentucky and graduated from Park
				  College, Kansas City, MO in 1888. He worked on newspapers while attending
				  college, serving two years as city editor of a Joliet newspaper. Soon after
				  graduation, he moved to Walla Walla, WA and then to Kelso, WA where he launched
				  the <emph render="italic">Kelso Courier</emph>. After two years, he joined the
				  banking house of J. J. Browne of Spokane and was soon promoted to the
				  management of the Columbia Valley Bank of Wenatchee. He became the local
				  manager of the Wenatchee Development Company and also the local agent of James
				  J. Hill. He was a member of the Columbia River Bridge Committee, which built
				  the first bridge spanning the Columbia River. He organized the Wenatchee Water
				  Power Company, helped promote the Farmers Telephone Company, and worked with
				  the Commercial Club Organization to complete the Commercial Club Building.
				  During 1897-98, he associate editor of the <emph render="italic">Wenatchee
				  Advance</emph>. In 1905, in a special election, he was chosen State Senator to
				  fill a vacancy caused by the death of J. P. Sharp of Ellensburg. He was killed
				  in an automobile accident in 1917. At the time of his death, he was president
				  of the Wenatchee Electric Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GunnA1</container><unittitle>Arthur Gunn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 13, 1906</unitdate><note><p>Photograph copy from the<emph>Wenatchee Republic</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gunn, Elisha Treat (January 4, 1833 - August 23,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elisha Treat Gunn was born in Milford, CT. He moved to
				  California in 1849 and then to Portland, Oregon Territory in 1851 where he
				  worked as a compositor on the <emph render="italic">Oregonian</emph>. From
				  there, he moved to Olympia, WA where he was a deputy collector for the IRS.
				  Gunn was elected Washington State Treasurer in 1872. In 1854, he started the 
				  <emph render="italic">Puget Sound Courier</emph>, a newspaper in Steilacoom. He
				  began publishing the <emph render="italic">Olympia Transcript</emph> in 1867
				  and continued working there until his death in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GunnET1</container><unittitle>Elisha Treat Gunn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1885?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guptill, Thomas Henry (June 26, 1868 - January 18,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Henry Guptill was born at North Cutler, Maine. His father
				  was a sea captain and Civil War Veteran who came to the Puget Sound area in the
				  1880s. The family first lived at Port Gamble where Captain Guptill commanded
				  sailing ships. In 1887, the family took up a homestead at Dry Creek. Thomas
				  first worked at a saw mill and later as a clerk in the mill company’s store. He
				  moved to Seattle in 1892 where he worked as a bookkeeper while studying art
				  with the Olympic Sketch Club. He joined the studio of Edward A. Curtis and
				  worked as a photo engraver. 1n 1897, he moved to San Francisco to study at the
				  Mark Hopkins Institute of Art; he worked as an engraver. Guptill moved back to
				  Seattle in 1916 where he continued work as an engraver, artist and poet. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GuptillTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas Henry Guptill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph published in the July 18, 1896 issue of 
					 <emph>Argus.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guthrie, Edwin Ray (January 9, 1886 - April 23,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Ray Guthrie was born in Lincoln, Nebraska. He received his
				  B.A. and M.A. from the University of Nebraska, and his PhD in psychology from
				  the University of Pennsylvania in 1912. He joined the faculty of the UW in
				  1914. He was appointed dean of the graduate school in 1943, succeeding
				  Frederick Padelford, and was named executive office of academic personnel in
				  1947. He was assistant president during Dr. Raymond Allen’s term as president.
				  Guthrie retired in 1952 and continued teaching as an emeritus professor until
				  1956. During World War I, he served as a second lieutenant; during World War
				  II, he was chief consulting psychologist for the War Department Psychological
				  Warfare Branch, studying propaganda and leadership. He was honored at the 1952
				  UW commencement for his long service to the UW. The Guthrie Building is named
				  in his honor, and his papers are held in UW Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GuthrieER1</container><unittitle>Edwin Guthrie seated at desk in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GuthrieER2</container><unittitle>Edwin Guthrie seated at desk in office, holding a
					 telephone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Guye, Elizabeth (Eliza) Warland Dunn Plimpton (October
				  10, 1826 - March 11, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eliza Warland Dunn was born in Maine. She married Josiah
				  Plimpton in 1847; he was killed in action in 1864 during the Second Battle of
				  Deep Bottom in Virginia. She came west on the Union Pacific Railroad to San
				  Francisco in 1870 and then traveled to Seattle by boat. In 1872, she married
				  France M. Guye, a Seattle pioneer who had made his fortune in lumber and real
				  estate. She was involved in the founding of the first hospital in Seattle and
				  was interested in mineralogy and history. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GuyeEWDP1</container><unittitle>Eliza Guye</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><note><p>Autographed on front</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gwinn, Charles Alexander (November 4, 1862 - April 23,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Alexander Gwinn was born in Curlsville, PA. He married
				  Annie McClay in Missoula, Montana in 1890. The couple settled in Garfield,
				  Washington where Gwinn was appointed postmaster in 1897. He was editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Garfield Enterprise</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GwinnCA1</container><unittitle>Charles Alexander Gwinn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1889</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Haynes Studio, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>In the 1880s, F. Jay Haynes outfitted a Palace train car into
					 a photo studio, which he used to photograph towns from Puget Sound to Chicago.
					 In 1889, Haynes moved his studio to St. Paul, Minnesota.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Gwydir, Rickard Daniel (November 7, 1844–November 7,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rickard D. Gwydir was born in Calcutta, India to Richard McKenna
				  Gwydir, a soldier in the British Army, and Jane Prendible Gwydir. His father
				  died of cholera when he was two, and his mother took him to the England and
				  later to New York City before settling in Kentucky in the 1850s. In 1861,
				  Gwydir enlisted in the Confederate States Army, spying and scouting for John H.
				  Morgan’s raiders. After the Civil War, he worked for his stepfather in the pork
				  packing and distillation business before beginning his career in public
				  service. He served as the Superintendent of Public Works in Covington, Kentucky
				  as well working as city auditor and as a gauger for the Internal Revenue
				  Service. In 1886, he was appointed Indian agent for the Colville Indian
				  Reservation in Northeast Washington. In 1889, he prospected gold and mined in
				  the Inland Empire of the state, and he served as Chinese Inspector for the U.
				  S. Treasury from 1893 to 1898. He settled in Spokane in 1901 where he continued
				  to be active in public service. Gwydir left a memoir of his frontier
				  experiences where he recorded the stories of both settlers and Native
				  Americans. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">GwydirRD1</container><unittitle>Rickard, Daniel Gwydir</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Elite Studio, Spokane WA</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>H</unittitle></did><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hackenschmidt, Georg (August 1, 1877 – February 19,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Georg Karl Julius Hackenschmidt was an early 20th-century
				  strongman, professional wrestler, author, and sports philosopher who is
				  recognized as professional wrestling's first world heavyweight champion.
				  Hackenschmidt launched his professional career in Reval in the Governorate of
				  Estonia, at the time when contests were largely legitimate, and lived most of
				  his life in London, England, where he gained the nickname of "The Russian
				  Lion". He was known for his impressive strength, fitness and flexibility, and
				  later in life, wrote many books on physical culture, training and
				  philosophy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF3</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller with Jakob Koch, Georg Hackenschmidt
					 and Americus (Gus Schoenlein)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman.
						Filed under Benjamin Franklin Roller subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF4</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller wrestling Georg
					 Hackenschmidt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman.</p><p>Filed under Benjamin Franklin Roller subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hadley, Henry Kimball (December 20, 1871 – September 6,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Henry Kimball Hadley, an American composer and conductor, was
				  born in Somerville, Massachusetts. He studied in Boston and Vienna and in 1904
				  went to Germany, where in 1909 he conducted his one-act opera 
				  <emph render="italic">Safié</emph>. He conducted the Seattle Symphony Orchestra
				  (1909–11), the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra (1911–15), and the Manhattan
				  Symphony Orchestra (1929–32) and was associate conductor of the New York
				  Philharmonic Orchestra (1920–27). Between 1917 and 1920 three of Hadley's
				  operas received premieres, and he conducted some of the performances, becoming
				  the first American composer to conduct his own opera at the Met. In 1933, he
				  founded the National Association for American Composers and Conductors, and was
				  instrumental in establishing the Berkshire Music Festival at Tanglewood,
				  Massachusetts in 1934. He was also a pioneer in film music, conducting the New
				  York Philharmonic for soundtracks of several films. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HadleyHK1</container><unittitle>Henry Kimball Hadley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph on the cover of the January 28, 1911
					 edition of<emph render="italic">The Town Crier</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hadley, Hiram Elwood (January 16, 1854 - January 13,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Elwood Hadley was born in Indiana and graduated from Union
				  College of Law in 1877. He practiced law in Indiana until 1889 when he moved to
				  Bellingham, Washington. In 1891, he was elected city attorney, and in 1896,
				  became a judge in Whatcom County Superior Court. He was appointed to the
				  Washington State Supreme Court in 1901. During his second term, Hadley became
				  the Chief Justice. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HadleyHE1</container><unittitle>Hiram Elwood Hadley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hadlock, Samuel (July 20, 1829 - September 5,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Hadlock, for whom Port Hadlock is named, came west on a
				  wagon train to The Dalles, Oregon, in September, 1852. He operated one of the
				  first steamboats on the Columbia. In 1868, he and five others built the Tacoma
				  Mill in Washington. In 1870, Hadlock sold his interest in the mill and
				  purchased the present site of Port Hadlock. He began to develop his new town
				  and other interests that included a profitable gravel pit between Hadlock and
				  Port Townsend, a lumber mill, and real estate. The lumber mill, the largest
				  single mill in existence at the time, turning out an average of 150,000 board
				  feet of lumber a day, and employed several hundred men. Lumber was shipped to
				  San Francisco, Hawaii and Australia. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HadlockS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Hadlock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph clipping from <emph>History of the Pacific
						Northwest: Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Haeckel, Ernst (February 16, 1834 –
				  August 9, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernst Haeckel was a German biologist, naturalist, philosopher,
				  physician, professor, and artist who discovered, described and named thousands
				  of new species, mapped a genealogical tree relating all life forms, and coined
				  many terms in biology, including anthropogeny, ecology, phylum, phylogeny, stem
				  cell, and Protista. Haeckel promoted and popularized Charles Darwin's work in
				  Germany and developed the influential but no longer widely held recapitulation
				  theory, claiming that an individual organism's biological development, or
				  ontogeny, parallels and summarizes its species' evolutionary development, or
				  phylogeny. He was awarded the title of Excellency by Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1907,
				  and the Linnean Society of London's prestigious Darwin-Wallace Medal in 1908.
				  In the United States, Mount Haeckel in the Eastern Sierra Nevada is named in
				  his honor, as is another Mount Haeckel in New Zealand. The asteroid 12323
				  Haeckel is also named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HaeckelE1</container><unittitle>Ernst Haeckel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of image of Haeckel used in frontispiece of his book 
					 <emph render="italic">Naturliche Schopfungs-Geschichte</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hafermehl, Charles Louis (September 4, 1916 - March 20,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Louis Hafermehl was born in Hillsboro, Kansas and
				  studied art at Bethany College, Kansas. He also studied at the Chicago Art
				  Institute and at the Art Students League in New York. While teaching art at
				  Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, he acquired an MFA degree
				  in painting. He taught art for more than 30 years at both Kansas State
				  University and the University of Washington retiring from the UW in the early
				  1980s. He returned to Kansas to live in Lindsborg. His paintings have been
				  exhibited widely in the United States. A partial list of institutes having
				  exhibited his work include: the Detroit Institute of Art, Denver Art Museum,
				  the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, San Francisco Art Institute and the
				  Sandzen Memorial Gallery in Lindsborg, KS.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HafermehlCL1</container><unittitle>Charles Louis Hafermehl in class with
					 students</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hagan, Mary Rex Barrett (February 2, 1865 - May 25,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Rex Barrett was born in Steubenville, Ohio and married
				  Calvin H. Hagen in 1892. She was a member of the Woman's Century Club and was a
				  poet and author. She wrote <emph render="italic">Pictures from Puget
				  Sound</emph> which was published in 1896.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HaganMRB1</container><unittitle>Mary Rex Barrett Hagan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hagedorn, Jessica Tarahata (May 22, 1949 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jessica Tarahata Hagedorn was born in Manila. She moved to San
				  Francisco in 1963, and received her education at the American Conservatory
				  Theater training program. She moved to New York in 1978 to continue her studies
				  of playwriting and music, Joseph Papp produced her first play 
				  <emph render="italic">Mango Tango</emph> in 1978. Her other productions include
				  <emph render="italic">Tenement Lover</emph>, <emph render="italic">Holy Food
				  </emph>and <emph render="italic">Teenytown</emph> . Her mixed media style often
				  incorporates song, poetry, images, and spoken dialogue. In 1985, 1986, and
				  1988, she received MacDowell Colony fellowships, which helped enable her to
				  write the novel <emph render="italic">Dogeaters</emph>, which illuminates many
				  different aspects of Filipino experience, focusing on the influence of America
				  through radio, television, and movie theaters. The novel earned a 1990 National
				  Book Award nomination and an American Book Award. In 1998 La Jolla Playhouse
				  produced a stage adaptation. Other honors and prizes include a Lucille Lortel
				  Playwrights’ Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fiction Fellowship, a Kesselring Prize
				  Honorable Mention for Dogeaters, an NEA-TCG Playwriting Residency Fellowship,
				  as well as fellowships from the Sundance Playwrights’ Lab and the Sundance
				  Screenwriters’ Lab. From 1975-85, Hagedorn was the leader of a band called The
				  Gangster Choir.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HaganJT1</container><unittitle>Jessica Tarahata Hagedorn at microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hagemeyer, Johanna Charlotte Eleanore Meier (August 10,
				  1837 - November 15, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Johanna Charlotte Eleanore Meier, the daughter of August Meier
				  and Ernestine Kristner Meier, was born in Hanover, Germany. She married August
				  Hagemeyer in Germany, and the couple came to the U.S. in 1870. They lived in
				  Chicago before settling in Olympia, WA. August, a boot and shoemaker, died in
				  1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HagemeyerJCEM1</container><unittitle>Johanna Hagemeyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 2, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor J. Farrar, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: She said her name was spelled Hagemeyer, but
					 city directory has "Hagemier." It may be either as she speaks with a heavy
					 German accent.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haggett, Arthur Sewell (May 8, 1870 - June 30,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Sewell Haggett was born in Newcastle, Maine. He received
				  his B.A. from Bowdoin College in 1893 and his PhD from Johns Hopkins University
				  in 1897. He did post-graduate studies at the University of Berlin and the
				  American University in Athens before joining the University of Washington in
				  1902. He taught Greek and Latin, and in 1911, was named Dean of the College of
				  Liberal Arts. He married Winifred Ruby Sunderlin in 1902; she was Dean of Women
				  for the UW. Haggett Hall, a residence hall on the UW campus, is named for the
				  couple.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HaggettAS1</container><unittitle>Arthur Sewell Haggett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1917?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haglund, Ivar Johan (March 21, 1905 – January 30,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ivar Haglund was born in Seattle, the son of pioneers Johan Ivar
				  Haglund, a Swedish immigrant, and Daisy Hanson Haglund, the daughter of
				  Norwegian immigrants. His maternal grandparents had purchased a house on Alki
				  Point in 1869 from Seattle pioneer Doc Maynard. He began as a folk singer and
				  radio personality, championing regional folk music. In 1938, he opened
				  Seattle's first aquarium along with a fish and chips counter on Pier 54. In
				  1946, he opened Ivar's Acres of Clams, a full service restaurant, and later
				  expanded the fine dining and fish and chips restaurants into a regional chain.
				  He sponsored the Fourth of July fireworks over Elliott Bay in 1965, naming them
				  “Fourth of Jul-Ivar”; the fireworks display sponsorship continued until 2008.
				  In 1976, Haglund bought the Smith Tower, a Seattle landmark that was once the
				  tallest building in North America west of the Mississippi River. In 1983, he
				  was elected port commissioner after filing as a prank; despite doing no
				  campaigning and spending no money, he won by over 30,000 votes. He wrote a will
				  that, except for a few gifts to friends, divided his estate between the
				  Washington State University restaurant program and his alma mater, the
				  University of Washington School of Business. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HaglundIJ1</container><unittitle>Ivar Haglund with guitar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haines, Isabel Burton (March 9, 1848 - May 17,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isabel “Bell” Burton, the daughter of Horace Burton and
				  Elizabeth Griswold burton, was born in Illinois. She married John Charles
				  Haines in Chicago in 1872. After the real estate collapse of 1879, the couple
				  moved to Seattle, where John established a law practice. After his death in
				  1892, she published <emph render="italic">The Week-End</emph>, a small
				  magazine. It was purchased by James Wood and E. L. Reber who renamed it 
				  <emph render="italic">The Town Crier</emph>; Isabel became the society
				  editor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainesIB1</container><unittitle>Isabel Burton Haines</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1913</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Curtis Studio, Seattle Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Your devoted friend, Isabel B. Haines,
					 Christmas 1913.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haines, John Charles (February 14, 1850 - January 2,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Charles Haines was born in Hainesville, Illinois and
				  graduated from Williams College. He studied law at a university in Chicago and
				  was admitted to the bar in 1871. He was appointed City Justice of Chicago in
				  1872 and re-elected four years later. He married Isabel Burton in 1872; the
				  couple moved to Seattle in 1880 following the real estate collapse in which
				  they lost their savings. He established a law practice in Seattle and was
				  elected colonel in the First Infantry Regiment of the Washington National
				  Guard. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainesJC1</container><unittitle>John Charles Haines</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph clipping from <emph>History of the Pacific
						Northwest: Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hainsworth, Regina Florence Stretch (October 4, 1874 -
				  December 23, 1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Regina Florence Stretch was born in England. Her father, Richard
				  H. Stretch, was an engineer who was hired in 1889 to plat a new land
				  development in West Seattle. She married William Henry Hainsworth in 1895. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainsworthWH1</container><unittitle>William Hainsworth, Regina Florence Hainsworth, and
					 family in front of car</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William H. Hainsworth subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hainsworth, William Henry (August 29, 1869 - January 13,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Hainsworth was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
				  where his father was in the steel business; his father later started a steel
				  foundry in Ballard. He moved with his family to Seattle in 1889, settling in
				  West Seattle where there were only ten families at the time. He married Regina
				  Florence Stretch in 1895. Her father, Richard H. Stretch, was an engineer who
				  was commissioned by the West Seattle Land and Improvement Company to plat a new
				  development in West Seattle. Hainsworth was employed by Pacific Coast Coal for
				  two years before he went into real estate. He and his brother-in-law, Arthur
				  Stretch, owned the Coney Island Baths on Alki Beach. Hainsworth helped develop
				  West Seattle, was influential in getting Admiral Way built, and donated to the
				  city the land for Admiralty Park. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainsworthWH1</container><unittitle>William Hainsworth, Regina Florence Hainsworth, and
					 family in front of car</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainsworthWH2</container><unittitle>Coney Island Bath on Alki Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainsworthWH3</container><unittitle>Unidentified men and women by Coney Island Bathhouse
					 on Alki Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HainsworthWH4</container><unittitle>Hainsworth family home at 2657 37th St. SW</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1907</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hairston, Jester Joseph (July 9, 1901 – January 18,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jester Joseph Hairston was an American composer, songwriter,
				  arranger, choral conductor and actor. His notable compositions include 
				  <emph render="italic">Amen</emph>, written for the film<emph render="italic">Lilies of the Field </emph> and the Christmas song 
				  <emph render="italic">Mary's Boy Child</emph>. Hairston was born in Belews
				  Creek, a rural community in North Carolina. His family moved to Homestead,
				  Pennsylvania, just outside of Pittsburgh, where he graduated from high school
				  in 1920. Hairston attended the Massachusetts Agriculture College (now the
				  University of Massachusetts) in the 1920s, graduated from Tufts University in
				  1928 and studied music at the Juilliard School. He worked as a choir conductor
				  in the early stages of his career. His work with choirs on Broadway eventually
				  led to his singing and acting in plays, films, radio programs, and television
				  shows. In 1961, the US State Department appointed Jester Hairston as Goodwill
				  Ambassador, and he traveled all over the world teaching and performing the folk
				  music. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contribution to the
				  television industry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HairstonJJ1</container><unittitle>Jester Joseph Hairston</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Halbert, Thomas Melvin (January 2, 1898
				  - March 23, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Melvin Halbert was born in Sheridan, Wyoming and lived in
				  Chelan, Washington where he had a fruit orchard. He was a candidate for West
				  Point and served in World War I.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HalbertTM1</container><unittitle>Thomas Melvin Halbert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Surry's Studio, Wenatchee, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hall, Calvin Springer (February 28, 1872 - April 5,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Calvin Springer Hall was born and raised on a farm in Illinois
				  and worked his way through college teaching in country schools. He graduated
				  from Wesleyan University in Wilmington, Illinois and received his law degree
				  from Chicago College of Law. He began his law practice in Seattle in 1900. He
				  was appointed to the King County Superior Court by Governor Ernest Lister in
				  1917 and elected to the position seven times. During his early years on the
				  bench, he was especially interested in the welfare of first offenders and
				  instituted a system of deferring sentences. He was instrumental in obtaining
				  the passage of the Judges’ Retirement Act. He retired in 1949 after 32 years on
				  the bench. Judge Hall was the president of the Board of Trustees for the
				  Seattle Boys Club and the Ryther Child Center.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hall, Costello L. (December 15, 1859 - February 8,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Costello Hall, the son of Isaac Hall and Clarissa Reynolds Hall,
				  was born in Iowa. He married Margaretha Goebel in 1883 and had a farm in
				  Iowa.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallCL1</container><unittitle>Costello Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1880?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Beatty &amp; Shannafort, Sigourney, Iowa</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Missing April 2023</p><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hall, David Connolly (May 1, 1875 - May 27,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Connolly Hall was born in Sherbrooke, Quebec and graduated
				  from Brown University in 1901. While at Brown, he was captain of the track
				  team, won the New England mile championships in 1896 and 1897 and was a member
				  of the U. S. Olympic track team in 1900. He graduated from Rush Medical College
				  in 1907. Hall came to the UW in 1908 as a professor of hygiene and as the
				  University health officer. During WWI, he enlisted student volunteers to form
				  an ambulance service; over 100 students volunteered and served. Dr. Hall
				  commanded over 33 ambulance companies on the Italian front and was decorated by
				  the Italian government for his service. He returned to the UW and became
				  director of student health services, where he pioneered hospital care for
				  students. In 1936, the student health center, which he helped establish, was
				  named for him. He was also head of the Physical Education department and was
				  volunteer track coach. He retired in 1947.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallDC1</container><unittitle>David Connolly Hall examining x-ray with unidentified
					 nurse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hall, John Henry (May 4, 1837 - September 9,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Henry Hall, born in New York City, attended Columbia
				  College and graduated from Oberlin College in Ohio. He served as Territorial
				  President of the University of Washington from 1869 until 1872. He was also a
				  real estate dealer and for a time taught school in Tacoma and Puyallup. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallJH1</container><unittitle>John Henry Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallJH2</container><unittitle>John Henry Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hall, Josef Washington (February 27, 1894 - November 13,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josef Washington Hall was born in Kelso, Washington where his
				  father was involved in mining. He went to China as a Seventh Day Adventist
				  missionary, later becoming a news correspondent. During the First World War he
				  worked with the American diplomatic service in China, gathering intelligence on
				  German and Japanese interests. He also sent articles to magazines on the war
				  where he would end them with the words “up close” indicating to his editors his
				  eyewitness presences at the front. Through a misunderstanding, “up close” was
				  rewritten as “Upton Close,” which became his pen name. After the war, he
				  continued to report from China and became editor of the <emph render="italic">Peking Daily</emph>. He wrote several books on the Far East and
				  contributed thousands of articles to magazines and newspapers. In the 1920s he
				  was a popular speaker at local gatherings speaking on his travels in the Far
				  East. Upton Close gave his first radio broadcast in 1924. In the 1940s he
				  became more isolationist and was associated with right-wing, anti-Semitic and
				  nationalist causes. In July 1945, he and Merwin K. Hart formed the American
				  Action Committee in Chicago, later renamed American Action, Inc. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallJW1</container><unittitle>Josef Washington Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haller, Granville Owen (January 31, 1819 – May 2,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Granville Owen Haller was a noted Indian fighter and United
				  States Army military officer, as well as a wealthy businessman in Seattle after
				  the war. He fought in the Seminole Wars in Florida in 1840-1841 and later
				  served with distinction during the Mexican American War as an officer in the
				  same regiment as Ulysses S. Grant. In 1852, he was promoted to major and
				  transferred to Washington Territory, where he was stationed at Fort Dalles. He
				  took part in the Northwest Indian wars of 1855-1856 and the San Juan Island
				  dispute. He served with the Union Army during the Civil War, where he was
				  charged with the defense of south-central Pennsylvania during the early days of
				  Gettysburg Campaign prior to the arrival of the Army of the Potomac. Accused of
				  disloyal conduct and sentiments after the battle of Fredericksburg, he was
				  dismissed from the Army in 1863. It took him 16 years to gain, by joint
				  resolution of Congress, "complete exoneration," and reinstatement with the rank
				  of colonel. In the years following his dismissal, he returned to Seattle where
				  he raised a sizable fortune in real estate, lumber, farming and general
				  merchandise. Haller Lake in Seattle is named for his son, Theodore Haller.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO1</container><unittitle>Granville Haller in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO2</container><unittitle>Granvillle O. Haller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO3</container><unittitle>Granville O. Haller in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO4</container><unittitle>Granville Owen Haller, Ludwig (Louis) Ziegler, Thomas
					 Reed and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harrison, Spokane Falls, Washington Territory</persname></origination><note><p>Original photograph in Coll. 334 Early Photographers</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Halloran, Bridget McGinty (February 2, 1830 - April 18,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bridget McGinty was born in Ireland and moved to Canada with her
				  brothers when she was a small girl. She married Patrick Halloran in Alpena,
				  Michigan in 1877 and moved with him to Skagit County, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HalloranBM1</container><unittitle>Bridget McGinty Halloran</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. O. Basen, La Conner, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Halloran, Patrick (September 15, 1844 - October 25,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patrick Halloran was born in New Brunswick, Canada where his
				  father was involved in the early industrial development of the province. In
				  1864, Halloran moved to Michigan, first to Detroit and then to Alpena where he
				  started in the lumber business. In 1876, he moved west to Skagit County,
				  Washington, continuing in lumber and establishing a farm where he raised oats,
				  hay and cattle. He became county commissioner in 1885. In 1900, he sold the
				  farm and moved to the town of Edison, where he invested in real estate. In
				  1904, he became county treasurer. He married Bridget McGinty in 1877. He was
				  killed during an attempt to rob the Farmers and Merchants Bank in Edison,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HalloranP1</container><unittitle>Patrick Halloran</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lothrop Brothers, Whatcom, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hallsten, Pehr (July 4, 1897 - December 15,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Painter Pehr Hallsten (Per Ulric Hallsten) was born on July 4,
				  1897 in Hammerdal, Sweden; his surname was originally Hallstensson. He
				  emigrated to the United States in 1920, and moved to Seattle in the 1930s.
				  Fluent in seven or eight languages, he made a living teaching languages,
				  working as a laborer, and for the WPA. In 1953 he graduated from the University
				  of Washington; his M.A. thesis was a translation of Strindberg's <emph>Stora
				  Landsvagen</emph> into English. He began to have success in the late '50s as a
				  painter. Pehr was the companion of artist Mark Tobey, living together in
				  Seattle, Washington and Basel, Switzerland. He died from diabetic complications
				  in Basel, Switzerland on December 15, 1965.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG5</container><unittitle>Pehr Hallsten, Mark Tobey and Wes Wehr, sitting at a
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April, 1962</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Uchida, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Mark Tobey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hamilton, Alexander (January 11, 1755 or 1757 – July 12,
				  1804)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Hamilton was an American revolutionary, statesman and
				  Founding Father of the United States. Hamilton was an influential interpreter
				  and promoter of the U.S. Constitution, the founder of the Federalist Party, as
				  well as a founder of the nation's financial system, the United States Coast
				  Guard, and the <emph>New York Post</emph> newspaper. As the first secretary of
				  the treasury, Hamilton was the main author of the economic policies of the
				  administration of President George Washington. He took the lead in the federal
				  government's funding of the states' American Revolutionary War debts, as well
				  as establishing the nation's first two de facto central banks (i.e. the Bank of
				  North America and the First Bank of the United States), a system of tariffs,
				  and the resumption of friendly trade relations with Britain. His vision
				  included a strong central government led by a vigorous executive branch, a
				  strong commercial economy, support for manufacturing, and a strong national
				  defense.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">16</container><container type="item">HamiltonA1</container><unittitle>Alexander Hamilton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Jackman after a portrait by Gilbs from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hamilton, Edward John (November 29, 1834 - November 21,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward John Hamilton was born in Belfast, Ireland and attended
				  Hanover College in Indiana where he received a BA in 1853, and an MA in 1856.
				  He briefly went to McCormick Theological Seminary in Indiana (which shortly
				  after became New Albany Theological Seminary), and Union Theological Seminary
				  in New York City, before attending Princeton Theological Seminary where he
				  graduated in 1858. After being ordained in the Presbyterian Church, Hamilton
				  became a pastor at Oyster Bay in Long Island, New York. During the American
				  Civil War, he was chaplain and bookkeeper for the 7th New Jersey Infantry of
				  Volunteers in the Union Army from 1862 to 1865. After the war, he spent three
				  years as a pastor in Hamilton, Ohio. From 1868 to 1879 he was taught at Hanover
				  College. He received a DD degree from Monmouth College in 1877. In 1882–3, he
				  was acting professor of logic, ethics, and politics at Princeton College. From
				  1883 to 1891 he was professor of intellectual philosophy at Hamilton College.
				  He served on the staff of Funk’s Standard Dictionary from 1883 until 1893. He
				  then taught at Whitworth College before joining the faculty of Washington State
				  University where he remained until his retirement in 1900. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HamiltonEJ1</container><unittitle>Edward John Hamilton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Joseph G. Gessford, New York, NY</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hamilton, James Jr. (May 8, 1786 – November 15,
				  1857)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Hamilton, Jr. was an American lawyer and politician who
				  served as a lieutenant in U. S. Army during War of 1812. He represented South
				  Carolina in the U.S. Congress (1822–1829) and served as its 53rd Governor
				  (1830–1832). Prior to that he achieved widespread recognition and public
				  approval for his actions as Intendant (mayor) of the city of Charleston, South
				  Carolina in 1822, during the period when plans for a slave rising were
				  revealed. As governor, he led the state during the Nullification Crisis of
				  1832, at the peak of his power. Hamilton organized a city militia in June 1822
				  to arrest suspects, including the purported free black leader Denmark Vesey,
				  supported the City Council in commissioning a Court of Magistrates and
				  Freeholders, and defended their actions, including ordering the execution of
				  Vesey and 34 other blacks, and deporting of tens of others. He helped shape the
				  public perception of the Court proceedings and the reasons for the revolt, as
				  well as gaining legislation in 1822 for more controls on slaves and free people
				  of color. Interested in supporting the expansion of slavery in western
				  territories, Hamilton personally lent $216,000 to the Republic of Texas in the
				  1830s. He was appointed as loan commissioner for Texas and traveled to Europe
				  to try to secure credit for the new republic. In 1857, while Hamilton was
				  returning by the steamboat <emph render="italic">Opelousas </emph> to Texas
				  from Washington, D.C., his ship was hit by the Galveston and exploded on fire;
				  it sank within half an hour. Twenty people died, including Hamilton who had
				  given his seat in a lifeboat to a woman and her child. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HamiltonJ1</container><unittitle>James Hamilton, Jr. in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1812</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a painting.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hamilton, William J. (October 25, 1850 - October 31,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William J. Hamilton was born in Oregon, the son of William
				  Hamilton and Melsina Taylor Hamilton. Both parents arrived in Oregon in 1847,
				  and William Hamilton, the father of William J. Hamilton, was murdered in a land
				  dispute in 1851. By 1872, William J. Hamilton had moved to Colfax, Washington
				  Territory where he married Tallulah J. Holt. After her death in 1882, he
				  married Susan Jane Tabor in 1884. Hamilton was a pharmacist and served on the
				  Colfax Board of Education in the 1920s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HamiltonWJ1</container><unittitle>William J. Hamilton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did><note><p>Street-level view of the Hamilton Drug Store in Colfax,
					 showing a pedestrian and window displays with an inset portrait of
					 Hamilton.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanan, Archimedes "Meade" (November 9, 1810 - February
				  2, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Archimedes “Meade” Hanan was born in Harrison County, Kentucky.
				  He lived in Illinois, Missouri, Iowa and Minnesota before traveling to Oregon
				  in 1852. He took up a government claim near Albany and farmed there until 1865.
				  Hanan sold his land and became a partner in a flour mill in Albany; however,
				  the venture was not successful. In 1871, he went to Whiskey Creek, Washington
				  Territory and then to Dayton, Washington Territory a few years later where he
				  had a farm. During the Indian Wars, he was a first lieutenant in Company H of
				  the Oregon Mounted Volunteers and fought near Walla Walla, W.T. Hanan married
				  Anna Maria Van Winkle in 1837.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HananA1</container><unittitle>Archimedes “Meade” Hanan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest: Oregon
					 and Washington</emph></p><p>His last name is misspelled on the lithograph as "Hanen."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hancock, John (January 23, 1737 - October 8,
				  1793)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Hancock was an American merchant, statesman, and prominent
				  Patriot of the American Revolution. He served as president of the Second
				  Continental Congress and was the first and third Governor of the Commonwealth
				  of Massachusetts. Before the American Revolution, Hancock was one of the
				  wealthiest men in the Thirteen Colonies, having inherited a profitable
				  mercantile business from his uncle. He began his political career in Boston as
				  a protégé of Samuel Adams, an influential local politician, though the two men
				  later became estranged. Hancock used his wealth to support the colonial cause
				  as tensions increased between colonists and Great Britain in the 1760s. He
				  became very popular in Massachusetts, especially after British officials seized
				  his sloop<emph render="italic"> Liberty</emph> in 1768 and charged him with
				  smuggling. Those charges were eventually dropped. Hancock was one of Boston's
				  leaders during the crisis that led to the outbreak of the American
				  Revolutionary War in 1775. He served more than two years in the Continental
				  Congress in Philadelphia, and he was the first to sign the Declaration of
				  Independence in his position as president of Congress. He returned to
				  Massachusetts and was elected governor of the Commonwealth, serving in that
				  role for most of his remaining years. He used his influence to ensure that
				  Massachusetts ratified the United States Constitution in 1788.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HancockJ1</container><unittitle>John Hancock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1765?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>From a portrait of Hancock by John Singleton Copley.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hancock, Susan Hunter Crockett (December 27, 1823 -
				  January 9, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan Hunter Crockett was born in Montgomery County, Virginia,
				  the daughter of Walter and Mary Crockett. She moved with her family first to
				  Missouri and then to Oregon, arriving in 1847. She married Samuel Hancock in
				  1854. The couple lived on Puget Sound during the Indian Wars, in Idaho during
				  the gold rush, and later had land at Admiralty Head on Whidbey Island, WA. The
				  land was added to Fort Casey in 1901. After Samuel's death in 1883, she moved
				  to Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HancockSHC1</container><unittitle>Susan Hunter Crockett Hancock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Copied from the original in possession of
					 Samuel D. Crockett, Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hancock, Winfield Scott (February 14, 1824 – February 9,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Winfield Scott Hancock was a United States Army officer and the
				  Democratic nominee for President of the United States in 1880. He served with
				  distinction in the Army for four decades, including service in the
				  Mexican–American War and as a Union general in the American Civil War. Known to
				  his Army colleagues as "Hancock the Superb," he was noted in particular for his
				  personal leadership at the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863. After the Civil War,
				  Hancock participated in the military Reconstruction of the South and the Army's
				  presence at the Western frontier. Hancock's reputation as a war hero at
				  Gettysburg, combined with his status as a Unionist and supporter of states'
				  rights, made him a potential presidential candidate. When the Democrats
				  nominated him for President in 1880, he ran a strong campaign, but was narrowly
				  defeated by Republican James A. Garfield. Hancock's last public service
				  involved the oversight of President Ulysses S. Grant's funeral procession in
				  1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">16</container><container type="item">HancockWS1</container><unittitle>Winfield Scott Hancock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1875 and 1885?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hall after a portrait by Bogardus from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Handforth, Thomas Scofield (September 16, 1897 - October
				  19, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Scofield Handforth was an American artist and etcher. He
				  wrote and illustrated the children's picture book <emph render="italic">Mei
				  Li</emph> based on personal experiences in China; the book won the 1939
				  Caldecott Medal for illustration. As one of the first American picture books to
				  have an Asian protagonist, it is considered a milestone for diversity in
				  children's fiction. Handforth was born in Tacoma, Washington and studied at the
				  University of Washington and at L’Ecole des Beaux Arts in France. From 1931 to
				  1937, he spent time in Japan, China and Mongolia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HandforthTS1</container><unittitle>Thomas Scofield Handforth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: self portrait.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanes, Charles Samuel (May 21, 1903 - July 6,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Samuel Hanes was born in Toronto, Canada and graduated
				  with a B. A. in biochemistry from the University of Toronto in 1925. He
				  received his PhD from Cambridge University in 1929 and his ScD in 1953. He was
				  elected to the Fellowship of the Royal Society of London in 1942 and the
				  Fellowship of the Royal Society of Canada in 1956. From 1941 through 1944, he
				  served as the scientific member of the British Food Mission in North America.
				  He was an authority on the action of enzymes with a special interest in protein
				  synthesis. In 1937, he provided an important early illustration of the
				  usefulness of enzymes as probes of molecular structures and the first proposal
				  of a helical conformation for a biological macromolecule, representing a
				  conceptual landmark of modern biochemistry. Hanes is best known for his
				  discovery and initial characterization of plant phosphorylases. In 1955, he was
				  a Walker-Ames visiting scholar at the UW. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanesCS1</container><unittitle>Charles Samuel Hanes in chemistry lab</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hanford, Charles Barnum (May 5, 1859 -
				  October 16, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Barnum Hanford, a Shakespearean actor, was born in
				  Sutter Creek, California. He began his acting career in 1882 at New London,
				  Conn. He acted with most of the famous actors of his time, including Edwin
				  Booth and Lawrence Barrett. Hanford married Mariella Bear in 1885; she took the
				  stage name “Marie Drofnah,” Hanford spelled backwards. The couple formed their
				  own theatrical company, touring throughout the U.S. in the early years of the
				  twentieth century. In 1917, he volunteered for naval duty and was assigned to
				  the office of Naval Intelligence with Thomas Edison. He appeared at Seattle's
				  Grand Opera House in 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanfordCB1</container><unittitle>Charles Barnum Hanford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The photograph is on a postcard advertising his appearance at
					 the Grand Opera House in Seattle in 1906.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanford, Clarence (May 13, 1857 - March 13,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Hanford was a Seattle native, the youngest son of
				  Washington Territory pioneers Edward S. Hanford and Abigail Holgate Hanford.
				  When Hanford was 13, he began learning the printing trade at the office of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>, which was published by
				  his older brother, Thaddeus Hanford, eventually becoming foreman of the
				  printing department. Hanford later bought out the job-printing department and
				  established a printing office with a partner, J.H. McClair, in 1879, buying out
				  McClair's interest in 1881. The printing plant burned in the Seattle Fire of
				  1889. In 1884, he joined his printing business with James D. Lowman’s book and
				  stationery business, forming Lowman and Hanford, a stationery and printing
				  company located at First and Cherry in Seattle. In 1887, he entered the
				  lithography business, consolidating with the Blatchley Company of Tacoma, which
				  was owned by Eldred Tucker. In 1900, the business was moved to Seattle and
				  incorporated as the Tucker Hanford Company. Hanford was a student at the
				  Territorial University (later the University of Washington) from 1872 to
				  1874.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanfordC1</container><unittitle>Clarence Hanford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph from the Arctic Club collection. The
					 original is in PHO 484 Edward S. Curtis photographs</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanford, Cornelius Holgate (April 21, 1849 - March 2,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cornelius Hanford was born in Iowa and came to Washington
				  Territory as a child in 1853. He was an American judge and the first United
				  States Judge for the District of Washington. After the fire of June, 1889, he
				  was the first to publicly propose that the city should turn the disaster into a
				  public benefit by widening and straightening some of the principal streets of
				  the city. On July 22, 1912, he resigned under pressure during the course of an
				  impeachment investigation. His troubles started when he revoked the naturalized
				  citizenship of a Tacoma man on the grounds that the man was an admitted
				  Socialist; he resigned after several weeks of hearings and just before
				  scheduled testimony that was believed might implicate powerful interests in the
				  Pacific Northwest. He went on to enjoy moderate success as an author; his
				  three-volume <emph render="italic">Seattle and Environs, 1852-1924</emph> is
				  considered a useful work on the city's early history. The town of Hanford,
				  Washington is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanfordCH1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Cornelius Hanford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanfordCH2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Cornelius Hanford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photograph folder: Professor Meany, This is
					 entrusted to you personally for your private collection, or you may place it in
					 the University archives. Under no circumstances shall it be given to any
					 newspaper for publication during my life time. C. H. Hanford.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BrooksRE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Brooks with group at the
					 dedication of the Seward statue at Volunteer Park in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1, 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Brooks second from the right in the front row, Judge Thomas
					 Burke third from the right in the front row, Judge Cornelius Holgate Hanford in
					 center, Edward C. Cheasty to Hanford's left.</p><p>Filed under Richard E. Brooks subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanford, Edward Slowson (January 10, 1807 - September
				  24, 1884)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Slowson Hanford was born in Hamilton, Ohio and married
				  Abigail Holgate in 1845. She was the sister of John C. Holgate, who first came
				  to Seattle in 1849. In 1854, Edward and Abigail joined her brother in Seattle
				  where they established a claim on Beacon Hill. Their sons were Thaddeus
				  Hanford, the publisher of the<emph> Seattle Post Intelligencer,</emph>
				  Cornelius Hanford, the first United States Judge for the District of
				  Washington, and Clarence Hanford, a printer and businessman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanfordES1</container><unittitle>Edward Slowson Hanford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanley, Robert Timothy (October 20, 1917 - December 15,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Timothy Hanley was born in Butte, Montana. He joined the
				  Navy in December, 1941 and served aboard patrol craft, submarines and ships to
				  support amphibious opeartions, known as Landing Ship, Tanks or LSTs during
				  World War II. In 1951, he was flag secretary and aide to the commander of the
				  Atlantic Fleet Training command in Norfolk, Virginia. He was executive officer
				  aboard a destroyer escort operating out of the Naval Base at Norfolk in 1953.
				  In 1955, he became the executive officer of the Naval ROTC unit at the
				  University of Washington, having previously served with the Navy ROTC, or
				  NROTC, unit at Iowa State College. In 1958, he was in command of a destroyer
				  operating out of San Diego. Following his retirement from the Navy, he worked
				  for the state of Washington for one year and then joined the Seattle King
				  County Health Department, retiring from that job in December 1982. His wife,
				  Mary Ellen Sullivan Hanley, was a lieutenant in the Women’s Marine Corps at
				  Parris Island, S.D. and later graduated from the UW School of Law. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanleyRT1</container><unittitle>Robert Timothy Hanley in Naval uniform, seated at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1955 and 1958</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hannah, Dolphus Brice (October 11, 1822 - June 16,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dolphus Brice Hannah, the son of Brice and Celia Tade Hannah,
				  was born in Gallatin County, Illinois. His father died in 1823, and his mother
				  remarried two years later. His step-father died in 1834, leaving his wife and
				  seven children penniless. During this time, Hannah worked on a farm and in a
				  brickyard and was engaged in running a ferry, a carding machine, as a cabin
				  boy, steward and keeping a hotel while attending school when he had the
				  opportunity. In April of 1845, he headed west for Oregon, arriving in October
				  of that year. He went south to the California gold fields in 1849, and using
				  the gold he found, invested in property in Sacramento. He was elected sheriff
				  of Sacramento County and held that office until California was admitted into
				  the union. Hannah then returned to Oregon City. In 1855, he enlisted in Company
				  C of Clackamas County Oregon Volunteers during the Yakima Indian Wars. In the
				  spring of 1856, he went into the steamboat business on the Willamette River. He
				  also bought a law library and studied law. He was sent to the legislature in
				  1858. On the admission of Oregon as a state, he was appointed United States
				  marshal and took the Oregon census of 1860. He moved to Tacoma, Washington in
				  1872 and served as county commissioner of Pierce County, and as a member of the
				  city council in 1866-87. In 1878 he was elected to the Walla Walla Convention,
				  which formed a constitution for the State of Washington. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HannahDB1</container><unittitle>Dolphus Brice Hannah</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from <emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hansard, Emily (August 28, 1842 - August 27,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emily Hansard was born in England and came to the United States
				  in 1875. She was married to George Hansard, a banker, and had two children,
				  Mildred (Millie) Hansard and A. Sidney Hansard. The family lived in Olympia,
				  Washington and then moved to Seattle in the 1880s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansardE1</container><unittitle>Emily Hansard with daughter Millie Hansard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 5, 1900</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">W. Broughton &amp; Sons, Norwich, U.K</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hansard, Mildred E. (November 30, 1872- May 6,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mildred "Millie" Hansard, the daughter of George and Emily
				  Hansard, was born in England and came with her parents to the United States in
				  1875. The family lived in Olympia, Washington and then moved to Seattle in the
				  1880s. Millie worked as a stenographer in Seattle for a number of years. She
				  married Daniel Ferguson of Ellensburg, Washington in 1920.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansardE1</container><unittitle>Emily Hansard with daughter Millie Hansard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 5, 1900</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">W. Broughton &amp; Sons, Norwich, U.K</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Emily Hansard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hansee, Martha Lois (June 4, 1859 - July 5,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Lois Hansee was born in Ellenville, NY. She graduated
				  from Indiana University and received her M.A. from Pacific College in Forest
				  Grove, Oregon. She came to the UW as a professor of Greek language and
				  literature in 1881, remaining three years. She then taught for several years at
				  Willamette University and was dean of women there before returning to the UW in
				  1895. She became the first Dean of Women at the UW in 1900. From 1908 until
				  1921, she taught at the American School in Tokyo, Japan and at Keio Gijuku
				  University, also in Tokyo. She retired in 1921. Hansee Hall, a student
				  dormitory on the UW campus, is named for her.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanseeML1</container><unittitle>Martha Lois Hansee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">K. Ogawa, Tokyo, Japan</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HanseeML2</container><unittitle>Martha Lois Hansee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Curtis Studios, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph. The original is in PHO 484 Edward S.
					 Curtis photographs</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hansen, Gracie (August 21, 1922 - January 9,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gracie Hansen was born in Shreveport, Louisiana and moved with
				  her family to Longview, Washington as a child. She worked as a waitress, cook
				  and bank clerk before starting the annual Morton (Washington) Follies, a
				  variety show and fund raiser for the local Parent-Teachers Association. During
				  the 1962 Seattle World's Fair, she operated Hansen's Paradise International, a
				  Las Vegas-type review. After the fair, she opened a nightclub in Portland,
				  Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansenG1</container><unittitle>Gracie Hansen with Ewan Dingwall at the 1962 Seattle
					 World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hansen, Mary Fortuna (April 27, 1905 -
				  October 11, 2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Fortuna Hansen was an Alaska pioneer. Born in Chiessina,
				  Italy, she came to Seattle with her family in 1909. In 1928, she moved to
				  Alaska where she trapped near Hope, worked in Anchorage canneries and had a dog
				  sled. Hansen owned and operated a gold placer mine in Kantishna from 1929 to
				  1933, and cooked, baked and waitressed in Nenana and Fairbanks in subsequent
				  years. Hansen was the first woman to race against men in the Fairbanks Winter
				  Carnival (later called the North American Sled Dog Race) in 1937. Mary met and
				  married her husband Bert in 1935 in Fairbanks. They worked in Fairbanks area
				  restaurants and ran traplines in the Chena Hot Springs and Salcha areas in the
				  1930s. For 30 years, until 1976, they owned and operated three roadhouses along
				  the Richardson Highway; two in Big Delta and one at Black Rapids. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansenM1</container><unittitle>Mary Hansen and two other women with a dog team in
					 front of the Lockheed 10C Electra aircraft #"NC14906.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1943?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hansen, Peter Marius (March 25, 1889 -
				  April 1, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Marius Hansen, the son of Hans and Karen Hansen, was born
				  in Lindknud, Denmark and came to the United States in 1913. He worked as a
				  butter maker for Mutual Creamery in Seattle and later at Carnation Company as a
				  dairyman; he retired from Carnation in 1954. He served in the U. S. Army during
				  World War I. Hansen married Ethel Brearly in Seattle in 1929. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansenPM1</container><unittitle>Peter Marius Hansen in World War I uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1917 and 1918</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">La Salle Studio, New York City</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Apparently Danish?</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanson, Arthur Knute (December 26, 1872 - November 23,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Knute Hanson, the son of Danish immigrants Nels Hanson
				  and Marie Peterson Hanson, was born in Nebraska. He was the secretary and
				  superintendent of the exchange of Equality Colony, a Socialist colony founded
				  in 1897 by the Brotherhood of the Co-operative Commonwealth. The colony was
				  located in Skagit County between Bow and Alger, and lasted until 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansonAK1</container><unittitle>Arthur Knute Hanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanson, Howard Arthur (November 10, 1876 - November 4,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Arthur Hanson was born in Minnesota and came to Seattle
				  in 1889. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1902 and from the UW
				  School of Law in 1904. He was assistant corporate counsel and for seven years
				  was in charge of King County’s civil law department in the prosecuting
				  attorney’s office. As a member of the legislature in 1907, he was active in
				  obtaining the legislation for the establishment of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
				  Exposition of 1909. From 1928 until his retirement in 1956, he was in private
				  practice. Hanson codified all of the local improvement laws in the state and
				  was president of the League of Washington Municipalities for five years. He was
				  a trustee of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and was chair of its state
				  development committee for five years. For 28 years, he led civic and government
				  groups in an effort to construct the Eagle Gorge dam as part of the Green River
				  flood control project and was largely instrumental in obtaining funding for the
				  dam; after his death, the dam was named for him. He founded the first Pacific
				  Northwest ski club in 1922 and in that year, organized the first major ski
				  tournament in the area. He was also a member of the board and former
				  vice-president of the Washington State Historical Society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansonHA1</container><unittitle>Howard Arthur Hanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 10, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hanson, Ole (January 6, 1874 – July 6, 1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ole Hanson was born in Racine, Wisconsin. He worked as a tailor
				  while studying law at night, passing the Wisconsin bar in 1893. He never
				  practiced law; instead, he worked in the grocery business before moving west to
				  go into real estate development. He co-founded Lake Forest Park, Washington in
				  1912 as a rural planned community for professionals in the Seattle area.
				  Entering political life, he served in the Washington House of Representatives
				  from 1908 to 1909 and as mayor of Seattle from 1918 to 1919. He became a
				  national figure promoting law and order when he took a hardline position during
				  the 1919 Seattle General Strike. He then resigned as mayor, wrote a book, and
				  toured the lecture circuit, lecturing to conservative civic groups about his
				  experiences and views, promoting opposition to labor unions and Bolshevism.
				  Hanson moved to California where he founded the city of San Clemente in 1925
				  and later a property development at Twentynine Palms.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HansonO1</container><unittitle>Ole Hanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bushnell, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harding, Jacob "Jake" (February 28, 1833 - March 29,
				  1931) with unidentified woman</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob “Jake” Harding, the son of Henry Harding and Sarah Pimm
				  Harding, was born in England. He lived in Olympia in 1860, where he sailed
				  Puget Sound as the steward on the stern-wheeler <emph render="italic">Eliza
				  Anderson</emph>. He was a fiddler who played for Seattle's first dance and who
				  used to call quadrilles in Chinook dialect for dances attended by both Native
				  Americans and the early settlers. He worked for a time at the Eureka Bakery in
				  Seattle and later had an umbrella factory. Harding later served as deputy
				  sheriff in Skagit County. He married Ida Margaret Teachman in 1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingJ1</container><unittitle>Jacob Harding with unidentified woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bushnell, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The woman in the photograph may be his wife, Ida Teachman
					 Harding (April 19, 1873 - October 16, 1957)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harding, John W. (February 3, 1918 - April 1,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Harding was born in Seattle. He graduated from Whitman
				  College and devoted his professional career at the University of Washington.
				  During the 1940s, he worked as a purchasing agent. He became director of the UW
				  physical plan in 1960 and assistant vice-president of Business and Finance in
				  1970. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingJW1</container><unittitle>John Harding sitting at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 4, 1950</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingJW2</container><unittitle>John Harding, wearing bow tie, leaning against
					 bookcase in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 7, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingJW3</container><unittitle>John Harding leaning against bookcase in
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 19, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingJW4</container><unittitle>John Harding sitting at desk in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 22, 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Three copies of photograph, different sizes</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harding, Florence Mabel (August 15, 1860 – November 21,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Florence Mabel Harding, the wife of Warren G. Harding, was the
				  First Lady of the United States from 1921 to 1923. Florence was the first First
				  Lady to vote, operate a movie camera, own a radio and invite movie stars to the
				  White House. She was born Florence Mabel Kling in Marion, Ohio, the eldest of
				  three children of Amos Kling, a prominent Marion banker, and Louisa Bouton
				  Kling. At 19 she eloped with Henry Atherton DeWolfe, and they were married on
				  January 22, 1880. Florence gave birth to her only child, Marshall Eugene, on
				  September 22, 1880. The couple separated not long afterwards and were divorced
				  in 1886. In 1891, she married Harding when he was a newspaper publisher in
				  Ohio. Florence became business manager of the <emph render="italic">Marion
				  Star,</emph>where she organized a circulation department, improved
				  distribution, trained the newsboys, and installed the first local news-wire
				  service. One of the newsboys, Norman Thomas, later the Socialist presidential
				  candidate, declared that Florence was the real driving power of the paper. By
				  1914, Warren's political career had taken him to the Senate, greatly helped by
				  Florence's management of his finances, social life and public image. He became
				  president in 1921. After President Harding’s death in 1923, Florence had
				  intended to make a new life in Washington, but she died of renal failure on
				  November 21, 1924.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingWG2</container><unittitle>President Harding and Florence Harding during their
					 visit to Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Warren G. Harding subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harding, Warren Gamaliel (November 2, 1865 – August 2,
				  1923) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Warren Gamaliel Harding was the 29th President of the United
				  States, serving from March 4, 1921, until his death in 1923. At the time of his
				  death, he was one of the most popular presidents, but the subsequent exposure
				  of scandals that took place under his administration, such as Teapot Dome,
				  eroded his popular regard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">HardingWG1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Warren G. Harding</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">Edmonston Studio, Washington D.C</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: For President Warren G. Harding.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HardingWG2</container><unittitle>President Harding and Florence Harding during their
					 visit to Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1923</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hardwicke, Earl of (May 31, 1757 – November 18,
				  1834)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Yorke, the third Earl of Hardwicke, was born in
				  Cambridge, England, the eldest son of Charles Yorke, Lord Chancellor. He was
				  educated at Harrow and Queens’ College, Cambridge, and was Member of Parliament
				  for Cambridgeshire from 1780 to 1790. After his succession to the earldom in
				  1790, he took office in 1801 as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. He was sworn of the
				  Privy Council in 1801, created a Knight of the Garter in 1803 and was a fellow
				  of the Royal Society. Hardwicke Island, an island in British Columbia, Canada,
				  is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">Hardwicke1</container><unittitle>Philip Yorke, third Earl of Hardwicke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1810 and 1819?</unitdate></did><note><p>Two copies of a portrait by William Giller, after the Sir
					 Thomas Lawrence mezzotint, published 1836. Photograph copyrighted by Walker
					 &amp; Cockerill.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harford, John (February 14, 1828 - January 19,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harford was born in Westchester County, New York. He went
				  west to California in the 1840s. He became a sheep rancher near Lincoln,
				  California in the 1860s and later built a wharf, a warehouse and a mill near
				  San Luis Obispo. In 1882, Harford moved to the town of Pataha City, Washington
				  Territory, where he became one of the principle owners of the town. He owned
				  the only bank in town and was owner of the flour mill.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarfordJ1</container><unittitle>John Harford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Lithograph from<emph>History of the Pacific Northwest:
						Oregon and Washington</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harkins, Ruth</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarkinsR1</container><unittitle> Ruth Harkins holding a camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1911</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harlan, James Shanklin (November 21, 1861 - September
				  20, 1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James S. Harlan was an American lawyer and commerce specialist,
				  son of U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan, and uncle of Justice
				  John Marshall Harlan II. He was born at Evansville, Indiana, graduated from
				  Princeton University in 1883, and studied law in the office of Melville W.
				  Fuller in 1884-88. Admitted to the bar in 1886, he practiced law in Chicago. In
				  1901-03 he served as Attorney General of Puerto Rico. He became a member of the
				  Interstate Commerce Commission in 1906 and was chairman of the Commission in
				  1914.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harned, Albert Everest (February 11, 1911 - May 1,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert E. Harned was born in Roanoke, Virginia and raised in
				  Washington, D.C. He graduated from the Coast Guard Academy in 1933 and spent
				  his first three years as an ensign in Alaska waters. He became a Coast Guard
				  aviator in 1937 and was an active pilot at air stations throughout the United
				  States. During the early years of World War II, he served as an aviation
				  instructor at Pensacola, Florida and was an air-sea rescue liaison office for
				  the Southwest Pacific area with the Navy’s Seventh Fleet. From 1951 until 1954,
				  he was chief of search-and-air rescue operations for the 13th Coast Guard
				  District in Seattle. He was transferred to Coast Guard Headquarters in
				  Washington, D. C. in 1954. In 1961, he returned to Alaska where he took his
				  last active duty assignment in Juneau as chief of staff of the 17th Coast Guard
				  District. He retired from the Coast Guard in 1963 to become the port director
				  of the city of Anchorage. Harned resigned from the port in 1967 and joined
				  Mutual of New York as a field underwriter. He is in MONY's Hall of Fame and was
				  the Alaska Agency's Man of the Year for five years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ChismMM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Middleton Martis Chism with Commander
					 Albert E. Harned</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1, 1954</unitdate></did><note><p>From an accompanying article from <emph render="italic">The
					 Seattle Times</emph> dated Friday, July 2, 1954: Comdr. A. E. Harned of the
					 Coast Guard, who was transferred yesterday to Washington, D.C., smiled happily
					 as he received an engraved cigaret box from Middleton Chism, commodore of the
					 Seattle Yacht Club. The club, at a farewell party at the club, presented Harned
					 with the memento in recognition of his interest in yachting and marine safety
					 in the Pacific Northwest. Harned had been chief of search and rescue operations
					 for the 13th Coast Guard District. </p><p>Filed under Middleton M. Chism subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Harriman, William Averell (November 15, 1891 – July 26,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Averell Harriman was an American politician,
				  businessman, and diplomat. He was a founder of Harriman &amp; Co. which merged
				  with the older Brown Brothers to form the Brown Brothers Harriman &amp; Co.
				  investment bank, served as Secretary of Commerce under President Harry S.
				  Truman, and was the 48th governor of New York. He sought the Democratic Party
				  nomination for president in 1952 and 1956 but was unsuccessful. Throughout his
				  career, he was a key foreign policy advisor to Democratic presidents.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Don (July 7, 1874 - December 10,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Don Harrington, the son of James Frank Harrington and Selina
				  McMaster Harrington, was a school superintendent in Albion, Michigan from 1919
				  until 1939. It was during his tenure that the Washington Gardner High School
				  was erected, and he guided the school system through the Great Depression. He
				  married Ida May Priest in 1899 and Harriet Riddick Baldwin in 1945. Harrington
				  Elementary School in Michigan, which opened in 1957, was named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don Harrington and sister Mattie
					 Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W. E. Marshall, Big Rapids, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD2</container><unittitle>Photograph of the Harrington family home in Rodney,
					 Michigan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington with daughter Hazel
					 and son Jean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herbert R. Harter, Audington, Michigan</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marshall, Big Rapids, Michigan</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Grace (January 26, 1883 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grace Harrington was born in Wisconsin and graduated from St.
				  Mary’s Institute in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. During the 1919 influenza pandemic,
				  she was the Public Health nurse for the Pacific Coast Coal Company mining
				  camps. She was the assistant superintendent of nursing for Noble Hospital in
				  Seattle before working with the Red Cross in Siberia for fourteen months. In
				  1921, she became the director of the Department of Nursing for the Northwest
				  Division of the American Red Cross.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonG1</container><unittitle>Grace Harrington in nurse's uniform and
					 cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared of page 12 of the February 19, 1920
					 edition of the<emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>.</p><p> Written on verso: Miss Grace Harrington, Supt. Noble Hospital
					 1911 (?), corner of Bowman and Kilbourne, (now Stone Way and North 36th.)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Hazel (May 1, 1900 - September 17,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hazel Harrington, the daughter of Don and Ida Harrington, was
				  born in Michigan. She married Floyd C. Brattin in 1925 and died the following
				  year, shortly after the birth of her daughter, Shirley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonH1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hazel Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marswell, Big Rapids, Michigan</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonH2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hazel Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1926?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington with daughter Hazel
					 and son Jean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herbert R. Harter, Audington, Michigan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Don Harrington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Ida May (July 21, 1873 - August 13,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida May Priest was born in Michigan and married Don Harrington
				  in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington with daughter Hazel
					 and son Jean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herbert R. Harter, Audington, Michigan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Don Harrington subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marshall, Big Rapids, Michigan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Don Harrington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Jean Carl (October 25, 1901 - April 19,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jean Carl Harrington, the son of Don and Ida Harrington, was
				  born in Michigan. He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
				  completed his bachelor’s degree in architectural engineering at the University
				  of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1924. He worked as an archaeologist for the U. S.
				  Parks Service and is best known for his work at Jamestown, Virginia and his
				  contributions to the methodology of historical archaeology. The excavations at
				  Jamestown continued until World War II, when Harrington was made Acting Park
				  Superintendent of Colonial Park. He held this position until 1946, when he went
				  on to become the Eastern Regional Archaeologist for the National Park Service's
				  southeast region in Richmond, Virginia. In 1952 Harrington received the
				  Citation for Distinguished Service from the United States Secretary of the
				  Interior. He married Virginia Sutton, who was also an archaeologist. In 1981,
				  the Harringtons created the J.C. Harrington Medal, the Society for Historical
				  Archaeology's award recognizing scholastic contributions to the discipline.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don and Ida Harrington with daughter Hazel
					 and son Jean</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herbert R. Harter, Audington, Michigan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Don Harrington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Mark Walrod (August 18, 1848 - September 10,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mark Walrod Harrington was born in Sycamore, Illinois and
				  attended the University of Michigan where he received his MA and MS degrees in
				  1868. Upon graduation, he was appointed Assistant to the Curator of the Museum
				  of Natural History in the University, where he remained two years. In 1870 he
				  went to Alaska as acting astronomical aid in the United States Coast Survey's
				  reconnaissance. In 1872 he returned to the University as Instructor in Geology,
				  Zoology, and Botany, and the following year was made assistant professor. He
				  resigned this position in 1876 and pursued studies at the University of Leipzig
				  for a year. The following year he went to Peking as Professor of Astronomy and
				  Mathematics in the Cadet School of the Chinese Foreign Office. Returning to Ann
				  Arbor in 1879 he was appointed Professor of Astronomy and Director of the
				  Observatory. This position he held till 1892, when he resigned it to become
				  Chief of the United States Weather Bureau at Washington. He relinquished this
				  office in 1895 and was elected President of the University of Washington, but
				  gave up that position at the end of his second year. He returned to the Weather
				  Bureau in 1898 and retired in June 1899. Harrington disappeared from his home
				  in October of 1899 and was discovered a decade later at the New Jersey State
				  Mental Hospital. He would never again recognize his former identity and
				  remained institutionalized for the rest of his life. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonMW1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Mark Walrod Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1897</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonMW2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Mark Walrod Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1895 and 1897</unitdate><note><p>Photocopy of original</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Mattie (April 13, 1871 - March 28,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mattie Harrington was the daughter of James Frank Harrington and
				  Salome McMasters and the sister of Don Harrington. She married George W.
				  Burghdorf on 25 November 1903. George operated a hardware store in Colfax,
				  Michigan in the 1920s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonD1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Don Harrington and sister Mattie
					 Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W. E. Marshall, Big Rapids, Michigan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Don Harrington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, Vernor James (December 10, 1889 - April 17,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vernor Harrington was the son of James Frank Harrington and
				  Salome McMasters. He served in World War II and later lived in Fargo, North
				  Dakota where he represented the Ford Motor Company. He married Dorothy Barnhill
				  in December 1912.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonV1</container><unittitle>Vernor Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1896 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrington, William Shaw (November 6, 1834 - November
				  10, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Shaw Harrington, the son of James Harrington and
				  Charlotte Walrod Harrington, was born in South New Berlin, New York. He
				  graduated from Dow’s Academy in 1849, the Garrett Bible Institute in 1862 with
				  a Doctor of Divinity and from Willamette University with a Doctor of Divinity
				  in 1884. He served as Pastor of Rock River Conference, Illinois (1862),
				  President Elder of the Mendota District (1867-1871), and of the Dixon District
				  (1872-1876) before being transferred to the Oregon Conference in 1881. He was
				  President Elder of the Portland District (1884 to 1888), and editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Pacific Christian Advocate</emph> (1888 to 1892). He
				  transferred to the Puget Sound Conference in 1895 and served as President Elder
				  of the Whatcom District (1899 to 1902) and the Seattle district (1902 to 1908)
				  before retiring in 1911. He was a member of the General Conference (1872, 1888
				  and 1904) and of the World's Missionary Conference in 1910. He was a trustee of
				  Jennings Seminary, Willamette University (Salem Oregon) and the University of
				  Puget Sound (Tacoma Washington). He married Elizabeth Clark in 1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarringtonWS1</container><unittitle>William Shaw Harrington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harris, Elizabeth M. (April 4, 1853 - April 16,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth M. Harris, the daughter of Morton Matthew McCarver and
				  Julia Ann McCoy McCarver, was born in Oregon Territory in 1853. She married
				  William Clary in 1873 and William H. Harris in 1883; William Harris was a
				  prominent Tacoma attorney who died in 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisEM1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth M. Harris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 26, 1915?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. P. Scott, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Date printed on verso</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harris, John William (March 23, 1876 - February 26,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harris was on the first city council of Nome, Alaska. He
				  wrote two books about his experiences during the Gold Rush: 
				  <emph render="italic">Seven years in Alaska</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Coldest Christmas</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harris, Scott Christopher (February 2, 1859 - October
				  29, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Scott Christopher Harris, an African American, was born in
				  Virginia in 1859. Harris worked as a barber in Everett. He married Elese
				  Griffin in 1897; the couple had five children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisSC1</container><unittitle>Scott C. Harris playing guitar with two musicians
					 playing mandolins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrison, Benjamin (August 20, 1833 – March 13,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd President of the United States
				  (1889–1893), was the grandson of the ninth President, William Henry Harrison. A
				  Republican, Harrison was elected to the presidency in 1888. Hallmarks of his
				  administration included unprecedented economic legislation, including the
				  McKinley Tariff, which imposed historic protective trade rates, and the Sherman
				  Antitrust Act; Harrison facilitated the creation of the National Forests
				  through an amendment to the Land Revision Act of 1891. He also substantially
				  strengthened and modernized the Navy, and conducted an active foreign policy.
				  He visited Seattle in 1891, two years after he had signed the Enabling Act, a
				  statute that enabled North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington to
				  form state governments and gain admission as states of the Union.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1893?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB2</container><unittitle>Arrival of President Harrison to Seattle by
					 boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lawrence Denny Lindsley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Boats saluting arrival of the President Harrison. Denny Hotel,
					 where the President stayed, is visible on the left; University of Washington is
					 on the right, partially hidden by the mast of the steamship.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB3</container><unittitle>Arrival of President Benjamin Harrison to Seattle by
					 boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lawrence Denny Lindsley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Slightly different view from above photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB4</container><unittitle>Arrival of President Benjamin Harrison to Seattle by
					 boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lawrence Denny Lindsley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Steamship sailing into Elliott Bay.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB5</container><unittitle>Arrival of President Benjamin Harrison to Seattle by
					 boat, fleet entering Elliott Bay with<emph> U. S. Cutter Wolcott</emph> firing
					 salute; <emph>S. S. Steamer City of Seattle</emph> leading.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lawrence Denny Lindsley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Steamship with escort sailing into Elliott Bay.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB6</container><unittitle>Arrival of President Benjamin Harrison to Seattle by
					 boat, fleet entering Elliott Bay </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lawrence Denny Lindsley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB7</container><unittitle>Parade on 1st Ave. south from Yesler Way in
					 celebration of President Benjamin Harrison's visit to Seattle on May 6, 1891.
					 Photograph shows Schwabacher Bros. &amp; Co., Yesler Way at 1st Ave. S., and
					 the Yesler Block (Mutual Life Building) at the northwest corner of 1st Ave. and
					 Yesler Way. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 6, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photorgrapher">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonB8</container><unittitle>Benjamin Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1893?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="Engraver">Henry Bryan Hall, Jr. , New York</persname></origination></did><note><p>Engraving by Henry Bryan Hall, Jr. from<emph>Appleton's
					 Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrison, Joseph Barlow (June 12, 1886 - June 25,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Barlow Harrison was born in Coupeville, Washington. His
				  parents, Isaac and Agnes Harrison, both physicians, moved to Washington in the
				  1880s from Michigan. Harrison came to Seattle in 1897 and attended grammar
				  school in the old University Building in downtown. He graduated from Seattle
				  High School on Madison Street and then attended the University of Washington,
				  receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1910. He applied for and was granted a
				  Rhodes scholarship for three years (1910-1913) to Oxford, England, becoming
				  only the fifth Rhodes Scholar from Washington State. Harrison received a degree
				  from Oxford in the honor school of English Language and Literature. He became a
				  faculty member at the University of Washington in 1913, where he taught courses
				  in American literature, playwriting, short story writing, and Shakespeare and
				  was a popular professor of literature in the UW extension service. He composed
				  poetry, was well known as an essayist and editor, and wrote a popular column on
				  word usage and language in the University of Washington <emph render="italic">Daily</emph> newspaper. Harrison was founder and later
				  president of the University Faculty Senate. He served on the board of directors
				  of the Repertory Theater and was a member of the American Association of
				  University Professors, the Modern Language Association, and the Phi Gamma Delta
				  social fraternity. He served as an officer during World War I. Harrison
				  remained on the faculty until his death, which occurred one week before his
				  retirement. His papers are held in the UW Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonJB1</container><unittitle>Joseph Barlow Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonJB2</container><unittitle>Joseph Barlow Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harrison, William Charles (April 26,
				  1880 - March 17, 1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Charles Harrison was born in Dublin, Ireland. He studied
				  violin in Germany with August Wilhelmj and mechanical and electrical
				  engineering at the London Institute of Engineering. He designed machinery for
				  the Great Southern and Western Railway of Ireland. Harrison was a concert
				  violinist, teacher of the viola and violin, and a fine woodworker. He lived in
				  Seattle from 1925 until 1951 when he and his wife moved to London.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonWC1</container><unittitle>William Charles Harrison cutting wood for a cabinet on
					 a bandsaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Cabinet maker par excellence.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonWC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Charles Harrison holding a
					 violin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Harrison, William Henry (February 9, 1773 – April 4,
				  1841)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Harrison was the ninth President of the United
				  States (1841), an American military officer and politician, and the last
				  President born as a British subject. He was also the first president to die in
				  office. Harrison died on his 32nd day in office of complications from
				  pneumonia, serving the shortest tenure in United States presidential history.
				  He was the grandfather of Benjamin Harrison, who was the 23rd President from
				  1889 to 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Henry Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1841?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of a painting</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">16</container><container type="item">HarrisonWH2</container><unittitle>William Henry Harrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1841?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="engraver">E. H. Knight, New York</persname></origination></did><note><p>Engraving by E. H. Knight after a portrait by Marceau from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Harsch, Alfred Elmer (September 7, 1901 - January 17,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Elmer Harsch was a professor at the University of
				  Washington Law School for more than 35 years and a former chairman of the State
				  Public Disclosure Commission. He received Bachelor of Arts and Law degrees from
				  the University of Washington in 1928 and a law degree from Columbia University
				  in 1940. Harsch began teaching business law at the UW in 1928 and was a
				  professor at the university's law school from 1931 until he retired in 1967.
				  Between 1949 and 1953, he served as its acting dean. Gov. Dan Evans appointed
				  Harsch to the Disclosure Commission in 1975. He previously had served as a
				  member of the State Uniform Law Commission and was an adviser to the trust
				  division of the Pacific Coast Banking School. Harsch was the only honorary life
				  member of the Seattle Estate Planning Commission. Harsch served as a
				  legislative and tax consultant to the Legislature, the territory of Alaska and
				  to South Korea. During World War II, he was the area rent director for the
				  Office of Price Administration. He was a member of the Law Review and the Order
				  of the Coif, a law honorary.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HarschAE1</container><unittitle>Alfred Elmer Harsch standing in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 30, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">UW Tyee</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hart, Albert Bushnell (July 1, 1854–July 16,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Bushnell Hart was an American historian, writer, and
				  teacher. One of the first generation of professionally trained historians in
				  the United States, he was a prolific author and editor of historical works. He
				  graduated from Harvard University in 1880. He studied at Paris, Berlin and
				  Freiburg, and received his doctorate from Freiburg in 1883. Hart joined the
				  Harvard faculty in 1883, served as instructor in history from 1883-87,
				  assistant professor from 1887-97, and became a professor in 1897. In 1910 he
				  was appointed Eaton Professor of the Science of Government. He was on the
				  Harvard faculty for 43 years, retiring in 1926. In retirement he continued to
				  write and edit.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartAB1</container><unittitle>Albert Bushnell Hart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H.G. Gutekunst</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photograph: To Edmond S. Meany with the cordial
					 regards of Albert Bushnell Hart, July 14, 1908.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hart, Ella James (July 8, 1860 - December 18,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ella James Hart, the daughter of Allen and Nancy Hardin James,
				  was born in Missouri. She married Louis Folwell Hart, the future Washington
				  Governor, in 1881; the couple had five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartEJ1</container><unittitle>Ella Hart and her daughter, Lou Ella Hart in front of
					 the Governor's Mansion</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1924?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hart, Lou Ella (January 1, 1901 - September 30,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lou Ella Hart, the daughter of Governor Louis Hart and Ella
				  James Hart, lived in the Governor's Mansion in Olympia during her father's term
				  in office. She later taught history at Cleveland High School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartLE1</container><unittitle>Lou Ella Hart in front of the Governor's
					 Mansion</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartEJ1</container><unittitle>Ella Hart and her daughter, Lou Ella Hart in front of
					 the Governor's Mansion</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1924?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ella James Hart subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hart, Louis Folwell (January 4, 1862 – December 4,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Folwell Hart was born in High Point, Missouri and studied
				  law in Missouri. He moved to Snohomish, Washington in the late 1880s, where he
				  practiced law. In 1899 he moved to Tacoma where he continued to practice law
				  and was an insurance agent. He was elected as Washington’s seventh Lieutenant
				  Governor in 1912 and was reelected in 1916. During World War I, he served
				  chairman of the Selective Service Appeals Board for Southwest Washington. He
				  became governor when the then governor Ernest Lister retired in 1919 due to
				  failing health. Hart was elected governor in his own right in 1920. He was
				  instrumental in getting new road projects through the state legislature,
				  strongly supported the creation of a state highway patrol, and oversaw the
				  construction of a new State Capitol complex. Perhaps his greatest
				  accomplishment was reorganizing the state's administrative structure, reducing
				  the number of administrative agencies from 75 to 10. Hart did not run for
				  reelection in 1924, but instead retired to Tacoma where he practiced law and
				  served as the president of the State Good Roads Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartLF1</container><unittitle>Louis Folwell Hart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hart, Mary E. (March, 1853 - March 9, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary E. Hart was a newspaper correspondent and lecturer. She was
				  the proprietor of <emph render="italic">The Pacific Monthly </emph>and
				  contributed to many other publications. In 1891, she was the first secretary of
				  the Southern California Science Association. In 1900, she went to Alaska to
				  join her husband, Judge Frank B. Hart, who was engaged in mining. She was one
				  of the first women to go to Alaska and work her own claims with a pick and
				  shovel. Hart worked for three years as a lecturer and guide on the Pacific
				  Coast steamer <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph>. Hart represented Alaska at
				  the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle as the Special Agent of
				  Women, Work, Art and Education, and was a special press correspondent at the
				  1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis and the 1915 Pacific Panama
				  International Exposition in San Francisco.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartME1</container><unittitle>Mary E. Hart in an Arctic parka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Surry's Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from a book.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hartley, Roland Hill (June 26, 1864 – September 21,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roland Hill Hartley served two terms as the tenth Governor of
				  the state of Washington from 1925 to 1933. He was born in New Brunswick, Canada
				  and at an early age, moved to Minnesota where he started a timber business. In
				  1888, he married Nina M. Clough, the daughter of David M. Clough. Hartley
				  worked as a bookkeeper in Clough Brothers Lumber Company, and became manager
				  and then Vice President. He was the private secretary to his father-in-law,
				  Minnesota Governor David Clough from 1895 to 1899. From 1897 to 1902, he was an
				  honorary colonel in the Minnesota National Guard. Hartley moved to Everett,
				  Washington in 1902, and invested in Hartley and Lovejoy Logging Company, The
				  Clark-Nickerson Lumber Company, the Everett Logging Company, the Clough-Hartley
				  Mill, and Everett City Tug Boat Company. He was elected mayor of Everett,
				  Washington in 1910, serving one term, and was a member of Washington State
				  House of Representatives from 1915 to 1916. When he was elected, in 1925, as
				  tenth Governor of Washington, the gavel used for Hartley's swearing in ceremony
				  was the same gavel used by his father-in-law, Governor David Clough, for his
				  swearing in. Hartley's major accomplishments during his governorship were the
				  creation of centralized state highway department and new state timber laws.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartleyRH1</container><unittitle>Roland Hill Hartley at the topping off ceremony of the
					 Washington State Legislature Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 13, 1926</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McKnight, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Governor Hartley atop. J. Johnston is the
					 figure in lower left hand corner facing camera and wearing a cap.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hartman, John Peter (July 3, 1857 - October 29,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John P. Hartman was born in Indiana and graduated from the
				  University of Nebraska. He came west in 1891, first to Tacoma and then to
				  Seattle. During the Gold Rush, he went to Skagway and with partners built the
				  Brackett Wagon Road from Skagway to Log Cabin, Alaska. He aided in the
				  construction of the White Pass and Yukon Railroad and help organize and finance
				  the Northwest Steamship Company. He was one of the founders of the Washington
				  Good Roads Association and prepared the bill for the creation of the Mount
				  Rainier National Park. He was a member of the board of the Alaska Yukon
				  Exposition. In 1912, he formed the law firm Hartman and Hartman with his sons,
				  Dwight and Harold.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartmanJP1</container><unittitle>John P. Hartman giving opening address of
					 Seattle-Tacoma portion of Pacific Highway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 30, 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>In December 1917, the Seattle-Tacoma portion of the Pacific
					 Highway, a hard-surfaced road from Blaine to Vancouver, Washington, was opened.
					 John Hartman can be seen on the stand at the right, giving the opening
					 address.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hartshorn, Florence M. (December 31, 1868 - October 21,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Florence M. Hartshorn was an early pioneer of Alaska and a
				  photographer's assistant during the Klondike Gold Rush. Born in Michigan, she
				  married Albert K. Hartshorn and had one daughter, Hazel Hartshorn Goslie.
				  Florence and her daughter went to Sitka, Alaska in 1898 at the peak of the Gold
				  Rush and reconnected with Albert, who had gone ahead to establish a blacksmith
				  shop at Lake Bennett, British Columbia, north and east of Sitka. At Lake
				  Bennett, Florence began assisting photographer E. J. Hamacher in 1898. Over the
				  next two decades, the Hartshorn lived in both Seattle and Canada. By the late
				  1920s, the Hartshorn were divorced and Florence moved permanently to Seattle,
				  where she was an active member of the Ladies of the Golden North, an
				  organization of early women pioneers in Alaska. From 1928 to 1929, Florence
				  began a successful campaign to raise money for a monument to be placed at Dead
				  Horse Gulch in the White Pass, commemorating the thousands of pack animals that
				  died transporting supplies to the gold fields. The memorial was completed under
				  the sponsorship of the Ladies of the Golden North, and Hartshorn chaired a
				  committee to raise funds for the memorial. The monument was dedicated on August
				  4, 1929, at Inspiration Point in White Pass above Dead Horse Gulch where
				  thousands of pack animals died in an historic stamped, and was unveiled by
				  Hartshorn. It was moved to the more accessible location in Skagway's Centennial
				  Park in 1997.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartshornFM1</container><unittitle>Florence M. Hartshorn, possibly at the dedication of
					 the monument at Dead Horse Gulch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hartsuck, Ann Sophia Connor (September 3, 1827 - April
				  30, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ann Conner was born in Concord, New Hampshire and graduated from
				  Exeter Female Academy in New Hampshire. In 1865 she sailed for Washington
				  Territory as one of the women Asa Mercer transported to Seattle in a settlement
				  venture. She taught school in Elma, Washington and in Tumwater, Washington
				  before marrying Mark Hartsuck, a local carpenter, in 1869. She was a member of
				  the Woman’s Club of Olympia, which had been established by Olympia suffragists
				  in 1883.</p></bioghist><note><p>See also two cartes-de-visite in PH Coll 1034.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartsuckASC1</container><unittitle>Ann Sophia Hartsuck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HartsuckASC2</container><unittitle>Copy of ticket on the steamship<emph render="italic">Continental</emph> from New York to Seattle, signed by A. S.
					 Mercer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Harty, George Washington (March 1, 1841 - November 8,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Washington Harty, the son of Jacob and Margaret Harty,
				  was born in Des Moines, Iowa in 1841. He enlisted in the Union Army in 1861 and
				  served until 1865. He married Sarah Elizabeth Said in Spokane, Washington in
				  1866. Harty worked as an expressman and died in Spokane in 1909 as the result
				  of an accident. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="item">HartyGW1</container><unittitle>George W. Harty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original carte-de-visite moved to PH Coll 1034.</p><p>Signed on verso and front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haskett, Edwin W. (October 23, 1848 - November 4,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin W. Haskett was born in Iowa and studied law. He was
				  admitted to the bar in 1872 and was appointed district attorney for the first
				  Civil Government in Alaska in 1884. He married Jennie Lester in 1874; they had
				  one daughter.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinkeadJH1</container><unittitle>Copy of photograph of the first officials of the Civil
					 Government of Alaska, taken in front of the Custom House in Sitka,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1885</unitdate></did><note><p> John Kinkead, seated. Standing from left to right: Edwin W.
					 Haskett, Munson C. Hillyer, Samuel Ward McCallister, Jr., Andrew T. Lewis.</p><p>Filed under John Henry Kinkead subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hastie, Thomas P. (March 2, 1835 - June
				  24, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas P. Hastie was a Skagit pioneer. Originally from
				  Liverpool, England, Hastie and his family arrived in New Orleans in 1845 and
				  then traveled west to Council Bluffs, Iowa, where they joined a train of 13
				  wagons going west. The family started a farm on Sauvie's Island in Oregon in
				  1851 before moving to Whidbey Island in Washington territory in 1853. Hastie
				  enlisted with Company I of the First Washington Volunteers and then Company G
				  of the Second Washington Volunteers and fought in the Indian Wars. Between
				  1857-1864, Hastie moved between Oregon and Washington, working in a mill,
				  sailing, and searching for gold. In 1864, he enlisted in Company E, 9th US
				  Infantry to fight in the Civil War. He was discharged at the rank of duty
				  sergeant in 1867. Hastie moved back to Whidbey Island and married Clara Taylor
				  Scott, a widow with three children. In 1870, they homesteaded on Fir Island. He
				  was a member of the Masonic Lodge and voted its most worshipful member in
				  1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HastieTP1</container><unittitle>Thomas P. Hastie with Masonic badge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hastings, Loren Bingham "Lote" (July 18, 1853 - January
				  16, 1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Loren Bingham “Lote” Hastings, the son of Loren Brown Hastings,
				  shipped on the <emph render="italic">Byzantium</emph>, a whaler, when he was
				  eighteen. He was shipwrecked near Seymour Narrows on the Queen Charlotte
				  Islands. Hastings played shortstop for the Alkis, one of the first Seattle
				  baseball teams in the 1880s. He was a member of the Washington State House of
				  Representatives (1901-1903) and a pioneer Puget Sound steamboat captain. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornBA1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Osborn with Loren "Lote" Hastings and Dr.
					 Harry Doane, seated on bales of hay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1876?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. F. Dollarhide, Seattle, W. T.</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Ph Coll 334.</p><p>Filed under Benjamin Osborn subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hastings, Loren Brown (November 18,
				  1814 - June 11, 1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Loren Brown Hastings was born in Vermont. He married Lucinda
				  Bingham, a teacher, in 1843. He dreamed of moving to Oregon and named his first
				  son Oregon Columbus Hastings. In 1847, the family joined a wagon train to
				  Oregon. They settled first in Portland, where he built a cabin. He went to
				  California during the gold rush, where he made money operating a trading post.
				  He invested most of the money in a mercantile business when he returned to
				  Oregon. In 1852, he relocated the family to Port Townsend. He purchased the
				  pilot boat <emph render="italic">Mary Taylor</emph> and made several trips
				  bringing settlers to Port Townsend. Hastings also established a trading post
				  and then a general store. When Jefferson County was created by the 1852-3
				  session of the Oregon Territory Legislature, he was one of the first three
				  county commissioners and was a representative at the Monticello Convention in
				  November 1852. He was a justice of the peace and performed the first recorded
				  marriage in Port Townsend in the new Territory of Washington on October 26,
				  1853. He was a probate judge and Jefferson County treasurer. In 1860 he was
				  elected as a representative of Jefferson County in the Territorial
				  Legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HastingsLB1</container><unittitle>Loren Brown Hastings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hatch, Melville Harrison (November 25,
				  1889 - January 19, 1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melville Hatch moved to Seattle, Washington in 1927. He taught
				  entomology at University of Washington, taking over for Trevor Kincaid, a
				  mentor who showed Hatch the best local collecting spots that sparked his
				  interest in the Northwest beetle. In 1937, he founded a social group that
				  shared a passion for beetles called the Scarabs; he was the "High Scarab" of
				  the group. He was promoted to full professor in 1941 at University of
				  Washington and served a short term as acting executive officer for the
				  Department of Zoology. Hatch also authored a series of several essays on the
				  topics of evolution, religion, philosophy, and a better world order through
				  knowledge. In addition, his work <emph render="italic">Beetles of the Pacific
				  Northwest</emph> is an exhaustive examination of the beetle that took 23 years
				  to complete; the first volume was published in 1949 and the fifth in 1971.
				  Throughout the course of his career, Hatch identified 13 new species of beetle.
				  In 1975, he earned the Entomological Society of America's Pacific Branch’s C.W.
				  Woodworth Award, the most prestigious achievement in entomology in the Pacific
				  U.S. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HatchMH1</container><unittitle>Melville Hatch seated at desk with
					 microscope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HatchMH2</container><unittitle>Melville Hatch seated at desk with open
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hathaway, Marshall Root (January 1,
				  1823 - March 2, 1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marshall Root Hathaway was born in New York. He traveled
				  overland to Oregon in 1852. Hathaway settled in Vancouver, Washington and
				  taught school in Clark County. He served as Clark County superintendent for
				  three terms, was a justice of the peace and a territorial legislator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HathawayMR1</container><unittitle>Marshall R. Hathaway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hatheway, William Howell (November 28,
				  1923 - December 11, 2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Howell Hatheway was born November 28, 1923, in Hartford,
				  Connecticut and grew up nearby in Litchfield. A lifelong academic, he attended
				  Andover Academy and Yale University. Before completing his degree at Yale WWII
				  called him to service, and he served four years in the U.S. Army. After the
				  war, he enrolled at the University of Chicago where he received a BS degree in
				  mathematics with a minor in mathematical statistics in 1948. At Chicago, in
				  addition to mathematics, he became interested in botany and biology, receiving
				  his MS in botany in 1952. He pursued his passion for tropical plants at the
				  University of Hawaii and Harvard University, where he earned a MF in forestry
				  in 1953 and a PhD in biology in 1956. Hatheway received a John Parker
				  Fellowship from Harvard in 1954. In 1953. He and his wife Merilyn moved to
				  Medellin, Colombia, when he took a position as a statistician with The
				  Rockefeller Foundation. There, in addition to his statistical work, he studied
				  the biology of maize and corn. As a post-doc at North Carolina State
				  University, he studied experimental statistics and quantitative genetics from
				  1956 to 1957. The family moved to Mexico City in 1961 where they resided until
				  1964 while he continued his work with the Rockefeller Foundation. From Mexico
				  the family moved to Costa Rica where Hatheway joined the Organization for
				  Tropical Studies as their Executive Director. He continued his teaching career
				  at North Carolina State University when the family moved to Raleigh in 1967. In
				  1969, the University of Washington recruited him as a professor in the College
				  of Forest Resources where he taught applied statistics and experimental design
				  as professor of quantitative science until his retirement in 1986. His
				  background and numerous scientific publications merged mathematics and tropical
				  biology. Following retirement, he remained active in academics at the UW.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HathewayWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Hatheway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Haughey, James Alexander (July 5, 1842
				  - July 18, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Alexander Haughey, a native of Delaware, entered the
				  military as a 1st lieutenant in 1861 in the 3rd Delaware Volunteer Infantry He
				  mustered out of the army in 1866. Shortly thereafter, he joined the Regular
				  Army as a 2d lieutenant in the 36th Infantry. He was assigned to the 21st
				  Infantry in 1870 as a lst lieutenant. Haughey was the last commanding officer
				  of America Camp on San Juan Island, serving from September 25, 1872 until July
				  1, 1874. In the Nez Perce War (1877), he was breveted to captain. His promotion
				  to captain came in 1880. He died on active service in Nebraska in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaugheyJA1</container><unittitle>James Alexander Haughey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1872 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Jas. A. Haughey U.S.A. Last commanding
					 officer at American Camp when flag was hauled down at British Camp-San Juan
					 Island. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haupt, Helen Doris (April 16, 1914 - May 9,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Doris Haupt, the daughter of Charles R. and Helen Widman
				  Haupt, was born in Lewistown, Montana. She graduated with a B.A. from
				  Washington State University and a Masters in Music from Illinois State
				  University. She taught at the University of Texas at Austin and the University
				  of Houston. The Mu Phi Epsilon Foundation has established the Helen Haupt Piano
				  Scholarship.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HauptHD1</container><unittitle>Helen Doris Haupt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1959?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="artist">Constance Forsyth</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on drawing: To the University of Washington with all
					 best wishes, Helen Haupt.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hauptly, Jacob (June 2, 1830 - February
				  6, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Hauptly was born in Switzerland and arrived in Hood Canel
				  in 1865. He drove cattle to the mill towns of Seabeck and Port Gamble. Hauptly
				  worked as a butcher and as a justice of the peace.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HauptlyJ1</container><unittitle>Jacob Hauptly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lothrop, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hausard, Millie</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Havens, Mareta Pearl (April 3, 1893 - November 30,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mareta Pearl Havens graduated from Marysville High School in
				  1910 as salutatorian of the class and earned a B.S. in Science from the
				  University of Washington in 1914. After graduation, she taught high school
				  science and mathematics in the Washington towns of Sunnyside and Burlington.
				  She earned an M.A. in 1932 and was an instructor in science at Santiago College
				  in Santiago, Chile from 1932 to1934. She later worked at the Marine Station on
				  San Juan Island, and her photographs of the area, as well as the UW campus, are
				  held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HavensMP1</container><unittitle>Mareta Pearl Havens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hawley, Julia Hulbert (August 13, 1834
				  - January 16, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia H. Hawley was the first woman juror in Washington State,
				  serving on both a territorial jury and a grand jury. She also helped establish
				  the Seattle Day Nursery and was involved in a women's suffrage club. Hawley was
				  a member of the Washington State Pioneers Club, having arrived in Washington
				  Territory in the 1870s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HawleyJH1</container><unittitle>Julia H. Hawley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hayden, Alice Hazel (January 17, 1909 -
				  March 8, 1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Hazel Hayden was a University of Washington professor of
				  education well known for her research on children with Down syndrome. She was
				  born Jan. 17, 1909, in Seattle and moved to Eugene, Oregon with her father
				  after her mother's death. After attending Oregon State, where she received a
				  master's degree in chemistry at 19. she received a Ph.D. from Purdue University
				  in Indiana. She began teaching at the UW in 1946. In 1958, Dr. Hayden began
				  concentrating her research on mental retardation in children. Two years later,
				  she co-directed the experimental Pilot School for children with disabilities.
				  The school was a forerunner to the present-day Experimental Education Unit at
				  the Child Development and Mental Retardation Center at the university, where
				  Dr. Hayden served as associate director. In 1967, Dr. Hayden began researching
				  education of children with Down syndrome, seeing the importance of detecting
				  the disability at birth and early intervention. She began the Alice H. Hayden
				  Preschool Program for children with developmental disabilities in the
				  Experimental Education Unit at the university. She retired in 1979..</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaydenAH1</container><unittitle>Alice Hazel Hayden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Shepherd Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hayden, Gay (May 9, 1819 - May 14,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gay Hayden was a prominent Oregon pioneer who owned a
				  significant portion of what is now the city of Vancouver. Additionally, Hayden
				  owned all of or part of what is now Hayden Island in Portland, Oregon, which is
				  named in his memory. He married Melinda Sexton in 1840 in Wisconsin; she died
				  in 1841 following the birth of their daughter. He married Mary Jane Bean in
				  1847, and the couple later traveled to Oregon, arriving in 1851. They settled
				  on what would become known as Hayden Island, where he built a home; they lived
				  there for five years. On March 10, 1886, the couple separated and divided their
				  property in court, from that point on each handling their own real estate and
				  financial affairs. He later became the mayor of Vancouver.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaydenG1</container><unittitle>Gay Hayden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hayden, John Louis (November 2, 1866 -
				  February 22, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John L. Hayden was born in Chicago; the family moved to Olympia
				  when he was a child. He entered the University of Washington when he was 17; in
				  his second year, he was appointed to the U. S. Military Academy at West Point.
				  He graduated 6th in his class and was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant of
				  Artillery. He was stationed at the Presidio in San Francisco before fighting in
				  the Sioux Wars, where he was at the battles of Wounded Knee and Clay Creek. In
				  1892, Hayden became the first professor of military science at the UW and was
				  instrumental in the construction of a gymnasium and drill hall. In 1896, he
				  served in the Philippines before returning to take command of Fort Casey in
				  Washington. He served in World War I and then returned to take command at Fort
				  Worden. He retired as a Brigadier General in 1930. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaydenJL1</container><unittitle>John L. Hayden in uniform sitting on a
					 horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hayden, Mary Jane Bean (July 7, 1830 -
				  June 24, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane Bean was born in Athens, Maine and spent her early
				  childhood with her grandparents in the town of Cornville, Maine. In 1845 she
				  moved with her parents to Wisconsin; two years later, she met and married Gay
				  Hayden. In 1850, they traveled overland to the Oregon Territory and settled in
				  what is now Vancouver, Washington. In 1851 they settled on an island situated
				  on the Columbia River between modern-day Portland, Oregon and Vancouver,
				  Washington that would become known as Hayden Island; they lived there for five
				  years. On March 10, 1886, the couple divorced and divided their property in
				  court, from that point on each handling their own real estate and financial
				  affairs. She was a member of the Oregon Pioneer Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaydenMJB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Jane Hayden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HaydenMJB2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Mary Jane Hayden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1918?</unitdate><origination><corpname>James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hayes, David</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hayes, Patrick J. (November 17, 1917 - November 26,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Pat Hayes was the voice of the University of Washington Huskies
				  for almost 30 years. He was a sports reporter for KIRO radio in the 1940s
				  through the 1960s as the play-by-play announcer for football and basketball
				  games; he also called the games for Seattle University.. He went on to serve as
				  the sports information director and athletic department business manager at
				  Seattle University for 20 years before retiring in 1983.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJD2</container><unittitle>Jim Owens with Pat Hayes; Owens is holding a 1959
					 Sports Achievement award</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jim Owens subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hayes, Rutherford Birchard (October 4,
				  1822 – January 17, 1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rutherford Birchard Hayes was the 19th President of the United
				  States, in office from 1877-1881. He was appointed after one of the most
				  fiercely disputed elections in United States history, running against Governor
				  Samuel J. Tilden of New York. He oversaw the end of Reconstruction in the
				  United States and the beginnings of the Second Industrial Revolution. At the
				  end of his term, Hayes kept his pledge not to run for reelection and retired to
				  his home in Ohio. where he became an advocate of social and educational reform.
				  Prior to his presidency, Hayes fought in the Civil War, was wounded in action,
				  and rose to the rank of brevet major general. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HayesRB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rutherford B. Hayes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1877 and 1881</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">17</container><container type="item">HayesRB2</container><unittitle>Rutherford B. Hayes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1877 and 1881?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Landy from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Haynes, Elaine Hanford (October 11, 1878 - May 27,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elaine Hanford Haynes was the daughter of District Court Judge
				  Cornelius H. Hanford, the first federal judge in Washington Territory, and the
				  wife of Manly Bostwick Haynes. She attended the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hazard, Joseph Taylor (January 1, 1879 - July 11,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Taylor Hazard, an educator and author, was born in Texas
				  and grew up in Wisconsin. He graduated from Whitewater Normal School, taught
				  school and was superintendent of schools in Spooner, Wisconsin for two years.
				  In 1903, he came to Everett to manage a factory. He worked for several years
				  for a textbook publishing company in California before returning to Seattle in
				  1918. Hazard joined the Mountaineers in 1912 and is credited with the first
				  ascent of Mount Thompson and of Mount Rainier by way of the Nisqually Glacier
				  and the Kautz routes. For over twenty years, he was a climbing companion of
				  Professor Edmond Meany. Hazard graduated with honors from the University of
				  Washington in 1935, was a visiting faculty member, and for eight years, was the
				  excursion director of the Seattle Public Schools. In 1947, he was appointed
				  secretary of the State Land Commission Board. He wrote five books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Pacific Crest Trails</emph> and <emph render="italic">Companion of Adventure,</emph> a biography of Isaac Stevens,
				  the first governor of Washington Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HazardJT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joseph Taylor Hazard at a book
					 signing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Don McQuade, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hazeltine, Amy Wood (June 16, 1872 - February 29,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amy Wood Hazeltine was born in Argentina where her father, Dr.
				  Thomas Wood, was a Methodist missionary. She married Frederick Hazeltine on May
				  30, 1895 in Callao, Peru. They moved to South Bend, Washington where Frederick
				  published <emph render="italic">The South Bend Journal</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HazeltineAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amy Wood Hazeltine, Leila E.
					 Hazeltine and Ellen Dow Hazeltine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: See how Lelia grows. She will soon be taller
					 than I am. Ezra is growing too. Ellen calls me and I must go.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hazeltine, Ellen Dow (September 22, 1907 -November 11,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellen Dow Hazeltine was the daughter of Frederick and Amy
				  Hazeltine. She attended Whitman College and was in the Dramatic Club. She
				  married Isaac Edward VanWinkle in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HazeltineAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amy Wood Hazeltine, Leila E.
					 Hazeltine and Ellen Dow Hazeltine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: See how Lelia grows. She will soon be taller
					 than I am. Ezra is growing too. Ellen calls me and I must go.</p><p>Filed under Amy Wood Hazeltine subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hazeltine, Lelia E. (January 13, 1897 - June 18,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leila Hazeltine, the daughter of Frederick and Amy Hazeltine,
				  married John Gorett in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HazeltineAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amy Wood Hazeltine, Leila E.
					 Hazeltine and Ellen Dow Hazeltine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: See how Leila grows. She will soon be taller
					 than I am. Ezra is growing too. Ellen calls me and I must go.</p><p>Filed under Amy Wood Hazeltine subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Heap, Desmond (September 17,1907 - June 27,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir Desmond Heap was a British lawyer and expert on town
				  planning law. In his role as comptroller and City Solicitor for the City of
				  London, he was largely responsible for co-ordinating the rebuilding of the area
				  after the Second World War, and for the sale of London Bridge to a company in
				  Arizona. He was the president of Britain's Town Planning Institute and was the
				  principal draftsman for the Town and Country Planning Act of 1947. In 1974, he
				  taught a course on land use planning and regulation at the UW.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeapD1</container><unittitle>Two photos of Sir Desmond Heap at the Hiram Chittenden
					 Locks, with unidentified man, in front of the <emph render="italic">Jackie
					 Ann</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1974?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeapD2</container><unittitle>Two photos of Sir Desmond Heap teaching a class at the
					 UW</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1974?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Heffner, Raymond Lorenzo (September 19, 1902 - February
				  24, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Raymond Lorenzo Heffner was born in Maiden, North Carolina and
				  graduated from the University of North Caroline, Chapel Hill and had degrees
				  from John Hopkins University. He taught English at Johns Hopkins, the
				  University of North Carolina, St. Louis University, the University of Wisconsin
				  and Northwestern University before coming to the University of Washington in
				  1938. He founded and edited <emph render="italic">Modern Language
				  Quarterly</emph>, a magazine devoted to articles on American, English, Romance
				  and German literature, which first appeared in 1940 under his editorship.
				  Active in literary circles, he was a member of the Modern Language Association
				  and the Phi Beta Kappa Scholastic Society. His son, Raymond L. Heffner, Jr.,
				  was president of Brown University in the 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeffnerRL1</container><unittitle>Raymond Lorenzo Heffner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate></did><note><p>Original passport photo</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hegg, Eric A. (September 17, 1867 –
				  December 13, 1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eric A. Hegg was a Swedish-American photographer famous for his
				  portrayals of the life and people in Skagway, Bennett and Dawson City during
				  the Klondike Gold Rush 1897–1901. Hegg participated in prospecting expeditions
				  with his brother, Peter, and fellow Swedes while documenting the daily life and
				  hardships of the gold diggers. His most iconic photograph is of the Chilkoot
				  Pass where miners and prospectors are climbing the ice stairs upwards to the
				  top and the awaiting Canadian border. He was born Eric Jonsson in Bollnas,
				  Sweden. The family left for the United States in 1881 and eventually settled in
				  Wisconsin. On arrival in New York, the family’s surname was changed to Hegg,
				  derived from Heggesta, the name of their Swedish area of origin. Hegg became a
				  photographer’s assistant in Minnesota at the age of fourteen; he later opened
				  his own studio. In 1888, he settled in the Swedish community outside of
				  Bellingham, Washington where he opened a new studio with his brother Peter. In
				  1897, he traveled to Skagway during the Klondike Gold Rush and opened a
				  photography studio there and in Dawson and Nome. He also mined and worked for
				  Guggenheim’s Copper River and Northwestern Railroad. He returned to Bellingham
				  in 1918. His work is held in UW Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeggEA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Eric A. Hegg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeggEA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Eric A. Hegg wearing
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on back of photograph: Mr. E.A. Hegg: To whom we are
					 indebted for these pictures.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Heifetz, Jascha (February 2, 1901
				  -December 10, 1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jascha Heifetz was born in Wilno, Poland (present day Vilnius,
				  Lithuania), came to the United States in 1917 and became a citizen in 1925. He
				  was educated at the Royal School of Music in Vilna, which he entered at five
				  and from which he graduated at nine; the St. Petersburg Conservatory, where he
				  studied with Leopold Auer and earned an Honorary Music Degree; the New York
				  College of Music; and Northwestern University. His first professional
				  appearance was at age five in St. Petersburg, Russia. He had a long and
				  successful performing and recording career; after an injury to his right arm,
				  he focused on teaching.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeifetzJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jascha Heifetz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1924</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is autographed: To Rev. M. A. Matthews--Very
					 Sincerely--Jascha Heifetz - Feb. 5, 24 Seattle.</p><p>Original photograph moved to vault</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subfonds"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Heilman, Robert Bechtold (July 18, 1906
				  - August 5, 2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Bechtold Heilman was born in Philadelphia and received a
				  Ph.D. in English from Harvard in 1935. In 1948, after teaching at Ohio
				  University (1928-1930), University of Maine (1931-1935), and Louisiana State
				  University (1935-1947), he joined the University of Washington faculty as chair
				  of the English department. Under his leadership, the English department grew in
				  national stature, and many of its faculty, including Theodore Roethke, Andrew
				  Hilen, Arnold Stein, James W. Hall, and David Wagoner, contributed prominently
				  to the field. Heilman brought in new faculty from over 30 graduate schools and
				  helped UW graduates find employment in at least that many other institutions.
				  He led the English department until 1971, when he turned 65, the mandatory
				  retirement age for department chairs. He retired from teaching and became a
				  professor emeritus at the UW in 1976 at age 70. In 1977 he spent a year as the
				  Arnold Professor at Whitman College. In addition, he published nine volumes of
				  critical works: on Shakespeare, on dramatic forms, and on prose fiction. He
				  edited 12 volumes which served as textbooks in many departments across the
				  country. They include novels by Hardy, Swift, and Conrad; a collection of
				  modern short stories; a collection of pre-Shakespeare plays; two Shakespeare
				  plays; and wrote with Yale professor Cleanth Brooks,<emph render="italic">Understanding Drama</emph>, which enjoyed considerable success
				  as a textbook.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeilmanRB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert Bechtold
					 Heilman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John A. Moore, Office of Information Services, University of Washington, Seattle (M-11033B)</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeilmanRB2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Robert Bechtold Heilman
					 standing in University of Washington's Suzzallo Library stairwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Heller, Amos Arthur (March 21, 1867 -
				  May 18, 1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amos Arthur Heller was an American botanist and one of the most
				  prolific western collectors from 1892 until 1940. Heller married Emily Gertrude
				  Halbach in 1896, and she frequently collaborated with him both in the
				  collection of specimens as well as illustrating his numerous publications. In
				  1900, he was sent to Puerto Rico with funds from Cornelius Vanderbilt to
				  collect specimens illustrating the flora of the island; he returned with over
				  8,000 specimens. After moving to California, the couple founded the botanical
				  journal <emph render="italic">Muhlenbergia</emph>, and Heller continued to edit
				  that journal until 1915. From 1904 until 1908, while living in Los Gatos,
				  California, he collected extensively in central California. In 1913, Heller
				  moved to Chico, California, and taught at the local high school, while
				  continuing to collect botanical specimens. His first herbarium of over 10,000
				  sheets is at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden and his second herbarium and library
				  is at the University of Washington, including the Puerto Rico plant collecting
				  itineraries of 1900 and 1902–1903. The collections provide for the historical
				  study of endangered plants.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HellerAA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amos A. Heller with unidentified men
					 in front of tents at campsite</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on back of photograph: A.A. Heller Idaho Botanist.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HellerAA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amos A. Heller with horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on back of photograph: A.A. Heller Idaho Botanist.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HellerAA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Amos A.
					 Heller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Thompson, Chico, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on inside of folder/mat: 1918.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HellerAA4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Amos A.
					 Heller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Thompson, Chico, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on inside of folder/mat: 1920</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hemphill, Lena (June 11, 1892 - June 18,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lena Hemphill, a native of Seattle and a life-long resident of
				  the city, was a noted social worker and club woman. She was principal of Martha
				  Washington School for Girls from 1937 until her retirement in 1952. She had
				  been a teacher at the school from 1935 until 1937. She was supervisor of
				  Mothers’ Pensions for the King County Juvenile Court from 1919 until 1935. A
				  graduate of Geneva College in Geneva, Pennsylvania, she did advanced studies at
				  Columbia University and the University of Washington. In 1931 and 1932,
				  Hemphill was president of the Seattle Soroptimists International and was a
				  member of the founding committee for the group’s Memorial Foundation for Youth
				  and its Mothers’ Home Foundation. In 1953, she was honored as an outstanding
				  woman of achievement by the Seattle Alumnae Chapter of Theta Sigma Phi for her
				  work with juvenile girls. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE2</container><unittitle>Ella McBride, Lee Ellenwood and Lena Hemphill
					 performing in Luncheon Program: <emph render="italic">The Ballet Dancers</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.McBrideEE2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The director was Mary Ann Wells.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Hench, Philip Showalter (February 28, 1896 - March 30,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip S. Hench was an American physician. Hench, along with his
				  Mayo Clinic co-worker Edward Calvin Kendall and Swiss chemist Tadeus Reichstein
				  was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1950 for the
				  discovery of the hormone cortisone, and its application for the treatment of
				  rheumatoid arthritis. Hench received his undergraduate education at Lafayette
				  College in Easton, Pennsylvania, and received his medical training at the
				  United States Army Medical Corps and the University of Pittsburgh. He began
				  working at Mayo Clinic in 1923, later serving as the head of the Department of
				  Rheumatology. He also had a lifelong interest in the history and discovery of
				  yellow fever. During his career, Hench was one of the founding members of the
				  American Rheumatism Association, and served as its president in 1940 and 1941.
				  In addition to the Nobel Prize, he was awarded the Heberden Medal (1942), the
				  Lasker Award (1949), the Passano Foundation Award (1950), and the Mutual of
				  Omaha Criss Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenchPS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Philip S. Hench</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1940</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Lindsay Poor, Minneapolis, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photo: With kindest regards to my friend Dr. K.K.
					 Sherwood, Philip S. Hench.</p><p>K. K. Sherwood (Kenneth Kyler) was a Seattle physician who was
					 born in 1902 and died in 1971. He was Medical Director of Harborview County
					 Hospital and later General Superintendent of the King County Hospital system,
					 retiring in 1963.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Henderson, Patsy (1879 - February 11, 1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chief Patsy Henderson, also known as Kulsin Koolseen, was one of
				  the last living links with the discoverers of the Klondike gold strike when he
				  died. He was in the camp of George Washington Carmack, Skookum Jim and Tagish
				  Charlie when they found gold near Dawson Creek on August 17, 1896. He was
				  Tagish Charlie’s youngest brother and was the only original member of the
				  Discovery Party to record the history of the discovery on tape, although he was
				  back at camp at the time of the actual discovery, having been left behind
				  because he was too young to take part in the prospecting hike. He later had a
				  fox ranch in Carcross, Yukon and worked for the White Pass &amp; Yukon Railway
				  as a lecturer and storyteller. In 1950 he wrote <emph render="italic">Early
				  days at Caribou Crossing and the Discovery of Gold on the Klondike.</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HendersonP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Patsy Henderson holding mask and
					 rattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hendrickson, Harvey Francis (May 29,
				  1901 - September 8, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harvey Francis Hendrickson was born in Pennsylvania and
				  graduated from the University of Washington (B. S., 1923) and the University of
				  Pennsylvania Medical School (M.D., 1927). He served in the U. S. Army Medical
				  Corps in Panama during World War II and later pracriced at the Veterans
				  Administration Hospital in Yountville, California. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HendricksonHF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harvey Francis
					 Hendrickson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1912 and 1917</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Christy Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photograph: Harvey Francis Hendrickson 344 - 18th
					 Ave No. Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Henry VIII (June 28, 1491 – January 28, 1547)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry VIII was King of England from April 22,1509 until his
				  death in 1547. Henry is best known for his six marriages and for his efforts to
				  have his first marriage (to Catherine of Aragon) annulled. His disagreement
				  with Pope Clement VII about such an annulment led Henry to initiate the English
				  Reformation, separating the Church of England from papal authority. He
				  appointed himself Supreme Head of the Church of England and dissolved convents
				  and monasteries, for which he was excommunicated. Henry is also known as "the
				  father of the Royal Navy", as he invested heavily in the navy, increasing its
				  size and establishing the Navy Board.. Domestically, Henry is known for his
				  radical changes to the English Constitution, ushering in the theory of the
				  divine right of kings in opposition to Papal supremacy. He also greatly
				  expanded royal power during his reign. Henry was an extravagant spender, using
				  the proceeds from the dissolution of the monasteries and acts of the
				  Reformation Parliament. Despite the money from these sources, he was
				  continually on the verge of financial ruin due to his personal extravagance, as
				  well as his numerous costly and largely unsuccessful wars. He oversaw the legal
				  union of England and Wales with the Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542, and he
				  was the first English monarch to rule as King of Ireland following the Crown of
				  Ireland Act 1542.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">17</container><container type="item">HenryVIII1</container><unittitle>Henry VIII</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1537 and 1547?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="engraver">R. Graves</persname></origination></did><note><p>An engraving by R. Graves after a portrait by Hans Holbein</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Henry, Horace Chapin (October, 6 1844 – June 28,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Chapin Henry was a railroad builder and, as president of
				  Metropolitan Bank and National Bank of Commerce and founder of Pacific
				  Creosoting Company, a powerful influence within the business community of
				  Seattle, Washington. After serving as a First Sergeant of the 14th Vermont
				  Infantry in the Second Vermont Brigade during the American Civil War, Henry
				  became a partner in Henry &amp; Balch and worked in railroad construction. He
				  moved to Seattle in 1890 to work on the Northern Pacific Railroad's belt line
				  around Lake Washington. He was an investor in, and vice president of, the
				  Metropolitan Building Company, which developed the Metropolitan Tract in
				  Seattle. His 1901 residence in the Harvard-Belmont Landmark District, which is
				  situated on the west slope of Capitol Hill, was the first of many Victorian
				  homes in the area. Horace Henry and his wife, Susan J. Henry, were
				  philanthropists of Seattle and after her death in 1921, Henry donated his
				  personal art collection and funds to construct what is now the Henry Art
				  Gallery situated on University of Washington campus. In 1911, after the death
				  of a son to tuberculosis, he donated land and funds to open Henry Sanatorium in
				  Seattle, later renamed Firland Tuberculosis Hospital. In 1934, his sons donated
				  land (including his original house) to the city for construction of a library.
				  This was to become the Susan J. Henry branch of the Seattle Public Library,
				  named for his wife. The branch was rebuilt and renamed in 2003 as the Capitol
				  Hill Branch.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenryHC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Horace Chapin Henry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1912 and 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harry Field, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenryHC2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Horace Chapin Henry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1928?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. Arthur Young, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Henry, Susan Elizabeth Johnson (July 21, 1856 -
				  September 28, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan J. Henry and her husband, Horace Chapin Henry, were
				  Seattle philanthropists. After her death in 1921, Horace C. Henry donated his
				  personal art collection and funds to construct the Henry Art Gallery which is
				  situated in University of Washington campus. In 1934, their sons donated land
				  (including his original house) to the city for construction of a library. This
				  was to become the Susan J. Henry branch of the Seattle Public Library, named
				  for his wife. The branch was rebuilt and renamed in 2003 as the Capitol Hill
				  Branch. In addition, a gift of funds was also donated for a beautification
				  landscaping project to create Susan J Memorial Way (commonly referred to as
				  Memorial Way) at University of Washington to commemorate Susan Henry's love of
				  gardening.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenrySJ1</container><unittitle>Susan J. Henry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Henry, William Elmer (November 7, 1857 - March 20,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Elmer Henry was born in Indiana in 1857 and became
				  involved in libraries after a brief period of teaching. He was state librarian
				  in Indiana, before accepting a position at UW. He was the founder of University
				  of Washington's Library and Information Science program. In 1911, the UW’s
				  library school was established by Henry, Harriet Howe, Josephine Meissner, and
				  Charles W. Smith as a response to the growing need, in the Western United
				  States, for highly trained, well-prepared librarians. Prior to 1911, untrained
				  librarians in the Pacific Northwest were trained through a six-week summer
				  course offered at the UW. The new library school was the first west of St.
				  Louis. Henry was dean of the program from 1914 until 1931. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenryWE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of William E.
					 Henry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Summers, Bloomington, Indiana</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenryWE2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William E. Henry seated at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1936?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HenryWE3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William E. Henry standing outside,
					 possibly on University of Washington campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1936?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hensley, Josephine Airey "Chicago Joe" (June 1, 1844 -
				  October 25, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josephine Airey Hensley was an Irish-born American prostitute,
				  madam and proprietor of brothels, dance halls, a variety theatre, and saloons
				  in Helena, Montana. She eventually became the most influential landowner in
				  Helena after a fire in 1874 provided her with the opportunity of buying up
				  property from those who couldn't afford to rebuild, making her the richest
				  landowner on Wood Street. In 1878, she married James T. Hensley, and together
				  they built a stone, fire-proof dance hall as well as the "Red Light Saloon" and
				  later a large vaudeville-style variety theatre called "The Coliseum", which
				  proved greatly successful, due to its rich furnishings and the beautiful girls.
				  Her wealth and influence enabled her to donate to charities and political
				  campaigns. She was famed for her lavish style of dress, lifestyle and the
				  parties she and her husband regularly gave. The nationwide panic of 1893 found
				  her financially overextended, and virtually all of her property ultimately
				  transferred to others. She died of pneumonia a few years later at the age of
				  56, and the citizens of Helena gave her a funeral with many speeches praising
				  her accomplishments and generosity.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HensleyJA1</container><unittitle>Photo of Josephine Airey Hensley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henson, Matthew Alexander (August 8,
				  1866 - March 9, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew Henson was an African American explorer and an associate
				  of Robert Peary, with whom he traveled on multiple expeditions to Nicaragua and
				  the Arctic. On April 6, 1909, he became the first person to reach the
				  Geographic North Pole. His achievement was not fully recognized until 2000 when
				  the National Geographic Society posthumously awarded Henson its highest honor,
				  the Hubbard Medal. This medal is awarded to those who demonstrate distinction
				  in exploration, discovery, and research. Until 2000, Robert Peary was the only
				  one from the 1909 expedition who received the Hubbard Medal for reaching the
				  farthest point north, 175 miles, from the pole, even though Henson was the
				  explorer who reached the destination first. Henson published his memoir, 
				  <emph render="italic">A Negro Explorer at the North Pole</emph> in 1912, which
				  included a foreword and praise by Peary.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HensonMA1</container><unittitle>Program of dedication ceremony of the Matthew Henson
					 Bronze in New York City</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 6, 1970</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HensonMA2</container><unittitle>Enlarged photograph of Matthew Henson from dedication
					 ceremony program</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Heppner, Henry (March 25, 1831 -
				  February 16, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Heppner was born in Prussia and came to New York in the
				  mid-1850s. In the mid-1860s, he traveled around the Horn to California where he
				  started a mercantile business in Shasta. After 18 months, he moved north to
				  Oregon, settling first in Corvallis and then in The Dalles, Oregon. He
				  conducted a freighting business between the mines in Idaho and Oregon until
				  1872, when he returned to the mercantile business. He settled in Umatilla,
				  Oregon, where he opened the first newspaper and hotel. He opened a store and
				  post office in partnership with Colonel Jackson Morrow. The townspeople, over
				  his objection, renamed the town Heppner. They also named the county Morrow
				  after Jackson Morrow. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeppnerH1</container><unittitle>Henry Heppner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW3</container><unittitle> John William Redington in scout uniform, holding
					 rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Pioneer pathfinders of the Pacific
					 Northwest. Photographs on page include: Hon Jackson Lee Morrow, Judge William
					 P. Dutton, Henry Heppner and Hon. James William Morrow.</p><p>Filed under John William Redington subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Herbert, George Frye (September 6, 1815
				  - February 6, 1868)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Frye Herbert was born in Frederick County, Virginia. He
				  married Elizabeth McCormick in 1838. The couple moved to Illinois and later
				  Iowa before crossing the plains by ox team with Captain Ezekial Williams’ train
				  in 1850. They settled in The Dalles, Oregon, spending the first year in a tent.
				  After the death of their 13 year old son, James Ambrose, Herbert and his wife
				  moved to Eugene, Oregon to farm and raise stock. In 1856, they returned to The
				  Dalles, Oregon and settled on a plot of land near Fifteen Mile Creek.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerbertGF1</container><unittitle>George F. Herbert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1868?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herman, Charles W. (October 21, 1847 - November 11,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles W. Herman was born in Detroit, Michigan and was
				  apprenticed to the printing trade when he was fourteen. He was employed by the 
				  <emph render="italic">Detroit Free Press</emph> for five years. In the early
				  1870s, he moved to Sioux City, Iowa, and continued to work on newspapers until
				  1884. He then moved to Orange, South Dakota and established a paper and a
				  homestead. In 1885 he started to break the sod on his land, but soon gave it
				  up, deciding that he was not suited to farming. In 1887, he moved west to
				  Uniontown, Whitman County, Washington, where he established the 
				  <emph render="italic">Washington Journal</emph>, publishing it for eight years.
				  Herman sold that paper in 1894 and moved to Rainier, Oregon, where he founded
				  the <emph render="italic">Rainier Gazette</emph>. After several years, he
				  returned to Uniontown and re-established the <emph render="italic">Washington
				  Journal</emph>. He ran that paper until 1900, when he moved the printing plant
				  to Rainier and resumed the publication of the <emph render="italic">Rainier
				  Gazette</emph>, before selling it in 1903. He died in Lewiston, Idaho in
				  1912.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HermanCW1</container><unittitle>Charles W. Herman with his wife, Veronica, seated
					 holding a copy of <emph render="italic">The Washington
					 Journal</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herman, Veronica (Verona) (June, 1854 - May,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Veronica (Verona) Schmied was born in Prague, Bohemia, Austria,
				  and came to the United States with her parents when she was two years old. Her
				  father was a musician, composer and orchestra leader. She married Charles W.
				  Herman in 1873. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HermanCW1</container><unittitle>Charles W. Herman with his wife, Veronica, seated
					 holding a copy of <emph render="italic">The Washington
					 Journal</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles W. Herman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herold, Edmund Henry (September 2, 1903 - November 18,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edmund Herold, a graduate of the University of Washington, was
				  appointed Express and Mail Superintendent for Pan American World Airways'
				  Alaska sector.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeroldEH1</container><unittitle>Edmund Herold seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Pan American Airways Photographic Service, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herrall, George (November 19, 1832 - October 11,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Herrall was born in Baden, Germany where he learned the
				  trades of brewing and coopering. He arrived in the United States in 1853 and
				  headed west to California and later to Southern Oregon. He served during the
				  Indian Wars of 1855-1856 under Major Bradford and supplied pack trains for the
				  troops from Crescent City to Chetco, the Rogue River, Port Orford and Coquille.
				  In 1862, he moved to Portland, where he was involved in several successful
				  business enterprises and became the head of the United States Brewing
				  Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerrallG1</container><unittitle>George Herrall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herrcke, Charles (1859 - January 6, 1932)
				  (?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Possibly a photo of Charles Herrcke, who was born in Prussia and
				  came to the United States as a child with his parents Ernest and Henrietta
				  Herrcke. He married Elfreda Spry in La Salle, Illinois in 1892 and later worked
				  as a landscape gardner in Burbank, California. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerrckeC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Herrcke with unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Horace Emory, Omaha, Nebraska</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dad &amp; Charlie Herrcke. [The name
					 "Charlie" is crossed out and replaced with Harry.]</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herrman, Arthur Phillip (December 3, 1898 - March 17,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Phillip Herrman was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and
				  graduated from Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1921 with a degree in
				  architecture. He spent almost his entire career in various faculty positions at
				  the University of Washington from 1923 until his retirement in 1968. In 1958,
				  the School of Architecture became the college of Architecture and Urban
				  Planning, and Herrman became the first dean, having previously served as Chair
				  of the department. Some confusion has surrounded the spelling of Herrman's last
				  name, which sometimes appears as “Herman” and “Hermann.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerrmanAP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dean Arthur Herrman with model of
					 Suzzallo and Allen Library</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1988?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerrmanAP2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Dean Arthur Herrman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Herrmann, Virginia Mary Hancock (September 28, 1858 -
				  May 17, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Virginia Mary Hancock, the daughter of Daniel Brown Hancock and
				  Sarah Arthur Hancock, was born on Whidbey Island, Washington in 1858. Her
				  father died when she was six. She married James Gunning Grainger in 1884; the
				  couple had two children. Following her divorce from Grainger, she married
				  Charles E. Herrmann in 1908. They lived in Omak, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HerrmannVMH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Virginia Mary Herrmann</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hessler, Margaret Constance (May 31,
				  1892 - March 18,1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Constance Hessler was born in Chicago. She graduated
				  from Columbia University in 1914 and became an instructor in the Department of
				  Home Economics at the University of Washington in 1917. Her dissertation, 
				  <emph render="italic">Experiments upon the Quantitative Differentiation of
				  Vitamins A and D </emph>was published in 1926. Hessler later taught at the
				  University of Chicago. She married Edward Brookes in 1931. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HesslerMC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Margaret Constance
					 Hessler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">McBride [Studio], Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hewitt, Elizabeth Matheny (March 26, 1823 - October 13,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Matheny, the oldest daughter Daniel Matheny and Mary
				  Cooper Matheny’s eight children, was born in Indiana. She moved with her family
				  to Illinois in 1827 and in 1837, to Platte County, Missouri where she met Henry
				  Hewitt. Henry and Elizabeth married in 1841, and in 1843,the couple traveled
				  with her parents to Oregon to join Henry’s brother, Adam. The Hewitts made a
				  donation land claim on the Tualatin plains near present-day Hillsboro. The
				  following year, the Hewitts settled on 640 acres, the site of present-day
				  Unionvale, Yamhill County, Oregon. In 1875, leaving their sons to farm the
				  Yamhill land, they purchased the Salem ferry. In 1883, they sold the ferry and
				  moved back to the farm, living near Wheatland, where Daniel Matheny had
				  established a ferry that took traffic across the Willamette River. Henry and
				  Elizabeth had ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HewittEM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Elizabeth Matheny Hewitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hewitt, Frances (September 8, 1868 - June 5,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frances "Fannie" Hewitt was the daughter of Christopher Charles
				  Hewitt and Betsy Wesson Hewitt. Her father was the Chief Justice of Washington
				  Territory, appointed by President Lincoln.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HewittF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frances "Fannie" Hewitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Miss Fannie Hewitt, Olympia.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hewitt, Henry (November 19,1822 -
				  January 15, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Hewitt was born in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, and moved to
				  Platte County, Missouri with his family with his family when he was sixteen. He
				  met Elizabeth Matheny in 1837; they married in 1841. In 1843, the couple
				  traveled with her parents to Oregon to join Henry’s brother, Adam. Henry was
				  the first to cross the Blue Mountains of Oregon and the second to reach the end
				  of the Oregon Trail at The Dalles. The Hewitts made a donation land claim on
				  the Tualatin plains near present-day Hillsboro. The following year, the Hewitts
				  settled on 640 acres, the site of present-day Unionvale, Yamhill County,
				  Oregon. Hewitt followed the gold fields, traveling to Idaho in 1862 and to the
				  Black Hills of South Dakota in 1874. In 1874, he was elected a commissioner in
				  Yamhill County. In 1875, leaving his sons to farm the Yamhill land, he
				  purchased the Salem ferry. In 1883, he sold the ferry and moved back to the
				  farm, living near Wheatland, where Daniel Matheny had established a ferry that
				  took traffic across the Willamette River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HewittH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Hewitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hewitt, Henry Harrison (December 7,
				  1846 - February 13, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Harrison Hewitt, the third child and second son of Henry
				  and Elizabeth Matheny Hewitt, was the first of the ten Hewitt children to be
				  born on the Hewitt Donation Land Claim. He attended the school on his parents'
				  land and in September of 1866 entered Willamette University. Before graduating,
				  Henry worked two terms teaching. After graduating from Willamette in 1870, he
				  taught for another seven years and was the Yamhill County Superintendent of
				  Schools in 1872. His last three years of teaching were spent at Albany
				  Collegiate Institute. While teaching there, he studied law and was admitted to
				  practice in December of 1877. On July 2, 1879, he opened his own practice in
				  Albany. Later that year, he was elected to the School Board in Albany. In 1888
				  he was elected District Attorney for Linn, Marion, Yamhill, Polk, and Tillamook
				  counties. In 1894 he was elected circuit court judge and served until 1898.
				  From 1898 until his death, Henry was senior partner of Hewitt and Sox. Henry
				  married Maggie J. Rowland, the daughter of Jeremiah Rowland, in 1872; they had
				  one daughter. After Maggie's death, Henry married Wallula Adelia Laughead of
				  Salem; there were no children from this marriage. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HewittHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry Harrison Hewitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Heyburn, Weldon Brinton (May 2, 1852 -
				  October 17, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walden Brinton Heyburn was born in Pennsylvania and attended the
				  University of Pennsylvania. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1876,
				  starting a practice in west of Philadelphia. He moved west to Leadville,
				  Colorado, where he practiced law for several years. In 1883, Heyburn moved to
				  the Silver Valley of northern Idaho where he was a member of the convention
				  that framed the constitution of Idaho in 1889. In 1903, he was elected by the
				  Idaho Legislature to the U.S. Senate. Heyburn was re-elected by the legislature
				  January 1909. During his career, he opposed Gifford Pinchot's call for national
				  forests because he didn't agree with the federal government controlling vast
				  amounts of land in western states. He also fought many of the Progressive Era
				  ideas such as an 8-hour work day and child welfare laws. He is best remembered
				  for introducing the bill which became the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. He
				  collapsed on the Senate floor after delivering a speech in March 1912 and died
				  several months later. In Idaho, the city of Heyburn is named for him, as is
				  Mount Heyburn in the Sawtooth Mountains. Heyburn State Park, the Northwest's
				  oldest state park, is at the southern end of Lake Coeur d'Alene. It was created
				  in 1908 when Senator Heyburn attempted to secure it as a national park; the
				  legislature named it after Heyburn in 1911 while he was still in office.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HeyburnWB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Weldon Brinton Heyburn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tucker Photography, Boise, Idaho</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hicks, Gallatin Gwin (October 28, 1857
				  - January 24, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gallatin Gwin Hicks, the son of Urban E. and India Ann Hicks,
				  was the state printer for the state of Washington in 1885 and served for
				  several years. Gwinwood, his home of several acres near Hicks Lake, became a
				  retreat site.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HicksGG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gallatin Gwin Hicks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: Gwin Hicks Native Son.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hicks, India Ann Hartsock (October 29,
				  1830 - May 2, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>India Ann Hartsock, the daughter of Gallentine Hartsock and
				  Elizabeth Miller Hartsock, was born in Indiana and arrived in Oregon in 1852.
				  She married Urban East Hicks in 1854; the couple had one son, Gallatin Gwin
				  Hicks.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HicksIAH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">India Ann Hicks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: India Ann Hicks at age 85</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hicks, Urban East (May 14, 1828 - March
				  13, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Urban Hicks was born in Missouri where he learned the printing
				  trade. Coming to Oregon Territory in 1851 as part of the Ruddell Party, he
				  lived in several places before settling in Olympia. He married India Ann
				  Hartsock in 1854, He held a variety of local offices, including County Clerk
				  and Assessor. He served during the Indian War of 1855-1856, rising to the rank
				  of Captain; he was charged with erecting blockhouses for the protection of the
				  settlers during the hostilities. Hicks was a school teacher in what is now
				  Lacey (1856-1857) and was appointed Territorial Librarian/Auditor (1858) and
				  later as Auditor (1865-1867). In between his terms as Auditor, he published the
				  <emph render="italic">Vancouver Telegraph </emph>(1861-1862). He returned to
				  Olympia and published the <emph render="italic">Washington Democrat</emph>
				  (1864-1865). He was sworn in as Territorial Quartermaster General in 1865.
				  After the Civil War, he continued to work in the newspaper business up and down
				  the Pacific Coast. In later years he lived on Orcas Island and eventually
				  became a resident of the Soldiers Home and Colony in Orting. Hicks Lake in
				  Thurston County is named for his family.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HicksUE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Urban Hicks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten on verso: Urban E. Hicks, early Oregonian
					 printer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Higginson, Ella Rhoads (January 28, 1861- December 27,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ella Rhoads Higginson was born in Council Grove, Kansas in 1861.
				  In 1863, her family relocated to Oregon; she grew up in Portland and Oregon
				  City. She married Russell C. Higginson in 1885 and moved to Bellingham,
				  Washington. Together, they opened and drugstore, and Higginson began to publish
				  poetry and stories in national journals. Works authored by Ella Higginson
				  include <emph render="italic">When the Birds Go North Again </emph>(1902) and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Vanishing Race and Other Poems</emph> (1911). She
				  wrote award-winning fiction, poetry, and essays primarily set in the Pacific
				  Northwest region of the United States. She was the author of 2 collections of
				  short stories, 6 books of poetry, a novel, a travel book, over 100 short
				  stories, over 300 poems, and numerous newspaper essays. In 1931, she was named
				  Poet Laureate of Washington State. In addition to writing poems and short
				  stories, Higginson was actively involved in promoting the arts, education, and
				  women's rights in Bellingham. She also helped found the city's first library.
				  Higginson died in Bellingham in 1940; her papers are collected at Western
				  Washington University's Center for Pacific Northwest Studies. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HigginsonER1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Ella
					 Higginson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HigginsonER2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Ella
					 Higginson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate><origination><persname role="Engraver">E. A. Perry, The Perry Pictures, Malden, Massachusetts</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Ella Higginson's poem Four Leaf Clover is printed on verso: I
					 know a place where the sun is like gold, And the cherry blooms burst with snow,
					 And down underneath is the loveliest nook, Where the four-leaf clovers grow.
					 One leaf is for hope, and one is for faith. And one is for love, you know, And
					 God put another in for luck--If you search, you will find where they grow. But
					 you must have hope, and you must have faith, You must love and be strong--and
					 so--If you work, if you wait, you will find the place Where the four-leaf
					 clovers grow.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HigginsonER3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ella Higginson standing outside in
					 front of trees and ferns with corner of house in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HigginsonER4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ella Higginson standing in front of
					 printed folding screen, holding a small dog</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Handwritten on verso: God love you for-ever and forever
					 dearest Zoe [Zoe Kincaid]! Come to see me some nice spring evening-you'll love
					 my home, even if it is a lonesome place now...I love you a lot...Ella
					 Higginson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hildt, Michael Thomas (March 17, 1942 - December 21,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Washington, D. C. in 1942 and raised in Colorado,
				  Michael Hildt began his career in the banking industry. In 1971, he gave up a
				  management position at SeaFirst Bank to become director of the Coalition for
				  Open Government. Pushing for a change in the state law requiring financial
				  disclosure of lobbying activities and campaign finance, the group's Initiative
				  276 passed in 1972, resulting in the state's public-disclosure law.
				  Subsequently, Hildt worked as head of City Council's policy staff until he ran
				  and was elected to Seattle City Council in 1977 at the age of 35. During the
				  eight-year period Hildt served on City Council, he is perhaps best-known for
				  his work with the Pike Place Market. Hildt forged an agreement between Pike
				  Place Market farmers and artisans known as the Hildt Agreement. Hildt was also
				  active in the City's conservation efforts in the early 1980s and housing
				  issues. He worked to allow apartments attached to single-family homes, or
				  mother-in-law apartments, in order to increase the supply of lower cost
				  housing. Hildt served two terms on Council, 1978-1986, before choosing not to
				  run for reelection. He chaired the Urban Development and Housing Committee
				  (1978-1981), the Energy Committee (1982-1985), and two ad hoc committees,
				  Shorelines (1979) and Campaign Financing (1984-1985). He was a member of
				  several other committees including: Parks and Community Services (1978-1979),
				  Water and Waste Management (1980-1981), Environmental Management (1984-1985),
				  and Finance (1982-1985). After leaving City Council, Hildt and his wife, Karen
				  Gates Hildt, moved to the Olympic Peninsula in 1986. He became the first City
				  Administrator for Port Townsend in 1995. In 1999, he earned his master's degree
				  in business from the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Carrie Mary Rhoads (September 1,
				  1857 - December 21, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carrie Mary Rhoads, the daughter of James L. Rhoads and Mary
				  Romaine Rhoads, was born in Indiana; she married Home Milton Hill in 1885. She
				  was president of Washington Equal Suffrage Association (WESA) from 1898-1900
				  and continued to be actively involved as a lobbyist and a crucial part of the
				  suffrage movement until the 1910 victory. In 1909 she became involved with and
				  leader of a rival organization to WESA, Washington Political Equality League.
				  She was also treasurer of the Washington Temperance Union and president of The
				  Woman’s Century Club (1893-95).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillCMR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Carrie Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Delinda Reed (March 27, 1835 - January 14,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Delinda Reed, the daughter of Calvin Reed and Alvira Brown Reed,
				  was born in Michigan and traveled with her family to Oregon in 1850. The Reeds
				  arrived at Eagle Creek, Clackamas, Oregon, a few days after the birth of their
				  seventh child, Bianca, on the western slope of Mt. Hood on the Barlow Road.
				  Delinda married Flemming R. Hill in 1853.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillDR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Delinda Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Eugene Kincaid (1845 - January 31,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eugene Kincaid Hill was born in Ohio. He married Jeanette Garton
				  in 1872, the same year he was appointed president of the University of
				  Washington. They comprised the entire faculty; she taught Greek, and he taught
				  mathematics and other subjects. Four months after he became the University’s
				  fifth president, the UW ran out of funds; he stayed until 1874. The second year
				  saw an increase of students and faculty; however, the UW was closed in 1874.
				  The couple left for California, where Eugene Hill taught school for sixteen
				  years. They returned to Seattle in 1890, and Eugene taught in both the public
				  schools and at the UW. In 1898, he joined the Gold Rush to Alaska. He died
				  while crossing the Valdez Glacier. His son, Climie, stayed with the body in
				  their winter quarters on the Alsek River until he was found by a rescue party
				  in the spring. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillEK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eugene Kincaid Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photo image copied from book.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillEK2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eugene Kincaid Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">M .M. Hazeltine Photo, Sacramento, CA</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Flemming Raphael (October 17,
				  1824 - March 13, 1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fleming Raphael Hill was born in Overton County, Tennessee. He
				  joined the Hudson’s Bay Company in Winnipeg, Canada, and came to Oregon as an
				  employee of that firm in the summer of 1844. In August, 1848, Hill went to
				  California, returning to Oregon in May, 1851. He married Delinda Reed in 1853;
				  her sister, Bianca Reed, later married Hill’s younger brother, William G. Hill.
				  Fleming Hill was a trustee of the Umpqua Academy at Wilbur and operated a
				  tavern and hotel in his former home. The house was altered with the addition of
				  a second story, probably in the 1870s The Fleming R. Hill House, also long
				  known as the Wilbur Tavern, is the oldest structure standing in Douglas County
				  and is one of the oldest buildings in all of southwest Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillFR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Fleming Raphael Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, George Alfred (December 24, 1842
				  - July 12, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Alfred Hill, the son of Reuben Colman Hill and Margaret
				  Lair Hill, was born in Tennessee. The family moved to Missouri early in 1853
				  and from there started to the Pacific Coast by ox team. They arrived in Benton
				  County, Oregon the following year. Hill taught school, prospected, freighted
				  with ox and mule teams, ran a drug store, all while studying law. He married
				  Julia Driggs in 1870, and in 1880, the couple moved to Seattle where he
				  practiced law. He served two terms as a police judge, was a member of the
				  Seattle volunteer fire department, and served as president of the Board of Fire
				  Commissioners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillGA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Alfred Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">E.G. Williams and Era, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, James Jerome (September 16, 1838
				  – May 29, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James J. Hill was born in Ontario, Canada. He moved to St. Paul,
				  Minnesota and worked in a shipping warehouse. By 1866, he was an independent
				  businessman as a forwarding agent and in transportation. He soon became the
				  agent for the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company which ran 10 miles to St.
				  Anthony, Minneapolis. By the 1870s, he wanted to move the line westward,
				  through the Rockies into Canada. Initially, Hill's plan to expand the railroad
				  line was dubbed "Hill's Folly" because he proposed to move the line through
				  unpopulated wilderness areas. The project, privately funded, took ten years to
				  complete due to Hill's cautious approach of laying the track in 200 mile
				  increments and promoting population around the line to support continued
				  construction efforts. The incremental progress of his railroad weathered the
				  economic turmoil of the depression and was a success, unlike many of competing
				  railroads that went bankrupt. The Great Northern Railway, so named in 1890, was
				  one of the largest transcontinental railroads in the United States and ran more
				  than 1,700 miles from St. Paul, Minnesota to Seattle, Washington. In 1879, Hill
				  and his business partners took over the bankrupt St. Paul and Pacific Railroad
				  and renamed it the Minnesota &amp; Manitoba Railway Company. In addition to his
				  work on the Great Northern Railway, Hill also was a prominent player in the
				  construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. He resigned as president of Great
				  Northern Railway in 1907, but remained on its board for five years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James J. Hill in overcoat and
					 cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1916?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of James J. Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJJ3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James J. Hill on platform giving an
					 address to a crowd at the opening day of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
					 Exposition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1909</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJJ4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Bust of James J. Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Joe (October 7, 1879 - November
				  19, 1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joe Hill, born Joel Emmanuel Hagglund, was a Swedish-American
				  labor activist, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World
				  (familiarly called the "Wobblies"). He was born in Sweden and immigrated to the
				  United States in 1902. Hill, an immigrant worker who frequently faced
				  unemployment and underemployment, became a popular songwriter and cartoonist
				  for the radical union. His most famous songs include <emph render="italic">The
				  Preacher and the Slave</emph> (in which he coined the phrase "pie in the sky"),
				  <emph render="italic">There is Power in a Union</emph>, and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Rebel Girl</emph>. In 1914, a Salt Lake City area
				  grocer and former policeman and his son were shot and killed by two men. The
				  same evening, Hill arrived at a doctor's office with a gunshot wound, and
				  briefly mentioned a fight over a woman. Hill refused to explain further, even
				  after he was accused of the grocery store murders on the basis of his injury.
				  He was convicted of the murders in a controversial trial, which turned into a
				  major media event, generating international union attention. Following an
				  unsuccessful appeal, political debates, and international calls for clemency
				  from high-profile figures and workers' organizations, Hill was executed by
				  firing squad on November 19,1915. After his death, he was memorialized by
				  several folk songs. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJoe1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Joe Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1915?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting of Joe Hill; framed original in UW
					 Special Collections.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Joseph (September 25, 1823 -
				  September 15, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Hill, the son of Joshua Hill and Margaret Cunningham
				  Hill, was born in Tennessee. In his early days, he was an unofficial member of
				  Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, and when lecturers came to the college, he
				  would take their photographs. On several occasions, he photographed President
				  Abraham Lincoln. He roomed with Orville Grant, the brother of General Ulysses
				  S. Grant, and met many of the prominent men of the Civil War period. Most of
				  his photographs and negatives were destroyed in a fire at his gallery; some of
				  the prints, including one of Lincoln, were stored in a shed and were saved. He
				  moved to Yakima in 1903. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJoseph1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Joseph Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 25, 1913</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Weston Studio, North Yakima, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Handwriting on photo: Joseph Hill, photo taken on my 90th
					 Birthday, Sept 25, 1913</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Julia Driggs (July 14, 1848 -
				  March 16, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia Driggs, the daughter of Jeremiah Driggs and Eliza Ann
				  Ketchum Driggs, was born in Oregon. She married George A. Hill in 1870. The
				  family moved to Seattle, Washington in 1880, where George Hill practiced
				  law.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillJD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Julia Driggs Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James and Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hill, Matthew William (June 26, 1894 - February 28,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew William Hill was an American lawyer who served as a
				  justice of the Washington State Supreme Court from 1947 to 1969 and chief
				  justice from 1957 to 1958. He was born in Bozeman, Montana; in 1907, the family
				  moved to Lester, Washington where he attended a two-room school. He graduated
				  from Stadium High School in Tacoma and enrolled in the University of Washington
				  where he was a member of the debate team and vice-president of the Associated
				  Students. In 1917, he graduated cum laude and Order of the Coif with a
				  Bachelors of Law degree. He later received an honorary Juris Doctor from
				  Seattle Pacific College. Admitted to the State Bar in 1918, Hill practiced law
				  in Seattle. From 1923 to 1924, he served as an Assistant U. S. District
				  Attorney and was appointed judge of the King County Superior Court in 1945. In
				  1946, he was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Washington State,
				  taking office on January 13, 1947 and serving as chief justice from January 14,
				  1957 until January 12, 1958. The Matthew W. Hill Scholarship at the University
				  of Washington Law School, established in his memory, supports second and third
				  year students with a financial need and a commitment to civic or community
				  activities.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Reuben Dwight (July 1, 1898 - July 10,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reuben Dwight Hill, the son of Superior Court Judge Reuben
				  Dwight Hill, was born in Minnesota and came to Seattle as a child. He graduated
				  from the University of Washington and attended UW Law School before joining
				  Burchard and Fisken Co. as a shipping executive. He was then manager of the
				  Moller Steamship Company of San Francisco and Hong Kong. At the beginning of
				  World War II, he was taken prisoner when the Japanese occupied Hong Kong; he
				  was repatriated on the Swedish liner <emph render="italic">Gripsholm </emph> in
				  1942. He later published <emph render="italic">Hong Kong Diary</emph> about his
				  experiences. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD1</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill standing with his son, R. Dwight Hill
					 Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD2</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill sitting at desk with his son, R. Dwight
					 Hill Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Reuben Dwight Jr. (April 10, 1936 - April 10,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reuben Dwight Hill Jr. , the son of Reuben Dwight Hill and Ruth
				  Jacobsen, was born in Portland, Oregon and was raised in Seattle, Hong Kong,
				  San Rafael, and various other cities. In 1954, he joined the Marines, and
				  served in Korea after that war. In 1959, he graduated from Pepperdine
				  University with a degree in psychology. Soon after graduating, Hill began
				  working with the Christian organization, the Navigators. Over the course of
				  fifty years, he and his wife, Ruth Ashton Hill, had ministries in the United
				  States and in Manila, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD1</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill standing with his son, R. Dwight Hill
					 Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Reuben Dwight Hill subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD2</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill sitting at desk with his son, R. Dwight
					 Hill Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Reuben Dwight Hill subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Robert Crosby (September 14, 1829
				  - May 10, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Crosby Hill was born in Pennsylvania in1829. In 1850, he
				  emigrated by way of Panama to California where he mined for quartz. In 1853, he
				  moved to Whidbey Island, Washington, where he served as a probate judge and an
				  auditor. He also fought in the Indian Wars. Hill then moved to Port Townsend,
				  Washington, where he stablished the First National Bank of Port Townsend in
				  partnership with Colonel Henry Landes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Crosby Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Samuel (May 13, 1857 - February 26,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Hill, usually known as Sam Hill, was a businessman,
				  lawyer, railroad executive and advocate of good roads in the Pacific Northwest.
				  He substantially influenced the region's economic development in the early 20th
				  century. His projects include the Peace Arch, a monument to 100 years of peace
				  between the United States and Canada, on the border between Blaine, Washington
				  and Surrey, British Columbia; the Maryhill Museum of Art, a building originally
				  conceived as a residence; and Maryhill Stonehenge, a replica of Stonehenge in
				  Maryhill, Washington, a memorial to fallen World War I soldiers from Klickitat
				  County, Washington. In 1907, he persuaded the University of Washington Board of
				  Regents to establish a chair of highway engineering, the first in the nation.
				  As part of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in 1909, Hill helped organize
				  the first American Congress of Road Builders, and the Good Roads Building at
				  the A-Y-P exposition became the highway engineering building at the University
				  of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Samuel (Sam)
					 Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sam Hill with James W. Wheeler at a
					 train station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>James W. Wheeler was a prominent realtor in Seattle.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sam Hill with Alta Wheeler at a train
					 station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Alta Wheeler was James W. Wheeler's wife.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hill, Sarah</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughJW1</container><unittitle>Jacob Wallace Lough with Stephen Andrews, Sammuel (?)
					 Andrews, Clarence Andrews and Sarah Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken on south bank of Portage Bay Lake, a
					 short way from the shore and about to Dalialand Flower Shop on Boyer Avenue.
					 There was a little stream, came down the valley. Evidently, it was the same
					 valley J. W. Wheeler has park now. We went there in the Andrews' boys clinker
					 built raw boat, taking along a watermelon. I took the picture with a string.
					 Must have been about 1896 as I look to be 16 years old. My first sweater which
					 was quite a favorite acquisition.</p><p>Filed under Jacob W. Lough subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, Tim (August 23, 1936 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tim Hill was born in Patterson, New Jersey. His family moved to
				  Seattle, Washington in 1948. Hill studied political science at Whitman College
				  and law at University of Washington, graduating from the University of
				  Washington's School of Law in 1963. He was a politician in Washington for 27
				  years, from 1966-1993. His career included two terms as King County executive,
				  one term as a state representative for the 44th district, three terms on the
				  Seattle City Council, and as the Seattle city comptroller from 1979-1985. For
				  his stewardship of Seattle's fiscal concerns, Hill received recognition from
				  the Municipal League in 1984 as the year's outstanding public official. He ran
				  unsuccessfully for the United States Senate in 1992. Hill married Margot David
				  in 1962.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Tim Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W.C. Heib, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Tim Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Camera Craft, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill on stage, speaking into
					 microphone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 24, 1969</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Nick J. Cirelli, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech><note><p>Stamped on verso: City of Seattle Engineering Department.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill sitting at a
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1969?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill sitting at a
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W.C. Heib, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photo missing as of April 2022</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, William Lair (August 20, 1838 -
				  February 24, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Lair Hill was born in Tennessee and moved with his
				  family to Oregon in 1853. He graduated from McMinnville College (now Linfield
				  College), a school that his father helped found. While attending college, he
				  met Julia Hall Chandler, the daughter of the school president; he married her
				  in 1865. After college, he began teaching in McMinnville while reading law; he
				  was admitted to the bar in 1861. After becoming a lawyer, he moved to Eastern
				  Oregon where he served in the army as a paymaster during the American Civil
				  War. From 1864 to 1866, he served as the judge for Grant County. In 1866, he
				  moved to Portland where he practiced law and was a newspaper editor for the 
				  <emph render="italic">Daily Union</emph>, <emph render="italic">the Daily
				  Times</emph> and <emph render="italic">the Oregonian</emph>. He was offered
				  appointments to the Supreme Court of Washington Territory in 1870 and later to
				  the Supreme Court of Idaho Territory, but declined the positions. He moved to
				  The Dalles, Oregon where he helped run the Wasco Academy. In 1866, he codified
				  Oregon’s laws under the authority of the Oregon Legislative Assembly and then
				  moved to Seattle in 1889 where he codified Washington’s laws. He served as a
				  director of the Columbia River Railway &amp; Navigation Company in 1892. A
				  Portland neighborhood, Lair Hill, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillWL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Lair Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hill, William Ryland (December 15, 1881
				  - July 21, 1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Ryland Hill was the son of Eugene Kincaid Hill, the
				  fifth president of the University of Washington, and Jeanette Garton Hill, who
				  also taught at the UW. William Hill was on the varsity football team from 1903
				  until 1905. He graduated from the University of Washington and was a professor
				  in the Electrical Engineering Department at University of Washington in the
				  1940s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillWR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Ryland Hill in football
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hilliger, Louis Charles (September 11,
				  1877 - May 8, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Hilliger had a farm in Happy Valley near Redmond,
				  Washington and later lived on Vashon Island. He was married to Whilimenia
				  "Minnie" Kakeldy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BossardJ1</container><unittitle>John Bossard with group including Erick Olson and
					 Louis Hilliger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Bossard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hillstrom, Phillip Knut (November 29, 1881 - March 5,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Knut Hillstrom was born Anders Phillip Knut Hellström in
				  Ryfors Nykyrke, Sweden. He immigrated to the United States in 1903 and became a
				  citizen in 1913. He was a participant of the Swedish Glee Club of Everett,
				  Washington; the chief of the Svea Male Choir in Seattle, Washington; the
				  director of both the Svea Glee Club Male Chorus of Oakland, California and the
				  Swedish Singing Society of San Francisco, California. He also taught voice in
				  Seattle, Everett and in California. He married Zora Dickinsson in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillstromPK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Philip K. Hillstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 24, 1927</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Coleman, Oakland, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photograph: To Svea Male Chair Seattle, Wash: With
					 Best Wishes, Remembering the happy days of 1925-1926. Philip K. Hillsträm
					 (Former Chief).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hilpert, August David (December 16,
				  1827 - August 20, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>August David Hilpert was born in Germany and immigrated to the
				  United States in the 1840s. He was a silk weaver by trade and worked for a time
				  in a factory in Massachusetts. He joined a company of Free Soilers who
				  established the town of Lawrence, Kansas in hopes of making Kansas a free
				  state. In 1858, he went west to Washington Territory, settling in the
				  Skookumchuck Valley, five miles northeast of present day Centralia, Washington.
				  He left for the gold fields of California and Idaho before returning to clear
				  the land and plant his first crop of wheat and oats. He later added fruit trees
				  and cattle. In 1869, he married Magdelina Gebhart; the couple had eight
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Elizabeth Hedwig (January 8, 1880- June 20,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth "Hattie" Hedwig Hilpert, the daughter of August and
				  Magdalena Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. She married Robert Henry
				  Teeter in 1902; the couple moved to Gig Harbor, Washington, where she was
				  active in the Gig Harbor Grange. They had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Helena Christina (November 23 1885 - January
				  12, 1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helena "Lena" Christina Hilpert, the daughter of August and
				  Magdalena Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. She married Herbert Clyde
				  Schaefer in 1906 in El Paso, Texas. The couple later lived in Denver, Colorado;
				  they had one child. In 1976, they donated land just north of Centralia for
				  Schaefer County Park.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Hamlet (October 10, 1907 - March 23,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hamlet Hilpert, the son of Reinhold and Lilla Hilpert, was a
				  member of the Lewis County Board of Commissioners. His parents took him to see
				  Eugene Debs in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV3</container><unittitle>Eugene V. Debs speaking to a crowd in front of the
					 Socialist Presidential Special train, Centralia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1908</unitdate></did><note><p>The crowd includes Reinhold Hilpert who is holding his son,
					 Hamlet, and his wife, Lilla Harrison Hilpert.</p><p>Filed under Eugene V. Debs subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Johanna (February 14, 1875 - January 14,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Johanna "Hanna" Hilpert, the daughter of August and Magdalena
				  Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. She married Frederick Schaefer in
				  1897 in El Paso, Texas. They had two children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Lilla Dora Harrison (July 21, 1880 - September
				  14, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lilla Hilpert was married to Reinhold Hilpert; they attended the
				  campaign rally for Eugene Debs in Centralia in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV3</container><unittitle>Eugene V. Debs speaking to a crowd in front of the
					 Socialist Presidential Special train, Centralia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1908</unitdate></did><note><p>The crowd includes Reinhold Hilpert who is holding his son,
					 Hamlet, and his wife, Lilla Harrison Hilpert.</p><p>Filed under Eugene V. Debs subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Magdalena Gephardt (January 6, 1842 - February
				  21, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Magdalena Gephardt, the daughter of Philip Henrich Gephardt and
				  Elizabeth Huhner Gephardt, was born in Germany and came to the United States in
				  1867. She married August David Hilpert in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Otto Frederick (April 19, 1881 - March 26,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otto Frederick Hilpert, the son of August David and Magdalena
				  Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. He was a farmer. He married Emilie
				  Kjesten Dortzbach in 1918. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Paulina Magdalena (March 2, 1878 - July 28,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Pauline Magdalena Hilpert, the daughter of August David and
				  Magdalena Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. She married Frederick
				  Reese in 1911. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Phillip Heinrich (July 23, 1883 - March 15,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phillip Heinrich, the son of August David and Magdalena Hilpert,
				  was born in Centralia, Washington. He worked as a farmer and telephone lineman.
				  He married Alice Carolina Padham in 1915; the couple had three children. Two
				  months after the death of his wife, he drowned in the Skoomchuck River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Reinhold (March 14, 1870 - September 30,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reinhold Hilpert, the eldest son of August David Hilpert and
				  Magdelina Gebhart Hilpert, was married to Lilla Hilpert; they attended the
				  campaign rally for Eugene Debs in Centralia in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DebsEV3</container><unittitle>Eugene V. Debs speaking to a crowd in front of the
					 Socialist Presidential Special train, Centralia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1908</unitdate></did><note><p>The crowd includes Reinhold Hilpert who is holding his son,
					 Hamlet, and his wife, Lilla Harrison Hilpert.</p><p>Filed under Eugene V. Debs subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hilpert, Selma Anna (December 23, 1872 - January 5,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Selma Anna Hilpert, the daughter of August David and Magdalena
				  Hilpert, was born in Centralia, Washington. She married Carl Pitzer, the
				  superintendent of music for the Centralia Schools, in 1890. They had three
				  children, Lona, Lenora and Carl, who later formed a musical trio and toured on
				  the Pantages Circuit. After her husband's death, she married William Wagner in
				  1917. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HilpertAD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">August David Hilpert with family
					 standing in front of house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>August Hilpert and his wife, Magdalena Hilpert, had eight
					 children: Reinhold, Selma, Johanna, Paulina, Elizabeth, Otto, Phillip and
					 Helena. There are nine children in the photograph in addition to August and
					 Magdalena.</p><p>Filed under August David Hilpert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hillyer, Munson Curtis (September 4, 1825 - May 12,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Munson Curtis Hillyer was born in Granville, Ohio and went to
				  California at an early age. He became a flour merchant and a mining supervisor.
				  In 1884, he was appointed marshall for the first civil government of Alaska.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinkeadJH1</container><unittitle>Copy of photograph of the first officials of the Civil
					 Government of Alaska, taken in front of the Custom House in Sitka,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1885</unitdate></did><note><p> John Kinkead, seated. Standing from left to right: Edwin W.
					 Haskett, Munson C. Hillyer, Samuel Ward McCallister, Jr., Andrew T. Lewis.</p><p>Filed under John Henry Kinkead subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Himes, George Henry (May 18, 1844 - January 6,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Himes was an archivist, historian, printer and journalist
				  in Olympia, Washington and Portland, Oregon, serving for over forty years as
				  the first curator of the Oregon Historical Society in Portland. Born near Troy,
				  Pennsylvania, he and his family traveled overland from Illinois to the Puget
				  Sound area in 1853 where his father started a farm east of Olympia, Washington.
				  In 1861, Himes became an apprentice to the publisher of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Washington Standard</emph> and in 1864 took a job as a
				  typesetter for the <emph render="italic">Oregonian</emph>. In 1865, he went to
				  work for Portland printer William D. Carter, and in 1868, purchased Carter's
				  shop with a partner. By 1870, he was the sole proprietor. Himes achieved his
				  greatest success in historical documentation. In 1873, he helped establish the
				  Oregon Pioneer Association, which he served for many years as secretary, and in
				  1898 he was one of the founding members of the Oregon Historical Society. Himes
				  sold his printing business in 1902 and devoted his time exclusively to the
				  Oregon Historical Society. In 1915, the organization's directors named him
				  curator, a post he held until his death in 1940. Almost single-handedly he
				  built the Society's core collections of books, periodicals, manuscripts, maps,
				  photographs, and artifacts. He also conducted more than 7,000 interviews with
				  Oregon pioneers, and published numerous articles on historical subjects, many
				  related to the history of printing in Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of George Himes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: Faithfully yours, Geo. H. Himes. June
					 10, 1919.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of George Himes seated at
					 desk with bookshelves in the background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesG3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Himes with a group of people
					 outside a wilderness station, probably a fire lookout</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Two versions of the scene.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesG4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Himes riding a horse on a
					 trail</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesG5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Himes in a car stuck in a
					 stream</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Himes, Judson Wickcliffe (March 9, 1850
				  - August 14, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judson W. Himes, the son of Tyrus Himes and Emeline Holcombe
				  Himes and the brother of George Henry Himes, traveled overland with his family
				  from Illinois to the Puget Sound area in 1853 where his father started a farm
				  east of Olympia, Washington. He learned baking in Olympia and then took a
				  business course. He worked for two years as a cruiser of timber lands for the
				  Northern Pacific Railway. He later worked in real estate and insurance. He
				  served as the town clerk and Justice of the Peace for Elma, Washington for many
				  years. He married Juniata Chipman in 1875; the couple had five children.
				  Juniata died in 1891, and he married Anna M. Stevens Nixon in 1895; they had
				  four children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HimesJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Judson Himes with unidentified woman,
					 probably his wife, Anna M. Stevens Nixon Himes (1867-1918)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Anna M. Stevens, daughter of Thomas Stevens and Catherine Kate
					 Shortell Stevens, married Samuel Nixon in 1885; they had one son, Edward J.
					 Nixon. In 1895, she married her second husband, Judson Wickcliffe Himes; they
					 had four children (Vernon (Vern) Himes, Roy Himes, Hazel Himes, and Velma
					 Himes). She is probably the woman in the photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hines, Gustavus (September 6, 1809 -
				  December 9, 1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reverend Gustavus Hines was an Oregonian missionary and author.
				  He was born in New York and entered the ministry in 1832 as part of the Genesee
				  Conference. He joined missionary Jason Lee in 1839 as part of the Great
				  Reinforcements for the Methodist Mission and moved to Oregon in 1840 to work as
				  a missionary. The following year. he was involved with the Champoeg Meetings
				  and was elected to a committee designed to draft laws in an attempt to create a
				  government in the region since there was no formal government at the time. Two
				  years later, continued meetings led the formation of the Provisional Government
				  of Oregon. Hines also served on the Board of Trustees for what is now
				  Willamette University (previously known as the Oregon Institute) and authored
				  several books while living in Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HinesG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Reverend Gustavus Hines</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1873?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hinckley, Timothy D. (June 30, 1827 -
				  February 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Timothy D. Hinckley was born in St. Clair County in Illinois. In
				  1850, he and his brothers traveled west to the California gold fields. In 1853,
				  he moved to Seattle and had a farm on land bordering Lake Washington. When
				  there was no market for his farm products, he moved to Port Orchard where he
				  worked as an engineer for three years. Returning to Seattle, he erected a
				  number of buildings on and near the site of the Phoenix Hotel; these were
				  destroyed in the 1889 fire. After the fire, he built the Hinckley block. He
				  also owned land bordering Lake Union, which was later divided into town lots.
				  He served as a Justice of the Peace and aided in framing the laws of Washington
				  during territorial days. He served three terms as a representative in the
				  general assembly. He influenced the passing of the liquor license law as well
				  as a bill creating and organizing Kitsap County. In 1867, he married his
				  brother's widow, Margaret.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HinckleyTD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Timothy D. Hinckley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hinman, Alanson (May 1, 1822 - July 26,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alanson Hinman was born in New York and came to the Oregon
				  Territory in 1844. He taught school at the Whitman Mission and later at the
				  Salem Institute. He established a donation land claim in the Willamette Valley,
				  was collector of customs at Astoria and finally settled in Forest Grove,
				  Oregon. In the 1860s, Hinman served in the State Legislature, was a justice of
				  the peace and served as county commissioner. He was a founding trustee of
				  Pacific University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HinmanA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Alanson Hinman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hinman, Chester Arthur (April 22, 1900
				  - November 22, 1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester Arthur Hinman, the son of Arthur Benton Hinman and Agnes
				  Stevens Hinman, was born in Lewiston, Idaho. He was a member of the University
				  of Washington pole vault team (1923 -1924). After graduation, he was the
				  general manager of the Kitsap County Medical Dental Business Bureau in
				  Bremerton. He was married to Ruth Kellogg.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HinmanCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chester Arthur Hinman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1924</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">La Pine Rogers, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on mat: Chester Hinman, ΣΘΕ member, University of
					 Washington pole vaulter 1923-1924. (Graduated about 1924.)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hipkoe, Max Otto (August 30, 1881-April
				  25, 1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Max Hipkoe worked in the Office of Public Information at
				  University of Washington for 45 years. He was born in Kunzendorf, Germany and
				  first came to the University in 1904 as a freshman, working part-time as the
				  telephone operator for the University. The next year, he began working as a
				  bookkeeper, accountant, clerk and cashier for Herbert T. Condon, who was then
				  the University Comptroller. In 1910, he was appointed purchasing agent with an
				  office in Denny Hall. The office was moved to the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
				  Exposition administration building and in 1922, to Education Hall. Hipkoe
				  retired in 1949. In 1953, he wrote <emph render="italic">A reminiscent history
				  of the purchasing department, University of Washington</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HipkoeMO1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Max Hipkoe with Herbert T. Condon at
					 retirement dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information University of Washington (negative 464-B)</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Max Hipkoe: retires after 45 years. Condon
					 presents him with watch and bag, Feb., 1949.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hirsch, Edward M. (May 3, 1836 -
				  December 29, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Edward M. Hirsch was born in Wurttemberg, Germany and came to
				  America in 1855. After several years in Pennsylvania and Georgia, he sailed
				  west to Oregon, arriving in 1858. He opened a store in Polk County before
				  moving to Silverton where he continued in the general merchandising business.
				  He moved to Salem, Oregon, employed as a salesman in the firm of J. B. &amp; M.
				  Hirsch. In 1866, he was elected president and business manager of the Eagle
				  Woolen Mills at Brownsville, remaining for two years. In 1868 he returned to
				  Salem, again working in merchandising. In 1878, he became state treasurer,
				  serving for eight years. When Hirsch left office in 1887, the state
				  indebtedness had been almost entirely cleared, and he more than tripled the
				  amount of investable monies. Hirsch also served on the Public Building
				  Commission, the State Asylum Commission, the Canal and Lock Commission, and the
				  Board of School Land Commissioners. He helped oversee the construction of the
				  Oregon State Capitol building and the construction of the State Asylum. Hirsch
				  followed his work as State Treasurer with service on the Salem City Council
				  (1891 to 1895) and served as chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee
				  during his second two-year term. President William McKinley appointed Hirsch to
				  the office of Salem Postmaster in August of 1898, and Theodore Roosevelt
				  awarded Hirsch a second term. He married Nettie Davis on May 10, 1868; the
				  couple had seven children. Solomon Hirsch was his brother.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HirschEM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward M. Hirsch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hirsch, Solomon (March 25, 1839 -
				  December 15, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Solomon Hirsch was born in Wurttemberg, Germany and immigrated
				  to the United States in 1855, eventually settling in Salem, Oregon with his
				  family in 1858. He established general mercantile stores, first in Dallas
				  (1858-1861), Silverton (1861-1864) and later in Portland. With Jacob Mayer and
				  Louis Flesichner, he was one of the founders of Fleischner, Mayer and Co., the
				  largest wholesale dry goods company on the West Coast. He served as president
				  of the Oregon State Senate during the 1880 session, and was ambassador to the
				  Ottoman Empire from 1889 until 1892. His wife, Josephine, was the leader of the
				  Portland Equal Suffrage League; she was the daughter of his business partner,
				  Jacob Mayer. Hirsch's brother, Edward, served as Oregon State Treasurer. A wing
				  of the Portland Art Museum was dedicated to Solomon and Josephine Hirsch in
				  1939.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HirschS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Solomon Hirsch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: from (Joseph P.) Gaston, 
					 <emph>Portland</emph> vol. 2, p. 145. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Histo (also known as White Earth, Topplish, or
				  Oyster)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Histo (or Topplish), a member of the Warm Springs scouts under
				  Donald McKay, participated in the Modoc Campaign. He was approximately 80 years
				  old when the photograph was taken.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitzgeraldMJ1</container><unittitle> Maurice Fitzgerald with Colonel Frazier Augustus
					 Boutelle and Histo, also known as Topplish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption on front of photo: Three veterans of Modoc Indian War
					 1872-73. Note from back of photo: Presented to my esteemed friend C.B. Bagley
					 this 1st day of December 1923. Maurice Fitzgerald.</p><p>Filed under Maurice Fitzgerald subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hitler, Adolf (April 20, 1889 – April 30, 1945)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adolf Hitler was a German politician who was the leader of the
				  Nazi Party, Chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945 and Führer ("Leader") of
				  Nazi Germany from 1934 to 1945. As dictator, Hitler initiated World War II in
				  Europe with the invasion of Poland in September 1939 and was central to the
				  Holocaust.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HitlerA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Adolf Hitler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1933 and 1945?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="photographer">Hoffmann, Munich</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoagland, Dayle Naoma (March 2, 1902 - January 6,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dayle Naoma Hoagland joined the UW Athletics Department in 1939
				  as an administrative assistant. She managed the Will Call and Complaints
				  Department, kept the student records and planned all the travels for the teams.
				  When she retired in 1964, she was awarded a Big W blanket bearing her name and
				  length of service, the first Big W blanket awarded to a woman. A rowing shell
				  was also named in her honor. She married Townsend Hoagland in 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoaglandDN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dayle Hoagland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1957</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1957 edition of <emph>The
						Tyee.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hobson, John (April 12, 1824 - June 12,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Hobson was born in Derbyshire England in 1824 and emigrated
				  with his family to the United States in 1843, joining a wagon train that
				  included Dr. Marcus Whitman. Upon arriving at Waiilatpu, Whitman's home, the
				  travelers were disappointed to find the grist mill had burned; however, they
				  obtained a little wheat and made flour with their coffee mills. They left their
				  cattle there on the range and proceeded down the Walla Walla river. They made
				  the descent of the Columbia in a canoe with a Native American guide. When they
				  reached Fort Vancouver, they were assisted by John McLoughlin. The family
				  settled in Clatsop, and John Hobson later moved to Astoria, Oregon. He was a
				  cattleman, salmon packer, miner and was appointed collector of customs for the
				  port by President Cleveland. He married Diana Owens on October 23, 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HobsonJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Hobson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hock, Robert D.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert D. Hock was a Seattle writer who also worked for the
				  Boeing Company in Seattle. In 1969, he won the Henry Broderick Play Award from
				  the Pacific Northwest Writers conference. He taught classes at The Writing Shop
				  in the 1970s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HockRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert D. Hock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Writing Shop, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hodgson, Thomas Francis (October 31, 1925 - September
				  24, 2013)</unittitle></did><note><p>Thomas F. Hodgson graduated from the University of British
				  Columbia and received his M.S. and PhD in psychology from the University of
				  Washington. He was on staff at the UW from 1953 to 1959 as a counselor in the
				  office of student affairs. He spent two years (1959 -1961) as a psychologist
				  with RCA in New Jersey before returning to the UW as Associate Dean of
				  Students. He was the director of evaluation and counseling services in the
				  1980s and president of the Foundation for International Understanding Through
				  Students (FIUTS) at the UW. </p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HodgsonTF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas F. Hodgson sitting at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hodson, James William (June 3, 1907 - May 1,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James William Hodson, a native of Waterbury, Connecticut,
				  graduated from Dartmouth College in 1929 and attended Harvard Law School for
				  two years. He graduated in 1932 from the University of Washington Law School.
				  In 1938, he was appointed judge pro tem of the Seattle Municipal Court by Mayor
				  Arthur Langlie; the appointment was made permanent two years later. He first
				  sat on the Superior Court bench in 1944, filling in for Judge William J.
				  Wilkins while the latter was on military duty. Hodson was elected Superior
				  Court judge in 1948 and served until his death in 1968. He gained national
				  recognition for his administration of the Traffic Court. He was a director of
				  the National Safety Council and president of the Seattle-King County Safety
				  Council, receiving its first annual award in 1958.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoffman, David Fergus (November 7, 1916 - December 26,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Fergus Hoffman graduated from the University of Washington
				  and was an editor at the University of Washington <emph>Daily</emph> in 1939.
				  He later worked as a reporter and feature writer at <emph>The Seattle
				  Post-Intelligencer.</emph> His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoffmanDF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">David Fergus Hoffman with a parakeet
					 on his shoulder at the Arizona National Livestock Show</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hogan, Virginia Chitwood (April 28, 1869 - February 16,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Virginia "Jennie" Chitwood, the daughter of Robert Chitwood and
				  Angeline Brown Chitwood, was born in Missouri. She married William Hogan on
				  December 30, 1897, in Butte, Montana. The couple had an apple orchard on Orcas
				  Island, Washington. Hogan died on February 16, 1960, in Anacortes, Washington,
				  at the age of 91.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoganW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Hogan standing on a box,
					 delivering a speech to his wife, Virginia, and unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: William Hogan and wife and "hand" delivering
					 an agitator's talk, Hogan's apple ranch, Orcas Island.</p><p>Filed under William Hogan subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hogan, William (October 13, 1864 - December 4,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Hogan, the son of James Hogan and Mary Cunningham Hogan,
				  was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. He married Virginia "Jennie" Chitwood on
				  December 30, 1897, in Butte, Montana. He had an apple orchard on Orcas Island,
				  Washington. Hogan died in Anacortes, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoganW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Hogan standing on a box,
					 delivering a speech to his wife, Virginia, and unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: William Hogan and wife and "hand" delivering
					 an agitator's talk, Hogan's apple ranch, Orcas Island</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holbrook, Amory (August 15, 1820 - September 26,
				  1866)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Amory Holbrook was an American attorney and politician in the
				  Oregon Territory. He was the first United States Attorney for the territory and
				  later served as mayor of Oregon City and in the Oregon Legislative Assembly. He
				  was born in Rowley, Massachusetts and attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick,
				  Maine, graduating in 1841. Following graduation, he studied law under Rufus
				  Coates. He married Mary Hooper in 1847 in Boston. When the United States
				  Congress created the Oregon Territory in 1848, Holbrook was appointed as the
				  first United States Attorney for the territory. He arrived in Oregon in 1850 by
				  way of Panama. He was elected as mayor of Oregon City in 1856, serving until
				  1859. After Oregon entered the Union in 1859, he was a candidate for the United
				  States Senate, but lost that year and a subsequent attempt for the position. He
				  also served in the Oregon House of Representatives in 1860. He then started the
				  first Know Nothing Party in Oregon and served as the editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Oregonian</emph> from 1862 until 1864. Holbrook
				  retired from politics after serving as editor and entered private legal
				  practice. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolbrookA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Amory Holbrook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1860</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holbrook, Richard Blackmer (August 7, 1821 - May 14,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Holbrook was a ship's captain. At the age of thirteen,
				  he went to the Grand Banks with a fishing fleet. He made two voyages of five
				  years each on a whaling ship, rounding the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn. In
				  1849, he followed the California gold seekers to San Francisco where he
				  purchased a sloop and took produce to help feed the people crowding into San
				  Francisco and the mines. In 1851, he established a homestead on Whidbey Island
				  at Penn's Cove. Holbrook served two terms in the Territorial Legislature and
				  was instrumental in establishing a mail route between Olympia and Bellingham
				  Bay. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolbrookRB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Holbrook</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holbrook, Stewart Hall (August 22, 1893 - September 3,
				  1964) [collection]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holcomb, Ira George (November 18, 1888 - January 31,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Ira Holcomb was in the U.S. Army First Field Battalion,
				  Signal Corps, from July 25, 1917 until October 27, 1919, serving during the
				  battles of Aisne Marne, Aisne Chapagne, St. Mihiel and the Argonne Forest. He
				  was presented with the Verdun Medal in 1932. After the war, he was the sheriff
				  of Jefferson County, Oregon and later worked as a court reporter.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolcombIG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Captain Ira Holcomb</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H. Menzel, Coblenz, Germany</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on front: Sincerely, your friend, Ira G. Holcomb</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holcomb, Oscar Raymond (December 30, 1867 - September
				  14, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oscar R. Holcomb was born in Gibson County, Indiana and
				  graduated from the Chicago College of Law. He was the prosecuting attorney in
				  Adams County (1895-1898), Commissioner of Arid Lands for the state of
				  Washington (1898-1899), mayor of Ritzville, Washington (1906-1908), and judge
				  of the Superior Courts of Adams, Benton and Franklin Counties in Washington
				  State (1909-1913). He served on the Washington Supreme Court starting in 1915.
				  He was defeated in a bid for reelection in 1926, and his term expired early in
				  1927. Within several months, he was appointed to the vacancy caused by the
				  death of Justice Jesse B. Bridges, and he continued to serve until 1939. In
				  1935, he wrote the lead opinion that income tax was a property tax and
				  therefore violated the Washington State Constitution requirement that all taxes
				  should be uniform upon the same class of property.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolcombOR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Oscar R. Holcomb in judge's
					 robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1935</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holeton, Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">Holeton1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Holeton observing a nurse giving
					 an injection to a student</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Holeton and ASUW officer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Holland, Ernest Otto (February 4, 1874 – May 30,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest Otto Holland was an American academic, the superintendent
				  of public schools for Louisville, Kentucky, and the fourth and longest-serving
				  president of Washington State University, leading the institution from 1915
				  until 1945. He was born in Bennington, Indiana; in 1891, the Holland family
				  moved to Bloomington, Indiana, where Ernest attended school. He earned a B.A.
				  in English from Indiana University in English in 1895. Holland began his career
				  in education as a high school English teacher. He took additional studies at
				  Cornell University and the University of Chicago (1898-1900) and was an
				  associate professor of education at Indiana University (1905-1908). He became a
				  professor of secondary education there in 1908. Holland earned his Ph.D. from
				  Columbia in 1912. In 1911, he became superintendent of schools at Louisville,
				  Kentucky, a position he held until 1915 when the Board of Regents selected him
				  to be the fourth president of the State College of Washington, now Washington
				  State University. \</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH11</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Governor Ernest Lister; Dr.
					 Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; and Dr. Ernest O.
					 Holland, president of Washington State College, taken on the day of President
					 Suzzallo's inauguration.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 21, 1916</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears on page 14 of the 1916 edition of 
						<emph>The Tyee.</emph></p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holl, Anna Love (November 4, 1864 - April 1,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Lou Love, the daughter of Dr. William Abram Love and
				  Louise Darden Love, was born in Georgia and moved to Seattle in the 1890s. She
				  was an active member of the Rainier Valley Commercial Club, the Seattle Art
				  League, and the Northwest Ceramic Art Society. She was married to Frank X.
				  Holl, an engineer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HollAL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Portrait of Anna Love Holl and one of
					 her art works</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holm, Bill (March 24, 1925- December 16, 2020
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bill Holm was a U.S. artist, author and art historian
				  specializing in the visual arts of Northwest Coast Native Americans as well as
				  a practitioner and teacher of the Northwest Coast art style. He was Professor
				  Emeritus of Art History, and Curator Emeritus of Northwest Coast Indian Art at
				  the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture and occasionally lectured at
				  the University of Washington. His 1965 book <emph render="italic">Northwest
				  Coast Indian Art: An Analysis of Form</emph>has for decades been the standard
				  introductory text in the field. His books have won scholarly acclaim and
				  recognition with four Washington State Governor's Writers Awards, and two
				  special Governor's awards. His achievements as an artist were celebrated in 
				  <emph render="italic">Sun Dogs and Eagle Down, The Indian Paintings of Bill
				  Holm.</emph> In 2001, he was honored with a certificate of appreciation from
				  the Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian people of Southeast Alaska through the
				  Sealaska Heritage Institute; the Native American Art Studies Association
				  recognized him with its Honor Award in 1991. The University of Washington
				  honored him with a Distinguished Achievement Award from the College of Arts and
				  Sciences in 1994 and selected him to give the annual University Faculty Lecture
				  in 2003. The Bill Holm Center at the Burke Museum of Natural History and
				  Culture was named for him, and the University of Washington annually gives out
				  The Bill Holm Center Graduate Fellowship which funds students doing research
				  and writing on Native art of the Pacific Northwest Coast.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmB1</container><unittitle>Bill Holm dancing at Alert Bay, British Columbia,
					 wearing the raising-top crooked-beak mask carved by Willie Seaweed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmB2</container><unittitle>Bill Holm as Hamatsa, Gwayasdums Village, Gilford
					 Island, British Columbia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1974</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holman, Frank Ezekiel (January 1, 1886 - November,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Frank Holman was an American attorney who, after his election
				  as president of the American Bar Association in 1948, led an effort to amend
				  the United States Constitution to limit the power of treaties and executive
				  agreements. Holman's work led to the Bricker Amendment. The proposed
				  constitutional amendment (which never became law) was based upon the fear that
				  the United Nations and the treaty process would be used by internationalists in
				  the U.S. “as a law-making process to change the domestic laws and even the
				  Government of the United States and to establish a World Government along
				  socialist lines.” The amendment would invalidate any provision of a treaty that
				  conflicts with the Constitution; allow a treaty to become effective as internal
				  law only through legislation that would be valid in the absence of treaty; and
				  authorize Congress to regulate all executive and other agreements with a
				  foreign power or international organization. Holman’s tireless effort to draw
				  the nation’s attention to the threats imposed by the newly formed United
				  Nations took him on public speaking tours into 42 states and into the halls of
				  Congress. Holman was born in Sandy, Utah. He graduated from the University of
				  Utah in 1908 and won a Rhodes Scholarship to study law at the University of
				  Oxford. Admitted to the Washington bar in 1911 and the Utah bar in 1912, he was
				  the dean of the S.J. Quinney College of Law from 1913 to 1915, after which he
				  began a law practice in Salt Lake City. In 1924, he moved to Seattle,
				  Washington, to practice law until his retirement in 1961. Holman argued cases
				  in state and federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmanFE1</container><unittitle>Frank Holman with James and Alta Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holman, Joseph (August 20, 1815 - June 25,
				  1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Holman was born in England and emigrated to Canada in
				  1833. He later moved to U.S. and in 1839, joined an Oregon-bound wagon train.
				  In 1840, he established a homestead in what is now Salem. Holman was one of the
				  founders of the Oregon Institute and was elected to the Board. He was the
				  director of the Willamette Woolen Mill 1856-1857, which began the manufacturing
				  of wool on the Pacific Coast. He promoted the raising of flaxseed and the
				  formation of the Pioneer Oil Works where the seed was converted to oil He built
				  the Chemeketa Hotel and the Holman Block where the Oregon Legislature held
				  sessions from 1860-1874. Holman also served as commissioner for the state
				  penitentiary and as superintendent of the state capitol.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmanJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Holman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Holmes, Helen Phoebe (October 23, 1878 - September 24,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Phoebe Holmes became the third woman to reach the summit
				  of Mount Rainier. She made the ascent with a party lead by Major Edward Sturgis
				  Ingraham in July of 1894 when she was 15 years old. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evelyn Fay Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of a page from a book. The page includes photographs
					 of Philemon B. Van Trump, Hazard Stevens and Helen Holmes.</p><p>Filed under Evelyn Fay Fuller subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holmes, Kate Louise Turner (September 1, 1852 - August
				  8, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kate Louise Turner, the daughter of Peter H. and Lydia A.
				  (Smith) Turner, was born in Palmyra, Wisconsin. She married Henry Elliott
				  Holmes, the partner &amp; owner of Stewart &amp; Holmes Drug Store, on Oct 16,
				  1877 in Boise, Idaho. The couple had six children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmesKLT1</container><unittitle>Kate Louise Holmes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holmes, Leander (October 1, 1820 - January 28,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leander Holmes was born in Licking, Ohio and went to Oregon in
				  1847. He was a Portland attorney who was the Republican nominee for Oregon
				  Secretary of State in 1858. In 1860, he was a delegate to the 1860 Republican
				  National Convention with instructions that his vote was to be for Edward Bates
				  of Ohio; he was unable to attend, and his friend, Jesse Applegate, convinced
				  him to send his proxy to Horace Greeley. Greeley had fallen out of favor with
				  the Seward/Weed wing of the Republican party in New York and had been barred
				  from being a delegate from New York. Instead, Greeley was able to attend as a
				  delegate from Oregon, thanks to Holmes. In the first two ballots, Greeley and
				  the Oregon delegation gave their votes to Bates; on the third ballot, the
				  Oregon delegates gave their support to Lincoln. William Seward, in his
				  autobiography, said his defeat at the convention was due to Horace Greeley, who
				  had a voice at the convention due to Holmes' proxy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmesL1</container><unittitle>Leander Holmes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holmes, Marcus Morton (April 10, 1844 - March 8,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marcus Holmes was born in New Hampshire in 1844 and graduated
				  from Colby Academy and Dartmouth College. He served in the Civil War as a
				  member of the New Hampshire infantry; he later was commander of Stevens Post,
				  Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Washington and Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmesM1</container><unittitle>Marcus Holmes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holmes, William Henry (April 3, 1850 - October 5,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Holmes was born in Polk County, Oregon in May, 1850,
				  and received his education at La Creole Academy. He read law with Thayer &amp;
				  Williams, of Portland, and was admitted to the bar in 1874. He soon opened an
				  office in Salem, Oregon. He was one of the first instructors at Willamette
				  College of Law, teaching admiralty and criminal law; at the time, there were
				  only two other instructors. In 1882, he was nominated for Prosecuting Attorney
				  for the Third Judicial District. He also served as the Oregon Supreme Court
				  Clerk until 1889, when a law was passed that included a provision that the
				  Chief Justice take over this responsibility. His law partner was Benjamin F.
				  Bonaham, the ninth Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. He married
				  Josephine Lewis on August 13, 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmesWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Holmes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Holt, Russell Wayne (January 17, 1923 - December 13,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Russell Wayne Holt, the son of Seymour and Clara Holt, was born
				  in North Dakota. He graduated from the University of Washington with a degree
				  in journalism; while at the UW, he worked at the <emph render="italic">UW
				  Daily</emph>, the campus newspaper. After graduation, he was a reporter for the
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>. From 1956 until 1961,
				  he was the press secretary for Senator Henry M. Jackson. In 1961, he joined the
				  staff of Charles R. Luce when Luce was administrator of the Bonneville Power
				  Administration. Holt returned to Washington when Luce became the
				  Under-Secretary of the Interior. When Luce was named president of Consolidated
				  Edison in New York, Holt became his administrative assistant. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoltRW1</container><unittitle>Russell Wayne Holt at a Seattle Seafair Skipper's
					 ship's wheel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1953 and 1961?</unitdate><note><p>There is a photograph of President Eisenhower on the wall
						behind Holt.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hongo, Garrett Kaoru (May 30, 1951 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Garrett Kaoru Hongo is a prolific and accomplished Japanese
				  American poet. Born in Volcano, Hawaii, Hongu moved as a child to Laie, to
				  Kahuku, and then to California. Hongo graduated from Pomona College, then
				  traveled in Japan on a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. He returned for graduate
				  work at the University of Michigan, where he won the Hopwood poetry prize and
				  studied with poet-professors Bert Meyers, Donald Hall, and Philip Levine. He
				  later earned an M.F.A. from the University of California at Irvine. He has
				  taught at various universities, including the University of Missouri, where he
				  was poetry editor of the <emph render="italic">Missouri Review</emph>. He is
				  presently professor of English and creative writing at the University of
				  Oregon. His collections of poetry include <emph render="italic">The River of
				  Heaven</emph> which was the Lamont Poetry Selection of The Academy of American
				  Poets and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 1988. His honors include
				  fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the
				  Arts, and the Rockefeller Foundation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HongoGK1</container><unittitle>Garrett Kaoru Hongo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hood, James Alexander (October 5, 1853 - July 8,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Alexander Hood, the son of George Hood and Frances Blaney
				  Hood, was born in New Brunswick, Canada. He worked in real estate, served as
				  mayor of Aberdeen, Washington in the 1890s and was on the Aberdeen City Council
				  in 1907. He ran as Republican candidate for state senator in 1910. In 1907, he
				  donated two months of his salary as a city councilman to the Aberdeen public
				  library board to purchase books. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoodJA1</container><unittitle>James Alexander Hood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hood, Samuel (December 12, 1724 - January 27,
				  1816)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Admiral Samuel Hood, later First Viscount Hood, was a British
				  naval officer and peer. After serving in the American Revolutionary War, he was
				  made a lord of the Admiralty; as commander in the Mediterranean in 1794, he
				  captured Corsica. In 1792, Lieutenant William Broughton, sailing with the
				  expedition of George Vancouver to the Northwest Coast of North America, named
				  Mount Hood in present-day Oregon, and Hood's Canal in present-day Washington,
				  after Hood.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoodS1</container><unittitle>Portrait of First Viscount Hood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1790 and 1799?</unitdate><note><p>From a painting by Lemuel Francis Abbott. The original is in
						the National Portrait Gallery in London. </p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoodS2</container><unittitle>Photograph of the Hood Monument at the Greenwich
					 Hospital Cemetery in England</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hooker, William Franklin (January 25, 1835 - January 2,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Major William Franklin Hooker was born in Hookerton, North
				  Carolina, and served as a Confederate officer during the Civil War. He moved to
				  Cheney, Washington in 1880 and served in several public offices. He was also
				  the editor of <emph render="italic">The Cheney Sentinel</emph>. He later moved
				  to Port Angeles, where he served as postmaster, having been appointed by
				  President Grover Cleveland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HookerWF1</container><unittitle>Major William Franklin Hooker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1890?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hooper, Alan Varies (February 5, 1878 - May 9,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alan V. Hooper was born in St. Joseph, Missouri and married to
				  Maude B. Hooper there in 1899. The couple moved to Seattle the following year.
				  He sold automobiles and real estate in the Seattle area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hooper, Charles Patrick (October 30, 1886 - October 18,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Patrick Hooper was the Assistant Sergeant at Arms for
				  the Washington State House of Representatives at the time of the ratification
				  of the Twenty-first Amendment, which repealed the Eighteenth Amendment.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HooperCP1</container><unittitle>Charles Patrick Hooper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: From one who knows that you will battle
					 for the people of the state of Washington come hell or high water. C. Pat
					 Hooper.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hooper, Maude Bartlett (April 26, 1879 - Februay 7,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Bartlett was born in Tokeka, Kansas, married Alan V.
				  Hooper in St. Joseph, Missouri in 1899, and came to Seattle the following
				  year.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hopkins, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsG1</container><unittitle>George Hopkins with group of unidentified people in a
					 living room</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Standar, Enumclaw, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hopkins, Ginny Evans (March 12, 1924 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ginny Hopkins is a Seattle writer who wrote<emph render="italic">The Bride's Book of Showers</emph>. She was the secretary of
				  the Seattle Free Lancers and was secretary-treasurer of the Pacific Northwest
				  Writers Conference in the 1970s. She and husband Jack were active in the
				  Edmonds (Washington) Driftwood Players.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsGE1</container><unittitle>Ginny Hopkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photo: Best wishes to the Mauermanns and their
					 students.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hopkins, Harry Lloyd (August 17, 1890 – January 29,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Lloyd Hopkins was one of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's
				  closest advisers. He was one of the architects of the New Deal, especially the
				  relief programs of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which he directed
				  and built into the largest employer in the country. During World War II, he was
				  Roosevelt's chief diplomatic advisor and troubleshooter and was a key policy
				  maker in the $50 billion Lend-Lease program that sent aid to the Allies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsHL1</container><unittitle>Harry Lloyd Hopkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hopkins, Helen Elizabeth (April 16, 1883 - November 24,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Elizabeth Hopkins, the daughter of Samuel S. Hopkins and
				  Harriet M. Gresey Hopkins, was born in Braddock, Pennsylvania. She moved to
				  Port Angeles, Washington with her family in 1898 and taught school. She married
				  William Valentine Weber; the couple had one son. She died on November 24, 1918,
				  in Bellingham, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsHE1</container><unittitle>Helen Elizabeth Hopkins with group of
					 students</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hopkins, Paul B. (August 12, 1881 -
				  July 18, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul B. Hopkins received his B. S. in Chemistry in 1901 and his
				  M.A. in 1902, both from the UW. He taught chemistry at the UW before becoming
				  an assayer in Fairbanks, Alaska, where he worked for the Bureau of Mines.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hopkins, Ralph Samuel (August 25, 1872 - May 3,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Hopkins drove the first automobile, a three-horsepower
				  Woods Electric, in Seattle on July 23, 1900. After he purchased the vehicle
				  from the Woods Motor Vehicle Company in Chicago, he drove it to San Francisco;
				  the journey took five months. Hopkins claimed to be the first man to cross the
				  continent in a motor car and the first to drive any vehicle on the ocean beach
				  between Aberdeen and the Columbia River in southwest Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horan, Michael (May 14, 1858 - March 22,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Horan was born in Stockbridge, Massachusetts and
				  traveled west in 1876, first to California and Arizona, and in 1884 to
				  Washington. In 1889, he moved to Wenatchee where he raised cattle and
				  established an orchard. He was vice-president of the Wenatchee Columbia Valley
				  Bank and was on the first Wenatchee City Council in 1892. In 1890, he was
				  chosen commissioner of Kittitas County, and he served as the Chelan County
				  school director for over twelve years. He helped organize the Washington State
				  Horticultural Association and was named the first National Apple King for the
				  quality of his nine varieties of apples he displayed at a Northwest apple
				  competition in Spokane in 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoranM1</container><unittitle>Michael Horan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Thomas Gagnon, Wenatchee, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horey, A.G. [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horr, James Cortland (January 17, 1832 - March 10,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James C. Horr was born in Waitsfield, Vermont and moved with his
				  parents to Loraine County, Ohio. From 1853 to 1865, he was in Australia,
				  working in the mines in and around Ballarat; during the latter part of his
				  stay, he was the superintendent of Cobb &amp; Company’s coach lines which
				  operated the largest stage line in the world. In 1865, he returned home, and
				  with his brother, operated the largest cheese factory in the state of Ohio. He
				  moved to California in 1868 where he worked in ranching in Santa Cruz County.
				  In 1872, he was appointed special agent of the Treasury Department and was
				  stationed at San Francisco and Port Townsend; the district included the state
				  of Oregon and the territories of Washington and Alaska. He held this position
				  until 1885, when under the Cleveland Administration in 1885, he was one of the
				  first men removed. He then went into the grain and feed business in Olympia. In
				  1876, he was elected mayor of Olympia. He represented Thurston County in the
				  legislature, and was re-elected mayor of Olympia in 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HorrJC1</container><unittitle>James Cortland Horr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Drawing from a newspaper clipping from the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horrocks, Hattie Eliza (October 18, 1882 - June 25,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hattie Eliza Graham the daughter of Seattle pioneers William and
				  Annie Graham, was born in Seattle in 1882. She was the great grand-daughter of
				  Seattle pioneer Thomas Mercer. She graduated from Seattle High School on
				  Madison Street and taught school in Port Gamble, Poulsbo and Bainbridge Island,
				  Washington. She married Charles Horrocks, a photoengraver, in 1904. In addition
				  to raising two children, her time was taken up with pioneer projects. She
				  lobbied Olympia for a bill advocating the teaching of Washington State history
				  in all state schools. Horrocks was the president of the Daughters of Pioneers
				  of Washington State, and for two and half years was the curator of the State
				  Capital Museum in Olympia. Horrocks wrote histories of both the Grahams and the
				  Mercers as well aa eighteen manuscripts on Northwest history.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HorrocksHE1</container><unittitle>Hattie E. Horrocks holding a copy of 
					 <emph render="italic">Blazing the Way</emph> by Emily Inez Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HorrocksHE2</container><unittitle>Hattie E. Horrocks seated beneath a portrait of Thomas
					 Mercer and holding a copy of <emph render="italic">Blazing the Way</emph> by
					 Emily Inez Denny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horton, Caroline E. (February 7, 1878 - April 14,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline Horton was the daughter of Dexter Horton and a graduate
				  of the University of Washington. She traveled to Alaska in 1902, and a
				  photograph of a Tlingit totem pole that she took on this trip is in the UW
				  Digital Collection "American Indians of the Pacific Northwest."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonCE1</container><unittitle>Caroline Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride Studio, Wayne Albee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Missing June 2023</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horton, Dexter (November 15, 1825 - July 28,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dexter Horton was born in Seneca Lake, New York and was raised
				  on a farm in Illinois. As a young man, he traveled to Oregon and later
				  relocated to Seattle. After working as a mill hand for Henry Yesler, he opened
				  a general store, where part of the business was making loans and accepting
				  deposits from customers. In 1870, he opened up the first business dedicated to
				  serving as a bank; it was one of the corporate ancestors of Seattle First
				  National Bank, which eventually merged into the Bank of America.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonD1</container><unittitle>Dexter Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Towne, Pasadena, California</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonD2</container><unittitle>Dexter Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horton, George Plant (March 18, 1904 - July 29,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Plant Horton was born in St. Louis, Missouri, and
				  received his undergraduate and Masters Degrees and a doctorate in psychology
				  from Princeton University. He was an assistance professor of psychology, the
				  executive director of the University of Washington’s Division of Correspondence
				  Study in the division of Adult Education and Extension Services during the
				  1950s, and served as acting chair of the psychology department from 1959 until
				  1962. He retired in 1969 after 35 years with the University. During World War
				  II, he served as a civilian consultant to the Army Signal corps and the Army
				  Air Force. He was co-author, with Edwin Ray Guthrie, of the well-known "Cats in
				  a Puzzle Box" experiments on learning theories.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonGP1</container><unittitle>George Plant Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 7, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonGP2</container><unittitle>George Plant Horton sitting at desk in his
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph appeared in the 1958 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonGP3</container><unittitle>George Plant Horton sitting in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Horton, Howard Dexter (October 16, 1880 - February 8,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Dexter Horton, the son of Julius Horton and the nephew of
				  Dexter Horton, grew up in the Georgetown area of Seattle, which was named for
				  his brother. He attended the University of Washington. Horton became one of the
				  stockholders of the Washington Portland Company, which he represented as an
				  assistant chemical engineer. In 1908, he resigned to organize the Horton
				  Investment Company, a real estate venture. He also owned a half-interest in 44
				  mining claims on Bear Creek in Alaska, and had placer and copper interests in
				  Oregon. He married Gladie Maxfield in 1905, and in 1930, they moved to San
				  Francisco. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonHD1</container><unittitle>Howard Dexter Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">W. F. Boyd, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HortonHD2</container><unittitle>Howard Dexter Horton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 2, 1898</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Excelsior Studio, San Diego, CA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoskinson, Martha Fisher (October 31, 1819 - April 11,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Fisher, the daughter of Thomas and Mary (Kells) Fisher,
				  married Riley M. Hoskinson in 1841. The couple had ten children. After the war,
				  the family lived in Kansas and San Francisco and on Smith Cove in Seattle
				  before settling at Eagle Harbor on the southeast side of Bainbridge Island in
				  1878. They were among the early settlers on Bainbridge Island and helped found
				  the Eagle Harbor Congregational Church in 1882. They also donated the bell for
				  church.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoskinsonRM2</container><unittitle>Riley M. Hoskinson with his wife Martha
					 Hoskinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Riley Hoskinson suberies</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoskinson, Riley M. (January 26, 1819 - November 7,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Riley M. Hoskinson was born near Morgantown, West Virginia. He
				  married Martha Fisher in 1841; the couple had ten children. In 1853, he moved
				  to Illinois with his family. He and his son, Stuart, enlisted in the 73rd
				  Regiment, Illinois Volunteers in 1862 and served until 1865. Riley, a
				  provisions master in the Union Army, was captured by the Confederate Army and
				  managed to escaped. After the war, the family lived in Kansas and San Francisco
				  and on Smith Cove in Seattle before settling at Eagle Harbor on the southeast
				  side of Bainbridge Island in 1878. From 1878 until 1889 Hoskinson used
				  instruments mounted on his roof to record the first weather observations for
				  the area west of the Mississippi and send reports to the U. S. Weather Service.
				  He later served as a member of the staff of the Climate and Crop Service of
				  Illinois. The Riley M. Hoskinson Papers held in UW Special Collections include
				  a letter to his wife Martha (Fisher) Hoskinson from Chattanooga, Tennessee
				  dated Oct. 27, 1863 describing the Battle of Chickamauga.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoskinsonRM1</container><unittitle>Riley M. Hoskinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart F. Hoskinson, Hoopeston, IL</persname></origination><note><p>Stuart F. Hoskinson, the photographer, was Riley Hoskinson's
						son.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoskinsonRM2</container><unittitle>Riley M. Hoskinson with his wife Martha
					 Hoskinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hotson, John William (May 2, 1870 - August 22,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Hotson was appointed to the University of Washington
				  faculty in 1911. He conducted a number of research projects on fungi and later
				  wrote a number of scientific papers on his work. He supervised the studies of
				  Dr. Henry Schmitz, University president, during his work for a master’s degree
				  in 1916. Dr. Hotson retired in 1947, but continued as an honorary research
				  consultant. A native of Innerkip, Ontario, he graduated from McMaster
				  University, Toronto, in 1901. He received a master’s degree there the following
				  year and was awarded a PhD from Harvard in 1913. He taught in Ontario schools
				  and as an assistant professor of botany at Pomona College before coming to
				  Seattle. He was president of the Pacific Northwest Division of the American
				  Association for the Advancement of Science, and was a member of the American
				  Association of University Professors, and the Botanical, Mycological and
				  Phytopathological Societies of America. He initiated the fungal herbarium at
				  the University of Washington in support of his research interests as a
				  mycologist and pathologist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiggGB1</container><unittitle>Group photo of George Rigg, Theodore C. Frye and John
					 W. Hotson, taken at the time of Dr. Rigg's retirement</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the Ecological Society Bulletin for the
					 District Ecologist Award.</p><p>Filed under George B. Rigg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Houghton, Alice (August 18, 1849 - August 19,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Houghton was born in Montreal, Canada. Her father,
				  Frederick Ide, an architect, moved in 1853 to Mondovi, Wisconsin with his
				  family. In 1864 she married Horace E. Houghton, an attorney of Mondovi. The
				  couple moved to Spokane, Washington, where Horace became a judge and l in 1889,
				  a state senator. She became the head of the successful real estate, insurance
				  and investment brokerage house, Mrs. Alice Houghton &amp; Co., in 1888. She was
				  one of the members of the Chicago World’s Fair commission, a superintendent of
				  the Women’s Department for Washington State at the Fair, and was the resident
				  manager. She opened a real estate office in Chicago and managed it for several
				  years. She called for the election of a State Flower during this time, and the
				  rhododendron was selected during a six month contest. She and her husband also
				  formed the Medical Lake Remedial Company to manufacture salts and soaps from
				  the waters of Medical Lake. Horace died in 1897, and she married Archibald
				  Brownlee in 1900 in Chicago.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoughtonA1</container><unittitle>Alice Houghton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">F. G. Kernan, New York, NY</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Houghton, Edwin Walker (August 5, 1856 - May 16,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Walker Houghton was born in Hartley Wintney, a town in the
				  northeast of Hampshire, England, where his family had been involved in
				  architecture and surveying. He apprenticed in the architecture firm of an uncle
				  and of his older brother before immigrating to the United States in 1884. He
				  worked as a farmer in El Paso, Texas, and as an architect in Pasadena,
				  California, before moving north. He arrived in Port Townsend, Washington in
				  early 1889, and to Seattle soon thereafter, drawn to the city after the Great
				  Fire of that year. He designed a number of theatres and hotels, including the
				  Moore Theatre in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoughtonEW1</container><unittitle>Edwin Walker Houghton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photo: Yours faithfully, E. W. Houghton.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Houlahan, Kathleen Eva (January 31, 1884 - February 1,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Winnipeg, Canada, Kathleen Eva Houlahan lived in
				  Pasadena, California from the age of three. In 1901, she moved to Seattle and
				  attended the University of Washington from 1902 to 1907. She studied painting
				  at the Art Students' League In New York City, returning to Seattle in 1923
				  after completing studies at the Sorbonne in Paris. Houlahan worked in oils and
				  painted rugged outdoor scenes as well as portraits, still lifes and industrial
				  views.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoulahanKE1</container><unittitle>Kathleen Eva Houlahan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Copy of the original photograph, printed in a magazine</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoult, Enoch (April 18, 1820 - March 18,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Enoch Hoult was born in Marion County, West Virginia, April 18,
				  1820 and grew up in Edgar County, Illinois. In 1842, he married Jeannette
				  Somerville. He and his family traveled overland by ox team to Oregon in 1853, a
				  journey of six months. He settled first in Lane County, establishing a farm and
				  orchard near present day Eugene. In the fall of 1863 he moved to Harrisburg,
				  Linn County. In the year 1857 he was elected a member of the constitutional
				  convention from Lane County and assisted in framing the constitution of the
				  State of Oregon. In 1870 he was elected to the state Senate from Linn County
				  and was re-elected in 1882. During his last term as State Senator, he was the
				  author of the bill to regulate fares and freight upon railroads, known as the
				  “Hoult Law.” </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoultE1</container><unittitle>Enoch Hoult</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hovenden, Alfred (August 26, 1824 - December 10,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Hovenden was born in Kent County, England and came to
				  American in 1844 when he was twenty years old. His first home was a farm in
				  Peoria County, Illinois. In 1849, together with his brother Charles, he sold
				  the farm and traveled over the Oregon Trail. He arrived in the Willamette
				  Valley and established a Donation Land Claim near the present site of Hubbard,
				  Oregon. He married Sarah Anne Soden in 1856, was a farmer and a strong
				  supporter of the Union during the Civil War. He died in a runaway carriage
				  accident.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HovendenA1</container><unittitle>Alfred Hovenden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1885?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hovey, Albert Gallatin (July 11, 1824 - November 27,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Gallatin Hovey was born in Londonderry, New Hampshire. In
				  1849, he joined a company of twenty men to cross the plains and work the gold
				  mines of California. Hovey moved to Corvallis in 1850, where he taught at the
				  first school. In 1851, he was appointed clerk of the United States District
				  Court for Benton County and later was elected county clerk. During his service
				  in the courts, he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1853. In 1862, he
				  was elected to the State Senate from Benton County and served in that capacity
				  until 1867. He moved to Eugene in 1879; two years later, he started the Lane
				  County Bank and served as its president. He served as mayor of Eugene, Oregon
				  from 1889-1991 and was a delegate to the Republican National Convention at
				  Chicago in 1884. He had a leading role in the construction of a railroad
				  between Eugene and Suislan Coast. In 1892, he served on the Board of Visitors
				  of West Point.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoveyAG1</container><unittitle>Albert Gallatin Hovey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howard, Mart Albert (February 9, 1855 -
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mart Albert Howard was a businessman in Webster, Massachusetts
				  in 1897 when news of the Klondike gold strikes reached the United States. He
				  left from home in October of that year, taking a train to Portland, then on to
				  Seattle where he outfitted for a trip to Alaska. Leaving Seattle in January
				  1898, he traveled north via coastal steamer to Dyea, then across Chilkoot Pass
				  and along inland waterways to his eventual destination at Dawson, Yukon
				  Territory. In the fall of the same year, he returned to Seattle and purchased a
				  shipment of supplies, which he retailed in the Klondike the following spring.
				  Using the profits of this mercantile venture, he became a mine operator,
				  purchasing interests in various mines on the creeks north of Dawson. He
				  returned briefly to Massachusetts in 1900 after which he took his third trip to
				  the Klondike, this time accompanied by his wife and son. He remained in Dawson
				  until 1905, after which he returned to Massachusetts permanently. In later
				  years, he became a public lecturer on the Klondike gold rush. His papers and
				  photographs are at Washington State University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HowardMA1</container><unittitle>Mart Albert Howard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howard, Oliver Otis (November 8, 1830 – October 26,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oliver Otis Howard was a career United States Army officer and a
				  Union general in the American Civil War. As a brigade commander in the Army of
				  the Potomac, Howard lost his right arm while leading his men against
				  Confederate forces at Fair Oaks in June 1862, an action which later earned him
				  the Medal of Honor. As a corps commander, he suffered two defeats at
				  Chancellorsville and Gettysburg in May and July 1863, but recovered from the
				  setbacks as a successful corps and later army commander in the Western Theater.
				  He was given charge of the Freedmen's Bureau in mid-1865, with the mission of
				  integrating the freed slaves into Southern society and politics during the
				  second phase of the Reconstruction Era. Howard took charge of labor policy,
				  setting up a system that required free slaves to work on former plantation land
				  under pay scales fixed by the Bureau, on terms negotiated by the Bureau with
				  white land owners. Howard's Bureau was primarily responsible for the legal
				  affairs of the freedmen. He attempted to protect the freed slaves from hostile
				  conditions, but lacked adequate power, and was repeatedly frustrated by
				  President Andrew Johnson. Howard's allies, the Radical Republicans, won control
				  of Congress in the 1866 elections and imposed Radical Reconstruction, with the
				  result that freedmen were given the vote. Howard was a leader in promoting
				  higher education for freedmen, most notably in founding of Howard University in
				  Washington and served as its president from 1867 until 1873. He also founded
				  Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tennessee in 1895. After 1874, Howard
				  commanded troops in the West, conducting a campaign against the Nez Perce
				  tribe; after Chief Joseph's surrender, he argued without success that the Nez
				  Perce should be allowed to return to their home. He went on to serve as
				  superintendent of West Point and in 1893 received the Medal of Honor for
				  bravery at the Battle of Seven Pines. The General O. O. Howard House, located
				  on Officer's Row within the Fort Vancouver National Historic Site was built in
				  1878 and now serves as the headquarters of the Fort Vancouver National
				  Trust.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HowardOO1</container><unittitle>Oliver Otis Howard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howe, John Pardee (August 22, 1849 - September 12,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Pardee Howe was Seattle's and the Pacific Northwest's
				  pre-eminent impresario and was the first to bring the Orpheum Vaudeville
				  Circuit to town He had a circuit of theaters in Seattle, Portland, Tacoma,
				  Victoria, Spokane, Walla Walla and a number of smaller cities. In the early
				  1890s, he toured the country as the manager of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Thumb before
				  returned to Seattle to manage the 1,500 seat Seattle Theatre, the first theater
				  built after the Great Fire. The theatre was located at Third and Cherry and was
				  destroyed in 1915 for the construction of the Arctic Club. He began excavation
				  of the site of the Alhambra Theater at Fourth and Pine, but sold his interests
				  to concentrate on real estate. In 1909, he moved to Eugene, Oregon to engage in
				  the fruit-raising business. He married Mary Sheffield in 1883; she was the
				  daughter of A. H. Sheffield, a Vancouver, Washington pioneer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweJP1</container><unittitle>John Pardee Howe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">HoweJP2</container><unittitle>John Pardee Howe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Lithograph of John Pardee Howe on verso of lithograph of
					 William M. Russell; see William M. Russell subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howe, Richard (March 8, 1726 - August 5,
				  1799)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Admiral of the Fleet Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe, KG was a
				  British naval officer, notable for his service during the American War of
				  Independence and French Revolutionary Wars. He was the brother of William and
				  George Howe. Howe joined the Navy at the age of thirteen and served throughout
				  the War of the Austrian Succession. During the Seven Years War he gained a
				  reputation for his role in amphibious operations against the French coast as
				  part of Britain's policy of naval descents. He took part in the decisive
				  British naval victory at the Battle of Quiberon Bay in 1759. He is best known
				  for his service during the American War of Independence, when he acted as a
				  naval commander and a peace commissioner with the American rebels, and for his
				  command of the British fleet during the Glorious First of June in 1794. Howe
				  Sound in British Columbia, Canada, and Howe Street in Vancouver, B.C. are named
				  for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweR1</container><unittitle>Richard Howe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1795?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a portrait of Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe, from a
					 painting by Henry Singleton in the National Portrait Gallery, London.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howell, Thomas Jefferson (October 8, 1842 – December 3,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Jefferson Howell was born in Cooper County, Missouri and
				  came west with his parent in 1850. Howell was largely self-taught and only had
				  six months of formal schooling. His father was a doctor who had taught him some
				  Latin and science, but he mostly educated himself while farming along the
				  Clackamas River. In 1878, an aquatic plant discovered by Thomas and his
				  brother, Joseph, was sent to Harvard botanist Asa Gray and was named Howellia
				  aquatilis by Gray in the brothers' honor. Howell started an herbarium in which
				  he cataloged 2,152 species; today, his collections are in many American and
				  European herbariums. Howell published his first catalog of regional plants in
				  1881. He compiled and published <emph render="italic">A Flora of Northwest
				  America: Containing brief descriptions of all the known indigenous and
				  naturalized plants growing without cultivation north of California, west of
				  Utah, and south of British Columbia </emph>between 1897 and 1903. Lacking
				  funds, he borrowed type and hand-set the book a few pages at a time, taking
				  them to Portland to be printed; it was the most comprehensive list of Oregon
				  and Washington plants published up to that time. Over 30 species of plants are
				  named howellii. Howell donated his collection of approximately 10,000 plant
				  specimens to the University of Oregon. His is one of the 158 names of people
				  who are notable in the early history of Oregon painted in the friezes of the
				  House and Senate chambers of the Oregon State Capitol. His family's home, the
				  Bybee–Howell House, is on the National Register of Historic Places.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HowellTJ1</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson Howell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Huron H. Smith, Chicago Field Museum</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photo is of Thomas Howell in 1910, displaying a bound copy
					 of his ground-breaking <emph render="italic">A Flora of Northwest
					 America</emph>. The photo was taken in Howell’s small grocery store in
					 Portland.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howells, John Meads (August 14, 1868 – September 22,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Meads Howells, the son of author William Dean Howells, was
				  born in Cambridge, Massachusetts and earned an undergraduate degree from
				  Harvard University in 1891. He completed further architectural studies there in
				  1894 before studying at the École des Beaux-Arts, in Paris, where he earned a
				  diploma in 1897. He returned to New York and founded the architectural firm
				  Howell &amp; Stokes with I.N. Stokes, who had also studied at the École. In
				  1910, Howells and Stokes operated an office in Seattle, overseeing the master
				  plan, design and construction of the Metropolitan Tract, an office, commercial
				  and entertainment complex on the site of the first campus of the University of
				  Washington. Around 1910, this real estate endeavor for the University's proxy
				  developer, the Metropolitan Building Company, was one of the largest planned
				  ensembles of office buildings in the US. After 1913, Howell focused his
				  practice on office buildings in the Art Deco style. Howells also designed the
				  plan for the University of Brussels in Belgium in 1922 at the request of U.S.
				  Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover. Howells served as president of the
				  Society of Beaux-Arts Architects and the Society of Architects Diplômes. He was
				  elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters, named a Chevalier by the
				  French Legion of Honor, named an officer of the Order of the Crown (Belgium),
				  and served on the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts from 1933 to 1937.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HowellsJM1</container><unittitle>John Meads Howells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 18, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy photo from photograph in <emph render="italic">Metropolitan Bulletin</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howery, Victor I. (April 13, 1916 - July 21,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Howery was the Dean of the School of Social Work at the
				  University of Washington, a member of the House of Delegates of the National
				  Council in Social Work and Education, and a consultant to the Committee on
				  Training of Professional Personnel for the White House Council on Aging. The
				  National Association for Rural Mental Health was founded in 1977 in order to
				  develop and enhance rural mental health and substance abuse services and to
				  support mental health providers in rural areas; it evolved from a Summer Study
				  Program on Rural Mental Health at the University of Wisconsin-Madison that Dean
				  Howery established in 1973. He was the author of several books and
				  articles.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweryVI1</container><unittitle>Victor Howery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweryVI2</container><unittitle>Victor Howery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweryVI3</container><unittitle>Victor Howery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoweryVI4</container><unittitle>Victor Howery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Howison, Neil McCoul (1805 - February 23,
				  1848)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lt. Neil McCoul Howison was the commander of the U.S. Schooner 
				  <emph render="italic">Shark</emph> when it wrecked on September 10, 1846 while
				  attempting to sail out of the Columbia River. The ship was a total loss; cannon
				  from the ship were afterwards found on the beach below Tillamook Head, hence
				  the name of Cannon Beach. A court of inquiry absolved him of all blame for the
				  loss of his ship. His experience made him emphasize the conditions affecting
				  the river and resulted in a revision of the sailing directions for the Columbia
				  River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HowisonN1</container><unittitle>Neil McCoul Howison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><origination>Photographic copy of drawing by 
					 <persname role="ohotographer">Ernest V. Jensen, Portland, Oregon and Cannon Beach, Oregon</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoxie, Charles Ellsworth (December 17, 1862 - March 5,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Hoxie was on the first city council in Nome. He owned
				  The Dexter, a saloon in Nome, in partnership with Wyatt Earp. The Dexter was
				  the city's first two story wooden building and its largest and most luxurious
				  saloon. His name was originally "Hoxsie," but he dropped the "s" from his name,
				  although his sons continued to use the original spelling.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoyt, John Philo (October 6, 1841 – August 27,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judge John P. Hoyt was an American politician and jurist. He
				  served as the fourth Governor of Arizona Territory and was nominated to become
				  Governor of Idaho Territory but he declined the position. In January 1879, he
				  was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Washington Territory, a
				  position he held until 1887. In May 1887, he became manager of the territory's
				  largest bank and in 1889, he was President of Washington's Constitutional
				  Convention. Following Washington's statehood, Hoyt was elected a justice of the
				  Washington Supreme Court and served from 1889 until 1897. From 1898 till 1902,
				  he was a regent for the University of Washington and a law professor at the
				  school from 1902 until1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoytJP1</container><unittitle>John Philo Hoyt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoytJP2</container><unittitle>John Philo Hoyt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hoyt, Samuel Adams (May 22, 1852 - October 6,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Samuel Hoyt, when a young man, was employed by the
				  Boston, Baltimore and Norfolk Steamship Company. He came to the Pacific Coast
				  in 1877 and piloted boats between San Francisco and Seattle for several years.
				  He later settled in Seattle, where he commanded several well-known steamers in
				  Puget Sound. He was harbor master in Seattle for three years; after retiring
				  from this position, he purchased the steamer. <emph render="italic">Wasco.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoytSA1</container><unittitle>Samuel Adams Hoyt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hubbard, Edward Buckley (March 9, 1839 - September 3,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lieutenant Edward Buckley Hubbard was a graduate of West Point
				  and served in the Union Army during the Civil War. After the war, he was
				  stationed in Arizona, California and Washington. He was the commander of the
				  American Camp from January 1872 until September 1872, shortly before the
				  conclusion of the "Pig War." The "Pig War" is the name commonly given to the
				  13-year standoff between the American Army and British Royal Navy on San Juan
				  Island that began in the summer of 1859 after an American settler shot a
				  British pig on the island that both nations claimed. The "war" is celebrated
				  because it was ultimately resolved by negotiation and compromise instead of by
				  guns and force, and there were no casualties except the pig. The confrontation
				  and its resolution are also significant in Washington history because the award
				  of the San Juans (San Juan, Orcas, Lopez, Shaw, and many smaller islands) to
				  the United States instead of Great Britain led to the creation of Washington's
				  San Juan County and finalized the borders of the state that exist today. The
				  American Camp was located at the southern end of San Juan Island, and the
				  English Camp near the northern end of the same island. The two sites have been
				  preserved and now make up the San Juan Island National Historical Park. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardEB1</container><unittitle>Edward Buckley Hubbard in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hubbard, Edward (Eddie) Wilits ( January 3, 1889 -
				  December 12, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Wilts (Eddie) Hubbard was born in San Francisco and came
				  to Seattle in 1907. On November 1915, he was the first pupil in the Aviation
				  School of the Northwest and the first in the Northwest to obtain an aviator's
				  license from the Aero Club of America. He joined the Boeing Airplane Company as
				  a mechanic and soon became a test pilot. In 1920, he was awarded the Seattle to
				  Victoria, B.C. airmail contract. He left Boeing to start his own firm, buying a
				  Boeing B-1 Seaplane to use as the delivery plane; it was Boeings's first
				  commercial aircraft sale and is now in the Museum of History and Industry in
				  Seattle. In 1927, he convinced William Boeing to bid for the cross-country mail
				  and passenger route from San Francisco to Chicago. Boeing won the bid, and
				  Hubbard rejoined the firm. He then convinced the company to resurrect a 1925
				  mail plane prototype upgraded with a metal body, more powerful engine and build
				  twenty-five for the route. That plane, the Model 40, became Boeing’s first
				  mass-produced commercial aircraft. Boeing Air Transport was established as part
				  of the sprouting empire, and Hubbard became vice-president of operations for
				  the Air Transport division. He died at age 39 after an operation. He was
				  actually born "Hubback," but an error on a licence led to him using the surname
				  Hubbard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardEW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eddie Hubbard standing in front of
					 U.S. Mail airplane with postmaster Charles M. Perkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1928?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardEW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eddie Hubbard in U.S. Mail airplane
					 with postmaster Charles M. Perkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1928?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hubbard, Samuel (May 17, 1863 - June 13,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Hubbard Jr. was the son of Samuel Hubbard, whose
				  half-brother was Gardiner Greene Hubbard, the first president of the National
				  Geographic Society and father-in-law of Alexander Graham Bell. In 1886,
				  Gardiner Greene Hubbard started the Moxie Company, an experimental farm that
				  tested crops for their viability in this area, raised livestock, irrigated some
				  7,000 acres of land, built a community, and offered land for sale. Hubbard Jr.
				  was one of the signers of the original articles of incorporation and worked for
				  the company for a number of years. He was the postmaster for Moxie (the town)
				  in 1887. In 1897, he accompanied John Hart McGraw, the former governor of
				  Washington, to the Klondike.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Samuel Hubbard Jr. standing in
					 doorway, holding a pen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Sam Hubbard at Rampart [Alaska] Federal
					 Reserve Bank, Alaska Commercial Company.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hudson, Jack</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerREH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ray Gardner with Jack Hudson and pack
					 mules</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Col. Ray E. Gardner, U. S. Geographic Soc.,
					 Jack Hudson, on the way to Snoqualmie Pass.</p><p>Filed under Ray Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huebner, Frederick D. (December 31, 1955 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick D. Huebner was a trial lawyer for more than 30 years
				  and a novelist since 1987. He wrote the Matthew Riordan mystery series as well
				  as trial novels and political thrillers. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huggins, Edward (June 10, 1832 - January 24,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Huggins was born in London, England. In October 1849, he
				  joined the Hudson's Bay Company, sailing on the <emph render="italic">Norman
				  Morrison</emph> for Fort Victoria, arriving there in March 1850. Sir James
				  Douglas, in charge at Fort Victoria, sent Huggins to Fort Nisqually, where he
				  arrived on Apri1 13, 1850 to work under the direction of William Fraser Tolmie.
				  During the Indian War, he was given charge of the Company's installation "Muck
				  Farm," ten miles east of Nisqually; he encountered no hostile Indians. In 1857,
				  Huggins married Letitia Work. When William F. Tolmie took over the duties of
				  Sir James Douglas at Fort Victoria in 1859, Huggins was placed in charge of
				  Fort Nisqually. In June 1870, the Puget Sound Agricultural Company (which
				  Huggins contended was not affiliated with the Hudson's Bay Company) surrendered
				  rights claimed under the Treaty of 1846, and Huggins was ordered to move to the
				  interior of British Columbia. Instead, he resigned and became a United States
				  citizen. Huggins later purchased the quarter section on which the buildings of
				  Fort Nisqually stood. He began farming and stockraising, and eventually
				  acquired the remainder of the Nisqually farm as well as an additional 1,000
				  acres purchased from the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. In the late 1870s,
				  he was elected County Commissioner on the Republican ticket, serving three
				  terms until he was elected County Auditor in 1886. He then moved to Tacoma and
				  joined the staff of the National Bank of Commerce, ultimately becoming its
				  vice-president.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HugginsE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward Huggins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hughes, Glenn (December 7, 1894 - March 21,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Glenn Hughes joined the UW faculty in 1919 after graduating from
				  Stanford University. He served as the executive director of the Drama program
				  at the University of Washington from 1930 to 1960, where he wrote more than 60
				  plays as well as various literary and scholarly publications, and launched one
				  of the West Coast's first foreign film series. He gained international fame as
				  the pioneer of “theater in the round.” </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG1</container><unittitle>Glenn Hughes in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0063/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Glenn Hughes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0064/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG3</container><unittitle>Glenn Hughes with Lillian Gish during a production of 
					 <emph render="italic">Mrs. Carlyle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG4</container><unittitle>Glenn Hughes with Edward G. Robinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG5</container><unittitle>Portrait of Glenn Hughes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1964?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0065/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hughes, Isaiah Inghram (August 4, 1875 - December 31,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaiah Inghram Hughes, the son of Isaiah Inghram Hughes and
				  Sarah Abbott Hughes, was born, in Whitman County, Washington. He attended the
				  University of Washington and married Maude Tinsley in Seattle in 1903. He later
				  practiced law in California where he founded the American Nationalist Party in
				  1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesII1</container><unittitle>Isaiah Inghram Hughes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Sincerely yours, Inghram Hughes. Member of
					 Oregon team, 1906.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hugo, Richard (December 21, 1923 – October 22,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Richard Hugo, born Richard Hogan, was an American poet whose
				  work reflects the economic depression of the Northwest, particularly Montana.
				  Born in White Center, Washington, he was raised by his mother's parents after
				  his father left the family. In 1942, he legally changed his name to Richard
				  Hugo, taking his stepfather's surname. He served in World War II as a
				  bombardier in the Mediterranean and left the service in 1945 after flying 35
				  combat missions and reaching the rank of first lieutenant. Hugo received his
				  B.A. in 1948 and his M.A. in 1952 in Creative Writing from the University of
				  Washington where he studied under Theodore Roethke. In 1952, he started working
				  as a technical writer for Boeing. In 1961, his first book of poems, 
				  <emph render="italic">A Run of Jacks</emph>was published. Soon after, he took a
				  creative writing teaching job at the University of Montana and later became the
				  head of the creative writing program there. He published five more books of
				  poetry, a memoir, a highly respected book on writing, and also a mystery novel.
				  He had a posthumous book of collected poetry, <emph render="italic">Making
				  Certain It Goes On</emph>. Hugo’s <emph render="italic">The Real West Marginal
				  Way</emph> is a collection of essays, generally autobiographical in nature,
				  that detail his childhood, his military service, his poetics, and his teaching.
				  In 1977, he was named the editor of the Yale Younger Poets Series. Hugo died of
				  leukemia on October 22, 1982. Richard Hugo House is named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HugoR1</container><unittitle> Richard Hugo smoking a cigarette</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: WWII in combat outfit. Original in
					 possession of William Stafford.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hume, Robert Deniston (October 31, 1845 - November 25,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Hume was born in Augusta, Maine. In 1864, he followed
				  older brothers William and George to California, where they had invented the
				  new industry of canning salmon in tins. Robert joined them and then, when
				  Sacramento River runs collapsed, helped move the family business to the
				  Columbia River in 1866. They not only operated the first salmon cannery on the
				  river, they were also key innovators, introducing new machinery, techniques,
				  and marketing strategies to the industry. By the early 1870s, each brother was
				  running his own venture, and Robert owned several canneries. After his children
				  and wife died, he sold his interests and moved to Wedderburn, Oregon, at the
				  mouth of the Rogue River. On the Rogue, Hume became a leader in salmon
				  conservation. In 1877, he built the river's first cannery, and he reorganized
				  the local fishery to prevent the recurrence of problems he had witnessed on the
				  Sacramento and Columbia rivers. To ensure reproduction, he built private salmon
				  hatcheries and funded state and federal operations farther upstream. He also
				  tried to control harvests by restricting river access through riparian
				  ownership, and he published a pamphlet, sent out with every case of his salmon,
				  promoting his policies. He dominated southwestern Oregon economically and
				  politically, with ventures extending from Alaska to San Francisco and became
				  known as "The Salmon King of Oregon." Although he tried to break the Alaska
				  Packers Association's lock on Alaska salmon, both on the water and by
				  testifying before Congress, the APA eventually bought out his Karluk River
				  operation in Alaska. He also tried to enter into a federally restricted tribal
				  fishery on the Klamath River in southern Oregon, but his claim was denied by
				  the courts. Hume's efforts to control the lower Rogue River fishery, which
				  included having the Oregon legislature sanction his monopoly, were eventually
				  nullified by state courts. Running as a Republican, he was twice elected, in
				  1900 and 1902, to represent Coos and Curry Counties in the Oregon House of
				  Representatives. Hume's fish theories and practices have continued to influence
				  state and federal salmon management for decades after his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumeRD1</container><unittitle>Robert Hume</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from a book. Written on front: Yours Truly,
					 R. D. Hume.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Humphrey, Hubert Horatio (May 27, 1911 – January 13,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hubert Humphrey was an American politician who served as the
				  38th Vice President of the United States under President Lyndon B. Johnson,
				  from 1965 to 1969. Humphrey twice served in the United States Senate,
				  representing Minnesota from 1949 to 1964 and 1971 to 1978. He was the nominee
				  of the Democratic Party in the 1968 presidential election, losing to the
				  Republican nominee, Richard Nixon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hubert Humphrey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. Swets, Duluth, Minnesota</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photograph: To Joe Gluck, a great Democrat, a
					 wonderful friend. Hubert H. Humphrey.</p><p>Joe Gluck was a Democratic politician from Seattle and
					 national committeeman for the party.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH2</container><unittitle>Hubert Humphrey with Edward Wenk, Jr. and S. Dillon
					 Ripley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Hubert Humphrey and S. Dillon Ripley presenting Edward Wenk
					 with a proclamation naming him an admiral in the Smithsonian Navy for his work
					 at the Smithsonian in ocean studies.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hubert Humphrey with flag in
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hubert Humphrey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunsaker, Elizabeth Chambers (November 20, 1854 - May 7,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth "Lizzie" Chambers, the daughter of Andrew Jackson
				  Chambers and Margaret White Chambers, was born in Thurston County, Washington
				  Territory in 1854. On May 1, 1873, she married Jacob Hunsaker, who later became
				  the mayor of Everett, Washington. Chambers Prairie in Thurston County is named
				  for her family, who were early settlers in the area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HunsakerEC1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Hunsaker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">B. J. Brush, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunsaker, Emily Collins (October 3, 1820 - January 4,
				  1874)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Emily Collins married Jacob T. Hunsaker on December 7, 1839 and
				  immigrated to Oregon in 1846 with him and their five children. The family
				  settled in Oregon City, Clackamas, Oregon, where seven more children were born
				  to the family. Two children, Josephine and Horton, died in a typhoid fever
				  epidemic in 1853.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HunsakerEC1</container><unittitle>Emily Hunsaker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1874?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunsaker, Jacob (January 22, 1845 - December 27,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob Hunsaker, the son of Oregon pioneers, Jacob T. Hunsaker
				  and Emily Collins Hunsaker, was born in Illinois. His parents traveled overland
				  to Oregon, arriving in 1846 when he was eighteen months old. He married
				  Elizabeth "Lizzie" Chambers, and the couple moved to Everett, Washington in
				  1892 during a land boom where he purchased real estate. In May 1893, the Silver
				  Panic caused a national depression that affected Everett. The price of the lots
				  Hunsaker had bought fell in value from $1,000 to $25, and there were no buyers.
				  He lost his home, and his son had to leave school to go to work. Jacob Hunsaker
				  became mayor of Everett in 1894 during the depression and was re-elected in
				  1902. He also served as County Treasurer. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HunsakerJ1</container><unittitle>Jacob Hunsaker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Juleen Studios, Everett, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunsaker, Jacob T. (July 20, 1818 - August 20,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob T. Hunsaker married Emily Collins in 1839 in Illinois. The
				  couple immigrated to Oregon in 1846 with their five children. The family, among
				  of the first pioneers to settle in Oregon City, had seven more children. Jacob
				  Hunsaker built a mill on Milton Creek, near the modern town of St. Helens,
				  where he sold lumber to the ships coming from California. He sold that mill and
				  built another sawmill on the Washougal River near the present site of Camas,
				  Washington. Following a fire, in October, 1849, the family returned to Oregon
				  City, where they purchased land near the Clackamas River. He moved to Woodburn,
				  Oregon after the death of his wife in 1874.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HunsakerJT1</container><unittitle>Jacob T. Hunsaker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunsinger, Elinor (July 11, 1921 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elinor Hunsinger, a real estate broker, was a member of the
				  Seattle Women's Commission in 1971. She married Edgar Opdycke in 1974.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hunt, Claude J. (August 11, 1886 – February 19,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Claude J. (Jim or Jump) Hunt was an American football player and
				  coach of football and basketball. He served as the head football coach at
				  Hillsdale College (1911–1912), Carleton College (1914–1916, 1920–1931), and the
				  University of Washington (1917, 1919), compiling a career college football
				  record of 90–28–6. Hunt was also the head basketball coach at Hillsdale from
				  1910 to 1913, at Carleton from 1913 to 1917, and at Washington from 1917 to
				  1919, tallying a career college basketball mark of 69–39. He played college
				  football at DePauw University, from which he graduated in 1911.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntCJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Coach Claude (Jim) Hunt holding
					 football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1918 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntCJ2</container><unittitle>Coach Claude (Jim) Hunt in front of bleachers on
					 football field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Hunter, William (November 8, 1805 – July 22,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Hunter Jr. was a politician and diplomat from Rhode
				  Island. He was a confidential clerk to Secretary of State John Clayton in the
				  United States Department of State from 1849 to 1850, serving with George P.
				  Fisher. He had served as acting Secretary of State on three occasions, once in
				  1853, again in 1860, and to temporarily substitute for Secretary William H.
				  Seward after his injury in a carriage accident and subsequent wounding in an
				  attack concurrent with the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. He also served as
				  Chief Clerk of the State Department from 1852 to 1855, Assistant Secretary of
				  State in 1855 and Second Assistant Secretary of State from 1866 until his death
				  in 1886.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huntington, Antoinette Josephine (December 20, 1838 -
				  June 15, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Antoinette Josephine Baker, the daughter of George Washington
				  Baker and Dorothy True Baker, began attending Lowell High School in Lowell,
				  Massachusetts in 1851. Graduating at the age of 16, she was soon teaching
				  school in the adjoining town of Dracut. In 1858, she began teaching in the
				  Lowell schools, but in the spring of 1864 she resigned her position when Asa
				  Mercer promised her a position at the Territorial University in Seattle. She
				  traveled with him and ten other women to Seattle on the <emph render="italic">S. S. Illinois</emph> in 1864; the group was known as the
				  Mercer Girls. After her arrival in Seattle, Antoinette taught for one term at
				  the Washington Territorial University under President Barnard. At the close of
				  the term, she was engaged by William Huntington, the territorial US Marshal, to
				  go to Monticello (now Longview), Washington Territory to teach. It was while
				  teaching at Monticello that she met Edwin Huntington; the couple were married
				  on February 21, 1865 in Monticello. In 1876, they moved to a farm at Castle
				  Rock, Washington Territory, where she organized the community's first school.
				  In May of 1880, she was selected the first woman to serve as School
				  Superintendent of Cowlitz County. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonAJ1</container><unittitle>Copy of a carte-de-visite portrait of Antoinette
					 Huntington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonAJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Antoinette Huntington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huntington, Chandler (February 24, 1849 – September 17,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chandler Huntington was the son of Harry Darby Huntington and
				  his second wife, Rebecca Jane Headly Huntington, who crossed the plains in 1848
				  and settled near present day Vancouver. Chandler was born there in 1849. The
				  family later moved to Cowlitz County where Harry Huntington established the
				  town of Monticello (now Longview). Chandler Huntington served in the Washington
				  State House of Representatives from 1889 until 1891. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Chandler Huntington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonC2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Chandler Huntington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huntington, Edwin Ruthven (September 28, 1839 - January
				  13, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Ruthven Huntington, the son of Harry Darby Huntington and
				  his first wife, Zervia Klinck Huntington, was born in Indiana. His mother died
				  in 1846, and his father married Rebecca Jane Headly in 1848. The family left
				  St. Joseph, Missouri, in 1848, crossing the plains in a covered wagon. They
				  settled near present day Vancouver and later moved to Cowlitz River where Harry
				  Huntington established the town of Monticello (now Longview). Edwin married
				  Antoinette Josephine Baker in 1865 and later operated the Castle Rock
				  dairy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER1</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington seated outside of house on his 50th
					 wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 2, 1915</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Edwin Huntington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huntley, Chester Robert ("Chet") (December 9, 1911 -
				  March 20, 1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester "Chet" Huntley was born in Caldwell, Montana and
				  attended the University of Montana at Bozeman and the Cornish College of the
				  Arts in Seattle. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1934 with a
				  degree in speech and drama. He began his radio career in Seattle, later working
				  at stations in Spokane and Portland before joining the NBC radio network. In
				  1956, he and David Brinkley began <emph render="italic">The Huntley-Brinkley
				  Report</emph> for NBC News which continued until Huntley left the show on July
				  31, 1970. He returned to Montana, where he conceived and built Big Sky, a ski
				  resort south of Bozeman which opened in December 1973.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntleyCR1</container><unittitle>Chester Robert Huntley sitting on a chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huppin, Abraham (May 15, 1904 - July 18,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Huppin's family was originally from Turisk, Russia. He
				  and his mother joined his father in Spokane in 1921. Shortly after they
				  arrived, his father died, and Huppin had to take over his father's store while
				  learning English and supporting his mother. As he developed the business, he
				  also became active in Keneseth Israel Synagogue, serving as recording secretary
				  and later president. He served as the negotiator for the later amalgamation of
				  Keneseth Israel and Temple Emanuel. Huppin headed the committee charged with
				  resolving the basic differences during the protracted negotiations in
				  establishing the new temple, which became Temple Beth Shalom. He organized the
				  Spokane Hebrew Free Loan Society to provide interest-free loans to members of
				  good character. For over 40 years, he was a member of the Chevra Kadisha while
				  looking after Spokane's Mt. Nebo Cemetery. During the 1940s, he was active in
				  B'nai B'rith and was a participant and leader in Spokane's civic issues.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuppinA1</container><unittitle>Abraham Huppin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1986?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hurlburt, T. [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hurley, A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HurleyA1</container><unittitle>A. Hurley seated in wicker chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Huson, Mary Jane (April 13,1842 - December
				  13,1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane Huson, the daughter of Archibald and Louella
				  McMillian, was born in Illinois and came to Oregon in 1852. She married Lewis
				  Madison Huson in 1861; the couple lived in Walla Walla, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HusonMJ1</container><unittitle>Mary Jane Huson with two children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1917?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peterson, Tacoma</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hutchinson, Henry Clay (July 27, 1843 - May 12,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry C. Hutchinson was born in Ohio and came to Washington
				  Territory in the 1870s. He had a farm in Pomeroy and served on the Washington
				  World's Fair Committee of 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HutchinsonHC1</container><unittitle>Henry C. Hutchinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hutchinson, Joseph Lambert (December 3, 1872 - May 20,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. Joseph L. Hutchinson was a physician and the father of
				  William B. Hutchinson, M. D., the founder of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
				  Research Center, and Fred Hutchinson, for whom the Center is named.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HutchinsonJL1</container><unittitle>Joseph L. Hutchinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1915 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle-Tacoma</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hutchinson, Robert Harper (November 24, 1858- January
				  22, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Harper Hutchinson was born in Illinois and early in his
				  career was a teacher. He taught school while studying law. After being admitted
				  to the bar, he went to Whitman County, Washington in April 1867. He was a
				  member of the Farmington City Council and was the first mayor of the city. He
				  also served as First Clerk in the land office of the Oregon Railroad and
				  Navigation Company. He was elected to the first legislature of the new state of
				  Washington in 1889. Hutchinson was later mayor of Oakesdale as well as
				  president of the Farmington Trading Company and Secretary of the Farmington
				  Hardware and Furniture Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HutchinsonRH1</container><unittitle>Robert H. Hutchinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Hyneman, H. - See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02></c01><c01 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>I</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ichikawa, Reverend Tatsuya (January 21, 1903 - September
				  23, 1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tatsuya Ichikawa was the first and longest serving rinban of the
				  Seattle Buddhist Church. His first visit to Seattle was in 1925 as a member of
				  the Japanese delegation commemorating the founding of the Buddhist Church in
				  America. He returned in 1936 to lead the church; a new temple was built in 1940
				  under his direction. In 1942, he was interned in relocation camps in Montana,
				  Louisiana, New Mexico and Texas. After the war, he returned to Seattle where
				  his first post-war duty was retiring the temple's debt. On March 11, 1954, the
				  temple was elevated to the honored status of Betsuin, the third one in the
				  United States. As head minister, Reverend Ichikawa was now addressed as Rinban,
				  a formidable title in the church. He retired in 1959.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IchikawaT1</container><unittitle>Tatsuya Ichikawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1968?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ickes, Harold L. (March 15, 1874 – February 3,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Ickes was a United States administrator and politician.
				  He served as United States Secretary of the Interior for 13 years, from 1933 to
				  1946, the longest tenure of anyone to hold the office, and the second longest
				  serving Cabinet member in U.S. history. Ickes was responsible for implementing
				  much of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "New Deal." He and Labor Secretary
				  Frances Perkins were the only original members of the Roosevelt cabinet who
				  remained in office for his entire presidency. Ickes was instrumental in having
				  Mount Olympus National Monument declared a national park. On June 29, 1938,
				  Congress converted the national monument to Olympic National Park.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IckesHL1</container><unittitle>Harold Ickes standing at a podium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ingebretsen, James C. (November 21, 1906 - March 6,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James C. Ingebretsen was a lawyer, developer, and conservative
				  who lived in the Los Angeles area from the 1930s to the 1990s. In the late
				  1920s and 1930s, he attended Stanford University and graduated with a law
				  degree. He practiced corporate law in Los Angeles; during the Second World War,
				  he served as counsel for the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. He returned to
				  Los Angeles after the war and became active in L.A.'s business community. He
				  participated in the Spiritual Mobilization organization, a nationwide,
				  non-denominational Christian organization that brought together a variety of
				  social, economic, and political ultra-conservatives during and after the 1930s.
				  He served as the Society’s general council and as an executive vice-president
				  before agreeing to head the organization in 1954, at the height of the
				  country’s anti-communist crusade. He remained at its helm, despite his own
				  misgivings, until 1961 when the organization was disbanded. These misgivings
				  developed when he experienced a “spiritual awakening” at age forty-nine that
				  prompted him to examine his life. He took the name Kristifer and said that he
				  would dedicate his life to changing the world through inner, spiritual
				  refinement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FifieldJW1</container><unittitle>James Fifield at a meeting in the Hotel Statler in Los
					 Angeles with Dr. Donald J. Cowling and James C. Ingebretsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1955 </unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, CA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under James W. Fifield subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ingraham, Edward Sturgis (April 8, 1852 - August 16,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Major Edward Sturgis Ingraham was the first superintendent of
				  the Seattle Public Schools, a noted mountaineer who climbed Mt. Rainier 13
				  times, and a leader in the effort to establish Mt. Rainier National Park.
				  Seattle's Ingraham High School is named in his honor as is Ingraham Glacier on
				  Mt. Rainier.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngrahamES1</container><unittitle> Edward Sturgis Ingraham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: In early 1956, Mr. Atkins wrote about a trip
					 to the top of Mt. Rainier in 1904 which was led by Prof. Ingraham. Three things
					 were done: a) The height of the mountain was determined; b) first ascent by
					 woman; c) Columbia Crest was given its name. <emph>The Seattle Times</emph>
					 printed the article and also the picture of the beloved Prof. Ingraham. This
					 photo was given to Pioneer Women at their meeting in October 1954 by Ivy Hall
					 Kirsch. Received by Margaret Ashworth Maxson, historian of Pioneer Women.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngrahamES2</container><unittitle>Edward Sturgis Ingraham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1926?</unitdate><origination label="Photographer"><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ingram, Robert (Bob)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Ingram was a member of the Junior Varsity crew in 1934
				  when he was a sophomore and was on the sports staff of <emph>The Daily</emph>,
				  the University of Washington student paper.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR1</container><unittitle>Robert "Bob" Ingram standing, Warner Nelson
					 seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR2</container><unittitle>Students posing with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ed Rulis, Frank
					 "Fritz" Waskowitz, unidentified, unidentified; Back row (left to right):
					 unidentified, Vic Markov, Bob Ingram, Negley England.</p><p>Written on verso: The Lindbloom bunch, Tri-Alpha House,
					 1933.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR3</container><unittitle>The Tri-Alpha House</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Alpha Alpha Alpha House, also known as
					 the Training Table or The House of the Bull. University of Washington,
					 1932.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Inkster, Lawrence A. (February 13, 1864 - May 25,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lawrence Inkster was born in Shetland, Scotland and immigrated
				  to the United States as a child. The family went first to Illinois and then to
				  Oregon, settling in the Willamette Valley in 1877. After three years, the
				  family moved to Spokane. Larence Inkster and his brother, James, owned Inkster
				  Realty in Spokane. With his brother Charles, he edited and published the 
				  <emph render="italic">Spangle Record</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">InksterLA1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Inkster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. Hugo Albrecht, Spokane</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Innes, Frederick W. (October 28, 1854 - December 31,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Frederick lnnes started his musical career at eight as a
				  chorister in the choir of St. Paul’s Church, Knightsbridge, London, England.
				  Besides the trombone, he studied violin, piano and harmony at the London
				  Conservatory of Music. He was a member of the Life Guards Band in London before
				  leaving for America in 1874, He served in Gilmore's band and the Boston Brigade
				  Band where he developed a reputation as a trombone soloist. In 1887, Innes
				  formed his own band and began touring the country. He directed the 13th
				  Regiment Band of Brooklyn, N.Y. before accepting the same position with the
				  Denver Municipal Band in 1914. Two years later, he resigned that position to
				  form the Innes School of Music. In 1923, he became president of the Conn
				  National School of Music in Chicago. As a performer, Innes was considered by
				  Sousa and Clarke to be the best of his time. As a conductor, he was noted for
				  adding chimes, double bass, and harp to the band instrumentation. Innes'
				  repertoire tastes included conducting entire concerts of the music of Wagner
				  and playing transcriptions of entire symphonies. He conducted all of his
				  concerts by memory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">InnesFW1</container><unittitle> Frederick lnnes in band uniform, holding
					 baton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">J. C. Strauss Studio, St. Louis</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photo taken for the Lewis &amp; Clark Exposition in Portland,
					 1904. Innes performed with the Innis Band at the Exposition from April 30, 1904
					 to May 28, 1904.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Iorns, Martin E. (November 19, 1909 - August 25,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin E. Iorns, F.I.F.S. (Fellow of the International
				  Ferrocement Society) was a consulting industrial engineer in West Sacramento,
				  California. He presented over 54 papers and obtained four patents on
				  ferrocement and concrete construction methods. He had a Bachelor of Science
				  degree from the University of Washington, and studied Industrial Engineering at
				  the University of Southern California. He served on the Editorial Board of the 
				  <emph render="italic"> Journal of Ferrocement</emph> and was a member of the
				  Marine Technology Society, Coastal Society, Society of Small Craft Designers
				  and American Concrete Institute Committees on Shells, Offshore Structures,
				  Repair, and Ferrocement.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IornsME1</container><unittitle>Martin E. Iorns in sweater, hat and fur gaiters in
					 Seaside, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: This is not a recent picture, but it is the
					 only one I happen to have at present.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Irving, Washington (April 3, 1783 – November 28, 1859)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Washington Irving was an American short-story writer, essayist,
				  biographer, historian, and diplomat of the early 19th century. He is best known
				  for his short stories <emph>Rip Van Winkle</emph>(1819) and <emph>The Legend of
				  Sleepy Hollow</emph> (1820). His historical works include biographies of Oliver
				  Goldsmith, Muhammad and George Washington, as well as several histories of
				  15th-century Spain that deal with subjects such as Alhambra, Christopher
				  Columbus and the Moors. Born and raised in Manhattan to a merchant family,
				  Irving made his literary debut in 1802 with a series of observational letters
				  to the <emph>Morning Chronicle,</emph> written under the pseudonym Jonathan
				  Oldstyle. He temporarily moved to England for the family business in 1815 where
				  he achieved fame with the publication of <emph>The Sketch Book of Geoffrey
				  Crayon, Gent.</emph>, serialized from 1819 to 1820. Irving served as American
				  ambassador to Spain in the 1840s, and he continued to publish regularly
				  throughout his life. He completed a five-volume biography of George Washington
				  just eight months before his death. Irving was one of the first American
				  writers to earn acclaim in Europe, and he encouraged other American authors,
				  advocating for writing as a legitimate profession and arguing for stronger laws
				  to protect American writers from copyright infringement. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">19</container><container type="item">IrvingW1</container><unittitle>Washington Irving</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1840 and 1850?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hollyer after a portrait by John Plumbe from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Irwin, Robert B. (June 2, 1882 - December 12,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>After graduating from the University of Washington where he was
				  the first blind student to graduate, Robert Irwin attended graduate school at
				  Harvard University where he received an M.A. in 1907. He began his career in
				  1910 as supervisor of the classes for the blind in the Cleveland Public
				  Schools, where he also organized classes for partially seeing children in 1913.
				  In 1914, he was the first to adapt Binet intelligence tests so that they "might
				  be used more appropriately with the blind." In 1923, he become the Director of
				  Research and Education of the American Foundation for the Blind. He also
				  developed an efficient interpoint braille printing machine which reduced the
				  bulk and cost of braille books by about 40 percent. Another significant
				  contribution was promoting a nationwide system of library services to supply
				  Talking Books to the blind in the United States. During his tenure as Executive
				  Director of AFB from 1929 to 1949, he built it into one of the most important
				  agencies in work for the blind. An early concern of his was the achievement of
				  better international cooperation on behalf of all the blind in the world. To
				  promote this cause, he organized the World Conference on Work for the Blind
				  which met in New York in 1931. In 1946 Irwin's interest in international work
				  for the blind resulted in organizing the American Foundation for Overseas
				  Blind, later renamed Helen Keller International. His legislative efforts led to
				  the program of Aid to the Needy Blind under Title X of the Social Security Act
				  and a bill allowing the blind an additional exemption on their Federal Income
				  Tax. He was instrumental in the passage of three laws which became a great
				  stimulus to the employment of the blind: the Barden-La Follette Act, the
				  Randolph-Sheppard Act, and the Wagner-O'Day Act. When World War II required
				  special provisions for war-blinded, he wrote and secured the passage of the
				  bill recognized as "a bill of rights for blinded veterans." He was named
				  Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus by the University of Washington, made a Chevalier
				  of the Legion of Honor by the French Government, and awarded an honorary Doctor
				  of Laws degree from Western Reserve University in Cleveland "in recognition of
				  his local, national, and international service in behalf of the blind." </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IrwinRB1</container><unittitle>Robert B. Irwin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on portrait: First blind student to graduate from
						the University of Washington.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IrwinRB2</container><unittitle>Robert B. Irwin, wearing glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1916?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Barnum Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: first U of W blind student to graduate</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Isaac, Elizabeth H. (July 12, 1902 - April 11,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth H. Isaac, the daughter of Howell and Emma (Brown)
				  Isaac, was born in Illinois. After graduation, she worked in sales and as a
				  statistician.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IsaacEH1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth H. Isaac in cap and gown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1928</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ivey, Thomas Odgers (December 14, 1872 - December 11,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Ivey was born in Cornwall, England and came to the United
				  States in 1891. He was secretary of the Barbers Union and vice president of the
				  Washington State Federation of Labor. In 1907, he was appointed to the State
				  Board of Barber Examiners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IveyTO1</container><unittitle>Thomas Ivey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hamilton, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ivy, Charles Evart (June 29, 1869 - April 5,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Ivy was a barber in Spokane and Davenport, Washington.
				  He also served as the secretary-treasurer of the Lincoln and Adams Counties
				  Pioneer Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IvyCE1</container><unittitle>Charles Evart Ivy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>J</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jack, Captain (circa 1837 - October 3, 1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kintpuash (Strikes the Water Brashly), better known as Captain
				  Jack, was a chief of the Native American Modoc tribe of California and Oregon
				  and was their leader during the Modoc War. He led a band from the Klamath
				  Reservation to return to their lands in California, where they resisted return.
				  From 1872 to 1873, their small force made use of the lava beds, holding off
				  more numerous United States Army forces for months in the Modoc War. He was the
				  only Native American leader ever to be charged with war crimes and was executed
				  by the Army, along with several followers, for their ambush killings of General
				  Edward Canby and Reverend Eleazar Thomas at a peace commission meeting. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JackC1</container><unittitle>Kintpuash, known as Captain Jack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1873?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackol, John (February 3, 1870 - December 31,
				  1929?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Jackol (or Jackola) was born in Tyrnävä, Finland and came
				  to the United States in 1890. He attended the University of Washington and
				  graduated with a B.S. in Botany and Zoology in 1897. He was also on the
				  Executive Board of the UW Alumni Association. Jackol taught science at Everett
				  High School and was the principal of the Aberdeen, Washington schools before
				  attending Rush Medical College in Chicago. Jackol later practiced medicine in
				  Duluth, Minnesota.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JackolJ1</container><unittitle>John Jackol</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">LaRoche Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Andrew (March 15, 1767 – June 8,
				  1845)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Jackson was the seventh President of the United States
				  (1829–1837). Based in frontier Tennessee, Jackson was a politician and army
				  general who defeated the Creek Indians at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend (1814),
				  and the British at the Battle of New Orleans (1815).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonA1</container><unittitle>Andrew Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1845</unitdate></did><note><p>Photo of a painting by 
					 <origination><persname role="painter">George Peter Healey</persname></origination> The original is at Jackson's home, The
					 Hermitage, in Nashville, Tennessee.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">19</container><container type="item">JacksonA2</container><unittitle>Andrew Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1835 and 1845?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Longacre from
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Daniel Bachhelder (July 18, 1833 - November 29,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Daniel B. Jackson was the owner of several steamship
				  companies, including the Northwest Steamship Company and the Washington
				  Steamboat Company. The latter was sold to the Northern Pacific Railroad, with
				  Captain Jackson becoming the general manager of the new Puget Sound and Alaska
				  Steamship Company. The company was active during the Alaska Gold Rush. He was
				  married to Mary Adeline Rowell in 1865.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonDB1</container><unittitle>Daniel B. Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1895?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Frank Cline (October 15, 1879 - June 28,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Cline Jackson was born in Denver and came to Seattle in
				  1898. He entered the real estate business with his father in 1900. He was
				  elected to the State Legislature in 1906 and served five sessions, three in the
				  House and two in the Senate. In 1907, he introduced the bill creating the
				  Washington State Reformatory and was later the chair of the committee that
				  selected the site in Monroe. He also served on its Board of Managers. He helped
				  pass the State Criminal Code in 1909, the Weights and Measures bill, and the
				  first real estate licensing bill in the state. After leaving the legislature,
				  he established the Tax Limit League and worked as a lobbyist for the Washington
				  Association of Realtors. Jackson organized the campaign to reapportion
				  legislative districts in 1930 and worked on an initiative to limit tax on real
				  and personal property. During World War I, he raised more than $37 million for
				  Armenian and Syrian relief and also directed the Near East Relief Fund. He was
				  the campaign director of the effort to gather signatures to place an initiative
				  reenacting the 40-mill tax limit on the ballot; the photo appears to show the
				  collection of petitions.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonFC1</container><unittitle>Frank C. Jackson standing near stack of papers with J.
					 W. Wheeler and Laurence S. Booth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Henry Martin "Scoop" (May 31, 1912 – September
				  1, 1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry M. Jackson was born in Everett, WA, graduated with a
				  bachelor's degree from Stanford University and a law degree from the University
				  of Washington. He was elected the prosecuting attorney for Snohomish County
				  from 1938 to 1940. Jackson successfully ran for Congress as a Democrat in 1940
				  and took his seat in the House of Representatives with the 77th Congress on
				  January 3, 1941. From that date forward, Jackson did not lose a congressional
				  election. In the 1952 election, he relinquished his seat in the House to run
				  for Senate. Jackson won that election and remained a Senator for over thirty
				  years. Jackson died in office in 1983 after winning re-election for the fifth
				  time in 1982. The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies at the UW
				  was named in commemoration of his career in foreign affairs, his commitment to
				  international education, and his unflagging support of the school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM1</container><unittitle>Henry M. Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Elis Oberg, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM2</container><unittitle>Henry M. Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM3</container><unittitle>Henry Jackson with John L. O'Brien</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0076/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM4</container><unittitle>Henry M. Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM5</container><unittitle>Henry M. Jackson smiling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BabbAL1</container><unittitle>Albert Babb with Dean Harold E. Wessman, Henry M.
					 Jackson and UW President Henry Schmitz at the nuclear pile located in Bagley
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1957</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Robert I. Peterson, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The wall behind Babb is a precursor type of reactor known as a
					 graphite pile, which was not a net producer of energy, located in Bagley Hall,
					 the chemistry building. The cylinders sticking out of the graphite pile are
					 fuel rods containing natural uranium. The people in the picture are wearing
					 radiation dose badges, commonly known as dosimeters. The picture was probably
					 taken in 1956 or 1957, shortly after the U.S. Government's announcement of the
					 Atoms for Peace Program. This time frame would be consistent with Henry Schmitz
					 still being UW president; he stepped down in 1958.</p><p>Filed under Albert Babb subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">21</container><container type="item">KennedyJF1</container><unittitle>President John F. Kennedy with Senators Warren G.
					 Magnuson and Henry M. Jackson.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph may have been taken during at groundbreaking
					 for the N-Reactor, Hanford Nuclear Reservation, Richland, Washington on
					 September 26, 1963.</p><p>Filed under John F. Kennedy subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD10</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini with Senator Henry M.
					 Jackson, Senator Warren G. Magnson and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albet Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Hiram (August 15, 1839 - June 26,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Jackson was born in Indiana and came to Washington
				  Territory in the 1850s. He settled in Cowlitz County, Washington, where he had
				  a farm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Mary Adeline Rowell (April 26, 1834 - April 4,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Adeline Rowell, the daughter of Stephen Rowell and Mary
				  Caldwell Rowell, was born in Holden, Maine. She married Daniel Bachhelder
				  Jackson in 1865; the couple had four sons and two daughters. They came to
				  Washington in the 1870s and lived in Port Gamble and Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonMAR1</container><unittitle>Mary Adeline Jackson </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">LaRoche &amp; Company, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Mary A. Jackson, 2614 E. Pine St.,
					 Seattle Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Matilda Ann Glover (January 29, 1811 - February
				  14, 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matilda Ann Glover was born in Charles County, Maryland and
				  married Nicolas Koontz in 1837. In 1847, the family decided to move to the
				  West. On their journey to Oregon, Nicholas drowned in the Snake River, leaving
				  Matilda a widow with four young sons. She continued to Oregon and later married
				  John R. Jackson. They built the first pioneer home north of the Columbia River.
				  Matilda Jackson State Park in Chehalis is named after her.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonMAG1</container><unittitle>Matilda Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jackson, Sheldon (May 18, 1834 - May 2,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sheldon Jackson was a Presbyterian missionary and political
				  leader. During his career, he established over 100 missions and churches in the
				  Western United States. In 1877, he turned his focus to Alaska, founding
				  numerous schools and training centers that served native Alaskans. He made
				  numerous trips into Siberia and imported nearly 1300 reindeer to bolster the
				  livelihoods of Alaskan Eskimos. He traveled extensively throughout Alaska and
				  collected representative items as he journeyed; he worried that native cultures
				  and their arts and ways of life would vanish with no records of their past. His
				  collections became the foundation for a museum of natural history and ethnology
				  in Sitka. . Jackson saw the necessity of using political means to further his
				  goals of betterment for the Alaskan people. He became a close friend of
				  President Benjamin Harrison and worked toward the passage of the Organic Act of
				  1884, which ensured that Alaska would begin to set up a judicial system. But
				  more importantly to Jackson, the Act provided Federal aid for education for
				  Alaska, and he became the First General Agent of Education in Alaska. He is
				  best remembered for his extensive work during the final quarter of the 19th
				  century in the U.S. territory which became the 49th state, Alaska, in 1959.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonS1</container><unittitle>Sheldon Jackson in his fur suit for summer use in
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Reproduction from a book</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonS2</container><unittitle>Sheldon Jackson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination label="engraver"><persname role="Engraver">Alexander Hay Ritchie</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacob, Julia Angeline (October 12, 1874 - December 12,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia Jacob was an African-American woman whose parents came to
				  Bainbridge Island in the early 1870s on a Portuguese lumber transport ship that
				  had a mostly African-American crew. Her mother died giving birth to her, and
				  her father, not able to care for a newborn aboard ship, left her with the
				  Suquamish Chief Jacob Wahalchu and his wife, who adopted her. Julia learned the
				  traditions of the tribe, including medicine making, basket weaving, and
				  speaking Lushootseed, the language of the Suquamish and other Coast Salish
				  tribes. She became an authority on Squamish legends and passed her knowledge to
				  her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. Her son, Lawrence
				  Webster, was the last Suquamish tribal member fluent in Lushootseed. She lived
				  between Miller's Bay and Indianola on the Wa-Hal-chu homestead. Her family
				  continues to tell her story and preserve Suquamish traditions.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobJ1</container><unittitle>Julia Jacob</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1947 and 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ernest B. Bertelson</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobs, Harrison Rolland (October 2, 1864 - November 27,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harrison Rolland "Harry" Jacobs was the son of Orange and
				  Lucinda Jacobs. He attended the University of Washington where he was a pitcher
				  for the 1879 baseball team. In 1884, he was the right field and change pitcher
				  for the Seattle Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest in
				  1884. He later worked as the county clerk for the Treasury Office. Jacobs
				  married Helen Ruth Young in 1895. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobs, John Lewis (August 25, 1881 - March 21,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lewis Jacobs was the business agent for Teamsters Local 313
				  for 26 years until his retirement. Before he became affiliated with Tacoma and
				  Northwest labor groups, he had a colorful career as a cowpuncher and mule
				  skinner and participated in the Pendleton Roundup for many years. Born in
				  Minnesota, his family moved to Idaho where he spent his childhood. He came to
				  Tacoma in 1908. For several years, he drove a team of horses for Harvey
				  Scofield, hauling much of the material used to build the Tacoma Smelter and the
				  stone blocks for the downtown Tacoma post office. Later, he drove a team for
				  the Union Transfer Company and for the Tacoma Taxicab and Baggage Transfer
				  Company. He served as the president of the Tacoma Building Trades, was a member
				  of the Tacoma City Planning Commission, and was vice president of the
				  Washington State Federation of Labor for the fifth district. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsJL1</container><unittitle>John Lewis Jacobs wearing a union lapel
					 pin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobs, Melville (July 3, 1902 – July 31,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melville Jacobs was an American anthropologist known for his
				  extensive fieldwork on cultures of the Pacific Northwest. He was born in New
				  York City. After studying with Franz Boas, he became a member of the faculty of
				  the University of Washington in 1928 and remained on staff until his death in
				  1971. During the earlier part of his career, from 1928 until 1936, he collected
				  large amounts of linguistic data and text from a wide range of languages
				  including Sahaptin, Molale, Kalapuya, Clackamas, Tillamook, Alsea, Upper
				  Umpqua, Galice and Chinook Jargon. He left funds to establish the Jacobs
				  Research Fund, which supports anthropological research in the Pacific
				  Northwest. His papers, including extensive raw linguistic material that has
				  provided the basis for subsequent research on now extinct languages, are held
				  by the University of Washington in the Jacobs Archive. He was married to
				  Elizabeth Jacobs, also an anthropologist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsM1</container><unittitle>Melville Jacobs and Annie Peterson with
					 battery-operated disc recorder</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1934</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Melville Jacobs and Mrs. Annie Peterson with
					 battery-operated disc recorder. Charleston, Oregon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobs, Orange (May 2, 1827 -May 21, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orange Jacobs was a lawyer, newspaper publisher and politician.
				  Born near Genesee, New York, Jacobs moved with his parents to Michigan
				  Territory in 1831. He attended Albion College in Michigan and the University of
				  Michigan at Ann Arbor. After studying law, he was admitted to the Michigan bar
				  in 1851 and practiced in Sturgis, Michigan. He moved to the Oregon Territory in
				  1852, settling in Jacksonville, where he continued the practice of law and
				  edited and published the <emph render="italic">Jacksonville Sentinel</emph>. In
				  1859, he moved to Washington Territory where he served as an associate justice
				  of the Supreme Court in 1869 and as chief justice of the Supreme Court from
				  1871 until 1875. He was elected to the Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth Congresses
				  (March 4, 1875 - March 3, 1879), and was an advocate for women's suffrage in
				  Washington Territory. He was not a candidate in 1878 and resumed the practice
				  of law in Seattle. He was mayor of Seattle in 1880. Jacobs served as member of
				  the Territorial council in 1887, was a member of the Seattle charter revision
				  commission in 1889 and of the corporation counsel for Seattle in 1890. He
				  served as judge of the superior court of King County from 1896 until 1900.
				  Jacobs served on the UW Board of Regents for ten years. The University of
				  Washington awarded him with its first ever honorary degree, a Doctor of Laws.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsO1</container><unittitle>Orange Jacobs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsO2</container><unittitle>Orange Jacobs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jacobs-Bond, Carrie Minetta (August 11,
				  1862 – December 28, 1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carrie Minetta Jacobs-Bond was an American singer, pianist and
				  songwriter who composed over 200 pieces of popular music from the 1890s through
				  the early 1940s. She is perhaps best remembered for writing the song 
				  <emph render="italic">I Love You Truly</emph> and was the first woman to sell
				  one million copies of a song. The song first appeared in her 1901 collection 
				  <emph render="italic">Seven Songs as Unpretentious as the Wild Rose</emph>Her
				  song with the highest number of sales immediately after release was 
				  <emph render="italic">A Perfect Day</emph> in 1910; it sold over 25 million
				  copies of sheet music. Because her attempts to have her music published were
				  repeatedly turned down by the male-dominated music industry of the day, in 1896
				  she established her own sheet music publishing company. In 2009, NPR produced a
				  documentary on her. She was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.
				  Her papers are held at the University of Colorado Boulder.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">Jacobs-BondCM1</container><unittitle>Carrie Minetta Jacobs-Bond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photo: Sincerely, Carrie Jacobs Bond 1936.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobsen, Harold (November 19, 1923 - March 6,
				  2020)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Jacobsen was born in Tacoma, Washington and was a
				  graduate of Puyallup High School. During World War II, he was a pilot in the
				  Air Corps. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1947 with a degree
				  in economics and joined the UW in 1948, first in business management of the
				  adult and extension services. Jacobsen then served as director of budget and
				  financial planning from 1952 until 1967 when he became vice president for
				  business and finance at Seattle Community College. In 1970, he was the vice
				  president for finance for the Seattle Community College District and was the
				  associate director for financial services for the State Board of Community
				  College Education in 1980, retiringfrom that position in 1999.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsenH1</container><unittitle>Harold Jacobsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobsen, Julius Ernest (April 5, 1883 - November 30,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julius Ernest Jacobsen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark and came
				  to the United States in 1909. He became a citizen in 1912 and married Mildred
				  Brown in 1914. He was the owner of the Latona Floral Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsenJE1</container><unittitle>Julius Ernest Jacobsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo shows Jacobsen standing in doorway of the shop,
					 which was located at 4320 -14th Avenue NE where the University Bookstore is
					 now. It was next door to the College Playhouse, and the initials "CP" can be
					 seen on the wall.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jacobson, Bertha Poncy (July 30, 1894 - October 2, 1975)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bertha (Berthe) Poncy was born in Geneva, Switzerland. She
				  married Myron Jacobson, a composer and pianist, in Seattle in 1928; he died in
				  1934. Jacobson, a concert pianist who played extensively on the West Coast,
				  including with the Seattle Symphony, taught piano at Cornish and the University
				  of Washington. She retired in 1965.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsonBP1</container><unittitle>Bertha Poncy Jacobson at the piano</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jaeger, John A. (October 20, 1916 - May
				  6, 1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John A. Jaeger was on the executive board of the Communication
				  Workers of America, Local 9102 in the 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, Elizabeth Green "Betty" (March 26, 1908 -
				  September 29, 1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Green James was the wife of Frank Dexter James.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesFD2</container><unittitle>Group photo of six people in a boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Judge Frank James, Bea Smith, Cecil Smith,
					 Betty James (l to r).</p><p>Filed under Frank Dexter James subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, Frank Dexter (November 25, 1907 - November 22,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judge Frank Dexter James graduated from the University of
				  Washington and was admitted to the Washington State Bar in 1930. During World
				  War II, he served with the Navy in the South Pacific and Korea. After the war,
				  he served as an acting Municipal Court judge, and in 1949 was appointed to fill
				  the new 16th Superior Court position. After 20 years as a superior-court judge,
				  he was appointed as one of the original members of the state Court of Appeals,
				  Division 1. He was a civil rights advocate and frequently visited Rotary and
				  Lions clubs to encourage people to voluntarily desegregate their community.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesFD1</container><unittitle>Frank Dexter James in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1941 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dolph Zubick, Seattle Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesFD2</container><unittitle>Group photo of six people in a boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Judge Frank James, Bea Smith, Cecil Smith,
					 Betty James (l to r).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, Horace Payne (June 16, 1855 - July 21,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Payne James, the son of Samuel James and Susan Payne
				  James, was born in Weybridge, Vermont. He graduated from Middlebury College,
				  and and in 1879 from the theological school of Oberlin College. He was ordained
				  and was assigned to the Congregational Church in Corinth, Vermont. After six
				  years, he went to a Congregational Church in Cooperstown, North Dakota before
				  moving to Colfax, Washington in 1888. In 1900, he moved to North Yakima where
				  he served as pastor of the Congregational Church. In 1906, he purchased an
				  orchard and became one of the organizers of the Yakima Fruit Growers
				  Association, serving as president for two years. He married Achsa Hayward in
				  1881. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesHP1</container><unittitle>Horace Payne James</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, James A. (December 25, 1837 - October 24,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James A. James was born in Wales and grew up in Ohio. He later
				  moved to Minnesota, where he was a member of the legislature. He came to
				  Seattle in 1889. From 1892 to 1906, he was a member of the city council during
				  a time when many improvements to the city were undertaken. He was chair of the
				  finance committee beginning in 1894, and in addition to being responsible for
				  the paving of First Hill streets, took an active role in the Cedar River
				  watershed project. James married Emerett Hine in 1862.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, Ivor John (November 2, 1895 - April 1,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ivor John James was born in Centralia, Washington and worked in
				  the transportation industry for 38 years. He first went to work for the Pacific
				  Steamship Company in 1919 and was assistant general passenger agent when he
				  left the company in 1935. He joined Northland Transportation Company in 1938
				  and became general passenger agent. He left Northland to become assistant
				  secretary of the Alaska Steamship Company in 1948. He was named secretary in
				  1956 and retired from the company in 1960. He served in the U. S. Navy during
				  World War I. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesIJ1</container><unittitle>Ivor John James</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.JamesIJ1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>James, John Rodgers (September 5, 1840 - April 16,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Rodgers James, the son of Samuel James and Anna Marie
				  Harris James, was born in Cornwall, England. His parents arrived in the United
				  States in 1843 and settled in Wisconsin before traveling west on the Oregon
				  Trail. They were the first settlers in Grand Mound, Washington Territory. John
				  R. James married Mary Cornelia Scammon in 1866, and the couple had a farm near
				  Grand Mound. In 1919, he deeded twenty acres, including the mound, to the state
				  for a park. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesJR1</container><unittitle>John Rodgers James</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jarman, William Robert (April 3, 1818 - June 11,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William R. Jarman, aka "Blanket Bill," was born in Kent,
				  England. He arrived in the Washington Territories in the 1840s and lived with
				  several Native American tribes. He was one of the first non-native settlers in
				  Port Townsend and had a contract to deliver mail by canoe between Fort
				  Bellingham and other army posts. On July 15, 1868, he established a claim at
				  Jarman Prairie, just east of present-day Belfast on the Edison Slough. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR1</container><unittitle>William Robert Jarman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR2</container><unittitle> William R. Jarman with Ezra Meeker and Nicholas Vance
					 Sheffer at the Old Settlers Picnic in the Skagit Valley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R. E. Hawley</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Wm. R. Jarman (standing), Ezra Meeker
						(center), N. V. Sheffer.</p><p>Photograph published in <emph render="italic">The Skagit
						River Journal</emph> of August 30, 2007.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR3</container><unittitle> Ray Jordan showing P. R. Jeffcott the one acre that
					 William R. Jarman cleared and the site of this second cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Ray Jordan explained that the fenceline marked Jarman's east
					 line on the slope just north of Jarman Prairie. Jarman later discovered that
					 his claim was actually on the other side, outside his staked claim.</p><p>Written on verso: The location of William R. Jarman's cabin
					 site at Jarman's Prairie.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR4</container><unittitle>View of Jarman's Prairie in the Skagit
					 Valley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jarvis, John Frederick (October 10, 1912 - April 4,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John (Jack) Jarvis was born in Tacoma and attended the UW before
				  joining <emph render="italic">The Seattle Star</emph> in the 1930s. In 1936, he
				  joined <emph render="italic">The Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> . During WW
				  II, while serving in the Army, he wrote a column <emph render="italic">Footnotes in History</emph>. After the war, he became the night
				  city editor for <emph render="italic">The Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> and
				  wrote a column called <emph render="italic">Fascinating Facts and
				  Figures</emph>. One feature of the column was a series of cards, awarding
				  membership in nonsensical organizations to friends around the world. He is
				  showing Fred Carter one of these cards in the photograph. Jarvis once hung up
				  on William Randolph Hearst, the newspaper's owner, thinking it was a crank
				  call. When Hearst called back and asked for his name, Jarvis responded "George
				  Henderson." The fictional George Henderson thereafter accepted blame for any
				  and all mistakes when irate readers called the newspaper.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CarterAL2</container><unittitle>Fred Carter with Mr. Page and Jack Jarvis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Jarvis is holding a card that states "No problem is too small
					 to baffle our organization."</p><p>Filed under Alfred L. Carter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jeffcott, Percival R. April 27, 1876 - January 4,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Percival R. Jeffcott came to Whatcom County in 1899 and taught
				  school for many years. He was the historian for the Whatcom County Pioneer
				  Association and wrote several books, including <emph render="italic">Nooksack
				  Tales and Trails</emph> and a biography of William “Blanket Bill” Jarman. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR3</container><unittitle> Ray Jordan showing P. R. Jeffcott the one acre that
					 William R. Jarman cleared and the site of this second cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Ray Jordan explained that the fenceline marked Jarman's east
					 line on the slope just north of Jarman Prairie. Jarman later discovered that
					 his claim was actually on the other side, outside his staked claim.</p><p>Written on verso: The location of William R. Jarman's cabin
					 site at Jarman's Prairie.</p><p>Filed under William R. Jarman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Jeffers, Clyde Garfield (July 2, 1881 - February 16,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clyde Garfield Jeffers was born in Hampton, Iowa. He moved to
				  Grant County, Washington where he was the prosecuting attorney from 1913 to
				  1917. He was alter an assistant in the State attorney-general's office, and a
				  Superior Court judge in Grant and Douglas Counties from 1923 until 1939. He was
				  named to the State Supreme Court in 1939 and served until his retirement in
				  1949.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jeffers, Joseph (October 17, 1807 - January 2, 1876)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Jeffers was born in Washington, D.C. and married to Sarah
				  Crawford on November 19, 1829. He later moved to Burlington, Iowa, where he
				  became a Methodist minister. In 1847, he and his family traveled by wagon train
				  to Oregon, first to Oregon City and later to Clatsop County. He and his wife,
				  Sarah, had eleven children, only three of whom survived him. In 1850, together
				  with Hezekiah Johnson and Ezra Fisher, Jeffers purchased land and donated it to
				  start the Oregon City College. The school closed in 1858, and the school bell
				  was donated to McMinnville College (now Linfield College) along with the
				  proceeds of the sale of the school’s property. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffersJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Jeffers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1876?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jeffers, Sarah Crawford (September 21, 1808 - March 7,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Sarah Crawford married Joseph Jeffers on November 19, 1829 and
				  came with him to Oregon in 1847. They later moved to Clatsop County. The couple
				  had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffersSC1</container><unittitle>Sarah Crawford Jeffers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jefferson, Thomas (April 13, 1743- July 4,
				  1826)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Thomas Jefferson was an American Founding Father, the principal
				  author of the Declaration of Independence (1776) and the third President of the
				  United States (1801–1809). He had previously served as the second vice
				  president of the United States under John Adams and as the first United States
				  secretary of state under George Washington. The principal author of the
				  Declaration of Independence, Jefferson was a proponent of democracy,
				  republicanism, and individual rights, motivating American colonists to break
				  from the Kingdom of Great Britain and form a new nation; he produced formative
				  documents and decisions at both the state and national levels.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffersonT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1805</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of portrait by Gilbert Stuart.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffersonT2</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffersonT3</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Missing June 14, 2022</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">19</container><container type="item">JeffersonT4</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1770 and 1779?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Brown from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jeffreys, Minnie Gertrude Ellis (May 12, 1872 – January
				  21, 1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Minnie Gertrude Ellis Jeffreys was an English actor born in
				  Colombo, in what is now Sri Lanka; she never used her first two names in her 50
				  years on the stage and screen. She was in more than 75 stage productions and 11
				  films. She made her debut with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in the chorus of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Yeomen of the Guard</emph>at the Savoy in October
				  1889; it was her only engagement with the Company. The following year she sang
				  several leading roles in <emph render="italic">La Cigale</emph> during its run
				  at the Lyric Theatre. She went on to appear in more than 75 stage
				  productions.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffreysMGE1</container><unittitle>Minnie Gertrude Ellis Jeffreys</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Kirkland, Denver</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Original in vault.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jeffs, Richard (December 27, 1827 - February 11,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Jeffs was born in New York and moved to California in
				  March 1851. He worked in the gold mines until 1858. During the great gold
				  excitement of 1858-59, he went to British Columbia on the Fraser River. In
				  1859, he moved to Whatcom, Washington Territory, where he employed by Captain
				  Henry Roderin the lumber trade. In 1862, Jeffs purchased an 800 acre farm on
				  the White River and was one of the leaders in the development of agriculture in
				  the area. In 1882, the Hopgrowers Association organized, and Jeffs was elected
				  president. He then moved to Snoqualmie to manage a large hop ranch, considered
				  to be the largest hop ranch in the world. He served as a justice of the peace
				  in the precinct of Slaughter for over sixteen years and was elected as a member
				  of the territorial convention of Washington for the eighteenth district.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JeffsR1</container><unittitle>Richard Jeffs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jenkins, Jennie G.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenkinsJG1</container><unittitle>Jennie G. Jenkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jenkins, John Lewellen (July 18, 1855 - December 25,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lewellen Jenkins was born in Ohio and lived in Bellingham
				  for 46 years where he owned a hotel. He married Margaret "Maggie" Armstrong
				  Jenkins in 1880 in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenkinsJL1</container><unittitle>John Lewellen Jenkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 26, 1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Grosarts Studio, Bellingham</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jenkins, William Henry (September 15, 1867 - August 5,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Jenkins was born in Coquimbo, Chile and moved with
				  his family to Victoria, B.C., Canada in the 1880s. He married Edith Anne Lewis
				  in 1900, and they moved to Seattle soon after. He was a partner with J. H. Fox
				  in the Commercial Street Boiler Works. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenkinsWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Jenkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jennings, Grant Scott (May 23, 1867 - June 23,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grant Jennings was a farmer and logger in Grays Harbor
				  County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenningsGS1</container><unittitle>Grant Jennings, his mother, Mary Jennings, and an
					 unidentified man standing in front of a cabin on Puget Mill Company
					 land</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1890</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: House on Puget Mill Co's land on the NE 1/4
					 of NE 1/4 Sec. 35, T. 16-5 W. The dwelling place of Grant Jennings and his
					 mother.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jennings, Mary (January 1827- September 4,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Creason married Benjamin Jennings in 1861. Her son, Grant
				  Jennings, was a farmer and logger in Grays Harbor County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenningsGS1</container><unittitle>Grant Jennings, his mother, Mary Jennings, and an
					 unidentified man standing in front of a cabin on Puget Mill Company
					 land</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1890</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: House on Puget Mill Co's land on the NE 1/4
					 of NE 1/4 Sec. 35, T. 16-5 W. The dwelling place of Grant Jennings and his
					 mother.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Grant Scott Jennings subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jennings, Stephen Alston (February 14, 1857 - May 8,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Jennings was born in Chicago in 1857. He worked with his
				  father, George W. Jennings, in the lumber business before attending the
				  University of Illinois, where he studied civil engineering and technology.
				  After graduation, he became an assistance engineer for the Detroit and Bay
				  Railroad Company, where he conducted the survey of the preliminary line through
				  the state of Michigan. He then accepted a position as superintendent of
				  construction in Springfield, Illinois. Due to ill health, he moved west,
				  eventually locating in Bismark, North Dakota for two years. During that time,
				  he developed plans for many public buildings and was the superintendent of
				  construction for the State Capitol Building in Bismark. In 1890 he returned to
				  Illinois and opened his own office in Evanston. He was responsible for many
				  public buildings and private residences in the area. In 1899, he moved to
				  Seattle where he had an architecture practice until 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JenningsSA1</container><unittitle>Stephen Alston Jennings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Adelaide Hanscom Leeson</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Stephen Alston Jennings, Architect. This
					 photograph was taken in 1927. (1927 is crossed out and replaced with ca.
					 1909)</p></note><note><p>Missing June 2023</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jervis, Sir John (January 9, 1735 - March 14,
				  1823)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Jervis, Earl of St Vincent GCB, was an admiral in the Royal
				  Navy and Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom. He served throughout the
				  latter half of the 18th century and into the 19th, and was an active commander
				  during the Seven Years' War, the American War of Independence, the French
				  Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars. He is best known for his victory at
				  the 1797 Battle of Cape Saint Vincent in Portugal, from which he earned his
				  titles, and as a patron of Horatio Nelson. Jervis was also recognized by both
				  political and military contemporaries as a fine administrator and naval
				  reformer. In 1801, as First Lord of the Admiralty, he introduced a number of
				  reforms that, though unpopular at the time, made the Navy more efficient and
				  more self-sufficient. Jervis Inlet is a principal inlet of the British Columbia
				  Coast, about 95 km (59 mi) northwest of Vancouver, and was named for Sir John
				  Jervis by his friend, Captain George Vancouver following for Jervis' victory
				  over the Spanish fleet at Cape St. Vincent. Vancouver also named St. Vincent's
				  Bay (near the entrance of Jervis Inlet) after the location of the battle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JervisJ1</container><unittitle>Sir John Jervis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1790 and 1800?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Sir William Beechey</persname></origination></did><note><p>From a mezzotint after the painting by William Beechey.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JervisJ2</container><unittitle>Sir John Jervis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1790 and 1800?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Sir William Beechey</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: From a mezzotint after the painting by Sir
					 William Beechey. Photograph copyrighted by Walker &amp; Cockerell. Rights
					 secured for this work in England and America.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jessett, Reverend Canon Thomas Edwin (January 18, 1902 -
				  February 25, 1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The Reverend Canon Thomas Edwin Jessett was born in 1902 in
				  Marlborough, England. He taught school in Vernon, British Columbia, and
				  Honolulu before coming to Washington. Jessett's ministry began in 1924 as a lay
				  reader in Chelan County. Transferred to Colfax, Whitman County, he received a
				  bachelor's degree in education and a master's degree in sociology from
				  Washington State University. He was ordained as a deacon in Colfax in 1928 and
				  as a priest in Spokane in 1929. Jessett was installed as canon of honor of St.
				  Marks Cathedral and diocese in Seattle (a lifetime, honorary title) on May 24,
				  1953. His son, Arthur Jessett, was killed in a climbing accident near Spirit
				  Lake in 1952. The accident gained national attention and served as a catalyst
				  to increase support for the Mountain Rescue Council and promote mountain
				  safety. Reverend Jessett became a strong supporter of the Council, making
				  frequent donations and speaking out on the importance of safe climbing
				  practices.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JessettTE1</container><unittitle>Reverend Canon Thomas Edwin Jessett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jessup, Walter Albert (August 12, 1877 – July 5,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Albert Jessup was the eleventh President of the
				  University of Iowa, serving from 1916-1934. Jessup Hall on the university
				  campus is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacbrideTH3</container><unittitle>Thomas Huston Macbride and Walter Albert Jessup on
					 Inauguration Day at the University of Iowa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 12, 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frederick Wallace Kent, Iowa</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dear Mrs. Fischer: We hope you and all our
					 Boulder friends are all right. I came across this old postcard of President
					 MacBride (sic) and it made me think of you. John and I like our work at Cottey
					 College very much. My mother died last September, so my father is much alone
					 now. Affectionately, Millicent Dearth (?)</p></note><note><p>Filed under Thomas Huston Macbride subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jewett, Harriett Sanborn Kimball (February 26, 1809 -
				  March 4, 1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harriett Sanborn was born in Richford, Vermont and married
				  Nathan Kimball on February 21, 1831. In 1847, they traveled to Oregon; two
				  children died on the way. In the late fall of 1847, they reached the Whitman
				  Mission near Walla Walla. In November of that year, Nathan Kimball was killed
				  during the Whitman Massacre, and Harriett Kimball and her surviving children
				  were held captive. After her release, she traveled to Oregon City, where she
				  married John Jewett, a widower with eight children, on April 20, 1848. The
				  couple moved to Clatsop Plains and took up a donation land claim.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JewettHSK1</container><unittitle>Harriett Jewett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jewett, William Henry (March 18, 1861 - February 6,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Jewett was born in Connecticut. He was a partner with
				  Henry A. Lambert &amp; Company in Bridgeport, Connecticut before moving to
				  Seattle in 1900. Jewett was a partner in Bretung &amp; Jewett Architects; the
				  firm was located first in the Colman Building and later in the Walker Building.
				  He died after a short illness.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JewettWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Jewett seated at a drafting
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Walker Bldg (new), Seattle. The Walker
					 Building, also known as the Seattle Quilt Building is at 316 -First Avenue,
					 Seattle. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johansen, Johanes (November 14, 1874 - August 18,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Johanes Johansen, the son of Johan Arentsen and Antonetta
				  Taraldsdatter, was born in Norway and immigrated to the United States in 1898.
				  He was a sailor and captain who sailed steamships from Seattle to Alaska. His
				  brother was Ole Andreas Johansen, who was also a master mariner and
				  captain.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansenOA2</container><unittitle>Captain Johansen on the <emph render="italic">Steamer
					 Dora</emph>, with his brother, Captain John (Johanes) Johansen, in the pilot
					 house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ole A. Johansen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johansen, Ole Andreas (April 6, 1866 - March 30,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ole Andreas Johansen, the son of Johan Arentsen and Antonetta
				  Taraldsdatter, was born in Norway and immigrated to the United States in 1883.
				  He was a sailor and captain who piloted steamers from San Francisco to Alaska,
				  from starting in the 1890s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansenOA1</container><unittitle>Captain Ole Johansen with boats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansenOA2</container><unittitle>Captain Ole Johansen on the <emph render="italic">Steamer Dora</emph>, with his brother, Captain John (Johanes)
					 Johansen, in the pilot house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johanson, Joel Marcus (November 30, 1879 - December 13,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>A Tacoma native, Joel Johanson majored in Latin at the
				  University of Washington, receiving his Bachelor of Arts in 1904. As an
				  undergraduate, Johanson was a member of Beta Theta Pi and served one year as
				  president of Phi Beta Kappa. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship in 1904, the
				  first year Americans were eligible and the first to be awarded to a graduate of
				  the UW. Johanson returned to the UW in 1907 as a professor of German. He was
				  appointed to a position in the English department in 1910, where he continued
				  teaching and writing prolifically until his death in a car accident in 1919.
				  Upon his death, a memorial volume of Johanson’s essays, verse and letters was
				  published.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonJM1</container><unittitle>Joel Marcus Johanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Boyd &amp; Company, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Roommate 1900</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johanson, Martin Gustav (October 11, 1887 - December 31,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Johanson was born in Pontiac, Rhode Island, and was
				  orphaned at age 12. He worked his way across the country, serving as a lay
				  pastor in New York, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. He had enrolled at Augustine
				  College in Rock Island, Illinois, to become a minister, but illness forced him
				  to drop out. He arrived in Seattle in 1917 and started a real estate business
				  after working for Puget Sound Power and Light, as a street car conductor, and
				  as a police officer. In 1921, he and a small group of friends begin serving
				  low-cost or free meals to homeless people. This was the beginning of the
				  Millionair Club Charity, a non-profit charitable organization dedicated to
				  changing lives through providing jobs and services to people in need and
				  encouraging their self-sufficiency. He served as executive director of the
				  Millionair Club Charity for 53 years, until he retired in 1974. After his
				  retirement, he formed Better Life Associates, an organization that provided aid
				  to the physically disadvantaged.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG1</container><unittitle>Martin Gustav Johanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG2</container><unittitle>Martin G. Johanson with Reverend Floyd Green, Father
					 Paul Luger, Judge Charles Stokes and Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG3</container><unittitle>Martin Johanson and Mayor Wes Uhlman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mayor Uhlman presenting "First Citizen"
					 certificate.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG4</container><unittitle>Mayor Uhlman signing "First Citizen" certificate with
					 Martin Johanson and Marybell S. Johanson looking on</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG5</container><unittitle>Martin Johanson and his wife, Marybell S. Johanson
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p>Photo was taken at the same time as the photos with Mayor
					 Uhlman.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG6</container><unittitle>A man and a woman at the Millionair's Club</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Scene at the Club while waiting turn.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG7</container><unittitle>Unemployed men waiting in the Millionair's Club
					 lobby</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG8</container><unittitle>Sample meal at the Millionair's Club</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johanson, Marybell Samson McMillan (February 12, 1905 -
				  October 12, 1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marybell Samson McMillan was born in Calumet, Michigan and moved
				  to Seattle with her parents in 1918. She graduated from Broadway High School in
				  1922 and worked for the Internal Revenue Service for thirty years. During World
				  War II, she joined the Women’s Army Corp and served at a hospital in Hot
				  Springs, Arkansas working with polio patients. She married Martin Johanson in
				  1952 and served on the board of the Millionair’s Club as well as being present
				  at many of the events and activities.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG4</container><unittitle>Mayor Uhlman signing "First Citizen" certificate with
					 Martin Johanson and Marybell S. Johanson looking on</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p> Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG5</container><unittitle>Martin Johanson and his wife, Marybell S.
					 Johanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p>Photo was taken at the same time as the photos with Mayor
					 Uhlman.</p><p> Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johanson, Nils A. (July 21, 1872 - March 7,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. Nils Johanson came to the United States from Sweden in 1893
				  to attend the Chicago World's Fair and remained to attend medical school at the
				  University of Colorado. He moved to Seattle in 1906 and headed a group of
				  Swedish businessmen to raise funds to launch Swedish Hospital; the hospital
				  opened in 1910. On a trip to Sweden in 1932, he observed the early use of
				  radiation therapy and returned to Seattle to found the Tumor Institute at
				  Swedish Hospital. He led the hospital until the mid-1940s. His influence is
				  still felt in the hospital's emphasis on continuing education and at the
				  Swedish Cancer Institute, which started as the Swedish Tumor Institute.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonNA1</container><unittitle>Nils Johanson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Grady Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johns, Mary Jane Vertress (October 26, 1851 - January
				  13, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane Vertress, the daughter of Charles M. and Mary J.
				  Vertress, was born in Pike County, Illinois. She married Bennett Willson Johns
				  on February 25, 1872, shortly after arriving in Olympia. Her husband owned a
				  farm and operated a saw mill near Bush Prairie, Washington; after his death in
				  1905, she managed his business interests. She owned a book bindery in Olympia
				  and was the assistant post master of Olympia from 1898 to 1905. She was active
				  in the Women’s Suffrage movement and was twice elected a delegate to the
				  Republican County Convention in the 1880s. She was also elected as a delegate
				  to the Territorial Convention. Johns was a Matron of the Eastern Star,
				  president of the Woman’s Club of Olympia, twice served as Noble Grand of the
				  Order of Rebekahs, and was a member of the Ladies’ Relief Society. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsMJV1</container><unittitle>Mary Johns wearing an emblem of the Order of the
					 Eastern Star</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jeffers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johns, Paul Henry (August 27, 1880 - May 6,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Henry Johns was the president and general manager of City
				  Lumber Company, the Ship Lumber Mill and the East Side Lumber Mill, all located
				  in Tacoma. He was chair of the Pierce County Republican Central Committee in
				  the 1920s and took a leading role in the election of Governor Roland H. Hartley
				  in 1924. Governor Hartley appointed him to the University of Washington Board
				  of Regents in 1926. He served from 1926 to 1933, including three years as Board
				  president. The Paul H. Johns Jr. Memorial Scholarship at the UW was established
				  to honor his son, who went down with the carrier <emph>Lexington </emph>during
				  the Battle of the Coral Sea in World War II. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsPH1</container><unittitle>Paul H. Johns</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johns, William Douglas (November 21, 1857 - January 20,
				  1942) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Douglas Johns was hired by the <emph render="italic">Chicago Record</emph> to write about the Alaska gold rush. He
				  was one of the first to go to the Klondike area, and he later wrote a
				  manuscript about the development of the gold rush, life in the mining camps and
				  in Dawson City, and his own explorations and hardships traveling in the region.
				  He also staked a claim on a tributary of Bonanza Creek. He later returned to
				  Seattle and worked in real estate. His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsWD1</container><unittitle>William Johns with cane on downtown street; Mannings
					 Restaurant in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsWD2</container><unittitle>William Johns walking away from camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsWD3</container><unittitle>Group photo with William Johns</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. J. Kneisle, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Andrew (December 29, 1808 – July 31,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Johnson was the 17th President of the United States,
				  serving from 1865 to 1869. He served as Abraham Lincoln's vice president, and
				  became president when President Lincoln was assassinated. A Democrat who ran
				  with Lincoln on the National Union ticket, Johnson came to office as the Civil
				  War concluded. The new president favored quick restoration of the seceded
				  states to the Union. His plans did not give protection to the former slaves,
				  and he came into conflict with the Republican-dominated Congress, culminating
				  in his impeachment by the House of Representatives. The first American
				  president to be impeached, he was acquitted in the Senate by one vote.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonA1</container><unittitle>Andrew Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a portrait</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonA2</container><unittitle>Andrew Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Mathew Brady
					 from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Aylette Newton (June 4, 1878 - December 28,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aylette Newton Johnson, the son of William Pearson Johnson and
				  Ella Southwick Johnson, was born in Oregon and graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1902 with a degree in zoology. While at the UW, he was ASUW
				  treasurer, on the <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph> staff, manager at the
				  University Bookstore, and active in the Badger Debate Club and the Glee Club.
				  After graduation, he worked in real estate. He married Calista Harmon in 1907;
				  the couple had two children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonAN1</container><unittitle>Aylette Newton Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lothrop Brothers, New Whatcom, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Bessie Pauline (May 20, 1905 - July 19,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bessie Pauline Johnson was born in Everett and graduated from
				  the University of Washington in 1929. She received a Master’s Degree from
				  Columbia University and an honorary doctorate of fine arts from Moore College
				  in Philadelphia. She taught at Central Washington College of Education (now
				  Central Washington University) and Colorado State University before becoming
				  head of Art Education at the UW in 1941. She was on the Council of the National
				  Education Association and was a nationally known leader in the field of art
				  education. She wrote several books, including <emph render="italic">Creating
				  with Paper.</emph>She retired from the UW in 1975.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonPB1</container><unittitle>Bessie Pauline Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonPB2</container><unittitle>Pauline Johnson with art work at the time of the
					 publication of her book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the July 20, 1958 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Johnson, Charles Willis (September 23,
				  1873 - January 4, 1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Willis Johnson was the Dean of the University of
				  Washington Pharmacy Department from 1903 to 1939. He oversaw the creation of
				  Bagley Hall, which was built by the Public Works Administration during the
				  Great Depression. He also supported the growth of the Medicinal Herb Garden on
				  campus, which is still one of the largest medicinal herb gardens in the
				  Northwest. Johnson was the state chemist for the Washington State Department of
				  Agriculture from 1913 to 1943 and served as president of the American
				  Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (1923-24) and the American Pharmaceutical
				  Association (1927-1928).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonCW1</container><unittitle>Charles Willis Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Martin, Spokane, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Clarence Dean (April 1, 1866 - May 2,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Dean Johnson was born near Corning, New York and moved
				  to Kansas with his family at an early age. In 1885, he moved to New Orleans,
				  where he became involved in the lumber trade. Starting in a saw mill, he cut
				  and trimmed lumber and eventually became general manager of the Frost-Trigg
				  Lumber Company. In 1920, he moved to the West Coast, where he became the
				  president of the Pacific Spruce Corporation, at one time, the largest spruce
				  mill in the world. The name for the mill operation was later changed to the
				  C.D. Johnson Lumber Company. Johnson was also president of the Pacific Spruce
				  Railroad. C. D. Johnson Lumber Company was purchased by Georgia Pacific
				  Corporation in 1952. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonCD1</container><unittitle>Clarence Dean Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Johnson, Frances Edith (Mrs. Charles
				  W.) (1877 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frances Edith Johnson married Charles Willis Johnson in 1898.
				  She was the president of the UW Faculty Wives' Club in the 1920s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Claudius Osborne (January 6, 1894 - February
				  26, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Claudius Osborne Johnson was born in Greenville, Virginia. He
				  attended the University of Richmond from 1913 to 1917, receiving an A.B. in
				  1917. He served overseas with the United States Army in World War I, where he
				  attained the rank of first sergeant of infantry. After the war, he received his
				  M.A. degree from the University of Chicago, 1920-1921, and received his
				  doctorate from that institution in l927. Johnson taught at the University of
				  North Dakota from 1921 through 1926 and at the University of Chattanooga from
				  1926 through 1928. He joined Washington State University in 1928 as the first
				  full-time political science professor and chairman of the newly formed
				  Department of History and Political Science. He served as chair of the
				  department until 1951 and retired from the faculty in 1960. After his
				  retirement, he continued to publish and teach. Johnson received a governor's
				  certificate for contributions to the cultural life of the State of Washington
				  in 1967. Johnson authored many books and scholarly articles, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Borah of Idaho</emph>. In 1967, WSU's eight-story
				  Claudius O. Johnson Tower, where the political science department is located,
				  was dedicated in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonCO1</container><unittitle>Claudius Osborne Johnson in his office, smoking a
					 pipe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Daniel (July 3, 1812 - July 14,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Johnson was born in 1812 in Berkshire County,
				  Massachusetts, and grew up in Onondaga County, New York. In 1837, he traveled
				  west to Indiana, where he worked in masonry, plastering and farming. In 1844,
				  he married Elsina Perkins, and the couple set out with an ox team for the
				  Pacific Coast. They spent several weeks at the Whitman Mission in Walla Walla
				  before making the journey to the Willamette Valley in the middle of the winter.
				  They reached Oregon City in February and took a Donation Land Claim near the
				  present site of Lafayette, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Elsina Perkins (August 11, 1828 - January 18,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elsina Perkins, the daughter of Eli and Sallie Perkins, was born
				  in Cattaraugus County, New York. The family moved to Tippecanoe, Indiana, when
				  she was four years old. She married Daniel Johnson in 1844, and the couple
				  headed west with an ox team shortly after the marriage. Her parents joined the
				  couple on their journey across the plains. The couple took a Donation Land
				  Claim near the present site of Lafayette, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonEP1</container><unittitle>Elsina Perkins Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Elvin Robert (March 26, 1921 - December 3,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elvin Robert Johnson was a graduate of Washington State College
				  (now Washington State University) in forestry and held an M.A. from Whitman
				  College in Walla Walla. A First Lieutenant in the 10th Mountain Division in
				  WWII, he fought through Italy and received a Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and
				  the Combat Infantryman badge. At WSC after the war, he was captain of the ski
				  team, winning all the collegiate cross-country races he entered. After
				  graduating, he began to work as a park ranger at Mt. Rainier, during which time
				  he was named to the U.S. Ski Team in cross- country, and participated in the
				  World Championship at Lake Placid, NY in 1950. After returning to college
				  teaching and coaching, he also worked summers at several National Parks as
				  ranger naturalist and in mountain rescue. He became involved in organizing
				  collegiate skiing, and was a charter member and chairman of the N.C.A.A. Ski
				  Rules Committee. He was an Assistant Chief of Course at the Winter Olympics at
				  Squaw Valley in 1960 and was a technical advisor to the Olympic Committee. He
				  coached several championship ski teams as well as competed himself, where he
				  was second in the national championships. He made several first ascents in the
				  Olympic Mountains, including that of Mt. Johnson in the Needle Range which was
				  named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonER1</container><unittitle>Elvin Robert Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Elvin Robert "Swede" Johnson</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Gerald White (August 6, 1890 - March 22,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gerald White Johnson was a journalist, editor, essayist,
				  historian, biographer, and novelist who wrote mystery novels under the pen name
				  of Charles North. He was born in Riverton, North Caroline and graduated from
				  Wake Forest College in 1910. During World War I, he was a member of the
				  American Expeditionary Force. He was the first professor of journalism at the
				  University of North Carolina. While there he published the first of many books,
				  The Story of Man's Work, a defense of liberal capitalism. Johnson worked for 
				  <emph>The Evening Sun</emph> of Baltimore from 1926 until 1943, when he retired
				  to write for magazines and to concentrate on writing books. In 1949 he served
				  as the honorary chairman of a committee that advocated against loyalty
				  oaths.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonGW1</container><unittitle>Gerald Johnson with Henry Ladd Smith, director of the
					 UW School of Communications, at the dedication of the Communications
					 Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Smith is pointing at a space in the wall of the building,
					 possibly where the time capsule was placed at the time of the dedication.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, James (August 28, 1814 - July 9,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Johnson, the son of James Johnson of Berkshire County,
				  Massachusetts, was born on his father’s farm in 1814, and as a child moved with
				  his parents to a new home in Onondaga County, New York. In 1836, he joined his
				  brother, Daniel, in Tippecanoe County, Indiana, where he worked as a carpenter.
				  He married Juliette Perkins in 1839. In 1844, the couple joined a wagon train
				  heading for Oregon. The wagon train stopped at the Whitman Mission to obtain
				  supplies before continuing on to Oregon. Johnson left his team for the winter
				  at The Dalles, and reached Oregon City where he was employed by Doctor John
				  McLoughlin as a carpenter. The following year, he selected his Donation claim
				  in Yamhill County, Oregon, near Lafayette. In 1849, he traveled to the
				  California gold mines, and later to the mines of Southern Oregon, before
				  returning to work his farm and to contracting and building at Lafayette.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonJ1</container><unittitle>James Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Juliette (March 15, 1824 - November 24,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Juliette Perkins, the daughter of Eli and Sallie Perkins, was
				  born in Cattaraugus County, New York. The family moved to Tippecanoe, Indiana,
				  in 1832. She married James Johnson in 1839; her sister, Elsina, married James
				  Johnson’s brother, Daniel, in 1844. The couple headed west with an ox team in
				  1844, joining her parents, sister and brother-in-law. They arrived in Oregon in
				  1844 and took a Donation Land Claim near the present site of Lafayette,
				  Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonJ1</container><unittitle>Juliette Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Lyndon Baines (August 27, 1908 – January 22,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lyndon Baines Johnson was the 36th President of the United
				  States, serving from 1963 until 1969. He became president following the
				  November 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy; he had previously
				  served as vice president from 1961 until 1963. Johnson was a Democrat from
				  Texas, who served as a United States Representative from 1937 to 1949 and as a
				  United States Senator from 1949 to 1961. He spent six years as Senate Majority
				  Leader, two as Senate Minority Leader, and two as Senate Majority Whip. Upon
				  taking office as president, Johnson launched an ambitious slate of progressive
				  reforms aimed at alleviating poverty and creating what he called a “Great
				  Society” for all Americans. Many of the programs he introduced, including
				  Medicare and Head Start, made a lasting impact in the areas of health,
				  education, urban renewal, conservation and civil rights. Despite his impressive
				  domestic achievements, Johnson’s legacy was equally defined by his failure to
				  lead the nation out of the Vietnam War. He declined to run for a second full
				  term in office and retired to his Texas ranch after leaving the White
				  House.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonLB1</container><unittitle>Head and shoulders portait of Lyndon Baines Johnson,
					 facing left</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonLB2</container><unittitle>Color portrait of Lyndon Baines Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonLB3</container><unittitle>Lyndon Baines Johnson standing in the Oval
					 Office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1963 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Arnold Newman</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Orson Bennett (August 15, 1848 - February 9,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orson Bennett ("Bug") Johnson served as professor of natural
				  science at the University of Washington from 1882 to 1892. Prior to coming to
				  Seattle, he had worked in Oregon and was instrumental in founding the Oregon
				  Cabinet of Natural History. When he came to Seattle, he brought with him his
				  collection of more than 20,000 biological specimens gathered while in Oregon,
				  giving the Washington Territorial University the largest natural history
				  collection in the Northwest. He is considered to be one of the pioneering
				  naturalists of the Pacific Northwest and is credited with building an extensive
				  collection of regional flora and fauna. The extensive collections he helped to
				  establish gave rise to the Washington State Museum, which continues as the
				  Burke Museum on the UW campus. He catalyzed the growth of an early research
				  group called the Young Naturalists' Society, bringing the research practices,
				  programs, and standards of the University to a new level of professionalism.
				  The waterfall beetle, Pterostichus Johnsoni, and the Johnson’s Hairstreak
				  butterfly or Callophrys Johnsoni, are named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB1</container><unittitle>Orson Bennett Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. L. Jackson, Eugene, Oregon</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB2</container><unittitle>Orson Bennett Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB3</container><unittitle>Orson Bennett Johnson in wheelchair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1915</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">C. A. Kinnear, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB4</container><unittitle>Painting of Orson Bennett Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><note><p>Photograph of the painting.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB5</container><unittitle>Orson Johnson with Thomas Condon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1915?</unitdate></did><note><p>Thomas Condon was the father of Herbert T. Condon.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB6</container><unittitle>Orson Johnson, holding butterfly net, with Adella
					 Parker and Lina Maude Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Warner &amp; Randolph, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: A. W. Denny photo, 1899.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Parish Barhydt (November 28, 1837 - February
				  27, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Parish B. Johnson, lawyer, politician and editor, was born in
				  Waddington, New York. In 1859, he opened a law office in San Francisco, and
				  practiced law there and in Sacramento. When the Civil War started, he was
				  commissioned in the California Volunteers. In 1875, he founded the 
				  <emph render="italic">Walla Walla Union</emph> and was the first editor of the
				  paper while continuing to practice law. He was prominent in territorial and
				  state politics. He also served at the national level, as sergeant-at-arms in
				  the Senate and in the House of Representatives post office department.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonPB1</container><unittitle>Parish B. Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Maxwell Brothers, Walla Walla, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>Copy of original cabinet card</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, Walter Perry (November 6, 1887 – December 10,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Perry Johnson, nicknamed "Barney" and "The Big Train",
				  was a Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher. He played his entire 21-year
				  baseball career for the Washington Senators (1907–1927). He later served as
				  manager of the Senators from 1929 through 1932 and for the Cleveland Indians
				  from 1933 through 1935. One of the most celebrated and dominating players in
				  baseball history, Johnson established several pitching records, some of which
				  remain unbroken. He was one of the first five players elected to the Baseball
				  Hall of Fame in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonWP1</container><unittitle>Walter Perry Johnson in Washington Senators
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Moffett Studio</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnson, William Carlton (December 20, 1905 - October
				  31, 1939) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Carlton Johnson, who also used the name Frank Emerson,
				  was born in Montana, worked as a logger, and was killed in Hood River, Oregon
				  in 1939.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonWC1</container><unittitle>William Carlton Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Mug shot of Johnson at the time of his arrest in 1933 for
					 forgery. Reverse side is a photograph of Elmer Benson Voshall.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Johnston, Eric Allen (December 21, 1894 - August 22,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eric Allen Johnston was born in Washington, D.C.; his family
				  moved to Spokane, Washington when he was a child. He worked his way through the
				  University of Washington, graduating in 1917. When World War I started, he
				  enlisted in the Marine Corps and became a Reserve Officer Training Corps
				  commander at the UW. He was promoted to captain, fought with the American
				  Expeditionary Force Siberia in the Russian Revolution and served as military
				  attaché in China. He was discharged in 1922. Educated as a lawyer, he pursued a
				  career in business. He served as president of the Spokane Chamber of Commerce
				  and was elected president of the National Chamber of Commerce in 1942, serving
				  four terms. During World War II, he served as a U. S. government special
				  projects administrator. After the war, Johnston was the administrator of the
				  Economic Stabilization Agency (1951) and the chair of the International
				  Development Agency. He also served as a special envoy to the Middle East during
				  the Eisenhower Administration and was appointed to the Citizens Commission for
				  NATO during the Kennedy Administration. In the 1950s, he became president of
				  the Motion Picture Association of America, serving until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnstonEA1</container><unittitle>Eric Allen Johnston</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from a magazine</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Eliza Jane King (April 8, 1827 - October 28,
				  1855)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eliza Jane Small was born in West Salem, Pennsylvania. She
				  married John King in 1847; her son, John Icilius King, was born in 1848. After
				  her husband's death, she married Harvey Horace Jones, and the family moved to
				  the White River area of Washington Territory. Eliza and Harvey had two
				  children, Eliza Olivia, who was born in 1851, and Harvey, who was born in 1853.
				  In 1855, In late 1855, conflict between the Native Americans and the U. S.
				  Government over land and fishing rights ignited what has come to be known as
				  the Puget Sound Indian War. On October 27, 1855, in what is often called the
				  White River Massacre, nine settlers were killed, including Eliza and Harvey
				  Jones. The three children managed to escape.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEJK1</container><unittitle>Eliza King Jones with her son, John Icilius
					 King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1855?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph, which also includes an inset of John
					 Icilius King, Eliza Olivia Jones and Harvey P. Jones. Written on verso:
					 Reproduced from the Collections of the Library of Congress.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Eliza Olivia (December 11, 1851 - October 7,
				  1864)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eliza Olivia Jones was the daughter of Harvey Horace Jones and
				  Eliza Jane Small Jones. In late 1855, conflict between the Native Americans and
				  the U. S. Government over land and fishing rights ignited what has come to be
				  known as the Puget Sound Indian War. On October 27, 1855, in what is often
				  called the White River Massacre, nine settlers were killed, including Eliza and
				  Harvey Jones. Eliza and her brothers managed to escape. She died of diphtheria
				  in 1864, three days after her brother, Harvey.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEJK1</container><unittitle>Eliza Jane King Jones with her son, John Icilius
					 King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1855?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph, which also includes an inset of John
					 Icilius King, Eliza Olivia Jones and Harvey P. Jones. Written on verso:
					 Reproduced from the Collections of the Library of Congress.</p><p>Filed under Eliza King Jones subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Ernest Morgan (August 30, 1891 - February 8,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest M. Jones was born in Iowa; his family moved to Washington
				  when he was five. He attended school in Tacoma and graduated from Northwestern
				  University College of Dentistry in 1917. He was an Army hospital corpsman
				  during World War I. After the war, he practiced dentistry in Burlington,
				  Washington and Edmonds, Washington. He was head of operative dentistry at the
				  University of Southern California (1935 -1945) and joined the University of
				  Washington in 1945 as the first dean of the dental program. Jones instituted a
				  comprehensive post-graduate dental education program and many of the work
				  cabinets in the clinical departments of the school. He retired in 1954 because
				  of health reasons, but continued to serve as a consultant to the University
				  following his retirement. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEM1</container><unittitle>Ernest M. Jones sitting in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1950?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photographer appears in the 1950 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEM2</container><unittitle>Dean Ernest Jones standing in front of a chart of the
					 UW School of Dentistry's first graduating class</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1950</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Franklin M. (1850 - October 27, 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Franklin M. Jones was born in New York and had a seat on the New
				  York Stock Exchange in 1879. At the time of his death, he was a member of the
				  banking firm, James D. Smith &amp; Company. He married Carrie C. Bruggerof in
				  1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesFM1</container><unittitle>Franklin M. Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward C. Dana, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: For my friend and fellow director, Hon.
					 Thomas Burke of Seattle, Washington, with the esteem of Franklin M. Jones.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Harvey Percival (December 9, 1853 - October 4,
				  1864)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harvey Percival Jones was the son of Harvey Horace Jones and
				  Eliza Jane Small Jones. In late 1855, conflict between the Native Americans and
				  the U. S. Government over land and fishing rights ignited what has come to be
				  known as the Puget Sound Indian War. On October 27, 1855, in what is often
				  called the White River Massacre, nine settlers were killed, including Eliza and
				  Harvey Jones. Harvey, his sister and older brother managed to escape. Harvey
				  died of diphtheria in 1864.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEJK1</container><unittitle>Eliza King Jones with her son, John Icilius
					 King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1855?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph, which also includes an inset of John
					 Icilius King, Eliza Olivia Jones and Harvey P. Jones. Written on verso:
					 Reproduced from the Collections of the Library of Congress.</p><p>Filed under Eliza King Jones subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Marvin Francis (April 23, 1838 - October 8,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marvin Francis Jones was born in New York and came to Washington
				  Territory in 1862. He initially settled in Walla Walla where he had a furniture
				  store. He later moved to Seattle where he had a farm in the Ravenna Heights
				  area. He contributed funds for social services and institutions that provided
				  care for women and children. In 1907, after the Seattle Children's Home burned,
				  he provided land and the initial money to rebuild it. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesMF1</container><unittitle>Marvin Francis Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1917?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Nard Benedict (April 12, 1904 - September 3,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nard Jones was a full-time journalist who also wrote seventeen
				  books, published more than three hundred stories in popular magazines, and
				  broadcast numerous radio programs. He published twelve novels, including a
				  national bestseller, <emph render="italic">Swift Flows the River</emph>, as
				  well as a history of Washington State, <emph render="italic">Evergreen
				  Land</emph>, and <emph render="italic">The Great Command</emph>, a history of
				  the Whitman Mission. He was born in Seattle and graduated from Whitman College,
				  beginning his career as a campus correspondent for the <emph render="italic">Walla Walla Daily Bulletin.</emph> He was chief editorial
				  writer for the <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> .</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesNB1</container><unittitle>Nard Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Three photographs of Jones at his desk at the <emph>Seattle
					 Post-Intelligencer</emph>; a photograph of William Randolph Hearst is hanging
					 on the wall behind him.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Orrin S. (January 13, 1854 - July 6,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orrin S. Jones was born in Maine and first taught in Port
				  Gamble, Washington before becoming the third teacher in Seattle. He first
				  taught at the Sixth Street School until the completion of the Denny School,
				  where he was the principal for over twenty years. He left Seattle in 1904 when
				  he became the superintendent of schools in Walla Walla. He was the chair of the
				  commission on legislation for the Washington State Teachers Association that
				  same year and drafted the first school code for Washington. He also organized
				  and conducted the first Teachers Institute in the state. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesOS1</container><unittitle>Orrin S. Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesOS2</container><unittitle>Orrin S. Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Photocopy of original, held in Coll. 484, Curtis.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesOS3</container><unittitle>Group photo of school children with teacher, Orrin S.
					 Jones, on the steps of the Sixth Street School, located at 6th and
					 Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1883</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Class of 1883, including Annie Hall (Strong)
					 and Margaret H. Yarno with Professor O. S. Jones.</p><p>Front Row (left to right): Willetta Robertson, who was the
					 granddaughter of Captain Renton, the lumberman who was prominent with the
					 Blakely Mills; Allie Whalie; Minnie Reeves, whose father was a member of the
					 banking firm of Reeves and Mackintosh; Callie Gillette; Frank Copp, civil
					 engineer; Julius Shults; Charlie Wilson, at one time in the theatrical business
					 and identified with the Primrose and Dockstader Minstrels; Juston Houghton.
					 </p><p>Second Row (left to right): Kate Orth; Anna Hall, who married
					 Major J. F. A. Strong, who later became governor of Alaska; Edna Morrison;
					 Annie Christ; George Parker, whose father, Isaac Parker, built the first brick
					 building in Seattle; Walter Piper, one of the founder of Piper &amp; Taft; Ray
					 Coombs, the artist who painted the original picture of Chief Seattle; Ralph
					 Andrews, engineer; Randolph Kalberg.</p><p>Third Row (left to right): Sophie Lider; Barbara Wander; Mamie
					 Keezer; Annie Rinehart, now Mrs. John E. Chilberg; Alvie Curtis; Barton
					 Robinson; Frank Stanz.</p><p>Fourth Row (left to right): Hattie Morse, sister of Major
					 Chester Morse, engineer; Annie Troxil; Margaret Yarno, whose father built many
					 of the early ships on Puget Sound; Clara Hinkley, who married Sherman
					 Moran.</p><p>Fifth Row (left to right): Kate Howes, who married John Eyler;
					 Brittie Scott; Hattie Kalberg, who married Henry Frankland; May Hoyt; Ray
					 Giddings; George Newell, whose father owned Newell’s Mill; Carl Jones.</p><p>Top Row (left to right): Bertha Robertson; Melissa Megonnigle;
					 Edson Weeks; Martin Mindelstat; Charlie Harrison; ? (no first name given)
					 Smith; Bert Huntoon, brother of Richard Huntoon, Seattle attorney.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Phyllis Rose Howard (February 18, 1919 - July 25,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phyllis Rose Howard was born in Yakima and graduated from the
				  University of Washington where she was a member of the Totem Club, the Pi Beta
				  Phi Sorority, and was president of the Mortar Board. In 1939 she won the Delta
				  Delta Delta award from the Pan Hellenic Society for scholarship, activities and
				  character. In 1941 she married Bradley Tyler Jones, also a University of
				  Washington graduate, who later was a founding member of the Davis Wright
				  Tremaine law firm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Richard Asbury [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Jones, Robert McGuire (December 21, 1881 - June 5,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert McGuire Jones was born in Delaplane, Virginia and was a
				  descendent of John Marshall, the fourth Chief Justice of the U. S. Supreme
				  Court. Jones graduated from William and Mary College in 1902 and from George
				  Washington University Law School in 1907. He came to Seattle in 1908 where he
				  practiced law and was active in Republican politics. He served as the chair of
				  the King County Republican Central Committee in 1920 and 1921 and campaigned
				  for Roland Hartley in 1924. During the 1925 legislative session, he served as
				  Governor Hartley’s legal advisor. Jones was appointed to the Superior Court in
				  1925 by Governor Hartley and was elected in 1926 and re-elected seven times. He
				  served until his death in 1954.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Robert Talliaferro</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Talliaferro Jones was a photographer who worked with
				  Frank Nowell during the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. The aerial view of the
				  exposition, although attributed to Nowell, was probably taken by Jones, who
				  marketed his photographs through Nowell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesRT1</container><unittitle>A studio portrait of Robert Talliaferro Jones in a car
					 at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Stella Hurtig (February 1, 1879 - July 3,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stella Hurtig started dancing on the stage as a child in an act
				  with her mother and sister. When she was 18, she decided to go out on her own,
				  and became "La Estrellita," Spanish for "Little Star." She toured the world,
				  danced for Queen Victoria, and celebrated her birthday atop the Great Pyramid,
				  with Lord Kitchener in attendance. In 1911, two men dueled over her and fatally
				  shot each other. Jack London was a friend and in the book, 
				  <emph render="italic">Kanaka Surf</emph> based the character, Ida Barton, on
				  her. During the peak of her fame, she earned more than $50,000 annually. In
				  1921, she married Paul Jones and retired from dancing to make exotic
				  perfumes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesSH1</container><unittitle>Stella Jones in costume as La Estrellita</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: "My best compliments, Estrellita. May 16, 19
					 (illegible)." At bottom: Mrs. Ga. Jardon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jones, Wesley Livsey (October 9, 1863 – November 19,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wesley Livsey Jones was born near Bethany, Illinois, and
				  attended Southern Illinois College. He became a lawyer, and at the age of 26
				  moved his practice to North Yakima (now Yakima). He became involved with the
				  Republican Party and was nominated to run for the U.S. House of Representatives
				  in 1898. He served in the House of Representatives from 1899 to 1909 and as a
				  Republican United States Senator from 1909 until 1932. He rose to become the
				  Republican whip and served as chairman of the Appropriations and Commerce
				  Committees. Jones promoted federal investment in the Pacific Northwest; he led
				  the development of the Puget Sound Navy Yard at Bremerton, successfully
				  championed several federal irrigation projects in the region, and drafted the
				  Jones Merchant Marine Act of 1920, which stipulated that only American ships
				  could carry cargo between American ports, which made Alaska dependent on
				  Seattle-owned shipping firms. Jones also helped craft the compromise which
				  became the Federal Water Power Act of 1920. He was a vocal proponent of
				  prohibition throughout his political career, a stance that initially aided his
				  popularity but eventually contributed to his electoral defeat along with his
				  association with an unpopular party headed by the unpopular President Hoover.
				  He died less than three weeks after his defeat.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesWL1</container><unittitle>Wesley Livsey Jones</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Caricature from <emph render="italic">The Argus</emph> dated
					 December 20, 1902.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jordon, Alvah Henry Bedell (September 23, 1865 - May 31,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alvah Henry Bedell Jordan, the son of Eben Jordan and Ellen
				  Bedell Jordan, was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He went to Everett in 1900 to
				  manage the Everett Pulp and Paper Mill for the Rockefeller interests, and
				  bought the mill in 1902. He was a member of the University of Washington
				  Regents from 1926 until 1930. He was one of the founders of Everett General
				  Hospital and served as chair of the building committee for the Washington Girls
				  Home and Hospital in Everett. He left the bulk of his estate to Seattle
				  Children’s Hospital, with smaller bequests to Everett General Hospital and
				  Deaconess Children’s Home in Everett. His bequest to Seattle Children’s
				  Hospital was the single largest bequest the hospital had received at that
				  time.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JordanAHB1</container><unittitle>Alvah Henry Bedell Jordan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jordan, David Haddon (January 10, 1909 - March 8,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Jordan was the grand-nephew of Ella E. McBride. His
				  mother, Clara Boot Jordan, was the daughter of Ella McBride's sister, Bertha
				  McBride Boot. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE7</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with David Jordan, her
					 grand-nephew</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 29, 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Ella McBride subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jordon, David Starr (January 19, 1851 – September 19,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Starr Jordan was an American ichthyologist, educator,
				  eugenicist, and peace activist. He was born in Gainesville, New York, and was
				  part of the pioneer class of undergraduates at Cornell University, graduating
				  with a degree in botany. He obtained graduate education from Butler University
				  and the Indiana University School of Medicine and was inspired by Louis Agassiz
				  to pursue his studies in ichthyology. He taught natural history courses at
				  several small Midwestern colleges before joining the faculty of Indiana
				  University Bloomington in 1879. In 1885, he was named President of Indiana
				  University, becoming the nation's youngest university president at age 34 and
				  the first Indiana University president who was not an ordained minister. In
				  March 1891, he was offered the presidency of about-to-open Leland Stanford
				  Junior University. He served Stanford as president until 1913 and then
				  chancellor until his retirement in 1916. While chancellor, Jordan was elected
				  president of the National Education Association. In addition to his work as
				  Stanford president, Jordan was known for being a peace activist and was
				  president of the World Peace Foundation from 1910 to 1914. Jordan served as a
				  Director of the Sierra Club from 1892 to 1903 and was a member of the initial
				  board of trustees of the Human Betterment Foundation, a eugenics organization
				  established in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JordanDS1</container><unittitle>David Starr Jordan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jordan, Ray (April 19,1898 - April 26, 1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ray Jordan was a columnist for the <emph render="italic">Skagit
				  Valley Herald</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Sedro-Woolley
				  Courier-Times</emph>, and was a member of the Skagit County Historical Society.
				  He came to Sedro-Woolley as a child in 1902 with his family. He spent part of
				  his school years in Belfast while his father, Lafe, logged the area surrounding
				  the rail bed for the Fairhaven &amp; Southern Railroad. Over the next seventy
				  years, he interviewed many of the pioneers and their descendants. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Yarns of Skagit County</emph>, a collection of stories
				  about the pioneers of the area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR3</container><unittitle> Ray Jordan showing P. R. Jeffcott the one acre that
					 William R. Jarman cleared and the site of this second cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Ray Jordan explained that the fenceline marked Jarman's east
					 line on the slope just north of Jarman Prairie. Jarman later discovered that
					 his claim was actually on the other side, outside his staked claim.</p><p>Written on verso: The location of William R. Jarman's cabin
					 site at Jarman's Prairie.</p><p>Filed under William R. Jarman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Joseph, Chief (March 3, 1840 – September 21,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt, popularly known as Chief Joseph or
				  Young Joseph succeeded his father Tuekakas (Chief Joseph the Elder) as the
				  leader of the Wal-lam-wat-kain (Wallowa) band of Nez Perce, a Native American
				  tribe indigenous to the Wallowa Valley in northeastern Oregon, in the interior
				  Pacific Northwest. He led his band during the most tumultuous period in their
				  contemporary history when they were removed from their ancestral lands in the
				  Wallowa Valley by the United States federal government and forced to move
				  northeast, onto a significantly reduced reservation in Idaho. A series of
				  events led those Nez Perce who resisted removal, including Joseph's band and an
				  allied band of the Palouse tribe, to take flight to attempt to reach political
				  asylum in Canada. By the time he surrendered, 150 of his followers had been
				  killed or wounded. Although Joseph had negotiated a safe return home for his
				  people, General Sherman forced him and 400 followers to be taken to Fort
				  Leavenworth, in eastern Kansas, to be held in a prisoner of war campsite for
				  eight months. Toward the end of the following summer, the surviving Nez Perce
				  were taken by rail to a reservation in the Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) for
				  seven years where many of them died. Finally, in 1885, Chief Joseph and his
				  followers were taken to the Colville Indian Reservation far from both their
				  homeland in the Wallowa Valley and the rest of their people in Idaho. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">Joseph1</container><unittitle>Ticket to Chief Joseph's appearance at the Seattle
					 Theatre</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 20, 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.Joseph1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The Washington University State Historical Society sponsored
					 the event featuring Chief Joseph "The Nez Perce," accompanied by his nephew Red
					 Thunder. Chief Joseph gave a speech, with former Indian Agent Henry Steele as
					 interpreter. After Chief Joseph's speech, Edmond Meany, who was close friends
					 with the chief, and had written his master's thesis about Joseph, gave a talk
					 about the chief's life and history. </p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">Joseph2</container><unittitle>Photograph of Chief Joseph's grave marker with
					 unidentified man standing next to it</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of the white marble shaft and concrete pedestal
					 marks his grave, 20 miles north of Grand Coulee Dam in north-central
					 Washington. The monument is inscribed with his tribal name,
					 Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt (Thunder Rolling Down the Mountain).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Josephi, Simeon Edward (December 3, 1849 - August 17,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simeon Edward Josephi, the son of Edward Josephi and Sarah
				  Mendoza Josephi, was born in New York City. He attended the Free Academy, later
				  known as the New York College and worked as a clerk in a wholesale hat house.
				  In 1866, he followed his brother to San Francisco where he met Dr. A. M. Loryea
				  of Portland who offered him a job as a bookkeeper for the Oregon Hospital for
				  the Insane. He worked as clerk at the hospital for two years, studying medicine
				  in his spare time. He took additional classes in New York and in 1877,
				  graduated from the Toland Medical School, later part of the University of
				  California. He worked as a physician at the Oregon Hospital for the Insane,
				  becoming medical superintendent in 1881. He also served as superintendent of
				  the Oregon State Insane Asylum from 1886 until 1887. In 1887, he resigned to
				  start a medical practice in Portland. Josephi was the first dean of the school
				  of medicine of the University of Oregon, served two terms as State Senator
				  (1889 and 1901), was a member of the water commission of Portland, a member of
				  the state board of pardons, served as a first lieutenant in the medical reserve
				  corps of the United States Army and was treasurer of Good Samaritan Hospital.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JosephiSE1</container><unittitle>Simeon Edward Josephi</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jourdan, Alda Beatrice (December 2, 1889 - January 7,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alda Jourdan was an expressionistic painter, primarily of
				  botanical subjects as well as a skilled photographer, author, and teacher. As
				  Alda Peasley, she and her husband shared a photographic studio from 1914 to
				  1925. With her second husband Albert Jourdan, also a photographer, she
				  exhibited their realistic photographic art nationally and internationally. She
				  wrote many articles on art and photography and lived and worked in Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JourdanAB1</container><unittitle>Alda Jourdan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Jowman, James Daniel [missing]</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Judge, William H. (April 28, 1850 – January 16,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Judge was a Jesuit priest who, during the 1897
				  Klondike Gold Rush, established St. Mary's Hospital, a facility in Dawson City
				  which provided shelter, food and any available medicine to the many gold miners
				  who filled the town. For his selfless and tireless work, Judge became known as
				  "The Saint of Dawson." Judge was born into a religious family in Baltimore,
				  Maryland. Becoming a Jesuit priest, in 1890, at the age of forty, he
				  volunteered to go to Alaska. He served for two years at Holy Cross Mission, on
				  the Yukon River, before being assigned to a smaller mission at Nulato, Alaska.
				  There he built a church and taught the native children. Judge was then
				  reassigned to the small mining town of Forty Mile, Yukon where he established a
				  mission in 1894. When gold was discovered in the Klondike, most of the
				  community relocated there. and he followed, arriving in Dawson City in March
				  1897. His humanitarian work became known through the writings of Jack London.
				  Judge died of pneumonia in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JudgeWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Judge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Judson, Holden Allen (September 10, 1826 - October 26,
				  1899) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Holden Allen Judson was born in Vermillion, Ohio and married
				  Phoebe Goodell on June 20, 1849. In 1853, the couple followed the Overland
				  Trail to Grand Mound, Washington Territory. In 1856 they moved to Claquato
				  (Lewis County) and late in 1858 to Olympia when Holden was elected to the
				  territorial legislature on the Democratic ticket. They would remain in Olympia
				  for nearly eight years. Holden served at least two terms in the legislature,
				  and subsequently operated a store in Olympia. In 1866, they moved to Whidbey
				  Island and then to Lynden, Washington in 1870. As Lynden developed, the Judsons
				  donated parts of their land for churches, schools, a printing office and a
				  blacksmith shop. They also built the Judson Opera House in the late 1880s,
				  which became the community center for lectures, entertainment, and
				  celebrations.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JudsonHA1</container><unittitle>Holden Allen Judson and wife Phoebe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Judson, Phoebe Weeks Goodell (October 25, 1831 - January
				  16, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phoebe Judson was the first non-indigenous American woman to
				  settle in the Lynden area (in northern Whatcom County). She became known as the
				  "Mother of Lynden" during the half century that she lived there. She was the
				  daughter of Jotham Weeks Goodell and Anna B. Goodell. Her parents moved to the
				  Willamette Valley in Oregon Territory in 1850 and later moved to Grand Mound,
				  Washington Territory. Phoebe and her husband, Holden Allen Judson, followed
				  three years later. In 1866, they moved to Whidbey Island and to Lynden,
				  Washington in 1870. The Judsons had five biological children and eleven adopted
				  children. As Lynden developed, the Judsons donated parts of their land for
				  churches, schools, a printing office, and a blacksmith shop. They also built
				  the Judson Opera House in the late 1880s, which became the community center for
				  lectures, entertainment, and celebrations. Phoebe became known for writing
				  letters to the <emph render="italic">Bellingham Bay Mail</emph> during the
				  1870s, describing the joys of life as a “Pioneer’s Wife,” as she usually signed
				  her letters. She wrote an autobiography, <emph render="italic">A Pioneer’s
				  Search for an Ideal Home,</emph> which was first published in 1925, the year
				  before her death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JudsonPWG1</container><unittitle>Phoebe Judson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JudsonHA1</container><unittitle>Holden Allen Judson and wife Phoebe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Holden Allen Judson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Judson, Stephen (October 28, 1837 - October 19,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen Judson, the son of Peter and Anna Judson, was born in
				  Prussia and came to the United States with his family in 1845. The family
				  initially settled in Galena, Illinois before heading west in 1853. In Salt Lake
				  City, they joined the Byles-Longmire party, bound for Oregon; the group was one
				  of the first wagon trains to cross the mountains at Naches Pass. They reached
				  Commencement Bay and took a Donation Land claim that encompassed most of the
				  current business district of Tacoma. Their home was where Union Station now
				  stands. The family moved to Steilacoom during the Indian Wars of 1855 and never
				  returned to Tacoma. The jail in Steilacoom was built with bricks from Peter
				  Judson’s kiln, and Stephen was elected sheriff of the town. He later served two
				  terms in the Territorial Legislature, two terms as County Treasurer, and was a
				  trustee for the State Hospital for the Insane. He married Mary W. Gallagher in
				  1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JudsonS1</container><unittitle>Stephen Judson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Juneau, Joseph (May 28, 1836–March 1, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Juneau, the son of Francois and Marguerite Juneau, was
				  born in Repentigny, Quebec, Canada. At the age of sixteen, he traveled to
				  California during the gold rush of 1849. In the next twenty-five years, he went
				  followed the gold fields, traveling to Oregon and the Fraser River. In 1879, he
				  heard about gold found near Sitka, Alaska, and with his partner, Richard
				  Harris, he found a rich basin cut by hundreds of gold-bearing quartz veins.
				  They named it the Silver Bow Basin. Juneau sold his interest in 1882; however,
				  miners decided to name the new city at the base of Gold Creek after him. He
				  never had another success comparable to his discovery at Juneau, but he did
				  make one more gold strike in the Circle district of Alaska in about 1895.
				  Juneau also joined the rush to the Klondike in 1897. A few years after his
				  death in the Yukon, miners and citizens of his city brought his body back for
				  burial inthe city named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JuneauJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Juneau</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Juvonen, Helmi Dagmar (January 17, 1903 - October 17,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helmi DagmarJuvonen was born in Butte, Montana and moved to
				  Seattle with her parents when she was fifteen. In 1929, she received a
				  scholarship to Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle. While doing drawings of
				  the Seattle Potlatch festival for a newspaper in 1934, she met leaders of
				  several tribes, beginning of a lifelong interest in native art and culture.
				  During the Great Depression, Juvonen participated in Federal Art Project
				  programs and helped create dioramas of tribal life for the University of
				  Washington Museum (later known as the Burke Museum). By the early 1950s Juvonen
				  was a well-known artist in the Pacific Northwest. Works of hers had been
				  displayed in local galleries, and several were in the collection of the Seattle
				  Art Museum; however, she still had very little money, supporting herself by
				  selling prints from a stall in the Pike Place Market. Committed to a mental
				  hospital in 1959, she spent the last 25 years of her life at Oakhurst
				  Convalescent Center. During these years, exhibitions arranged by her artist
				  friends sparked a re-discovery of her work, and she received considerable
				  recognition. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JuvonenHD1</container><unittitle>Helmi Dagmar Juvonen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>K</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Kahan, Rose (March, 1887 - June, 1963
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rose Kahan, the daughter of Lewis and Annie Kahan, was born in
				  Devil's Lake, North Dakota and graduated from the UW in 1908 with a degree in
				  Latin. She later taught school in Everett.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kamphenborg, Helen Gilkey (October 29, 1918 - February
				  15, 2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Gilkey was born in Anacortes to Frank and Clyde Gilkey.
				  She attended the University of Washington where she was a member of the Pi Beta
				  Phi sorority. She married Harvey H. Kamphenborg with whom she had two
				  daughters. After the marriage ended, she married R. Frank Tucker, and the
				  couple moved to Guemes Island. She worked for the Bellevue School District and
				  the Seattle Arboretum, and was involved in gardening, bridge and antiquing. She
				  made her last kayak trip when she was 92. Among her survivors was Helen K., the
				  rhododendron named in her honor after she won “Best in Show” at the Seattle
				  Garden Show.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kane, Thomas Franklin (May 5,1863 -April 10,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Westfield, Indiana in 1863, Thomas Franklin Kane
				  graduated from DePauw University in Greencastle Indiana in 1889. He later
				  received a masters degree from the same school in 1891. Kane then attended
				  Johns Hopkins University for a law degree. Before becoming President of the
				  University of Washington Kane joined the University of Washington faculty as a
				  professor of Latin and Greek. He became President of the University in 1902 and
				  served in the facility until 1914. Between his presidency at the University of
				  Washington and his retirement from education in 1933 he served as president of
				  both Olivet College in Olivet, Michigan as well as the University of North
				  Dakota. He died April 10, 1953 in Seattle Washington at the age of 89.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE4</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead on the UW campus with University
					 President Thomas F. Kane, Professor Edmond S. Meany and Everett Voorhees
					 Thompson, orderly of the day.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Edward Mead subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kanim, Pat (Pat-ka-nim) (c. 1808 - 1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Pat Kanim, also known as Pat-ka-nim, was chief of the
				  Snoqualmie and Snohomish tribe in what is now Washington State. During the
				  1850s, he lived at the largest village of his people located at a fishing
				  village at the confluence of the Tolt and Snoqualmie rivers near present day
				  Carnation, Washington. He controlled the Snoqualmie Pass and the profitable
				  trade between the tribes on either side. In 1854, Pat-ka-nim assisted U.S. Army
				  Captain George McClellan, later a Civil War major general, in exploring
				  Snoqualmie Pass as part of the Pacific Railroad Surveys. On January 22, 1855,
				  he signed the Treaty of Point Elliott, trading away several modern counties in
				  exchange for a reservation near Tulalip, Washington. Pat-ka-nim maintained good
				  relations with the founders of Seattle. With the approach of the Puget Sound
				  War, they persuaded him to ally himself with the forces of the United States.
				  He assisted in constructing forts and encamped at Fort Tilton with 100 of his
				  troops to block Snoqualmie Pass. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KanimP1</container><unittitle>Pat Kanim</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1855?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Karlstrom, Alva Elida Carlson (April 20, 1886 - July 6,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alva Elida Carlson, the daughter of Christofer Carlson and Karna
				  Olson Carlson, was born in Trelleborg, Sweden and came to the United States
				  with her parents when she was five. She married Otto R. Karlstrom in 1911 and
				  worked with him to establish the Lutheran Compass Center in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarlstromOR4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Otto Karlstrom with wife Alva</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Bon Marche, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Otto R. Karlstrom subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Karlstrom, Otto Reinhold (June 8, 1880 - May 20,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otto Reinhold Karlstrom was born in Sweden and went to sea on
				  merchant ships at an early age. He came to the United States in 1900 to
				  complete his education. After ordination, he became the first pastor of the
				  Bethany Lutheran Church in Seattle. In 1910, he started a mission on Seattle’s
				  skid road, which served mostly homeless sailors, loggers and fishermen. A
				  second mission was established in 1922 in Tacoma lasted for a decade, and later
				  became the Lutheran Welfare Society. In the early 1930s the Lutheran Welfare
				  Society established Good Samaritan Hospital in Puyallup. The Compass Housing
				  Alliance, as it is now called, continues to offer emergency shelter, day
				  services, transitional and some permanent housing in the Greater Seattle area.
				  Karlstrom married Alva Elida Carlson in 1911.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarlstromOR1</container><unittitle>Otto Reinhold Karlstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Brandt Brothers, Davenport, Illinois</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarlstromOR2</container><unittitle>Otto Reinhold Karlstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1948?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarlstromOR3</container><unittitle>Otto Reinhold Karlstrom in clerical attire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarlstromOR4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Otto Karlstrom with wife Alva</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Bon Marche, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Karr, Abigail Boutwell Walker (May 23, 1840 - November
				  9, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abigail Karr was the wife of the first permanent settler in
				  Hoquiam and was the first settler child born in what is now Washington State.
				  Her parents were Elkanah Walker, a minister, and Mary Richardson Walker, a
				  teacher, who came to the Pacific Northwest as missionaries and settled at
				  Tshimakain on Walker’s Prairie near Spokane. Among their fellow missionaries
				  was Dr. Marcus Whitman, who was the attending physician at Abigail’s birth.
				  After the Whitman Mission killings in 1847, the Walkers moved to Fort Colville
				  for three months and then went to the Willamette Valley in Oregon where Abigail
				  finished her education. After graduation, she taught school. She married James
				  Anderson Karr in September, 1863, and the couple moved to Hoquiam and later
				  Yakima. She was a member of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the Eastern
				  Star, and the Daughters of the American Revolution. John Mix Stanley, the
				  artist and explorer, painted her portrait when she was a child. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarrABW1</container><unittitle>Abigail Karr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 16, 1913</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. F. Colville, Yakima</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph was taken on her fiftieth wedding
					 anniversary.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Karstens, Henry Peter "Harry" (September 2, 1878 –
				  November 28, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Peter "Harry" Karstens was the first superintendent of
				  Mount McKinley National Park (now known as Denali National Park), from 1921 to
				  1928. He was the guide and climbing leader of the first complete ascent of
				  Denali (Mount McKinley) in 1913, with expedition members Hudson Stuck,
				  Episcopal Archdeacon of the Yukon and Arctic; Walter Harper, and Robert Tatum.
				  Karstens was born in Chicago and went to Dawson City, Canada during the
				  Klondike Gold Rush in 1897 when he was nineteen. He mined on Seventymile Creek
				  and helped lay out the town of Eagle, Alaska. He also carried freight and mail
				  with Charles McGonagall via dog teams among the frontier towns of Fairbanks,
				  Valdez and Kantishna. He also worked as a packer, hauling miners' supplies over
				  the Chilkoot Pass. From 1906 to 1908, Karr accompanied Charles Sheldon, a
				  hunter, conservationist, and naturalist, on hunting trips into the Toklat River
				  region. Sheldon, the chairman of the influential Boone and Crockett Club,
				  successfully campaigned with Congress to have the area set aside as a national
				  park. Denali National Park was established as Mount McKinley National Park in
				  1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KarstensHP1</container><unittitle>Harry Karstens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Katz, Solomon (June 10, 1909 - December 23,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Solomon Katz was born in Buffalo, New York, and attended Cornell
				  University where he earned his B.A. and Ph.D. in ancient history. After
				  finishing his doctorate, he accepted a job teaching Greek at the University of
				  Oregon, then came to the University of Washington's history department in 1936
				  to teach Roman, Byzantine, and medieval history. Katz served in the United
				  States Air Force during World War II, earning a Bronze Star. He returned to the
				  University of Washington where he served as an instructor, professor, Chair of
				  the Department of History, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Provost,
				  and Vice President for Academic Affairs. He authored many publications
				  including <emph render="italic">The Decline of Rome and the Rise of Medieval
				  Europe</emph>. His research interests also led him to build a Byzantine library
				  at the UW. He is remembered for his tireless efforts over the years in support
				  of the arts and humanities in the Northwest, serving as a member of numerous
				  arts, civic, and educational boards, including PONCHO, Seattle Repertory
				  Theatre, Seattle Art Museum, the Seattle Symphony, and Lakeside School. Katz
				  received the Seattle Mayor's Public Service Award in the Arts in 1978 and the
				  University's Outstanding Public Service Award in 1983. In 1978, the UW
				  established the Solomon Katz Distinguished Lectureship Series in the
				  Humanities. Later, an endowed professorship was created in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KatzS1</container><unittitle>Solomon Katz seated at desk, in front of
					 bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph appears in the 1957 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KatzS2</container><unittitle>Solomon Katz standing in front of a
					 bookshelf</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kaynor, Sunny Sue Farmer (November 25, 1934 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sunny Sue Farmer, a graduate of the University of Washington, is
				  an artist. She married Kirk Gilbert Kaynor in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD2</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe, Sunny Sue Kaynor and an unidentified
					 woman looking at books during an Alumni Vacation College Session</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1979</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert D. Monroe subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kearney, Joseph Laurence (April 28, 1927 – May 5,
				  2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph L. “Joe” Kearney was a coach and sports administrator in
				  university athletics. After serving in the Navy during World War II, he
				  attended Seattle Pacific University where he received a B.A. degree in history
				  and was a member of the SPU basketball team. He worked as an administrator and
				  coach in several high schools in Washington before completing a Master’s degree
				  in education at San Jose State University. He moved back to the UW to finish
				  his Ph.D. Kearney joined the UW Athletic Department in 1969 as assistant
				  athletic director under Jim Owens; he was later appointed athletic director and
				  then Director of Sports Programs. While at UW, he first broached the idea of
				  allocating prime-location seats at Husky Stadium to reward those who gave the
				  most money to the athletic department, an idea which later morphed into the
				  Tyee Club. He became athletic director at Michigan State in 1976 and served
				  briefly as athletic director at Arizona State in 1980. Kearney then became
				  commissioner of the Western Athletic Conference from 1980 to 1994. He served as
				  the Assistant Executive Director of the Washington Interscholastic Activities
				  Association and for sixteen years, served the U.S. Olympic Committee as a
				  committee member and later as a USOC Committee Chairman. He was named to the
				  USOC Board of Directors, and in 1996, he was awarded the USOC Olympic Torch
				  Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KearneyJL1</container><unittitle>Joe Kearney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Keeler, Harold Emerson (October 9, 1905 - June 8,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Keeler, a printmaker and painter, was born in Denver,
				  Colorado. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and was a member of the
				  Denver Artists Guild. His work is in the collections of the Denver Art Museum,
				  the Colorado State Historical Museum, and the Seattle Art Museum. He also
				  worked at the Burke Museum on the campus of the University of Washington. In
				  1964, he published <emph render="italic">Waterfront : a sketchbook: lithographs
				  drawn on and printed from the stone</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeelerHE1</container><unittitle>Harold Keeler inking lithography stone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeelerHE2</container><unittitle>Harold Keeler drawing on stone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeelerHE3</container><unittitle>Harold Keeler pulling stone through the
					 press</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeelerHE4</container><unittitle>Harold Keeler drawing on stone with tusche
					 crayon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeelerHE5</container><unittitle>Harold Keeler pulling lithograph from
					 stone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Keene, Laura (July 20, 1826 – November
				  4, 1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laura Keene was a stage actor, producer and theatrical manager,
				  and one of the first female theater manager in New York. She was born Mary
				  Frances Moss and took the stage name of Laura Keene circa 1851. In 1865, she
				  witnessed Lincoln's assassination while she was performing in 
				  <emph render="italic">Our American Cousin</emph> at Ford's Theater.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeeneL1</container><unittitle>Laura Keene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of original in vault.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kefauver, Estes (July 26, 1903 – August 10,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Estes Kefauver was an American politician from Tennessee. A
				  member of the Democratic Party, he served in the U.S. House of Representatives
				  from 1939 to 1949 and in the Senate from 1949 until his death. After leading a
				  much-publicized investigation into organized crime in the early 1950s, he twice
				  sought his party's nomination for President of the United States. In 1956, he
				  was selected by the Democratic National Convention to be the running mate of
				  presidential nominee Adlai Stevenson. Still holding his U.S. Senate seat after
				  the Stevenson–Kefauver ticket lost to the Eisenhower–Nixon ticket in 1956,
				  Kefauver was named chair of the U.S. Senate Antitrust and Monopoly Subcommittee
				  in 1957 and served as its chairman. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KefauverE1</container><unittitle>Estes Keafuaver receiving a pickle pin at the Heinz
					 Pickle booth at the Seattle World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Senator Estes Kefauver was the principal guest at the
					 Tennessee Day ceremonies at the Plaza of the States at the Seattle World's Fair
					 on September 1, 1962.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kegley, Carey Bell (March 25, 1857 - October 29,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carey Bell Kegley, the son of John H. Kegley and Sarah Jennings
				  Kegley, was born in Ames, Iowa and came to Pullman, Washington in 1891. He was
				  first elected as Master (president) of the State Grange in 1905 and served
				  thirteen consecutive terms. Under his leadership, the Grange followed a
				  politically activist role, cooperating with labor and lobbying for major social
				  changes, including equal suffrage. Statewide membership in the Grange increased
				  rapidly during this period. In 1916, he joined the Federal Farm Loan Bank in
				  Spokane as an appraiser while continuing his role as Master of the Grange. He
				  died in office and was succeeded by William Morley Bouck.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KegleyCB1</container><unittitle>Carey Bell Kegley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1913 and 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appears in <emph>Washington State Grange
					 Proceedings (1913 -1916)</emph>facing page 31.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Keil, William (March 6, 1812 – December 30,
				  1877)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William (Wilhelm) Keil established and led communal religious
				  societies in Bethel, Missouri, and Aurora, Oregon in the nineteenth century. He
				  was born in Prussia and immigrated to the United States as a young man.
				  Initially, he settled in New York and worked as a tailor, his family trade.
				  Within a year, he and his wife, Louisa Ritter Keil, moved to western
				  Pennsylvania, where he gained a reputation as a mystic and healer. Keil was
				  influenced by revivalism and utopianism, which were popular in western
				  Pennsylvania during the 1830s. After becoming a successful Christian preacher
				  and building a large congregation, Keil, and his followers moved to Bethel,
				  Missouri, in 1844 and started a Utopian commune. Although this colony was
				  considered successful, many of its members followed Keil to Oregon between 1853
				  and 1856 to start a new settlement, which became known as Aurora Mills, named
				  after Keil’s daughter who had died in 1862 of smallpox. When Keil died in 1877,
				  he left a power vacuum that led to the dissolution of the colony in 1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KeilW1</container><unittitle>William Keil</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelley, William Bastore (January 29, 1838 - November 27,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Bastore Kelley was born near Winchester, Tennessee on
				  January 29, 1839. The family moved to Illinois where he attended the public
				  schools and McKendree College at Lebanon, IL. On March 30, 1864, he married
				  Mary M. Williams. That same year, they started to Washington Territory, along
				  with his parents; the group started with six teams and eventually had 129
				  wagons in the train. Both William and his father claimed land on the banks of
				  Finnell’s Creek near the present city of Sumner. In addition to farming,
				  William taught school in the summer and worked in the logging camps during the
				  winter. He served two terms in the territorial legislature (1875 and 1877) and
				  in 1879 went to eastern Washington, where he spent a year in mining. When he
				  returned to Sumner, he was elected auditor for Pierce County, an office he held
				  for three terms. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge, the International Order
				  of Odd Fellows and of the Knights of Pythias order in Tacoma. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelleyWB1</container><unittitle>William Bastore Kelley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelling, Dietrich Richard (1832 - November 21,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dietrich Kelling was born in Bremen, Germany in 1832 and in 1854
				  immigrated New York. Two years later he traveled west, mining in California and
				  Idaho. In the late 1860s, he purchased two blocks of Walla Walla in Washington
				  Territory; the town was then a supply point for the mines in Idaho and British
				  Columbia. He continued to mine and was one of the first to go to the Oro Fino
				  mines. In 1871 he settled down in Walla Walla, and in 1885 leased the Stine
				  House, a hotel. His sons continued to operate the hotel after his death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellingDR1</container><unittitle>Dietrich Richard Kelling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1888?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Charles Henry (October 1, 1846 - August 7,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Henry Kellogg, the son of Joseph Kellogg and Estella
				  Bushnell Kellogg, was born in Wood County, Ohio. The family started the journey
				  to Oregon in 1847, arriving in 1848. He was one of the first graduates of
				  Portland Business College and trained as a maritime pilot under Captain
				  Baughman. As soon as he was qualified to assume command of a vessel, he was put
				  in charge of the <emph render="italic">Senator</emph>, a steamer owned by the
				  People's Transportation Company. After the sale of the company, he commanded
				  various boats for the Oregon Steam Navigation Company. On the completion of the
				  locks at Oregon City, he piloted the first steamer through the locks. He became
				  a stockholder of the Joseph Kellogg Transportation Company and was first its
				  vice-president and then its treasurer. He had command of the steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">Joseph Kellogg</emph> until his death. He married twice,
				  first to Emma Eliza Goode in 1870 and then to Mary Ellen Copeland in 1882. He
				  had two children from his second marriage, Pearl and Earl. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Elizabeth Carr (1817 - July 30, 1876)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Carr was born in Vermont. She arrived in Oregon in
				  1857 and married George Kellogg in 1859.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggEC1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Estella Bushnell (February 22, 1818 - January
				  15, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Estella Bushnell, the daughter of Truman Bushnell and Hepsibah
				  Bond Bushnell, was born in Waterbury, Connecticut. She married Joseph Kellogg
				  in 1844 and traveled with him and their two young sons, Charles and Orrin, to
				  Oregon, arriving in 1848. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles H. Kellogg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Gardner (February 26, 1839 - June 24,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gardner Kellogg was born in Maine and trained as a pharmacist.
				  He crossed the continent in 1861, working as a druggist in San Francisco and
				  Sacramento before moving to Seattle in 1863. He opened Kellogg’s Drug Store,
				  the first drug store in Seattle; was appointed post master by President
				  Lincoln; and was one of the founders of Seattle’s first volunteer fire brigade.
				  He later became chief of the volunteers, but stepped down in 1888. When the
				  Seattle Fire Department was authorized after the Great Fire of 1889, he was
				  again chosen as chief, this time in a paid position. Kellogg was an advocate of
				  fire prevention. Noting that much of the damage caused by the Great Fire was
				  caused by poor construction, he recommended ordinances which would place
				  responsibility for fire safety on building owners, and he personally inspected
				  every commercial building in the city. Businessmen were unhappy, arguing that
				  the new ordinances would cost them money. They complained to the Fire
				  Commission and asked for Kellogg's dismissal; he was fired on November 1, 1892.
				  When a new city charter was written, which included a Civil Service system to
				  replace the commission system, Kellogg once again became chief. He retired in
				  1911. He married Sarah Amelia Bonney in 1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggG1</container><unittitle>Gardner Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1916</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggG2</container><unittitle>Gardner Kellogg standing in front of his home located
					 at 1211 Summit Avenue in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peiser, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Collection 202.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, George (April 6, 1814 - April 28,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Kellogg, the son of Orrin and Margaret Kellogg, was born
				  at Caledonia Springs, Canada, April 6, 1814. In 1836, he moved to Cincinnati,
				  Ohio, where he studied medicine. He had an interest in botanic and
				  physio-medicine, and learned to compound medicines from native herbs and
				  plants. After graduating, he established a practice in Wood County, Ohio. In
				  1851, he came to Oregon, where he practiced, not only in Portland, but
				  throughout the state and territories. He was instrumental in opening Yaquina
				  Bay to commerce, even though this was originally part of the Indian Agency.
				  From a study of United States laws, he believed that a harbor could not be
				  withheld from commerce and determined to make the test at Yaquina. He met
				  strong opposition from the officers and the superintendent of the Agency;
				  however, after a final appeal to the government, Yaquina Bay became an open
				  port. He married Elizabeth Carr in 1859.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggG1</container><unittitle>George Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Jay Alverdo (February 21, 1851 - November 3,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jay Alverdo Kellogg, the son of Eli Davenport Kellogg and
				  Margaret Passage Kellogg, was born in Boone County, Illinois. When he was
				  eight, the family crossed the plains to California, settling in Weaverville. As
				  an adult, he engaged in the lumber business in Humboldt County until 1879, when
				  he sold his business and moved to Dayton, Washington Territory. He had a
				  mercantile business and practiced law. He was elected county auditor in 1884
				  and re-elected in 1886. He married Sina M. Colson in 1882; after her death in
				  1895, he married Cora Lake in 1896 and divorced her in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggJA1</container><unittitle>Jay A. Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Joseph (June 12, 1812 - November 30,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Kellogg, the son of Orrin Kellogg and Margaret Miller
				  Kellogg, was born in Canada. After the War of 1812, his family moved first to
				  New York and then to Ohio where Joseph Kellogg was trained as a millwright. In
				  1847, the Kellogg family started the journey to Oregon. They wintered in St.
				  Joseph, Missouri, and finally reached Milwaukie, Oregon in 1848. Joseph took up
				  a donation land claim and built the first commercial flour mill in Oregon. He
				  also built several of the first sawmills and operated schooners that were used
				  in the lumber trade between Oregon and California. Kellogg became an owner of
				  the People's Transportation Company in 1864. In 1867, he superintended the
				  building of a basin above Willamette Falls, which made it easier to traverse
				  the portage between the portions of the Willamette River above and below
				  Willamette Falls. He worked with Captain George A. Pease in the first
				  navigation of the Tualatin River; together, they constructed a canal that made
				  it possible to bring freight from the Tualatin River to the Willamette River.
				  Kellogg also laid out the town of Oswego. After selling the People's
				  Transportation Company, he formed the Willamette Transportation Company which
				  built the steamboats <emph render="italic">Governor Grover</emph>and 
				  <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph>. After selling his interest in the company,
				  he formed the Joseph Kellogg Transportation Company with his brother, Jason,
				  and his two sons. He was a prominent Mason, and with his father, brought the
				  charter to establish the first Masonic Lodge in Oregon in 1848. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles H. Kellogg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Margaret Miller (December 12, 1792 - August 22,
				  1858) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Miller was born in England. She married Orrin Kellogg
				  in 1811; the couple had twelve children. In 1847, the Kellogg family started
				  the journey to Oregon. They wintered in St. Joseph, Missouri, and finally
				  reached Milwaukie, Oregon in 1848. Margaret died when she fell from her horse
				  whiles returning from a visit to one of her children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles H. Kellogg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Noah Spencer (December 18, 1831 - March 17,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Noah Spencer Kellogg was born in Ohio, and in 1852, began the
				  journey across the plains, reaching Council Bluffs that year, and arriving in
				  Portland, Oregon in 1853. The next year, he worked as a lumberman at Port
				  Gamble, continuing there until 1870. In 1870, Kellogg traveled to the mine
				  fields of British Columbia, California and Mexico, prospecting and gathering
				  mining information. In 1888, he went to the Coeur d’Alene area and became part
				  owner of the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mines, which were sold in 1887 to S.G.
				  Reed for $1, 500,000. The town of Kellogg, Idaho is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggNS1</container><unittitle>Noah Spencer Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Orrin Jr. (October 16, 1846 - October 9,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orrin Kellogg, the son of Joseph Kellogg and Estella Bushnell
				  Kellogg, was born in Wood, Ohio. The family started the journey to Oregon in
				  1847, arriving in 1848. He became a steam ship captain and was later president
				  of the Joseph Kellogg Transportation Company. He married Margaret Ellen
				  Westfall in 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles H. Kellogg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Orrin Sr. (September 4, 1790 - February 14,
				  1872) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Orrin Kellogg was born at St. Albans, Vermont. He
				  married Margaret Miller in 1858; the couple had twelve children. He moved to
				  Canada in 1812, where he operated a hotel and mineral springs. Because of the
				  war between England and the United States, he was unable to return to the
				  United States until after the war. In 1847, the Kellogg family started the
				  journey to Oregon. They wintered in St. Joseph, Missouri, and finally reached
				  Milwaukie, Oregon in 1848. He took up a donation land claim between Oregon City
				  and Milwaukee, where he built a home and established a fruit orchard and
				  tannery. He also explored and studied navigation on the lower Willamette and
				  Columbia Rivers. He was a prominent Mason, and with his son, Joseph, brought
				  the charter to establish the first Masonic Lodge in Oregon in 1848.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggCH1</container><unittitle>Kellogg family, including Joseph Kellogg, Estella
					 Kellogg, Charles Kellogg, Captain Orrin Kellogg Sr., Captain Orrin Kellogg Jr.
					 and Margaret Kellogg.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Charles H. Kellogg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kellogg, Sarah Bonney (June 2, 1848 - October 24,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Amelia Bonney was born in Iowa and crossed the plains with
				  her family when she was four years old. The family arrived in Oregon in 1852
				  and moved to Steilacoom, Washington Territory, in 1853, when it was the largest
				  town in the territory. She was a member of the first graduating class of the
				  Territorial University of Washington. She married Gardner Kellogg, Seattle’s
				  first fire chief, in 1868. Her father was Timothy Bonney; her brothers were
				  William Pierce Bonney, Fred Bonney, and Ranson K. Bonney. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KelloggSB1</container><unittitle>Sarah Kellogg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelly, Clinton (June 15, 1808 – June 19,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clinton Kelly, the son of Samuel and Nancy Kelly, was born in
				  Pulaski County, Kentucky. In 1827, he joined the Methodist Episcopal Church and
				  became a pastor. He joined the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in 1844 after
				  its succession from the main church over the issue of slavery. In 1847, he and
				  his family, along with his brothers Albert and Thomas, traveled to the Oregon
				  Territory, arriving in late 1848. They initially stayed in a cabin on James B.
				  Stephens' claim and later settled in what is now Oregon City where he farmed
				  and continued circuit riding and preaching throughout the lower Willamette
				  Valley. He married Mary Baston in 1827, and they had five children. After
				  Mary’s death in 1837, Kelly married Jane Burns in 1838; she died shortly after
				  the birth of their daughter, Mary Jane. Kelly married his third wife, Moriah
				  Maldon Crain, on March 11, 1840; the couple had nine children. Clinton Street
				  and Clinton Park in Portland are named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellyC1</container><unittitle>Clinton Kelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelly, David Seeley (March 27, 1875 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Seeley Kelly received his B.S. from the University of
				  Washington in 1899 and his M.A. in 1901. He was a tutor in physics at the UW
				  (1899-1901), and an assistant professor (1901-1903). He was a scholar in
				  physics (1903-1904), a fellow in physics (1904-1905) and a professor of physics
				  (1906-1907) at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. He later taught at
				  Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellyDS1</container><unittitle>David Seeley Kelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelly, James Kerr (February 16, 1819 – September 15,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Kerr Kelly was born in Centre County Pennsylvania, studied
				  law at the Dickinson School of Law in Carlisle, Pennsylvania and was admitted
				  to the bar in 1842. He began private practice in Lewistown, Pennsylvania and
				  was deputy attorney general for Mifflin County, Pennsylvania. In 1849, he left
				  for the gold fields of California and then moved to the Oregon Territory in
				  1851. He established a law practice in Portland and was one of three people
				  selected to help re-write the laws of the territory. While living in Oregon,
				  Kelly became active in politics and was elected as a Democrat to the
				  territorial legislature serving from 1853 to 1857, and was selected as
				  president of the legislature twice. In 1857, he was a member of the
				  constitutional convention formed to prepare for Oregon's admission into the
				  Union in 1859. Upon statehood, Kelly was elected to the Oregon State Senate and
				  served from 1860 to 1864. In 1864, he ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the U.
				  S. House of Representatives, and was also unsuccessful in running for governor
				  in 1866. In 1870, he was elected to the U.S. Senate as a Democrat and served
				  from March 4, 1871, to March 4, 1877. He did not run for re-election. From 1878
				  to 1880, Kelly was a justice on the Oregon Supreme Court and also served as
				  Chief Justice of the court. After retiring from the bench, Kelly went back into
				  private practice in Portland. In 1890, he returned to the east coast, settling
				  in Washington, DC, where he practiced law.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellyJK1</container><unittitle>James Kerr Kelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Kelly, Jessie</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE1</container><unittitle>Cast of <emph render="italic">Treasure Island
					 </emph>performance at the Seattle Soroptimists Club luncheon at the Olympic
					 Hotel; Lois Sandall (as Long John Silver), Ella McBride (as Darby McGraw),
					 Jessie Kelly (as Jim Hawkins), Rose Morgan (as Black Dog) and Mary Ann Wells
					 (as Captain Billy Bones)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 29, 1926</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the September 30, 1926 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kelly, John (May 3, 1818 - June 15, 1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Kelly was born in Dublin Ireland, and at the age of 9 years
				  immigrated with his parents to Montreal, Canada. He went west to Oregon in 1847
				  and again in 1849, locating at Oregon City, where he served as government
				  quartermaster. Later he moved with his family to Roseburg, where he served as
				  register of the land office from 1858 to 1866, at which time he moved to Lane
				  County and settled at Springfield. From 1874 to 1880, he was collector of
				  customs at Portland, and in 1890 had general supervision of the census of
				  Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellyJ1</container><unittitle>John Kelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Kelly, John (July 22, 1836 - January 30,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Kelly was born in Germany and came to the United States
				  with his father, Charles Kelly, in 1844. In 1850, he enlisted as a drummer boy
				  in the 4th Infantry and was stationed in near Humboldt Bay, California, where
				  he served under Ulysses S. Grant. After his discharge in 1855, he enlisted in
				  the Navy and served on the <emph render="italic">U. S. R. C.
				  Massachusetts</emph>, wooden steamer. The ship was sent to Panama, and then to
				  Seattle during the Indian Wars. He served in the Civil War and worked on fifty
				  different commercial vessels, his rank ranging from deckhand to captain. He
				  married Lucinda Cook in 1874; she died in 1878. In 1881, he married Julia Anna
				  Fisher, who died in 1887. For ten years, he was the city marshall for Oregon
				  City, Oregon and later worked as the watchman for the Crown-Willamette Paper
				  Mill.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KellyJ1</container><unittitle>John Kelly in uniform with drum</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerGRH2</container><unittitle>George Miller standing, John Kelly sitting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Preston M. Hart, Oregon City, Oregon</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: John Kelly sitting. Mr. Kelly was a drummer
					 boy on Massichusetts (sic) revenue cutter.</p><p>Filed under George R. H. Miller subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kempster, Arthur Llewellyn (September 17, 1872 - July
				  28, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Llewellyn Kempster was born in Canfield, Illinois and
				  came to the Pacific Coast with his parents in 1885. The family lived in
				  Victoria, B. C. until 1887; he attended public schools in Victoria and Chicago.
				  He was employed as an office boy by the Consolidated Street Car Company of
				  Seattle in 1891 and quickly rose in the company. He joined the accounting
				  department, became an auditor, and then secretary of the consolidated
				  properties. When the Seattle Electric company was organized in 1899, he entered
				  the operating department as the train master of the system, later becoming the
				  superintendent of transportation, the general superintendent and finally
				  manager of the Seattle division of the Puget Sound Traction, Light and Power.
				  In 1919, he was asked to aid in a study of the New York Railroad and Brooklyn
				  Rapid Transit. In 1920, he was appointed general manager of the New Orleans
				  Railroad, and was to become president in 1922 when he became ill. The Board of
				  the company elected him vice-president and general manager, a position he held
				  until his death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KempsterAL1</container><unittitle>Arthur Llewellyn Kempster seated at desk, looking at
					 camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KempsterAL2</container><unittitle>Arthur Llewellyn Kempster seated at desk, wearing
					 glasses and writing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KempsterAL3</container><unittitle>Arthur Llewellyn Kempster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studios, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">PorXC1</container><container type="item">KempsterAL4</container><unittitle>Arthur Llewellyn Kempster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kendall, Sarah Ann (November 15, 1851 - February 6,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Ann Kendall was born in Bath, Maine and came to Seattle in
				  1884 after finishing her medical training in Boston. She was one of the first
				  women to practice medicine in Seattle, was on the staff of Seattle General
				  Hospital and was an early member of the City Health Board in addition to having
				  a large private practice. During the territorial and state campaigns for
				  women’s suffrage, she took an active role and was an officer in the Washington
				  Women’s Suffrage Association throughout its existence. She was a founding
				  member of the Woman’s Century Club and its first vice-president, and was chair
				  of the Federated Clubs of Washington. She also worked with the Consumers League
				  on improving working conditions and wages for men and women. After she retired
				  in the 1920s, she continued to be active in the Woman’s Century Club and the
				  Daughters of the American Revolution.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">KendallSA1</container><unittitle>Sarah Ann Kendall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, Edward Moore (February 22, 1932 – August 25,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy was a United States Senator from
				  Massachusetts and a member of the Democratic Party. He was the second most
				  senior member of the Senate when he died and was the fourth-longest-serving
				  senator in United States history, having served there for almost 47 years.
				  Kennedy played a major role in passing many laws, including laws addressing
				  immigration, cancer research, health insurance, apartheid, disability
				  discrimination, AIDS care, civil rights, mental health benefits, children's
				  health insurance, education and volunteering. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyEM1</container><unittitle>Edward "Ted" Kennedy speaking to students at the Husky
					 Union Building while campaigning for John F. Kennedy, facing the
					 camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 18, 1960</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyEM2</container><unittitle>Edward "Ted" Kennedy speaking to students at the Husky
					 Union Building while campaigning for John F. Kennedy, facing away from
					 camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 18, 1960</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, Ethel Skakel (April 11, 1928 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Skakel Kennedy is an American human-rights campaigner and
				  widow of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, who was assassinated while running for
				  nomination as Democratic presidential candidate in 1968. In 2014, President
				  Barack Obama awarded her a Presidential Medal of Freedom.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyRF1</container><unittitle>Robert F. Kennedy signing guestbook at the Seattle
					 Century 21 World's Fair, with Ethel Kennedy and unidentified man and woman
					 observing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 7, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert F. Kennedy subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, Frederick Washington (February 4, 1875 -
				  December 17, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Washington Kennedy was born in Ohio and served in the
				  Spanish American War with the Ohio Volunteer Third Regiment. He was the manager
				  of the University of Washington printing plant and journalism laboratory, and
				  taught journalism at the University for many years. He was the field manager
				  and executive secretary for the Washington Press Association, which equipped a
				  seminar room in Lewis Hall in his honor. Kennedy was affectionately known as
				  "Pa" Kennedy by his students, and the seminar room was given this name.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyFW1</container><unittitle>Frederick Washington Kennedy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, John Fitzgerald (May 29, 1917 – November 22,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Fitzgerald Kennedy was an American politician who served as
				  the 35th president of the United States from 1961 until his assassination near
				  the end of his third year in office. Kennedy was the youngest person to assume
				  the presidency by election and was also the youngest president at the end of
				  his tenure. Kennedy served at the height of the Cold War, and the majority of
				  his work as president concerned relations with the Soviet Union and Cuba. A
				  Democrat, he represented Massachusetts in both houses of the U.S. Congress
				  prior to his presidency.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">21</container><container type="item">KennedyJF1</container><unittitle>President John F. Kennedy with Senators Warren G.
					 Magnuson and Henry M. Jackson.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph may have been taken during at groundbreaking
					 for the N-Reactor, Hanford Nuclear Reservation, Richland, Washington on
					 September 26, 1963.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, Julia Emily (December 27, 1848 - January 20,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia Emily Kennedy was born in Illinois and graduated from
				  Illinois State Normal University. She was an educator for many years and the
				  first female superintendent of the Seattle Public Schools, serving from 1887
				  until 1890. She was a founding member of the Women's Century Club, and the
				  first meeting of the club was held in her home.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyJE1</container><unittitle>Julia Emily Kennedy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennedy, Robert Francis (November 20, 1925 – June 6,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert F. Kennedy, an American politician from Massachusetts,
				  served as a Senator for New York from 1965 until his assassination in 1968. He
				  was previously the 64th U.S. Attorney General from 1961 to 1964, serving under
				  his older brother, President John F. Kennedy, and his successor, President
				  Lyndon B. Johnson. An icon of modern American liberalism and member of the
				  Democratic Party, Kennedy ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in the
				  1968 election.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennedyRF1</container><unittitle>Robert F. Kennedy signing guestbook at the Seattle
					 Century 21 World's Fair, with Ethel Kennedy and unidentified man and woman
					 observing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 7, 1962</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kenney, William J. (February 10 1864 - January 25,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William J. Kenney was born in New York and moved with his family
				  to San Francisco in 1872 and to Seattle in 1876. As a young man, he was a
				  member of Company #1 of Seattle's early Volunteer Fire Department and served
				  for many years as a captain in the U. S. Lighthouse Service. He was the catcher
				  for the Seattle Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Oregon, Washington Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kennicott, Robert (November 13, 1835 – May 13,
				  1866)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Kennicott was an American naturalist and herpetologist
				  who advocated for the study and protection of native prairie animals. He teamed
				  with Northwestern University to found a natural history museum in 1857, founded
				  the Chicago Academy of Sciences and worked with the Smithsonian Institution. In
				  April 1859 he set off on an expedition to collect natural history specimens in
				  the subarctic boreal forests of northwestern Canada in what is now the
				  Mackenzie and Yukon River valleys and in the Arctic tundra beyond. Kennicott
				  encouraged the Hudson's Bay Company fur traders to collect and send natural
				  history specimens and First Nations artifacts to the Smithsonian. In 1864 the
				  Western Union Telegraph Expedition was mounted to find a possible route for a
				  telegraph line between North America and Russia by way of the Bering Sea.
				  Kennicott was selected as the scientist for this expedition. He died while
				  traveling up the Yukon River. To commemorate his efforts on behalf of science,
				  Kennicott Glacier, Kennicott Valley, MV Kennicott, and the Kennicott River were
				  named after him. The town of Kennecott, famous for rich copper mines, was named
				  for its proximity to the glacier; however, the name was misspelled.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KennicottR1</container><unittitle>Robert Kennicott in his Western Union
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1865?</unitdate><note><p>A copy of the last known photograph of Robert Kennicott</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kent, William (March 29, 1864 – March 13,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Kent was a United States Congressman representing the
				  State of California; he served from 1911 until 1917. In 1916, he was the lead
				  sponsor of the legislation in the House of Representatives that created the
				  National Park Service. He was one of the major supporters of the creation of
				  the Marin Municipal Water District in 1911 and also backed early efforts for a
				  Golden Gate Bridge. Following his career in Congress, Kent was appointed to the
				  United States Tariff Commission (now known as the United States International
				  Trade Commission), serving from March 21, 1917 to March 31, 1920. He
				  spearheaded the movement to create the Muir Woods National Monument by donating
				  one of the last remaining stands of coast redwoods along Redwood Creek north of
				  San Francisco Bay. President Theodore Roosevelt declared the area a national
				  monument in 1908 and suggested naming the monument after Kent, who instead
				  suggested the grove be named Muir Woods National Monument, after naturalist
				  John Muir. The William Kent Campground on the west shore of Lake Tahoe is named
				  for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KentW1</container><unittitle>Portrait of William Kent</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KentW2</container><unittitle> Photograph of William Kent standing on a
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1928?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kenvyn, Hugh Ronald (November 26, 1884 - August 13,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Ronald Kenvyn was born in 1884 in Newport, South Wales.
				  After coming to British Columbia, he joined the <emph render="italic">Daily
				  Province</emph> in 1907 and worked as a marine reporter from 1908 to 1918.
				  After becoming city editor, he was promoted to managing editor in 1924. Kenvyn
				  retired from the editorship in 1938 and became associated with a firm of
				  business consultants. In 1941, he was appointed British Columbia field
				  representative to the information section of the Wartime Prices and Trade
				  Board. Kenvyn was an avid swimmer, yachtsmen and maritime historian, and was
				  founder of the Vancouver Amateur Swimming Club. He was appointed a member of
				  the Order of the British Empire in 1946.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KenvynHR1</container><unittitle>Hugh Kenvyn looking at the Vancouver Quadra Monument
					 at Friendly Cove, B.C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 23, 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>The Quadra Monument commemorates the 1792 meeting of Captain
					 George Vancouver and Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra, the last Spanish
					 commander in the area. Kenvyn's name is misspelled on the photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Keogh, Thomas </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Keogh (or Keough) was an actor and theater manager. In
				  1907, he appeared at Keith &amp; Proctor's Jersey City Theater. The act was
				  listed as Thomas Keough &amp; Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KeoghT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Keogh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bertram C. Towne, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Towne Collection, UW Special
					 Collections.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kerensky, Alexander Fyodorovich (May 2, 1881 – June 11,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Kerensky was a Russian lawyer and politician who
				  served as the second Minister-Chairman of the Russian Provisional Government
				  from July until November 1917. A leader of the moderate-socialist faction of
				  the Socialist Revolutionary Party, he was a key figure of the Russian
				  Revolution. When the February Revolution broke out in 1917, he was one of its
				  most prominent leaders: he was a member of the Provisional Committee of the
				  State Duma and was elected vice-chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, and
				  simultaneously became the first Minister of Justice in the newly formed
				  Provisional Government. Following unrest in Petrograd and suppression of the
				  Bolsheviks, Kerensky succeeded Prince Lvov as Russia's Prime Minister.
				  Following the Kornilov Affair at the end of August and the resignation of the
				  other ministers, he appointed himself Supreme Commander-in-Chief as well. He
				  retained his post in the final coalition government in October 1917 when it was
				  overthrown by the Bolsheviks. Kerensky eventually settled in New York City, but
				  spent much of his time at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in
				  California, where he both used and contributed to the Institution's huge
				  archive on Russian history, and taught graduate courses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerenskyAF1</container><unittitle>Alexander Kerensky with Alexander Koiransky and
					 William Kimball in Palo Alto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kerrick, Harrison Summers (October 13, 1873 - May 15,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harrison Summers Kerrick, the son of Josiah and Margaret
				  Hollenback Kerrick, was born in Minonk, Illinois. He attended Illinois Wesleyan
				  Bloomington for two years and received his degree from Northern Illinois State
				  Normal School at Dixon in 1894. He was principal and teacher of schools at
				  Lostant and Benson. in 1898, he enlisted in Company G, Second Illinois
				  Volunteer Infantry and served in the Spanish American War, rising to the rank
				  of captain. After the war, he went to though Philippine Islands, where he was
				  named divisional superintendent of schools in 1901 and was appointed head of
				  the artillery corps in the same year. He graduated from the artillery school at
				  Fort Monroe, VA in 1906 and served in the American Expeditionary Forces (A. E.
				  F.) in France in 1918. He again served in the Philippines in 1925-1927, during
				  which time he was commissioned colonel in the artillery. On his return to the
				  United States, he resigned his commission and was named chief co-coordinator of
				  the sixth area Army Bureau of the Budget. He was the creator of the code of
				  conduct for the U.S flag which was adopted by the United States Congress on
				  proper display and handling of the U.S flag. He wrote several books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Military and Naval America</emph>, <emph render="italic">Your Flag and Mine</emph>, and <emph render="italic">The Flag
				  of the United States</emph>. He married Lena Mae Clark in 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerrickHS1</container><unittitle>Harrison Summers Kerrick in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lothrop Brothers, Port Townsend, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kerry, Albert Sperry (April 14, 1866 - April 27,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Kerry was a Northwest lumberman who was known for his
				  business acumen in the lumber industry and for his civic involvement,
				  especially in Seattle. Two towns (one in Oregon and one in Washington) where
				  Kerry established lumber mills were named after him, and Kerry Park on Queen
				  Anne Hill bears the Kerry name. He came to Seattle in 1886 and began working in
				  the lumber business. Kerry founded Kerry Mill Company, later Kerry Timber
				  Company, and was associated with other lumber enterprises in the Pacific
				  Northwest. In 1913, he built the Columbia and Nehalem River Railroad to reach
				  his timber holdings. At its peak in the 1920s the line hauled more than 12
				  percent of the annual lumber production of the Columbia River-Portland mills,
				  and played a vital role in the Northwest’s lumber industry. He was involved in
				  Seattle’s civic affairs, taking part in the construction of the Rainier Club
				  building in 1904, and later serving as president of the club. In 1909 he served
				  as vice-president of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle, and also
				  served on the fair’s executive committee. He played a leading role in the
				  financing and direction of the construction of the Olympic Hotel in downtown
				  Seattle in 1924. He helped establish the King County Anti-Tuberculosis League
				  and Firlands (tuberculosis) Sanatorium. Kerry served as president of the
				  Medical Arts Building Company and president of the Seattle Park Board. He
				  married Katherine Amelia Glen in 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerryAS1</container><unittitle>Albert Sperry Kerry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. S. Kerry, vice president, Alaska Yukon
					 Pacific Exposition.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerryAS2</container><unittitle>Albert Sperry Kerry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Albert S. Kerry, Jr</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: President, Community Hotel Corporation.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kerry, Katherine Amelia Glen (September, 1874 - June 25,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Katherine Amelia Glen, the daughter of the Reverend John Glen
				  and Lucy Glen, was born in Philadelphia. She married Albert S. Kerry in Dayton,
				  Oregon in 1902. She was one of the founders of the Seattle Music and Art
				  Foundation, a member of the first board of the Seattle Symphony, a member of
				  the first board of Seattle Children's Orthopedic Hospital, one of the founders
				  of the Sunset Club, a member of the University Club, and one of the original
				  governors of the English Speaking Union.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerryKAG1</container><unittitle>Katherine Amelia Kerry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The portrait of Katherine Kerry appeared in the May 1926 issue
					 of <emph render="italic">Charmed Land Woman's Magazine</emph>. The reverse side
					 has a portrait of Anne Beatrice Ames.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kilbourne, Edward Corliss (January 13, 1856 - August 15,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Edward Corliss Kilbourne was the founder of the Seattle public
				  electricity system. He was born in Vermont in 1856, raised in Aurora, Illinois,
				  and lived in Colorado before moving to Seattle. Kilbourne was trained as a
				  dentist. He organized the first territorial dental society in 1886 and a year
				  later helped secure passage of the first law regulating the practice of
				  dentistry in the territory. After Seattle's Great Fire of 1889, Kilbourne
				  received the city's franchise to restore electric power. In 1892, he became
				  majority owner of the future Union Electric Company. After it was acquired by
				  the city, Kilbourne became superintendent of the Seattle Lighting Department,
				  the municipal electricity system, which became Seattle City Light. In 1904, he
				  formed Kilbourne &amp; Clark Company to deal electrical machinery and supplies.
				  Together with his uncle, Corliss P. Stone, he was the developer of city of
				  Fremont, which was annexed by Seattle in 1891. He and his uncle also developed
				  the north shore of Lake Union. Kilbourne was a pioneer in urban mass transit,
				  founding a horse trolley line and the first electric railway in Seattle. He
				  also supported the YMCA and was involved with the Plymouth Congregational
				  Church of Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KilbourneEC1</container><unittitle>Edward Corliss Kilbourne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1914?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers Studios, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KilbourneEC2</container><unittitle>Edward Corliss Kilbourne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1886</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Edward C. Kilbourne, age 30</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kimball, William Rice ( April 14, 1919 - June 17,
				  2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Rice Kimball was born in Utah and graduated from
				  Stanford in 1941 with a bachelor's degree in economics. He was a pioneer in the
				  use of fiberglass plastics through Kimball Manufacturing Corp., where he also
				  was president. He went on to found Kimball &amp; Co., which managed various
				  operations and investments. He co-founded Alpine Meadows Ski Resort in Lake
				  Tahoe, the Acorn Foundation and the Kimball Foundation. He served on the boards
				  of many companies during his career and was also the founding chairman of the
				  Kimball Art Center and School in Park City, Utah. He served three terms as a
				  Stanford trustee and was president of the board from 1981 until 1985. He was
				  the donor of the bell and clock tower at Stanford, the principal donor of
				  Kimball Hall dormitory and established several endowments at Stanford.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerenskyAF1</container><unittitle>Alexander Kerensky with Alexander Koiransky and
					 William Kimball in Palo Alto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Alexander Kerensky subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subfonds"><did><unittitle>Kimsey, Herbert Dale (February 24, 1887 - July 27,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Dale Kimsey was born on his father’s farm in Blue Hills,
				  Nebraska; nine years later, the family moved to Siloam Springs, Arkansas. He
				  graduated from Arkansas Conference College Academy and moved to Seattle in
				  1909. He studied civil engineering at the University of Washington and worked
				  at a dry goods company and on transit vehicles before joining the Seattle
				  Police Department in 1912. During his 45 year career, he held virtually all of
				  the top positions in the department, serving as police chief from 1941 until
				  1946. At the time of his death, he was the supervising captain in charge of the
				  South End Precinct. He served in the Army during World War I. Kimsey married
				  Grace Austin in 1922. Their son, Herbert, also joined the department. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KimseyHD1</container><unittitle>Herbert Dale Kimsey in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1941 and 1946?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KimseyHD2</container><unittitle>Herbert Dale Kimsey in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1941 and 1946?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kincaid, Harrison Rittenhouse (January 3, 1836 – October
				  2, 1920) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harrison Rittenhouse Kincaid, the son of Thomas Kincaid and
				  Nancy Chadwick Kincaid, was born in Indiana and arrived in Oregon with his
				  parents in 1853. The family settled in Lane County near present-day Eugene,
				  Oregon. Kincaid found work in the mines of southern Oregon and northern
				  California before returning to Oregon to attend Columbia College. He worked as
				  a journalist and printer after graduation, working at several small papers in
				  Oregon, including the <emph render="italic">State Republican</emph> and the 
				  <emph render="italic">Oregon State Journal</emph>. Between 1858 and 1879, he
				  served as a clerk in the Oregon State Senate and was elected Oregon Secretary
				  of State in 1894, serving until 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KincaidHR1</container><unittitle>Harrison Rittenhouse Kincaid</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kincaid, John Francis (December 6, 1838 - October 21,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John F. Kincaid, the son of William Moore Kincaid and Nancy
				  Woolery Kincaid, was born in Marion County, Missouri. After the death of Nancy
				  Kincaid, William Kincaid moved his family to Washington Territory in 1853,
				  settling first in Steilacoom and later to an area that would become Sumner,
				  Washington. John became a hop grower and one of the founding fathers of Sumner.
				  In 1883, he donated land for the establishment of Sumner Academy, which would
				  later become Whitworth College. He married Nancy Ann Wright in 1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KincaidJF1</container><unittitle>John F. Kincaid</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kincaid, Trevor Charles Digby (December 21, 1872 - July
				  3, 1970) - see also Trevor Kincaid collection</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>During his more than fifty years at the University of Washington
				  as a student and professor, Trevor Kincaid’s work with insects and oysters made
				  him one of the best known naturalists in the region and across the country.
				  Kincaid discovered and named hundreds of species, but most of his fame came
				  from his solutions to economic problems, such as getting rid of harmful pests
				  and revitalizing the state’s oyster industry. While the first part of his
				  career dealt mostly with insects and taxonomy, Kincaid later became known as
				  the “father of the Northwest oyster industry” because he was one of the few
				  serious scientists studying oysters and was largely responsible for bringing
				  the Japanese oyster to Washington. While still in high school, Kincaid had
				  already discovered and named various insect species; before earning his
				  bachelor's degree, he had attracted attention from scientists across the
				  country. In 1897 he accompanied Stanford University president David Starr
				  Jordan on the American Fur Seal Commission to study the fur seal situation in
				  the Pribilof Islands. When it was time for Kincaid to graduate, he missed the
				  ceremony because he was chosen as one of only sixty American scientists to go
				  on the Harriman Alaska Expedition. Accompanying noted naturalists such as John
				  Muir and John Burroughs, Kincaid was the youngest person on this expedition and
				  the only entomologist. On the journey he discovered and named over 240 insect
				  species; one specimen, a beautiful metallic beetle found in Farragut Bay, was
				  later named <emph render="italic">Nebris kincaidi </emph>in his honor. In 1901,
				  Kincaid received his Master's degree from the University of Washington and
				  immediately was hired as a professor. In 1902 the biology department was
				  divided, and Kincaid became the first chairman of the Department of Zoology. In
				  1904, along with botany professor R.C. Frye, Kincaid founded the University of
				  Washington Marine Station at Friday Harbor. He also taught the first classes in
				  ichthyology, which helped lead to the creation of the Fisheries College in
				  1919. Kincaid realized how expensive it would be to print his papers
				  commercially, so he bought a manual press and worked as his own publisher,
				  editor, photographer, and typesetter. In 1908, the US government sent Kincaid
				  abroad to discover a natural parasite to destroy the gypsy moth that was
				  ruining crops in New England. Kincaid went first to Russia, then to Japan in
				  1909, where he discovered a parasite which the Department of Agriculture
				  continued to breed and use successfully for many years. In the early 1910s,
				  Kincaid began turning his attention to Washington’s troubled oyster industry.
				  At the time, intensive exploitation had nearly eliminated the native oyster
				  industry, and attempts to cultivate East Coast oysters were futile. Kincaid
				  recalled observations of the Japanese oyster culture from previous journeys,
				  and developed methods for importing Japanese oyster seed. Soon Kincaid was
				  employed by the state Department of Fisheries in the Olympia district and later
				  he was put in charge of one of their labs on Willapa Bay. Kincaid remained
				  chairman of the department of Zoology until his automatic retirement in 1937,
				  then continued teaching and researching as a professor emeritus until his full
				  retirement in 1942. After retirement, Kincaid remained active pursuing his
				  interest in studying various species and wrote his autobiography, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Adventures of an Omnologist</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">21</container><container type="item">KincaidTCD1</container><unittitle>Treavor Kincaid with microscope in a
					 laboratory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGS1</container><unittitle>Group photo at banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1956</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Olin E. Myers, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Identified on verso: Trevor Kincaid, Milnor Roberts, and
					 Milnora Roberts.</p><p>Filed under Dr. Gayton Bailey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kindred, Bartholomew Carek (April 20, 1818 - March 13,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bartholomew Carek Kindred was born in Jackson County Indiana. He
				  married Rachel Mylar in 1841. In 1844, the couple, along with Bartholomew’s
				  parents, started west to Oregon with the Gilliam Company, arriving at the
				  Willamette River on Christmas Eve, 1844. Late that evening, Rachel gave birth
				  to their second son, James Franklin. The following year, they moved to
				  Cathlamet, Washington where Bartholomew working in logging. After several
				  moves, they bought the improvement on the land now known as Gearheart Park (the
				  town of Gearheart), where they lived until November of 1864. They then sold
				  their improvements and moved to a section of land where Hammond now stands.
				  Kindred was the first man to operate boats on the Columbia and Willamette
				  Rivers, carrying freight to Oregon City. When the transportation business
				  became no longer profitable, he worked at fishing, farming, real estate, and
				  the suppling of fresh provisions to sailing ships that would anchor off the
				  shores of their homestead. Kindred sold a portion of his claim to the U. S.
				  Government for the establishment of the Federal fortification at Point Adams
				  which was completed and christened in 1864 as Fort Steven to honor General
				  Isaac J. Stevens, first governor of Washington Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KindredBC1</container><unittitle>Bartholomew Carek Kindred and Rachel Myler
					 Kindred</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kindred, Rachel Myler (March 14, 1822 - January 2,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rachel Mylar was a great grandniece of Daniel Boone. On August
				  26, 1841, she married Bartholomew Carek Kindred, and in 1844, the couple and
				  Bartholomew's parents started west to Oregon with the company headed by Colonel
				  Cornelius Gilliam. They arrived in Oregon on Christmas Eve, 1844, and later
				  that evening, Rachel gave birth to their second son. After several moves, they
				  bought the improvement on the land now known as Gearheart Park (the town of
				  Gearheart), where they lived until November of 1864. They then sold their
				  improvements and moved upon their Donation Land Claim of half a section of land
				  where Hammond now stands, adding another half section to their claim in 1850.
				  She sold her half of their donation land claim to a syndicate; it was platted
				  and named New Astoria.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KindredBC1</container><unittitle>Bartholomew Carek Kindred and Rachel Myler
					 Kindred</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Bartholomew Carek Kindred subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kineth, Jane M. Carter (October 18, 1835 - October 20,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jane M. Carter was born in Ohio and crossed the plains by ox
				  team with her parents when she was thirteen. The family settled in Portland,
				  Oregon when there were only five homes there. She married John Kineth in 1852;
				  the couple moved to Whidbey Island in 1853 where they had a farm. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinethJMC1</container><unittitle>Jane Carter Kineth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Steckel, Los Angeles, CA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinethJMC2</container><unittitle>Jane Carter Kineth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Merrihew Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kineth, John (June 30, 1828 - January 19,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Kineth was born in Bavaria and came to America at the age
				  of ten with his parents; they settled in Illinois. In 1849, he joined a group
				  heading west to Oregon. He worked as a harness maker for many years. In 1852,
				  he married Jane M. Carter, and they began farming on Whidbey Island, Washington
				  in 1853.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinethJ1</container><unittitle>John Kineth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, Amos Nahum (April 29, 1822 - November 11,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amos Nahum King, the son of Nathan King and Sarah Norton King,
				  was born in Franklin County, Ohio on April 29, 1822. In May 1845 he, along with
				  his parents, three brothers and five sisters, joined a company of 100 wagons
				  and started across the plains for Oregon, arriving at The Dalles in December of
				  that year. He took a Donation Claim a few miles south of Corvallis. In the
				  spring of 1849, he sold his claim and moved to Portland, where he engaged in
				  the tanning business. King later built houses and was one of the builders and
				  stockholders of the Multnomah Street Railway. He also owned several thousand
				  acres of agricultural land where he raised horses and cattle. He married
				  Malinda Fuller in 1846; the couple had six children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KingAN1</container><unittitle>Amos Nahum King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, John Icilius (November 13, 1848 - January 3,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Icilius King was the son of John King and Eliza Jane Small
				  King. After his father died in 1850, his mother married Harvey Horace Jones;
				  the couple had two children, Eliza Olivia and Harvey, and moved to Washington
				  Territory in 1854. In late 1855, conflict between the Native Americans and the
				  U. S. Government over land and fishing rights ignited what has come to be known
				  as the Puget Sound Indian War. On October 27, 1855, in what is often called the
				  White River Massacre, nine settlers were killed, including Eliza and Harvey
				  Jones. John, his brother and his sister managed to escape. John later became a
				  physician in Martel, Ohio.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesEJK1</container><unittitle>Eliza King Jones with her son, John Icilius
					 King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1855?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph, which also includes an inset of John
					 Icilius King, Eliza Olivia Jones and Harvey P. Jones. Written on verso:
					 Reproduced from the Collections of the Library of Congress.</p><p>Filed under Eliza King Jones subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, John Lawrence (June 1, 1904 - August 28,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lawrence King received his bachelor’s degree in 1925 and
				  his master’s degree in 1941, both from the University of Washington. He was a
				  member of the UW Board of Regents (1946-1953 and 1957-1968), serving as board
				  president several times. He was chairman and vice president of Innova
				  Corporation, a business development firm he founded in 1969. He had previously
				  been director of radio and research for the Washington State Grange,
				  secretary-treasurer of KIRO radio and a member of its board of director
				  (1958-1964), president of the Seattle China Club, and president of the Seattle
				  King County Safety Council. He was also a member of the executive committees of
				  several organizations including the Association of Governing Boards of State
				  Universities, the Ryther Child Center, and the Y.M.C.A.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KingJL1</container><unittitle>John Lawrence King at right with Governor Albert D.
					 Rosellini at the podium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1957 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, Malinda Fuller (May 25, 1827 - January 30,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Malinda Fuller, the daughter of Arnold Wesley Fuller and Sarah
				  Greene Fuller, was born in Ohio and crossed the plains with her parents in 1845
				  who followed the Meek Cutoff. She married Amos Nahum King in 1846; the couple
				  had six children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KingMF1</container><unittitle>Malinda Fuller King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, Peggy Jeane Worthley (October 2, 1918 - July 2,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peggy Jeane Worthley, the daughter of Guy and Leona Worthley,
				  was born in Yakima and graduated from the University of Washington where she
				  was a member of the Pi Beta Phi Sorority. She married Robert B. King in
				  1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>King, Sarah Ann Lee (August 4, 1830 - July 16,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Ann Lee, the daughter of James Lee and Matilda Powell Lee,
				  was born in Ohio. She married Francis King in 1849 and crossed the plains to
				  Oregon with him in 1851. The couple first settled in the Willamette Valley and
				  moved to the San Juan Islands in the 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KingSAL1</container><unittitle>Sarah Ann King</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinkead, John Henry (December 10, 1826 – August 15,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Henry Kinkead was an American businessman and politician
				  who served as the third Governor of Nevada (1879 – 1883) and the first Governor
				  of the District of Alaska (1884 – 1885). He was also Treasurer of Nevada
				  Territory and a member of the Nevada Constitutional convention. He became the
				  first United States official to hold office in Alaska when he was appointed
				  postmaster by President Andrew Johnson. In addition to his postal duties, he
				  operated a trading post and served as Sitka, Alaska's unofficial mayor. In
				  1884, the First Organic Act created the District of Alaska, and allowed for the
				  appointment of a skeleton bureaucracy; Kinkead was appointed governor, serving
				  for one year.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinkeadJH1</container><unittitle>Copy of photograph of the first officials of the Civil
					 Government of Alaska, taken in front of the Custom House in Sitka,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1885</unitdate></did><note><p> John Kinkead, seated. Standing from left to right: Edwin W.
					 Haskett, Munson C. Hillyer, Samuel Ward McCallister, Jr., Andrew T. Lewis.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Kinne, James Blaine (February 13, 1880 - September 23,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Blaine Kinne was born in Ovid, New York. After graduating
				  from Cornell University, he came to Seattle in 1906. Kinne was a prominent
				  lawyer and was active in civic affairs at the time of his appointment to the
				  King County Superior Court bench in 1925 by Governor Roland Hartley. He served
				  five successive four-year terms. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinnear, Charles Alee (March 22, 1868 - November 5,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Alee Kinnear was born in Illinois in 1868. His father,
				  George Kinnear, made his first trip to the Puget Sound region in 1874; the rest
				  of the family came by ship, arriving in 1874. George purchased property on
				  Queen Anne Hill, where the family home was built in 1888. Charles Kinnear
				  attended the University of Washington and received a law degree from the
				  University of Michigan in 1890. He established a law office in his father’s
				  real estate office. He later joined his father in the business and remained
				  until it was sold in 1953. In 1885, he organized the Washington Territorial
				  University Cadets; under his leadership, the cadets helped re-establish law and
				  order and prevent further violence during the anti-Chinese riots of 1886.
				  Kinnear left the family home and its surrounding property to the Seattle First
				  Methodist Church for creation of a home for the elderly. The mansion was
				  demolished in 1958, and Bayview Manor Retirement Community was built on the
				  site in 1961. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinnearCA1</container><unittitle>Charles Alee Kinnear</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Herbert Randall, Ann Arbor, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0067/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinnearCA2</container><unittitle>Photograph of family home at 809 Queen Anne Avenue
					 North, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinnear, George (January 30, 1836 – July 21,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Kinnear was a leader in the development of Queen Anne
				  Hill in Seattle. He first visited the Northwest in 1874 and purchased a large
				  section of the southwest slope of Queen Anne Hill. In 1878, he moved to Seattle
				  with his wife Angeline and sons Charles and Roy, purchasing additional real
				  estate around Queen Anne Hill. He was instrumental in the building of a wagon
				  road over Snoqualmie Pass, and arranged for the printing and distribution
				  throughout the country of pamphlets promoting the Puget Sound region to
				  potential new settlers. In 1887, he and his wife donated 14 acres on the
				  southwest slope of Queen Anne Hill to the City of Seattle for a park, named
				  Kinnear Park in his honor. In February 1886, he played a leadership role as
				  captain of the Home Guard during the Seattle Anti-Chinese riots. When word
				  spread of a plot to forcibly evict the Chinese from Seattle, some citizens
				  organized militias to oppose any such action. One group, called the Home Guard,
				  chose George Kinnear as their leader. Charles Kinnear, his son, organized
				  another group, the University Cadets. The Home Guard, the University Cadets and
				  the other militias, by force of arms, helped to re-establish law and order and
				  prevent further violence. His brother was John Ritchey Kinnear.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinnearG1</container><unittitle>George Kinnear</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinnear, John Ritchey (July 26, 1842 – March 31, 1912)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Ritchey Kinnear was born in Indiana and served in the 86th
				  Illinois Infantry during the Civil War, marching with General Sherman on his
				  journey from Atlanta to the sea; he later wrote and published a history of the
				  regiment. After the war, he attended Chicago Law School and also read law with
				  Adlai Stevenson. He practiced law in Illinois before moving to Seattle in the
				  early 1880s. He was elected to the Territorial Legislature a year after his
				  arrival. In 1888, he was elected to the upper house but never took his seat
				  because of the passage of the law making Washington a state. He was elected to
				  the State Constitutional Convention and kept complete notes of the proceedings,
				  thought to be the only complete record of the convention. He was the choice of
				  King County for governor when statehood was granted; however, Elisha P. Ferry
				  was elected in his stead. He served in the Washington State Senate from 1889
				  until 1895 was chair of the judiciary committee. He then returned to private
				  practice. His brother was George Kinnear.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinnearJR1</container><unittitle>John Ritchey Kinnear</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinnearJR2</container><unittitle>Photograph of Kinnear family home at 809 Queen Anne
					 Avenue North, Seattle; John's home was at 348 Olympic Place and was replaced by
					 the Villa Costello Apartments in 1929.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinney, Robert Crouch (July 4, 1813 - March 2,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Crouch Kinney was born on July 4, 1813 in Belleville,
				  Illinois. He helped found the town of Muscatine on the Mississippi River where
				  he entered the milling business. He married Eliza Bigelow in 1833; in 1847, he
				  traveled with his family to Oregon. Settling in Yamhill County, he began
				  farming under the Donation Land Act. He went to the California gold fields in
				  the fall of 1848 and returned in early 1849 to his farm and family. Kinney
				  served in the territorial legislature in 1849 and 1851 as a “free state”
				  delegate to the constitutional convention and served on the Committee on
				  Education and School Land. He voted against final approval of the constitution.
				  In 1858 he moved to McMinnville and bought the Newby Flour Mill the following
				  year. The milling business prospered and expanded to include mills in Salem;
				  the company was soon handling one-fourth of all Oregon’s grain crop and
				  exported flour and grain to foreign ports. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinneyRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Crouch Kinney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1875?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinney, Samuel (January 27, 1810 - October 20,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Kinney, a brother of Robert C. Kinney, was born in 1810
				  in Illinois. He married Ann Maria Porter in 1832, and soon after the marriage,
				  they moved to Muscatine, Iowa, where Samuel worked in a sawmill. In 1847, he
				  and Ann made the trip across the plains to Oregon. The first winter was spent
				  at Oregon City, and next season he selected a Donation Claim at West Chehalem.
				  He farmed there until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinneyS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Kinney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1875?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Clark Kenison (April 15, 1877 - November 29,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clark Kenison Kinsey, the son of Edmund Kinsey and Louisa
				  McBride Kinsey, was born in Grant Township, Missouri. The family moved to
				  Washington, where his parents are believed to have purchased the first lots in
				  the new town of Snoqualmie, Washington (later Snoqualmie Falls) where Clark and
				  his brother Darius learned photography. Starting in 1894, Clark operated
				  photography studios with Darius in the Seattle area, traveling during the
				  summertime throughout northwestern Washington, using a large portable tent as a
				  studio. While taking pictures around Black Diamond coal mining camps in 1898,
				  he met Mary Jane Williams; they were married in a double wedding with Mary's
				  sister, Sara, and Clark's brother Ed, in Black Diamond's Diller Hotel on
				  October 12, 1898. Around 1899, Clark and Mary went to the Klondike. Although he
				  worked in mining there for several years, he was most successful with his
				  photography business. He operated a studio with his brother Clarence and
				  documented the many mining and engineering projects and the scenery of the
				  Yukon Territory. Around 1906, Clark and Mary returned to the Snoqualmie area
				  where he operated a contracting firm, moving to Seattle in 1908 and later to
				  Vancouver B.C. In 1913, he returned to professional photography, specializing
				  in the wood products industry, very much like his brother Darius, with Clark
				  operating mostly south of the Seattle area and Darius usually to the north. His
				  commercial success stemmed from the patronage by lumber company management and
				  by the endorsement of the West Coast Lumberman's Association. His career
				  continued for more than thirty years, and he produced more than 10,000 images
				  of logging camps, milling operations, equipment and crews. During World War I,
				  he documented the Spruce Division camps in Washington and Oregon; he later
				  documented Civilian Conservation Corps camps in Washington, Oregon and
				  California during the Depression era. Both Clark and Darius Kinsey retired from
				  active work in 1945.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK1</container><unittitle>Clark Kinsey in studio with photographic
					 equipment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK2</container><unittitle>Clark and Mary Kinsey in front of their tent in the
					 Yukon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK3</container><unittitle>Clark Kinsey with camera standing on a tree
					 stump</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK4</container><unittitle>Clark Kinsey standing in front of a house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1938</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK5</container><unittitle>Clark Kinsey seated in front of a bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Darius Reynolds (July 23, 1869 - May 13,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Darius Kinsey was a photographer active in western Washington
				  State from 1890 to 1940. He is best known for his large-format images of
				  loggers and phases of the region's lumber industry. He also photographed
				  locomotives and landscapes and early in his career did studio work. He was born
				  in Maryville, Missouri and moved to Snoqualmie, Washington, where he took up
				  photography in 1890. After learning the photography trade, he was hired by the
				  Seattle and Lake Shore Railroad Co. and spent the next five years taking views
				  along its line. At the same time, he started his pictorial documentation of
				  life in the logging camps, photographing every aspect of logging in the Pacific
				  Northwest. In 1896 he married Tabitha May Pritts and a year later started a
				  studio in Sedro-Woolley Tabitha served as her husband's assistant, working in a
				  darkroom at home, processing negatives received from the field and sending the
				  finished photographic prints back to the logging sites. In 1906, the couple
				  moved to Seattle. Darius gave up studio work and focused instead on the lumber
				  industry and scenic photography. After falling from a stump in 1940, Darius was
				  forced to give up his career. He died in 1945 and is buried with his wife in
				  Nooksack, Washington. The major collection of his work is held by the Whatcom
				  Museum of History and Art. The University of Washington Libraries also has a
				  collection of his work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">21</container><container type="item">KinseyDR1</container><unittitle>Darius Kinsey with camera, equipment and
					 transportation</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from <emph render="italic">This was
					 logging!</emph>, a photographic study of logging life and times in the Pacific
					 Northwest by Ralph W. Andrews.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyDR2</container><unittitle>Darius Kinsey with camera, equipment and
					 transportation</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed in reverse; original in oversize box.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Edmund John (January 10, 1844 - February 5,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edmund John Kinsey was born in Missouri. He married Louisa
				  Elizabeth McBride on February 6, 1867 in Belvidere, Boone County, Illinois.
				  They are believed to be the first residents of Snoqualmie Falls, Washington,
				  where they established the first hotel, livery, general store, dance hall, post
				  office, meat market and the first church in the town. They had six children,
				  two of whom (Clark and Darius) are famous for their photography documenting the
				  early timber works in the region. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyEJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph in front of the Mount Si Hotel,
					 including Edmund John Kinsey and wife Louisa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1896?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Kris (October 30, 1954 -)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kris Kinsey graduated from the University of Washington with an
				  undergraduate degree in Art and an M. A. in Library Science. She has worked at
				  the UW Libraries since 1982 and is currently Digital Projects Coordinator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyK1</container><unittitle>Kris Kinsey with unidentified student at the Special
					 Collections reception desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 22, 1997</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Louisa Elizabeth McBride (1846 - September 17,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louisa Elizabeth McBride, born in Belvidere, Boone County,
				  Illinois, married Edmund John Kinsey on February 6, 1867. They are believed to
				  be the first residents of Snoqualmie Falls, Washington, where they established
				  the first hotel, livery, general store, dance hall, post office, meat market
				  and the first church in the town. They had six children, two of whom (Clark and
				  Darius) are famous for their photography documenting the early timber works in
				  the region.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyEJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph in front of the Mount Si Hotel,
					 including Edmund John Kinsey and wife Louisa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edmund John Kinsey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsey, Mary Jane (April 1, 1892 - August 5, 1933)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Jane Williams was born in Pierce County, Washington in
				  1892. She met Clark Kinsey in 1898 when she was 16 and married him later that
				  year in a double wedding with her sister, Sara, and Clark's brother Ed. She
				  accompanied him to the Klondike, where he spent several years in mining as well
				  as photographing the many mining and engineering projects and the scenery of
				  the Yukon Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyMJ1</container><unittitle>Mary Jane Kinsey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinseyCK2</container><unittitle>Clark and Mary Kinsey in front of their tent in the
					 Yukon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Clark Kinsey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kinsman, Adelbert Gale "Bert" (February 20, 1883 -
				  November 21, 1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adelbert Gale “Bert” Kinsman was appointed district traffic
				  manager of Alaska Airlines in 1946. His job was to promote traffic and act as a
				  liaison officer with the Anchorage, Alaska headquarters of the company. Alaska
				  Airlines operated within the then territory of Alaska and had applied with the
				  Civil Aeronautics Administration for a connecting link between Alaska and
				  Seattle. Kinsman was one of the oldest promoters of air traffic in the United
				  States in terms of years of experience in traffic development at that point in
				  his career with a record of more than 300,000 miles as a passenger. Kinsman had
				  been the general traffic manager for Northwest Airlines and was passenger
				  traffic manager for Boeing Air Transport Company when Boeing equipment was
				  being pioneered. Before he joined Boeing, he worked for the Northern Pacific
				  Railway. He returned to Boeing Airplane Company for the remainder of his career
				  after working at Alaska Airlines, United Airlines and Northwest Airlines.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinsmanAG1</container><unittitle>Adelbert "Bert" Kinsman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.KinsmanAG1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kirchner, George Cecil (October 9, 1888 - March 13,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Cecil Kirchner was born in Brooklyn, New York. From a
				  family of musicians, he began his musical career as a child. He graduated from
				  the Leipzig Conservatory in Germany and studied the cello with Julius Klengel.
				  He was one of the original members of the Spargur Quartet, playing with the
				  group for over twenty years. Kirchner joined the University of Washington
				  School of Music in 1919, specializing in instruction in stringed instruments.
				  He founded the UW High School Music Institute and directed it for over
				  twenty-five years. He directed the University Symphony Orchestra for fifteen
				  years and was a principal cellist with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra for over
				  a decade. Kirchner also taught at Cornish College and conducted theater
				  concerts in Seattle. He retired from the University in 1959.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirchnerGC1</container><unittitle>George Cecil Kirchner with cello</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kirk, Ruth Eleanor Kratz (May 7, 1925 -April 19, 2018
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The daughter of a physician and a chemical engineer, Ruth Kratz
				  was born in 1925 and spent her formative years in Los Angeles. During her
				  studies at Occidental College, Ruth met Louis Kirk, a young coast guardsman
				  serving in the area, and they married in 1943. At the end of the Second World
				  War, Louis pursued his education, earning degrees in natural sciences,
				  psychology, and education. He became a ranger and naturalist with the National
				  Park Service (NPS) in 1947, and Ruth frequently worked with her husband as an
				  active partner on a range of official and unofficial projects. She also
				  nurtured an avid personal interest in nature photography, and soon began
				  publishing photo-essays. She began writing non-fiction books at this time,
				  co-authoring the guidebook Death Valley (1954), for which photographer and
				  friend Ansel Adams, provided the pictures. This would be the first of her 36
				  published books to date, with topics ranging through ecology, anthropology,
				  archaeology, history, and natural science. Ruth acted as producer, editor,
				  scriptwriter, still photographer, actor, and narrator for the films that she
				  and her husband created; the films concentrated on natural and environmental
				  themes. After Louis died in 1992, Ruth concentrated on writing. She has been
				  recognized for excellence over the course of her long career, earning the
				  Washington State Governor’s Writer’s Award, the Pacific Northwest History
				  Award, and a short-listing for the National Book Award, among others. In 2007,
				  Ruth married long-time friend and collaborator Richard D. Daugherty, an
				  anthropologist and archaeologist retired from Washington State University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirkREK1</container><unittitle>Ruth Kirk in mountains with backpack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirkREK2</container><unittitle>Ruth Kirk and Barbara Glicksberg at the Friends of the
					 Library book sale</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kirkendall, Martha Ann Gilmour (November 7, 1850 -
				  October 11, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Ann Gilmour was born in Hancock County, Illinois. Her
				  family crossed the plains in 1851 by ox team; her father, Captain John Wilson
				  Gilmour, was head of the party. The family settled in Albany, Oregon. She
				  married Nathan Jackson Kirkendall on January 26, 1865; the couple lived in
				  Olympia, Washington where Nathan ran the livery at Grainger’s Stables and
				  Martha worked as a nurse. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirkendallMAG1</container><unittitle>Martha Kirkendall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kirkland, Albert Persons (February 6, 1881 - March 13,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert “Bert” Persons Kirkland graduated from Yale University in
				  1905 and joined the University of Washington in 1912 as a professor in the
				  School of Forestry. He left the University in 1931 to work in Washington D.C.
				  for the U. S. Forest Service. He wrote several books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">The Place of Forests in the Farm Economy</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">Forest Resources of the Douglas Fir Region</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KirklandAP1</container><unittitle>Albert Persons Kirkland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kirkwood, Trudi Strong (1922? - March 15,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Trudi Strong Kirkwood appeared on <emph render="italic">Reports
				  from Labor</emph>, a popular pro-labor radio show in Seattle that ran from 1948
				  to 1950. During the Washington Legislature’s Joint Fact Finding Committee on
				  Un-American Activities, dubbed the "Canwell Committee" after its chairperson,
				  Albert F. Canwell, a witness identified her as a suspected Communist. Kirkwood
				  also worked as a stenographer for the Fisherman's Union in the 1950s. She
				  married Clarence H. Pedersen in 1958. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kistler, Abraham J. (March 3, 1866 - March 12,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham J. Kistler, the son of David and Mary Muntz Kistler, was
				  born in Pennsylvania and came to Seattle in the late 1880s. He had a grocery
				  store and served on the Seattle City Council (1902 - 1904). He married Ella
				  Jandro in 1890. Kistler was killed in a car accident in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Kit Elswa, Johnny</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Johnny Kit Elswa; a Haida man, assisted in the collection of
				  Native art and artifacts during the late 19th century.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG6</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan and Johnny Kit Elswa, a Haida
					 artist. with small carved pole and canoe paddles, taken after their return from
					 Queen Charlotte Island B.C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October,1883</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Spencer &amp; Hastings, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: James G. Swan and his interpreter,
					 Johnnie.</p><p>Filed under James Gilchrist Swan subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Kitroeff, Alexandros George (Alec)
				  (February 11, 1926 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexandros George (Alec) Kitroeff was born of Greek parents in
				  Alexandria, Egypt, in 1926. During Word War II he served in the British and
				  Greek navies and, after the war, in the merchant marine on Greek-flag Liberty
				  ships. In 1953 he became a correspondent for Hearst’s International News
				  Service, covering Greece and the Middle East, and in 1958, when INS was sold to
				  the United Press, he became a PR and advertising executive. His works include 
				  <emph render="italic">Greeks that Never Were</emph>, <emph render="italic">The
				  Bananaless Republic</emph>, and <emph render="italic">The Dinosaur
				  Years</emph>. All three books are collections of humorous columns by the author
				  which appeared in the now-defunct English-language monthly published in Athens
				  entitled <emph render="italic">The Athenian</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GipsonJH2</container><unittitle>James Gipson in Piraeus Greece with Violet Fougberg
					 and Alec Kitroeff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 2, 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Note on verso describes Violet as employee of 
					 <emph render="italic">New York Daily Mirror</emph>, and Alec as "INS
					 Correspondent in Athens."</p><p>Filed under James H. Gipson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kizer, Benjamin Hamilton (October 29, 1878 - April 8,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin H. Kizer, was born in Ohio in 1878 and graduated from
				  the University of Michigan Law School in 1902. After graduation, he moved to
				  Spokane and joined the firm of Graves and Graves; he became a partner in 1905.
				  He was President of the Spokane County Bar Association in 1924, and of the
				  State Bar Association in 1929. He secured the passage of a legislative
				  enactment that provided Washington with an integrated bar association,
				  replacing the independent and voluntary associations. In 1944, he served as
				  head of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) in
				  China, serving for two years. Kizer was an advocate of improving United States
				  and China relations. His daughter, Carolyn Kizer, won a Pulitzer Prize for
				  poetry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KizerBH1</container><unittitle>Benjamin H. Kizer pointing out the signature
					 representing China on the United Nations charter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 6, 1946</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kizer, Carolyn Ashley (December 10, 1925 – October 9,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Carolyn Ashley Kizer was an American poet who won the Pulitzer
				  Prize in 1985. She was born in Spokane, Washington where her father, Benjamin
				  Kizer, was a successful attorney, and her mother, Mabel Ashley Kizer, was a
				  professor of biology. In 1945, she received her bachelor's degree from Sarah
				  Lawrence College, where she studied comparative mythologies with Joseph
				  Campbell. She married Charles Stimson Bullitt, an attorney from a wealthy and
				  influential Seattle family, in 1945 and divorced him in 1954. That same year,
				  she enrolled in a creative writing workshop at the University of Washington run
				  by poet Theodore Roethke. In 1959, she helped found Poetry Northwest and served
				  as its editor until 1965. She was a Specialist in Literature for the U.S. State
				  Department in Pakistan, teaching there for several months. In 1966, she became
				  the first director of Literary Programs for the newly created National
				  Endowment for the Arts. She resigned that post in 1970, when the N.E.A.
				  chairman, Roger L. Stevens, was fired by President Richard Nixon. She was a
				  consultant to the N.E.A. for the following year. In the 1970s and 1980s, she
				  held appointments as poet-in-residence or lecturer at universities and was a
				  visiting writer at literary conferences and events across the country. She was
				  also a member of the faculty of the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She was appointed
				  to the post of Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets in 1995, but
				  resigned three years later to protest the absence of women and minorities on
				  the governing board. Kizer later married the architect-historian, John Marshall
				  Woodbridge, dividing her time between their home in Sonoma, California and
				  their apartment in Paris when she was not teaching.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KizerCA1</container><unittitle>Carolyn Ashley Kizer, seated, holding a
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Erna Bert Nelson, Spokane, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on matboard: With much love to my friends, the
						MacBrides. Carolyn Ashley Kizer, September 17, 1936.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kline, Robert Luke (August 7, 1858 - May 4,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Luke Kline was born in Pennsylvania and came to
				  Washington Territory in the 1880s, moving to Whatcom County. He worked in
				  insurance and real estate and was a Washington State senator. He was a member
				  of the Washington State Good Roads Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Klippel, Henry (December 6, 1833 - November 2,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Klippel was born in Germany and immigrated to Ohio in 1837
				  with his family. After his father died when Henry was fifteen, he and two of
				  his brothers crossed the plains to Oregon, arriving in 1851. He worked on a
				  ferryboat for a few months and then drove an ox-team to Yreka, California where
				  he worked in the mining camp there before returning to Oregon. He played an
				  active role in the Indian wars of 1853, 1855, and 1856. Once peace was
				  established, Klippel returned to mining, pioneering quartz mining in Oregon and
				  building the first stamp mill for crushing rock to extract the gold at what
				  became Gold Hill. In 1860, he married Elizabeth Ann Bigham, who had crossed the
				  plains in 1853. After the wedding, he went to Idaho to mine, remaining there
				  for two years. He then operated a billiard saloon and a hardware store and
				  invested in real estate. He became one of the backers of a new newspaper, 
				  <emph>The Democratic Times. </emph>In 1864, Kippel was one of the discoverers
				  of the cinnabar and quicksilver deposits near the California border. When
				  Jacksonville was incorporated, he was elected its first Recorder and later
				  served as President of the Board of Trustees (Mayor). In 1870 he was elected
				  Sheriff of Jackson County, and in 1872 was appointed a Commissioner for the
				  construction of the second State Capitol building in Salem. In 1874 he served
				  as Chairman of the State Democratic Central Committee, was a candidate for
				  Presidential Elector in 1876, and in 1880 was elected County Clerk of Jackson
				  County, serving several terms. He served as an Oregon Commissioner for the 1893
				  Chicago World’s Fair. During the 1890s, he and his wife moved to Medford, where
				  he served a term as County Assessor, and was an active member of the Medford
				  City Council. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KlippelH1</container><unittitle>Henry Klippel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knapp, Martin Augustine (November 6, 1843 – February 10,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin A. Knapp was an attorney and United States federal judge.
				  In 1891, he was appointed to the Interstate Commerce Commission by President
				  Benjamin Harrison, reappointed in 1897 by President Grover Cleveland, and again
				  reappointed in 1902 by President Theodore Roosevelt, becoming chairman of the
				  Commission from 1898, where he served until 1910. Under the Erdman Act as ex
				  officio mediator, he assisted in the work of settlement of numerous disputes
				  between the public and the railroads. On December 12, 1910, Knapp was nominated
				  by President William H. Taft to a new joint seat on the United States Commerce
				  Court and the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. His
				  service on the Commerce Court was terminated on December 13, 1913, due to
				  abolition of the court, and on January 1, 1916, he was reassigned to the United
				  States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit where he served until his
				  death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, Amelia Stewart (January 2, 1817 - January 25,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amelia Stewart was born in 1817 and married Dr. Joel Knight in
				  1834. The couple traveled to Oregon in 1853 with their seven children; Amelia
				  kept a diary of their journey. She was pregnant with her eighth child, who was
				  born the day after they arrived in Oregon. They settled near present day
				  Vancouver, Washington where her husband was active in the Territorial
				  Legislature. After his death in 1867, she briefly re-married. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightAS1</container><unittitle>Amelia Stewart Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from the Oregon Historical Society.
					 Permission for use in a publication, film or video production must be requested
					 from them.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, Henry Granger (July 21, 1878 - July 13,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Granger Knight was born in Bennington, Kansas and attended
				  school in Minnesota, Kansas and Washington State. He earned a Bachelor of Art's
				  degree from the University of Washington in 1902. He studied chemistry at the
				  University of Chicago from 1903 to 1904 before earning a Master of Arts from
				  University of Washington in 1904. He was an assistant professor of chemistry at
				  the University of Washington in 1904. From 1904 to 1910 he was professor of
				  chemistry at the University of Wyoming and also served as state chemist. From
				  1910 to 1918 he held deanship of the College of Agriculture and earned a PhD
				  from the University of Illinois in 1917. He was dean and director of the
				  Oklahoma Agricultural College at Stillwater (now Oklahoma State University
				  College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources) from 1918 to 1921 , and
				  from 1922 to 1927 served as director of the experiment station at West Virginia
				  University, where he also served as dean of the agricultural college. In 1927,
				  Knight became head of the Bureau of Chemistry and Soils of the United States
				  Department of Agriculture. He was a fellow and president of the American
				  Institute of Chemists, which awarded him its Gold Medal in 1941. In 1939, he
				  was named Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus by the University of Washington, an
				  award given to graduates who perform distinguished service after
				  graduation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightHG1</container><unittitle>Henry Granger Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, Henry William (September 24, 1875 - January 27,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry William Knight, the son of Hiram and Ida Knight, was born
				  in California. By 1910, he had joined his uncle, Richard Knight, who owned a
				  roadhouse on the Toklat River in the Kantishna District, Alaska. Henry worked
				  as a miner and owned Knight's Roadhouse during the 1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightHW1</container><unittitle>Henry William Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaRoche, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 140.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightHW2</container><unittitle>Five miners outside of a log cabin (Knight's Roadhouse
					 Tolkat River Alaska), Henry William Knight is on the left. The man holding the
					 gold pan is pointing to gold nuggets in the pan.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913?</unitdate></did><note><p>Original in UW Alaska Photograph Collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, James Carnahan (November 16, 1875 – March 29,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James C. Knight was born in Ottumwa, Iowa and began his college
				  education at Parsons College, where his father was a professor. In 1893, he
				  enrolled at Princeton University where he was an end for the Princeton Tigers
				  football team and also lettered in gymnastics and rowing. After graduation in
				  1896, he worked as an agent for Ginn &amp; Company, a leading publisher of
				  textbooks. From 1898 until 1900, he was employed as an agent for New York Life
				  Insurance Company, and was a member of the Detroit Rowing Club. In 1901, he
				  enrolled in law school at the University of Michigan, receiving his law degree
				  in 1902. While studying at Michigan, he played for the Michigan's 1901
				  "Point-a-Minute" football team which won the 1902 Rose Bowl, the first college
				  football bowl game. He was also the manager and catcher for the University of
				  Michigan law school class baseball team in 1902. In 1902, Knight moved to
				  Seattle, Washington where he was employed as a civil engineer for the Seattle
				  Electric Company. He also served as the head athletic instructor and football
				  coach at the University of Washington from 1902 to 1904, as well as the rowing
				  and track coach. After he left the University of Washington, he attended
				  Princeton Theological Seminary, worked as an engineer for the Western Pacific
				  Railroad and subsequently moved to Caldwell, Idaho.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightJC1</container><unittitle>James Carnahan Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1902-1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>Two copies, one cropped</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, John (February 21, 1747 – June 16,
				  1831)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rear Admiral Sir John Knight, KCB, was a senior British Royal
				  Navy officer during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, known for his
				  activities during the American and French Revolutionary Wars. Serving with the
				  Caribbean Fleet during the American war, he fought a several significant
				  battles and was commended for his service. During the French wars, he served
				  with the North Sea fleet under Admiral Adam Duncan and was engaged at the
				  Battle of Camperdown against the Dutch. During the Napoleonic Wars that
				  followed, he held a senior administrative role at Gibraltar for ten years
				  before retiring in 1815 as a full admiral and a Knight Commander of the Order
				  of the Bath. Knight Inlet, one of the principal inlets on the British Columbia
				  coast, was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightJ1</container><unittitle>John Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: From a portrait by Ridley after the painting
					 by Stuart. Photograph from the collection of Augustin Rischgitz. Printed on
					 front: John Knight, Esq., Rear Admiral of the White Squadron</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Knight, Napoleon Bonaparte (December 7, 1840 - February
				  17, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Napoleon Bonaparte Knight was born in Dover, Delaware and
				  attended school in New York, graduating in languages, medicine and law, He
				  accepted a position as professor of languages in a Southern college shortly
				  before the start of the Civil War. With the secession crisis brewing, he
				  returned to Delaware, where he continued his legal training under the auspices
				  of George P. Fisher, a prominent Unionist politician. When Fisher received a
				  colonel’s commission and was given the task of raising a full regiment of
				  cavalry, he appointed Knight, who was only 21 years old, as major in his new
				  regiment. After the war, Knight finished his legal studies, graduating from
				  Albany Law School in New York. He moved west to Salem, Oregon, arriving in 1867
				  and began to practice law. By 1868, he took in a business partner, his former
				  fellow-soldier and childhood friend, William P. Lord, who had served as a
				  captain in the 1st Delaware Cavalry. Lord was later elected governor of Oregon.
				  In 1889, Knight went to Klamath County, where he engaged in the stock business
				  on a large scale while continuing to practice law. In 1892, he sold out his
				  livestock business, but remained in Klamath Falls until 1896. He then practiced
				  law in Salem and in Baker City, where he specialized in mining litigation. In
				  the 1870s, Knight served Marion County as a State Senator and ran
				  unsuccessfully for the United States Senate in 1885. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KnightNB1</container><unittitle>Napoleon Bonaparte Knight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kobel, Melvin Francis (December 20, 1933 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melvin F. Kobel was born in Port Angeles, Washington and
				  attended the University of Washington in the 1950s where he was on the track
				  team. He was later a coach at Glacier High School in Burien, Washington. Kobel
				  married Ferna Mounot in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KobelMF1</container><unittitle>Melvin Kobel leaving starting block</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared on page 237 in the 1957 
					 <emph render="italic">Tyee </emph>yearbook.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KobelMF2</container><unittitle>Melvin Kobel sprinting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kobler, Arthur Leon (May 18, 1920 - February 28,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Kobler studied disability and violence issues and fought
				  for American Civil Liberties Union causes. He worked to abolish the draft,
				  lobbied to get disabled patients out of institutions, and argued against the
				  University of Washington Loyalty Oath. Born in New York City, he earned a
				  bachelor's degree in 1941 at City College of New York. After serving in the
				  Coast Guard during World War II, he studied clinical psychology, receiving his
				  master's degree in 1946 at Columbia University, followed by a doctorate in
				  clinical psychology at Kansas University, and additional training at the
				  Menninger Foundation. In 1951, Kobler became the research director at the Pinel
				  Foundation, a semi-private mental-health facility in Seattle; when the facility
				  closed in 1958, he entered private practice. He briefly directed research for
				  Ryther Child Center and taught clinical psychology at the University of
				  Washington. He was also a research associate in electrical engineering. He
				  wrote The Life and Death of a Mental Hospital, and articles on violence, police
				  brutality, privacy, personal freedom and mental health. With Ezra Stotland, he
				  wrote The Death of Hope: A Social-Clinical Study of Suicide. He served on the
				  American Civil Liberties Union of Washington board for 35 years and was a
				  national ACLU board member for 20 years. In 1988, he accepted the William O.
				  Douglas Award, ACLU Washington's highest honor, for outstanding and sustained
				  contributions to the cause of civil liberties. He also co-founded the
				  Compassion in Dying group and consulted for Seattle Crisis Clinic. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KoblerAL1</container><unittitle>Arthur Kobler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Koiransky, Alexander Arnol'dovich (February 21, 1882 -
				  December 14, 1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Koiransky was born in Moscow and was affiliated with
				  the Moscow Art Theatre. After the Russian Revolution, he left Russia and moved
				  to the United States where he became head of the Drama Department at the
				  Cornish School of Allied Arts in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KerenskyAF1</container><unittitle>Alexander Kerensky with Alexander Koiransky and
					 William Kimball in Palo Alto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Alexander Kerensky subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Koch, Jakob (April 12, 1870 - February 19,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jakob Koch was a German wrestler. He was two-time European
				  champion , two-time world champion and two-time runner-up in the Greco-Roman
				  wrestling match.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF3</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller with Jakob Koch, George Hackenschmidt
					 and Americus (Gus Schoenlein)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman.</p><p>Filed under Benjamin Franklin Roller subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kolloen, Henry &amp; Inga (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kommers, William John (January 13, 1872 -December 18,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William John Kommers was the vice-president of the Union Trust
				  and Savings Bank of Spokane, Washington in the 1920s and 1930s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KommersWJ1</container><unittitle>William John Kommers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Koolseen, Kulsin - see Chief Patsy Henderson</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Koontz, Charlotte Simmons (February 17, 1850 - January
				  26, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Charlotte Simmons Koontz was the daughter of one of Washington
				  Territory's earliest pioneers, Colonel Michael Troutman Simmons. The Simmons
				  family crossed the plains in 1844, arriving first at Washougal and then moving
				  to Tumwater, a town founded by her father. In 1850, shortly after Charlotte’s
				  birth, he sold his interests and moved to Olympia where he invested in shipping
				  and became Olympia's postmaster. On November 13, 1867, Charlotte married John
				  N. Koontz, a member of another pioneer family who had settled on Jackson
				  Prairie, 12 miles southeast of Chehalis.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KoontzCS1</container><unittitle> Charlotte Simmons Koontz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Koontz, James Henry (May 2, 1830 - January 31,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Henry Koontz was born in Belmont County, Ohio, and became
				  a carpenter and joiner. He married Elizabeth Williams in 1851; after she died,
				  he married Cynthia N. Hyatt in 1856. In 1862, he and his wife joined the Ellis
				  train and crossed the plains to Oregon. They settled first in Umatilla, Oregon
				  on the shore of the Columbia River. Working as a carpenter, he soon had enough
				  money to build a store. In 1864 he was appointed postmaster, an office he held
				  for seventeen years. In 1880, he platted the town of Echo, which he named for
				  his daughter; the town was incorporated in 1904. Koontz established a branch
				  store and a hotel in Echo, Oregon, moving all of his business there in 1883. In
				  1886 he built a gristmill, which burned later that year at a loss of nearly
				  forty thousand dollars.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KoontzJH1</container><unittitle>James Henry Koontz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kost, Mary Haskamp (November 17, 1887 - March 21,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Haskamp, the daughter of Herman J. Haskamp and Anna Bohmer
				  Haskamp, was born in Canada. In 1915, she married Edward L. Kost in Vancouver,
				  B.C., and came to Seattle in the 1930s. She was a member of the wedding party
				  for her niece, Ihrma Haskamp, who married William B. Nickum on August 31, 1934
				  at the home of Eliza Ferry Leary.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyEF2</container><unittitle>Eliza Ferry Leary with Ihrma Haskamp Nickum (right)
					 and Mary Haskamp Kost (left)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 31, 1934</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Watters, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Ihrma Haskamp married William Bowman Nickum at Eliza Leary's
					 home on August 31, 1934; her aunt, Mary Haskamp Kost, was a member of the
					 wedding party.</p><p>Filed under Eliza Ferry Leary subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kostrometinoff, George (Sergei) (Father Sergius) (April
				  5, 1854 - April 1, 1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sergei Kostrometinoff was born in 1854 to a Russian employee of
				  the Russian-American Company and a Creole woman. Fluent in Russian and English
				  and conversant in several native languages, he became an interpreter for
				  Alaska's American authorities and an indispensable cultural broker among the
				  region's Euro-American, Russian-Creole, and native communities. Thanks to that
				  role as well as his political skills and successful commercial activities,
				  Kostrometinoff became one of the leading Russian-American citizen of Sitka,
				  Alaska's first capital, serving as the warden of its Orthodox cathedral as well
				  as the president of the chamber of commerce, a lieutenant colonel in the
				  territorial militia, and the secretary of the local historical society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DuncanW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Duncan with George (Sergei)
					 Kostrometinoff (Father Sergius)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1915?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Duncan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Kraabel, Paul Benjamin (February 2, 1933 – August 12,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Benjamin Kraabel was an American politician and engineer.
				  He worked for the Boeing Company as an engineer for 15 years. Kraabel was
				  elected to the Washington State Legislature as a representative of the 46th
				  district in 1971. In 1974, he was elected the Seattle City Council, serving for
				  16 years (1974 to 1991). He was the council president from 1990-1991 and
				  returned briefly as an interim council member from August to November 1996. On
				  the City Council, he worked on the Downtown Plan and worked to protect the
				  International District and Pioneer Square from development that would damage
				  these unique neighborhoods and business districts. Kraabel was an advocate for
				  public ttransit and for low income housing, working with then State Senator Jim
				  McDermott to establish the Housing Trust Fund. After leaving the council,
				  Kraabel was involved with many community organizations including Seattle
				  Community College, where he served as the board chair. He also served on the
				  boards for Summer Nights at the Pier, the Seattle International Children's
				  Festival, the International District Village Square and One Reel Productions.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Krebs, Stanley Dale (May 4, 1928 - March 13,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Dale Krebs was born in Scotia, Nebraska and received his
				  B.A. in 1949, M.A. in 1951, and his Ph.D. in 1963, all at the University of
				  Washington. During his service in the United States Army, he was sent to the
				  Army Language School in Monterey, where he became an expert in speaking and
				  reading Russian. In 1959-60, as a Ford Foundation fellow, he undertook advanced
				  study in composition at the Moscow Conservatory, where he came to know many
				  leading figures in Soviet musical life. His book, <emph render="italic">Soviet
				  Composers and the Development of Soviet Music</emph>, published in 1970, came
				  from this background, as did many articles on other aspects of musical life in
				  the Soviet Union. In 1968-69, he continued intensive work in this area by
				  spending a year in Munich as a fellow of the Institute for the Study of the
				  USSR. He joined the music faculty of the Santa Barbara campus of the University
				  in 1961, after three years at Baylor University. During his undergraduate days,
				  he was a member of the double bass section of the Seattle Symphony, and was the
				  principal bassist with the Santa Barbara Symphony. In the 1960s, he served for
				  several years as conductor of the Santa Maria Symphony, the Lompoc Symphony,
				  and the Santa Barbara Choral Society. He was a composer, teacher, critic and
				  writer on Soviet music, and was a practicing musician in the role of conductor
				  and double bassist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KrebsSD1</container><unittitle>Stanley Dale Krebs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kreidel, Samuel (December 12,1854 - February 19,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Kreidel was born in Kraków, Poland and came to the United
				  States in 1872. He settled first in California, where he married Pauline Harris
				  in 1880. The couple moved to Seattle in 1883, and for three years, he worked in
				  the clothing business. In 1886, he moved to Ellensburg, Washington where he
				  owned a general merchandise store. After the fire of 1889, which destroyed most
				  of the downtown area, he built the Kreidel Block on the corner of Third and
				  Pearl Streets. He was a member of the Ellensburg City Council for several terms
				  and was elected mayor of Ellensburg in 1915. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KreidelS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Kreidel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kreisman, Larry (May 31, 1947 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lawrence (Larry) Kreisman has a B.A. from City College of New
				  York; a M.A. in English literature from the University of Chicago; and a Master
				  of Architecture degree from the University of Washington. is co-author with
				  Glenn Mason of <emph render="italic">The Arts and Crafts Movement in the
				  Pacific Northwest</emph> and author of <emph render="italic">Made To Last:
				  Historic Preservation in Seattle and King County</emph>, and numerous other
				  books. He is an architectural historian, author, preservation consultant, and
				  for twenty years (1997 - 2017) served as Program Director for Historic Seattle.
				  He is an Honorary Member of AIA Seattle, and received the Washington State
				  Historic Preservation Officer’s Award for Outstanding Career Achievement in
				  Historic Preservation. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD1</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe with Mary Randlett and Larry
					 Kreisman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert D. Monroe subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Krenmayr, Janice Weikel (May 23, 1912 - February 7,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Janice Weikel was born in Dayton, Ohio, one of seven children.
				  Both of her parents were deaf, and she would later write articles on issues
				  concerning the deaf community. During the 1930s, she worked for the WPA and for
				  the Boeing Company. She married Joseph Krenmayr in 1934. They both wanted to
				  travel, so they saved their money and went to South America in 1947; the trip
				  lasted until 1952. During that time, Janice began to write, selling hundreds of
				  stories, many of which were printed in <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Times</emph>. She became a Times staff writer in 1952, retiring in 1975. She
				  won numerous awards for her writing, including ones from the National League of
				  American Pen Women and the Washington Pen Women. The American Bar Association
				  gave her an award for a series of articles she wrote on her experiences as a
				  juror. She wrote several guide books on travel, including <emph render="italic">Exploring Puget Sound by Car</emph> and <emph render="italic">Footloose in Seattle.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KrenmayrJW1</container><unittitle> Janice Krenmayr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kroupa, Sandra</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sandra Kroupa is the Book Arts and Rare Books Curator at the
				  University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KroupaS1</container><unittitle>Sandra Kroupa in UW Special Collections</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 22, 1997</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Krug, Julius Albert (November 23, 1907 – March 26,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julius Albert Krug was a politician who served as the United
				  States Secretary of the Interior for the administration of President Harry S.
				  Truman from 1946 until 1949.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kruickshank, J. A.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>J. A. Kruickshank was the manager for Admiral Evans' lecture
				  tour in 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robley Dunglison Evans in an
					 automobile with others in front of a building, during a tour of the site of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Seated in front, next to chauffeur: J. A. Kruickshank, manager
					 of Admiral Evans' lecture tour; in second seat: President of A-Y-P Board John
					 E. Chilberg and Captain Alfred W. Lewis, director of concessions; seated in
					 back: Admiral Evans and Mrs. Evans. The photo appeared in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> on March 30, 1909.</p><p>Filed under Robley Dunglison Evans subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kuhn, Joseph Augustine (September 1, 1841 - October 4,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Augustine Kuhn, the son of Judge Joseph J. Kuhn and Jane
				  McCabe Kuhn, was born in Pennsylvania, and educated at Tuscarora Academy in
				  Pennsylvania and Calvert College in Maryland. When he was nineteen, he went to
				  Missouri and worked in the freight business, crossing the plains eleven times.
				  After serving in the Union Army, he again crossed the plains to Stockton, where
				  he sold his cattle and then traveled by steamer from San Francisco to Portland
				  and overland to Port Townsend, Washington, arriving in 1866. His first ventures
				  were a dairy and a photography studio while he studied law; he was admitted to
				  the bar in 1871. Kuhn served three terms as a justice of the peace, served as
				  school director for twelve terms, was elected probate judge of Jefferson County
				  in 1876, served eight sessions in the Territorial and State Legislatures, and
				  was mayor of Port Townsend for four terms. He was one of the organizers of the
				  Port Townsend and Southern Railroad and was its president for several years. He
				  was also president of the Hotel and Improvement Company and the Port Townsend
				  Foundry Company as well as vice president of the Port Townsend Gas Company.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KuhnJA1</container><unittitle>Joseph Augustine Kuhn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KuhnJA2</container><unittitle>Judge Joseph Augustine Kuhn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1895?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. S. Fulton, Port Townsend, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Collection 334, Fulton.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Kunst, Mr.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Possibly a photograph of Gustav Henry Kunst, born in Germany on
				  September 5, 1885, who immigrated to the United States in 1910. He worked as
				  the advertising manager for <emph render="italic">The Daily Washingtoner
				  Staats-zeitung</emph> and also for the advertising firm, Wood and Reber, Inc.
				  He married Josephine Smith in Seattle in 1913 and died January 18, 1919 of
				  pneumonia while on a business trip to Kansas City. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">Kunst1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Mr. Kunst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Kuykendall, George Benson (January 22, 1843 - June 24,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Benson Kuykendall, the son of John Kuykendall and Malinda
				  Stark Kuykendall, was born in Indiana in 1843. The family immigrated to Oregon
				  in 1852 and spent the first winter near Hillsboro before settling near the
				  future town of Wilbur, Oregon. George Kuykendall graduated from the Willamette
				  University Medical School in 1872 and began his first medical practice as the
				  agency physician on the Yakima Indian Reservation at Fort Simcoe, Washington.
				  In 1883, he left the Indian Agency and established an independent practice at
				  Pomeroy, Washington, where he remained until his retirement in 1920. He died at
				  Portland, Oregon, in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KuykendallGB1</container><unittitle>George Benson Kuykendall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Name listed as G. P. Kuykendall, M.D., Pomeroy, W.T.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>L</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ladd, John R. (October 25, 1838 - October 14,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John R. Ladd was born in New York in 1838. He went to California
				  with his father in 1852 and then returned east to Illinois. In 1860, he married
				  Rachel Knapp, and two years later, they traveled west to the Salmon River mines
				  in Oregon. They built a cabin and hotel at Ladd’s Cañon in Grande Ronde, Oregon
				  on the direct route to the mines, sometimes feeding a hundred men at a time.
				  They spent 1865 in Walla Walla, Washington before returning to their home in
				  Oregon. Ladd followed freighting for five years, and later engaged in farming
				  and stock-raising. In 1867 he bought one hundred and sixty acres of land and
				  took one hundred and sixty more of government land. Ten years later, he started
				  a stage line from Wallowa to Grande Ronde, subsequently owning several other
				  stage lines in the area. His real estate increased by 1887 to forty-five
				  hundred acres, all in the valley, as well as property in the towns of La Grande
				  and Pendleton, and his businesses included a stable, stock-raising and sheep
				  herding.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaddJR1</container><unittitle>John R. Ladd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ladd, William Sargent (October 10, 1826 – January 6,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Sargent Ladd was born in Holland, Vermont in 1826. He
				  did not attend college and instead began working for the Boston, Concord &amp;
				  Montreal Railroad. In 1851, he decided to move west to work with Charles E.
				  Tilton, a friend who was involved in a mercantile business in San Francisco. He
				  tried to get Tilton to become partners in a venture to import goods to the
				  Oregon Territory. When Tilton refused because of the risks involved, Ladd
				  continued north to Portland, traveling with a small load of wine and liquor. He
				  rented a small store and began to branch out, adding eggs, chickens, and other
				  local goods. He continued in the mercantile business for several years, buying
				  goods from Tilton, who became a silent partner in his business. In 1858, they
				  opened Ladd &amp; Tilton Bank, the first bank in Oregon. His company W. S. Ladd
				  &amp; Company later became Ladd, Reed &amp; Company when Simeon Gannett Reed
				  joined the business. Ladd and Reed would also partner in a variety of ventures,
				  including a farm where Reedville, Oregon, and in 1862, the Oregon Steam
				  Navigation Company. Ladd’s other investments included the Oregon Furniture
				  Manufacturing Company in 1874, the Portland Flouring Mills Company in 1883, the
				  Portland Cordage Company in 1888, the Portland Hotel in 1887, the Oregon
				  Telegraph Company in 1862, Oregon Iron Company in 1864, the Oregon Central
				  Railroad Company in 1866, and in 1868 the Idaho Telegraph Company. In 1867,
				  Ladd along with Asahel Bush founded the Ladd and Bush Bank in Salem, Oregon. He
				  served as the president of the Board of Regents at the state agricultural
				  college in Corvallis, now known as Oregon State University. In 1853 and again
				  in 1856, Ladd served on the city council in Portland. He served two terms as
				  mayor in 1854 and again in 1857. He was one of the first people to contribute
				  funds toward the creation of the Portland Library fund, and he endowed a chair
				  at the state medical school in Portland (later Oregon Health &amp; Science
				  University) and a scholarship at Willamette University in Salem. He helped to
				  establish River View Cemetery and platted Ladd's Addition in what is now
				  Southeast Portland. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaddWS1</container><unittitle>William Sargent Ladd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lafty, Marie</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">CallahanHS2</container><unittitle>Harlan Callahan with (from left to right) Mrs. Marie
					 Lafty, Percy Pratt Bliss and Mrs. Thomas Balimier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1950?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford &amp; Carter, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Photo may have been taken at the retirement of Bliss after 40
					 years as a King County employee.</p><p>Filed under Harlan S. Callahan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lagourgue, Charles Henri (June 23, 1875
				  - October 21, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Henri Lagourgue was born in Paris and began his musical
				  education at the age of six. He studied clarinet, cello, piano and organ at the
				  Paris Conservatory and composition with Samuel Rousseau and Henri Dadlier. He
				  also studied with Massenet and Saint-Saens. He came to Seattle in 1909 where he
				  established the Music Conservatory of the Northwest, the Lagourgue Concert
				  Band, and was music director of the Standard Opera Company in Tacoma. In 1916,
				  he moved to Chicago, where he opened a music school. He was a composer,
				  conductor, musician and teacher as well as a writer. He wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">The Complete Treatise on Transposition </emph>and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Secret: Vocal Feelings and Reactions and the Tree of
				  Voice.</emph>He wrote his name as both Henri Charles Lagourgue and Charles
				  Henri Lagourgue.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LagourgueCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Henri Lagourgue</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The photograph is printed on a postcard published by Breitkopf
					 &amp; Hartel, New York.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lajoie, Napoleon "Nap" (September 5, 1874 – February 7,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Napoléon "Nap" Lajoie, also known as Larry Lajoie and nicknamed
				  "The Frenchman", was an American professional baseball second baseman and
				  player-manager. He played for the Philadelphia Phillies, Philadelphia Athletics
				  (twice), and Cleveland Naps between 1896 and 1916. He managed the Naps from
				  1905 through 1909. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the new American
				  League was beginning to rival the supremacy of the National League, and in
				  1901, Lajoie and dozens of former National League players joined the American
				  League. National League clubs contested the legality of contracts signed by
				  players who jumped to the other league but eventually, he was allowed to play
				  for Connie Mack's Athletics. During the season, he set the all-time American
				  League single-season mark for the highest batting average. One year later, he
				  went to the Cleveland Bronchos where he would play until the 1915 season when
				  he returned to play for Mack and the Athletics. While with Cleveland, Lajoie's
				  popularity led to locals electing to change the club's team name from Bronchos
				  to Napoleons ("Naps" for short), which remained until after Lajoie departed
				  Cleveland and the name was changed to the Cleveland Indians, the team's
				  present-day name. Lajoie led the AL in batting average five times in his career
				  and four times recorded the most number of hits; he ended his career with a
				  lifetime .338 batting average. In 1914, he joined Cap Anson and Honus Wagner as
				  the only major league players to record 3,000 career hits. He was elected to
				  the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1937.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LajoieN1</container><unittitle>Napoleon "Nap" Lajoie in Cleveland baseball
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1913?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Moffett Studio, Chicago, Illinois</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lam, Tat (1897 - ?) </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LamT1</container><unittitle>Tat Lam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: No. 15, Lam Tat, age 13, S/S Protesilaus,
					 1/11/1910.</p><p>The<emph render="italic"> Protesilaus</emph> was a British
					 Merchant Steamer built in 1910 and owned by Alfred Holt &amp; Co., China Mutual
					 Steam Navigation Company, Ltd. She made her maiden voyage in March and April of
					 1910, sailing from Liverpool through the Suez Canal to Singapore and then to
					 Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, B.C. Tat Lam may have been a crew member. The
					 photograph is stamped "General Land Protector of Chinese ...(incomplete
					 stamp).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lamb, Daisy Ethel (April 1, 1906 - December 25,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daisy Lamb was the daughter of John Hill Lamb, an IWW member who
				  was convicted of second degree murder following the Centralia Massacre in 1919.
				  Her mother was Margaret Meek Lamb. Daisy married Keith Ellis Parker (1898-1974)
				  in 1923; they had two children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LambDE1</container><unittitle>Daisy Lamb holding a rake standing next to younger
					 sister Gertrude Lamb who is holding a shovel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LambDE2</container><unittitle>Daisy Lamb with sister Gertrude Lamb and brother Dewey
					 Lamb</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lamb, Dewey Emanuel (September 22, 1903 - June 23,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dewey Lamb was the son of John Hill Lamb, an IWW member who was
				  convicted of second degree murder following the Centralia Massacre in 1919. His
				  mother was Margaret Meek Lamb. Dewey worked in Centralia as a laborer; he
				  married Virginia Fay Linehan in 1942.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LambDE2</container><unittitle>Daisy Lamb with sister Gertrude Lamb and brother Dewey
					 Lamb</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daisy Lamb subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lamb, Gertrude A. (November 27, 1908 - April 20,
				  2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Lamb was the daughter of John Hill Lamb, an IWW member
				  who was convicted of second degree murder following the Centralia Massacre in
				  1919. Her mother was Margaret Meek Lamb. She married Walter Parker in 1922.
				  Walter Parker was the brother of Keith Ellis Parker, who married Daisy,
				  Gertrude's sister.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LambDE1</container><unittitle>Daisy Lamb holding a rake standing next to younger
					 sister Gertrude Lamb who is holding a shovel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daisy Lamb subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LambDE2</container><unittitle>Daisy Lamb with sister Gertrude Lamb and brother Dewey
					 Lamb</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daisy Lamb subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lamphere, Phyllis Lee Hagmoe(February 9, 1922 – November
				  13, 2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phyllis Lee Lamphere was an American politician and civic
				  activist. She was a longtime member of the Seattle City Council and was the
				  first woman to lead the National League of Cities. She was born in Seattle and
				  received a scholarship to attend Barnard College. She graduated in 1939 with a
				  degree in mathematics. After Barnard, she worked for IBM and Boeing, where she
				  was Director of Women's Activities, before entering politics. Lamphere was
				  active in League of Women Voters and lobbied the Seattle City Council to pass a
				  bill that placed budget decisions under the mayor's authority. She won a seat
				  on the city council in 1967 and remained on the council for 11 years. She
				  helped pass an "Open Housing" law banning discrimination in Seattle in 1968 and
				  lobbied for the building of the West Seattle Bridge. In 1977, Lamphere became
				  the first non-mayoral and woman president of the National League of Cities and
				  ran for Mayor of Seattle, coming in fourth in the primary. After leaving the
				  council, Lamphere served as regional director of the Economic Development
				  Administration and was named in 1980 to a team tasked with building the
				  Washington State Convention Center, where the Phyllis Lamphere Gallery was
				  named after her. She also helped the Museum of History &amp; Industry relocate
				  to its present location in South Lake Union, Seattle. She was also a board
				  member of Virginia Mason Medical Center, Museum of History &amp; Industry, and
				  a board member of the Washington State Convention Center from 1982 to 2002.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lancaster, Columbia (August 26, 1803 - September 15,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Columbia Lancaster, an American lawyer and politician, was born
				  in New Milford, Connecticut, and studied law in Detroit, Michigan Territory. He
				  was admitted to the bar in 1830. He was appointed prosecuting attorney of
				  Michigan Territory and served as member of the Michigan Territorial Legislature
				  in 1837. In 1847, he headed west to Oregon Territory in 1847, settling first in
				  the Willamette Valley and later on the Lewis River in what would later be
				  Washington State. He served as supreme judge of the Provisional Government of
				  Oregon from 1847 to the end of that government in 1849. He was an unsuccessful
				  candidate for Delegate to the Thirty-first Congress from Oregon before the
				  separation of the Territories of Washington and Oregon. Lancaster served as
				  member of the Oregon Territorial Council (Senate) from 1850 to 1852. Lancaster
				  resigned his Council seat in the fall of 1852. When the Washington Territory
				  was admitted to representation, he was elected as a Democrat to the
				  Thirty-third Congress and served from April 12, 1854, until March 3, 1855. He
				  was an unsuccessful candidate for re-nomination. Lancaster was regent of the
				  University of Washington in 1862 and was connected with the Puget Sound and
				  Columbia River Railroad project. Lancaster Lake, just north of Ridgefield,
				  Washington, is named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LancasterC1</container><unittitle> Columbia Lancaster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LancasterC2</container><unittitle>A view of Columbia Lancaster's grave in Vancouver,
					 Washington's City Cemetery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LancasterC3</container><unittitle>A view of Columbia Lancaster's grave in Vancouver,
					 Washington's City Cemetery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LancasterC4</container><unittitle>Photograph of the inscription on Columbia Lancaster's
					 grave in Vancouver, Washington's City Cemetery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lancaster, Leon John (August 8, 1891 - December 7,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Colonel Leon J. Lancaster was born in Hoquiam, Washington and
				  first entered the shipping business as a ticket agent for the Pacific Coast
				  Steamship Company in Nome, Alaska. He served as general freight and passenger
				  agent of the American Mail Lines before joining the American President Lines.
				  He served as general passenger agent starting in 1934 and was in charge of the
				  Seattle office of the American President Line which had just opened. A veteran
				  of both World Wars, he served as chief petty officer aboard the
				  torpedo-destroyer <emph render="italic"> Gynn</emph> in the First World War. He
				  joined the Army in 1942 and spent three years in New Guinea and the Philippines
				  as commanding officer of the Advance Harbor Craft Pool, United States Army
				  Services of Supply. He was awarded the Silver Star and the Bronze Star for
				  gallantry in action at sea off Leyte Gulf and outstanding service in New
				  Guinea, and was awarded the Legion of Merit for his services in logistics
				  supply. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LancasterLJ1</container><unittitle>Leon J. Lancaster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.LancasterLJ1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lander, Edward (August 11, 1816 - February 2,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Lander was born in Salem, Massachusetts and graduated
				  from Harvard Law School in 1839. By 1841, he was the prosecuting attorney for
				  the Fifth Judicial Circuit. At the outbreak of the Mexican War, he organized a
				  company of volunteers and served eighteen months as captain of the 4th Indiana
				  Volunteers. After the war, he was judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and in
				  1853, was appointed the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Washington
				  Territory. On May 12, 1856, Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens used martial law
				  and militia officers to eject Judge Lander from his court after Lander issued a
				  writ of habeas corpus for the release of farmers whom Stevens had imprisoned,
				  believing them friendly to Native Americans battling Territorial troops. Lander
				  issued a contempt of court citation against the governor, which Stevens’
				  supporters paid on his behalf. After he retired from this post, Lander
				  practiced law in San Francisco and was counsel for Hudson’s Bay Company. In
				  1861, with Arthur Denny and Charles C. Terry, he donated ten acres in downtown
				  Seattle for the funding of a territorial university which became the University
				  of Washington. Lander Street in Seattle and Lander Hall, a residential hall on
				  the University of Washington campus, are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LanderE1</container><unittitle>Edward Lander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LanderE2</container><unittitle>Edward Lander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Cross Photo, Salem, Massachusetts</corpname></origination><note><p>Enlargement of cabinet card photograph</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LanderE3</container><unittitle>Edward Lander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Cross Photo, Salem, Massachusetts</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Landes, Henry (October 8, 1843 - March 18,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Landes was born in Germany in 1843. In 1847, his family
				  immigrated to Kentucky, He left school in 1861 to enlist in a Kentucky Federal
				  Infantry Regiment and served for three years, participating in all the
				  principal battles from Shiloh to the capture of Atlanta. After the Civil War,
				  he traveled west to the gold fields of British Columbia. Unsuccessful as a
				  miner, Landes went to Washington Territory in 1870, where he was appointed
				  Indian trader for the Makah Tribe at the Neah Bay Reservation. In 1876 he moved
				  to Port Townsend, Washington Territory, where he was elected president of the
				  Port Townsend Board of Trade, served four years as a member of the city
				  council, three years as city treasurer, and three years as member of the
				  public-school board. In 1884, he was appointed to the board of commissioners to
				  locate the new territorial penitentiary, and in 1885, was appointed to the
				  board of commissioners to locate Port Townsend’s government buildings. In
				  September, 1885, he was commissioned by Governor Watson C. Squire a member of
				  the governor’s military staff, as assistant adjutant-general with the rank of
				  lieutenant-colonel. He was one of the incorporators, and was elected treasurer,
				  of the Port Townsend &amp; Southern Railway Company, which was organized in1887
				  to build a road from the Strait of Fuca to Portland. He founded the First
				  National Bank of Port Townsend and served as its president. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandesH1</container><unittitle>Henry Landes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Landes, Henry S. (December 22, 1867 - August 23,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Henry S. Landes was born in Carroll County Illinois in 1868. In
				  1892, he earned two B.A. degrees, one from the University of Indiana and one
				  from Harvard University, and the following year, earned his Masters of Science
				  from Harvard. He joined the University of Washington in 1895, the year the
				  University moved to its present site, and taught geology. He was dean of the
				  College of Science from 1912 until 1934; when that college merged with the
				  University College, he became vice dean. He was acting president of the
				  University in 1914 and 1915, between the presidencies of Dr. Thomas Kane and
				  Dr. Henry Suzzallo. While acting president, Landes introduced a building
				  program and appointed the first committee which provided for enlarging the
				  University on a definite plan. He served as Washington State geologist (1910 -
				  1932), was president of the Puget Sound Academy of Science, and gave nationwide
				  broadcast on geology. He was married to Bertha Knight Landes, city council
				  member and former mayor of Seattle. Landes became ill during a geology study
				  tour in Asia and died August 23, 1936 in Seattle, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandesHS1</container><unittitle>Henry S. Landes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Long's Studio, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandesHS2</container><unittitle>Henry S. Landes looking out of a window, possibly on a
					 boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1936?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandesHS3</container><unittitle>A photograph of the Landes family
					 residence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>The home is now the site of the Graduate Hotel, formerly the
					 Edmond Meany Hotel.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Landon, Alfred Mossman (September 9, 1887 – October 12,
				  1987) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred "Alf" Landon was a Republican politician, who served as
				  the 26th Governor of Kansas from 1933 to 1937. He was the Republican Party's
				  nominee for President of the United States, but was defeated in a landslide by
				  incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1936 presidential election.
				  Following his defeat, Landon finished out his term as governor of Kansas and
				  returned to the oil industry; he did not seek elected office again. He had
				  first pursued a career in banking, but in 1912 he became an independent
				  petroleum producer in Independence, Kansas. During World War I, Landon served
				  in the Army as a first lieutenant in chemical warfare. By 1929, the oil
				  industry had made him a millionaire. Landon was instrumental in the
				  establishment of the Kansas-Oklahoma division of the United States Oil and Gas
				  Association, then known as the Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association, a
				  petroleum lobbying organization. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonAM1</container><unittitle>Alfred Landon in hat and coat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1936</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from the Kansas State Historical Society,
					 Topeka.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonAM2</container><unittitle>Alfred Landon on a horse, with unidentified man
					 holding the reins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from the Kansas State Historical Society,
					 Topeka.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Landon, Daniel "Dan" (January 4, 1876 - December 16,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel "Dan" Landon was born in Sharon, Wisconsin, and graduated
				  from the University of Nebraska with a law degree in 1900. He came to Seattle
				  the next year and opened a law practice. He was first elected to the Washington
				  State Senate in 1910 and served until his death in 1933. Landon served as chair
				  of the Senate appropriation committee for many years, where he introduced the
				  appropriations bill for the construction of the Lake Washington Ship Canal,
				  advocated for appropriations for the University of Washington, and introduced
				  legislation for free kindergarten, eight-hour law, minimum wage, workers
				  compensation as well as other legislation to improve conditions for women and
				  children. He ran for mayor in 1922, losing to Dr. Edwin J. Brown.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Landon with Harold Sparkman, James M. Sparkman,
					 George Noyes and James. W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1932</unitdate></did><note><p>In the foreground are papers bearing the certified signatures
					 on the initiative petition for the 40 mil tax limit bill. A version of this
					 photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on
					 Sunday, July 10, 1932, indicating that the papers were filed on Friday, July 7,
					 1932.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Landsburg, George Vincent (Circa 1855? - November 25,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Vincent Landsburg was the custodian of the city water
				  works intake at Landsburg, halfway between Seattle and Cedar Falls and had held
				  the position for 15 years before his death. He was born in Canada and became a
				  U. S. citizen in 1889. He married Tressa McMullen in 1895 in Victoria, B. C.,
				  Canada.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lane, Francis Knight (July 15, 1864 – May 18,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Knight Lane was a politician from California who served
				  as United States Secretary of the Interior from 1913 to 1920. He also served as
				  a commissioner of the Interstate Commerce Commission and was the Democratic
				  nominee for Governor of California in 1902, losing a narrow race. Lane's record
				  on conservation was mixed; he supported the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir project in
				  Yosemite National Park, which flooded a valley esteemed by many
				  conservationists, but also presided over the establishment of the National Park
				  Service.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lane, Joseph (December 14, 1801 – April 19,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Lane was an American politician and soldier. He was a
				  state legislator representing Evansville, Indiana and then served in the
				  Mexican–American War, becoming a general. President James K. Polk appointed
				  Lane as the first Governor of Oregon Territory. When Oregon was admitted as a
				  state in 1859, Lane was elected one of Oregon's first two U.S. Senators. In the
				  1860 United States presidential election, Lane was nominated for vice president
				  of the pro-slavery Southern wing of the Democratic Party as John C.
				  Breckinridge's running mate. Lane's pro-slavery views and sympathy for the
				  Confederate States of America in the Civil War effectively ended his political
				  career in Oregon. He retired to his ranch outside of Roseburg, Oregon after his
				  Senate term. Lane County in Oregon is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Lane in military uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1846 and 1848</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ2</container><unittitle>Joseph Lane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1859?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ3</container><unittitle>Joseph Lane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Photo of my grandfather, Gen. Joseph Lane.
					 Was enlarged from the original daguerreotype now in the Gen. Lane collection.
					 Mrs. R. S. Ellison of Tulsa, Okla., Miss Winifred (?), Portland, Oregon August
					 17, 1936.</p><p>Copy by Bruno, Portland, Oregon</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ4</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Joseph Lane standing with hand on a
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Brady, New York</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ5</container><unittitle>Photograph of Joseph Lane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ6</container><unittitle>Portrait of Joseph Lane seated, holding
					 cane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Graves, Roseburg, Oregon</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ7</container><unittitle>Joseph Lane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abell, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaneJ8</container><unittitle>Portrait of General Joseph Lane at the age of
					 78</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1879</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Laners, Barbara Ann (January 29, 1940 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Barbara Laners was a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971. Laners graduated from the University of Washington in 1963 with a degree
				  in political science. She graduated from the University of Washington Law
				  School in 1973. Laners worked as a field examiner for the National Labor
				  Relations Board in the 1970s, was host of a public affairs show on radio
				  station <emph>KRIZ</emph> in the 1990s and was the moderator of <emph>Soul
				  Dialog</emph> on radio station <emph>KYAC</emph> in 1970. She was a columnist
				  for <emph>The Medium</emph> in the 1990s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Langer, Susanne Katherina (December 20, 1895 – July 17,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susanne Katherina Langer (born Susanne Knauth) was an American
				  philosopher, writer, and educator who was known for her theories on the
				  influences of art on the mind. She is best known for her 1942 book 
				  <emph render="italic">Philosophy in a New Key</emph>. In 1916, Langer enrolled
				  at Radcliffe College. She earned the bachelor's degree in 1920 and continued
				  with graduate studies in philosophy at Harvard, where she received her master's
				  degree in 1924 and her doctorate in 1926. Langer was a tutor in philosophy at
				  Radcliffe from 1927 to 1942. She lectured in philosophy for one year at the
				  University of Delaware and for five years at Columbia University (1945-1950).
				  She also taught philosophy at the University of Michigan, New York University,
				  Northwestern University, Ohio University, Smith College, Vassar College, the
				  University of Washington, and Wellesley College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LangerSK1</container><unittitle>Susanne Katherina Langer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1978</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William D. Langer</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Langford, Nathaniel Pitt (August 9, 1832 - October 18,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathaniel Pitt Langford was an explorer, businessman,
				  bureaucrat, and historian who played an important role in the early years of
				  the Montana gold fields, territorial government and the creation of Yellowstone
				  National Park. He was born in New York and moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota in
				  1854. He worked as a banker until 1862 when he joined the Northern Overland
				  Expedition, with the mission of establishing a wagon road to the Salmon River
				  mine regions of the Rocky Mountains. The expedition ended at the gold fields of
				  Montana where Langford and his associates established freight companies, a saw
				  mill and other businesses. Langford was also part of the Montana Vigilantes
				  which dealt with lawlessness in the territory. He was a member of the 1870
				  Washburn, Langford and Doane Expedition, exploring the region that would become
				  Yellowstone National Park. Mount Langford, east of Yellowstone Lake, was scaled
				  by Langford during the expedition and named for him. After his participation in
				  the Washburn expedition, Langford was appointed as the first superintendent of
				  the park, although he had no salary, no funding for the park, and no legal way
				  to enforce protection for its wildlife and geologic features. He was replaced
				  in 1877, and returned to St. Paul. In 1890, he wrote <emph render="italic">Vigilante Days and Ways</emph> to chronicle the era of pioneer
				  justice in the American Old West.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LangfordNP1</container><unittitle>Nathaniel Pitt Langford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Langlie, Arthur Bernard (July 25, 1900 – July 24,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur B. Langlie served as the mayor of Seattle, Washington and
				  was the 12th and 14th Governor of the U.S. state of Washington from 1941 to
				  1945 and from 1949 to 1957. He graduated with a law degree from the University
				  of Washington in 1925. Langlie's legacy as governor included the Washington
				  State Ferries system inaugurated under his administration, additional road and
				  bridge projects, and some of the first environmental measures adopted in the
				  state of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PorXC1</container><container type="item">LanglieAB1</container><unittitle>Arthur B. Langlie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lantz, Harry (February 2, 1920 - June 1,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Lantz was president of the Texas Orchestra Directors
				  Association from 1962 until 1965 and president of the Texas Music Educators
				  Association from 1966 until 1968. He was guest conductor of the Seattle
				  All-City High School Symphony in 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LantzH1</container><unittitle>Harry Lantz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Larkin, Wayne Deming (April 25, 1927 - September 3,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wayne Larkin left Seattle’s Roosevelt High School in 1944, at
				  age 17, to join the U.S. Coast Guard and serve two years on troop transports to
				  Australia, India, New Guinea, the Philippines and Japan. He joined the Seattle
				  Fire Department in 1947, serving at Station 17, Ladder 9. In March 1952, he
				  joined the Seattle Police Department, serving in patrol and as a detective in
				  auto theft, intelligence, narcotics and vice. Larkin was elected president of
				  the Seattle Police Officers Guild and vice president of the Washington Council
				  of Police Officers. He also served as president of the Association of
				  Washington Cities, as president of the King County Chapter of Muscular
				  Dystrophy, and as a two-term member of the National MD Board of Directors. When
				  a vacancy occurred in 1969 on the Seattle City Council, he ran for election,
				  serving two-terms chairing the Intergovernmental Relations, Utilities, and
				  Public Safety committees. Larkin sponsored and secured passage of Harborview
				  Hospital's bond issue for Seattle's nationally recognized Burn Center and also
				  spearheaded the passage of legislation creating the Police Department's
				  successful K-9 unit, as well as the Vietnam and Korean War Memorial on the
				  walls of the old Public Safety Building, the first of its kind in the state. He
				  worked with Fire Chief Gordon Vickery to develop the first 911 Medic One system
				  in the country. As chairman of the city's Utilities Committee, he secured
				  passage of a program to exempt economically disadvantaged users of the city's
				  utilities, and he played a leading role in the creation of the Metro Transit
				  System. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>LaRoche Jr., Frank (July 25, 1884 - November 14,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank LaRoche Jr. was born Frank Austin Crary. His father,
				  Austin Ballou Crary, died in 1898, and his mother, Ida Lindsey Crary, married
				  Frank LaRoche in 1891; LaRoche adopted her son. LaRoche Sr. was a prominent
				  early Seattle photographer who specialized in Alaska and Puget Sound scenery
				  and portrait photography. During the years 1890 to 1902 and especially during
				  the Gold Rush period, he made many trips to Alaska and the Yukon Territory to
				  make photographs of Alaska scenery, mining camps and the trail. La Roche Sr.
				  was also commissioned by the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition in Seattle in 1909
				  to take official photographs. He maintained his Seattle studio for 25 years
				  after which he moved to Skagit County. When he retired, he passed on the
				  business to his son, Frank La Roche Jr., who had assisted him in the studio as
				  well as on the trails in Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF1</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. seated at a table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF2</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. and Maude Tripplett
					 LaRoche</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF3</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. and Maude Tripplett
					 LaRoche</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Same sitting as previous photograph, different pose</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF4</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. with hat, sitting in a
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF5</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frank LaRoche Jr. wearing a
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF6</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frank LaRoche Jr. wearing a bow
					 tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaRoche Photo</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF7</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frank LaRoche Jr. with glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1948?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF8</container><unittitle>Portrait of Frank LaRoche Jr. with glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1948?</unitdate></did><note><p>Same sitting as previous photograph, different pose</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>LaRoche, Maude Tripplett (April 29, 1887 - December 19,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Tripplett married Frank LaRoche Jr. in 1903; their son
				  Harold was born the following year. Maude married Joseph Shaw in 1953.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF2</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. and Maude Tripplett
					 LaRoche</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Frank LaRoche Jr. subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LaRocheF3</container><unittitle>Frank LaRoche Jr. and Maude Tripplett
					 LaRoche</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Same sitting as previous photograph, different pose. </p><p>Filed under Frank LaRoche Jr. subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Larsen, Jakob Aall Ottesen (March 1, 1888 – September 2,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jakob Aall Ottesen Larsen was an American classical scholar,
				  known principally for his research on the political status of Ancient Greece.
				  He was the son of Peter Laurentius Larsen, founding president of Luther
				  College, and his second wife Ingeborg Astrup. He received a B.A. from Luther
				  College in 1908 and M.A. from Yale in 1911. In 1914, he was awarded a Rhodes
				  scholarship. In 1928, Larsen received his Ph.D. from Harvard. The University of
				  Vermont awarded him the LL.D. in 1953, and Luther College presented him with
				  his D.Litt. in 1961. He worked as an Assistant Professor of History at the
				  University of Washington from 1921 to 1926. From 1926 through 1929, he served
				  in the same capacity at Ohio State University. He was promoted to Associate
				  Professor and continued in that capacity at Ohio State University until 1930
				  before becoming an Associate Professor of History at the University of Chicago,
				  then as a Professor in 1943 and Professor Emeritus from 1953 to 1971. Larsen
				  was the managing editor of <emph render="italic">Classical Philology</emph>
				  from 1939 to 1951. From 1951 to 1952 he was chairman of the American
				  Philological Association. He served as the Sather Professor of Classics at the
				  University of California-Berkeley in 1954 and as Visiting Professor of History
				  at Rutgers University in 1956 and 1957. Larsen was Visiting Professor of
				  History at the University of Texas in 1960 and at the University of Missouri
				  from 1960 to 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LarsenJAO1</container><unittitle>Jakob Aall Ottesen Larsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Laschelle, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaschelleMr1</container><unittitle>Mr. Laschelle standing in front of a cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Laschelle. Voyageur for Astor. This photo
					 taken at his home, Seaside, Clatsop Beach, Oregon."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Laschelle, Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaschelleMrs1</container><unittitle>Mrs. Laschelle sitting in front of a cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Laschelle. One of John Jacob Astor's
					 voyageurs. Lives near Seaside, Oregon. Is married to an Indian woman who is the
					 last Flathead Clatsop Indian. This should have been written on the other
					 picture."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lau, Alan Chong (July 11, 1948 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alan Chong Lau is an American poet and artist. He grew up in
				  Paradise, California and graduated from the University of California, Santa
				  Cruz with a B.A. in Art in 1976. After college, he studied in Japan. In 1978,
				  he moved to Seattle and began exhibiting his work at the Francine Seders
				  Gallery. His collections of poetry include <emph render="italic">Songs for
				  Jadina</emph>, for which he won the 1981 American Book Award, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Blues and Greens: A produce worker’s journey</emph>. He
				  serves as Arts Editor for <emph render="italic">The International
				  Examiner</emph>. In 2014, he was given the title of Cultural Ambassador by the
				  Mayor’s Arts Awards in honor of his work in the Seattle arts community. Other
				  awards include a creative artist fellowship from the Japan-US Friendship
				  Commission and an Artists Grant from the Seattle Arts Commission. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LauAC1</container><unittitle>Alan Chong Lau with two unidentified
					 people</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Laube, William Tell (September 3, 1880 - November 27,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Tell Laube was born in Wisconsin and moved to Bellingham
				  with his parents in 1893. He graduated from the University of Washington Law
				  School in 1904. As an undergraduate, he was the first president of the
				  Associated Students of the University of Washington, and in 1900 was on the
				  staff of the <emph render="italic">Pacific Wave</emph>, the UW’s newspaper at
				  the time. In 1904, he was appointed manager of athletics. He was a prominent
				  political figure and an attorney and was a partner with Laube, Laughlin and
				  Guttormsen. Laube was a leading Republican during the Harding, Coolidge and
				  Hoover administrations and served as the secretary of the Washington State
				  Senate. He was the first president of the Young Men’s Republican Club and was a
				  member of the American Bar Association, the Washington State Bar Association,
				  the Rainier Club, the Washington Athletic Club and the Arctic Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaubeWT1</container><unittitle>William Tell Laube</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1902 and 1904</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lauer, Edward Henry (February 24, 1885 - August 21,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Henry Lauer graduated from the University of Michigan in
				  1906. He was on the faculty of the University of Iowa from 1910 to 1934 and
				  also served as the athletic director there from 1929 until 1934. In 1934, he
				  joined the University of Washington as dean of the faculty; he later became the
				  dean of Students and for many years was dean of the College of Arts and
				  Sciences. In the 1950s, he was Dean Emeritus of Germanic Languages and
				  Literature. In retirement, Lauer served churches between ministers, was the
				  first lay president of the Seattle Council of Churches and served as a
				  moderator for the Washington Congregational Christian Conference. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LauerEH1</container><unittitle>Edward Henry Lauer seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 22 of the 1952 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Law, Myron Cutler (October 22, 1901 - August 3,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Myron Cutler Law was born in Kansas and came to Seattle in 1921.
				  He was the vice president and general operations manager for Frederick &amp;
				  Nelson, a department store in Seattle. He was active in community and civic
				  affairs, servicing as a member of the governing council of the National
				  Municipal League, the president of the board of the Seattle Municipal League,
				  president of Seattle Steam, chair of the Seattle Transit Commission, president
				  of the Seattle Safety Commission and head of the financial division of United
				  Good Neighbors. Law married Margaret Mary Hayes in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LawMC1</container><unittitle>Myron Cutler Law</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dexter, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lawler, James T. (July 29, 1871 - November 23,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James T. Lawler was born in Bay City, Michigan and graduated
				  from the University of Michigan Law School. He taught school and practiced law
				  in Bay City for several years before moving to Seattle in 1902. In 1932, he was
				  an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for county
				  commissioner. Governor Clarence D. Martin first appointed Lawler to the
				  Superior Court in 1933, but an act creating four new judgeships was declared
				  unconstitutional before Judge Lawler could be sworn in. The following year, the
				  Legislature created two new judgeships, and Lawler was again appointed, along
				  with Judge Roger Meakim. Lawler was elected in 1934 and re-elected in 1940,
				  1944 and 1948. He devoted considerable time to public service, serving as
				  president of the Seattle Municipal League, the King County Democratic Club and
				  the Taxpayers' League.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lawrence, Helen (Lady John Foster Fraser) (1878? -
				  ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Lawrence, the daughter of Francis Lawrence, went to Annie
				  Wright Academy. In 1898, she married John Foster Fraser, a British travel
				  author, who was knighted in 1917 for his war efforts. She divorced him in
				  1922.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lawrence, Henry James (August 8, 1902 - October 3,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry James Lawrence was born in Seattle and graduated from the
				  University of Washington with a degree in pharmacy. While working for a
				  pharmacist, he was robbed twice, and that experience, along with a suggestion
				  from a friend, got him interested in police work. He took the exam and joined
				  the Seattle Police Department in 1931; he was one of the first college
				  graduates on the force. Lawrence became a detective sergeant after five years
				  and a detective captain four years later. He retired in 1960 after twenty-six
				  years with the department, the last eight as chief of police. After his
				  retirement, he joined the Washington State Board of Prisons and Parole. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LawrenceHJ1</container><unittitle>Henry James Lawrence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Western Engraving and Colortype Company, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lawton, Charles W. (1838? - October 17, 1891) -See John
				  Vandevanter</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles W. Lawton was born in England and established a nursery
				  in Seattle in the 1870s. The nursery was located on Yesler and 15th, where he
				  sold plants and fruit trees. He became a naturalized citizen in 1872.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lawyer, Chief (Hallalhotsoot) (1796? - January 3,
				  1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chief Lawyer (Hallalhotsoot) was a leader of the Niimíipu (Nez
				  Perce) and among its most famous, after Chief Joseph. He was the son of Twisted
				  Hair, who welcomed and befriended the Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1805. He
				  may have received the name “Lawyer” for his speaking and diplomatic skills or
				  because of his dedication to obeying the law. He served as a guide for Whitmans
				  when they established their mission. From 1848 until 1871, he was the head of
				  the tribe and a consistent counselor of peace with the U. S. Government. In
				  1855, he took part in the Walla Walla Council and signed a treaty establishing
				  a reservation for the tribe. After gold was discovered in 1860, he agreed to
				  new cessions of land in the Treaty of 1863, which reduced the tribal land by 95
				  percent. Several other chiefs refused to accept the treaty, and in 1871,
				  Hallalhotsoot was replaced by Chief Joseph as the only head of the tribe.
				  Lawyer Creek and Lawyer Canyon in north central Idaho are named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LawyerC1</container><unittitle>Chief Lawyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Layton, Charles (February 17, 1835 - April 11,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Layton, the son of Samuel and Nancy Layton, was born in
				  Pennsylvania and crossed the plains with his parents in 1849. The family
				  settled in Lewis County, Washington Territory, and Charles later had a farm
				  near Toledo, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LaytonC1</container><unittitle>Charles Layton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lazarus, Al</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Al Lazarus caught a 505 lb. bluefin tuna in Holyrood Conception
				  Bay, Newfoundland on August 24, 1962.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LazarusA1</container><unittitle>Al Lazarus with bluefin tuna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LazarusA2</container><unittitle>Al Lazarus with bluefin tuna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LazarusA3</container><unittitle>Al Lazarus with bluefin tuna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LazarusA4</container><unittitle>Certificate showing the date of the catch and the
					 weight of thebluefin tuna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LazarusA5</container><unittitle> Bluefin tuna in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leach, Calista Ann Lovejoy (September 11, 1837 - January
				  22, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Calista Ann Kinney was born in New Brunswick, Canada. She
				  married Captain Howard Bentley Lovejoy on January 6, 1855 in San Francisco, and
				  the couple moved to Coupeville, Washington in the 1860s. After the death of
				  Captain Lovejoy in 1872, she married John A Leach.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeachCAL1</container><unittitle>Calista Lovejoy Leach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="series"><did><unittitle>Leader, Elmer Winfield (February 20, 1889 - April 24,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer Winfield Leader graduated from the University of
				  Washington Law School in 1916. While at the UW, he and his twin brother, Ed,
				  were prominent crew, football and basketball athletes. In later years, he
				  served as the referee and official starter for the UW crew home regattas. His
				  brother later became head crew coach at Yale University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY5</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Alvin Ulbrickson, Elmer Leader and
					 Russell Callow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leary, Eliza Ferry (July 24, 1851 - March 8,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eliza Ferry was the daughter of Washington’s first governor,
				  Elisha P. Ferry. She was born in Waukegan, Illinois and came to the Pacific
				  Northwest in 1869 with her parents. Mrs. She married John Leary, a pioneer
				  leader in the development of the state, in 1891, and the couple built their
				  first home on the corner of Second Avenue and Madison Street. In 1907, they
				  built a home on Capitol Hill in Seattle. She was active in the Ladies’ Relief
				  Society, the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association of the Union, the Washington
				  Historical Society, the Pioneers’ Association and the Daughters of the American
				  Revolution, in which she was instrumental in organizing the Elisha P. Ferry
				  Chapter. Leary was the chair of the committee that obtained the statue of
				  George Washington for the University of Washington campus. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyEF1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Eliza Ferry Leary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1935?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyEF2</container><unittitle>Eliza Ferry Leary with Ihrma Haskamp Nickum (right)
					 and Mary Haskamp Kost (left)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 31, 1934</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Watters, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Ihrma Haskamp married William Bowman Nickum at Eliza Leary's
					 home on August 31, 1934; her aunt, Mary Haskamp Kost, was a member of the
					 wedding party.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leary, John (November 3, 1837 - February 8,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Leary was born in New Brunswick, Canada. By age 17, he was
				  buying and selling timber in Canada. When changing trade agreements between
				  Canada and the United States made that business less profitable, he emigrated
				  to the U.S, living briefly in Maine before settling in Seattle, in 1869. He was
				  admitted to the Washington state bar in 1871. Although he maintained a law
				  practice for 10 years, he increasingly devoted his time to business activities.
				  He was involved with virtually every major civic and commercial undertaking in
				  Seattle in the 1870s and 1880s, with investment holdings in banking,
				  railroading, newspaper publishing, real estate development, logging and coal
				  mining enterprises. He was a founder and director of the First National Bank of
				  Seattle, established in 1882 and became the principal owner of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post</emph>, which he merged with the
				  separately-owned<emph render="italic"> Intelligencer</emph>, creating the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer. </emph>After he sold his
				  interest in the consolidated paper in 1884, he and his business partners
				  incorporated the Seattle, Lake Shore &amp; Eastern Railroad Company. In the
				  late 1880s, ongoing construction costs led the railroad’s initial investors to
				  organize the Seattle &amp; Eastern Construction Company. In 1892, Northern
				  Pacific Railroad absorbed the line. At various times, he served as president of
				  the Seattle Land &amp; Improvement Company, the West Coast Improvement Company,
				  and the Seattle Warehouse and Elevator Company, and was a charter member of the
				  Rainier Club. Leary served three terms as a member of the Seattle city council
				  (in 1873, 1875, and 1876). He was also the only mayor in Seattle’s history to
				  be elected as a candidate of the Business Men’s Party and served from 1884
				  until 1885. In 1892, Leary married Eliza P. Ferry, a daughter of Elisha P.
				  Ferry, the first governor of the State of Washington. When he died, on February
				  9, 1905, Leary left an estate valued at $2 million.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyJ1</container><unittitle>John Leary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyJ2</container><unittitle>John Leary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: John Leary, President, Seattle Real Estate
					 Exchange.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leasure, John Crawford (June 9, 1854 - July 19,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John C. Leasure was born in Marion County, Oregon in 1854; his
				  parents, George Leasure and Elizabeth Crawford Leasure, had crossed the plains
				  to Oregon in 1851. John graduated from Philomath College in 1877. He taught
				  school while studying law at the same time; he passed the bar in 1880 and
				  started a law practice in Pendleton, Oregon. He was vice president and attorney
				  for the Oregon &amp; Washington Railway, and was mayor of Pendleton for two
				  terms. Leasure served as presidential elector in 1884. He was a member of the
				  Young Men’s Republican League of Oregon, and was for six years vice-president
				  for Oregon of the National Republican League. He was the first president of the
				  Native Sons of Oregon. Leasure married Anna L. Blakely in 1881.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeasureJC1</container><unittitle>John C. Leasure</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Leavy, Charles Henry (February 16, 1884 - September 25,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Henry Leavy was born on a farm in York, Pennsylvania,
				  one of 13 children. He was educated in Missouri and graduated from the Normal
				  School (now Western Washington University) in Bellingham, Washington and Kansas
				  City School of Law. He then taught school for six years. In 1914, he was
				  elected prosecutor of Pend Oreille County, Washington, and was re-elected two
				  years later. He served as a special assistant U. S. Attorney from 1918 to 1921
				  and was a presidential elector in 1924. Leavy was elected Spokane County
				  prosecutor and then served three terms as a Superior Court judge. He was
				  elected to Congress in 1936, representing the 5th Congressional District; he
				  served until 1941. Leavy was sworn in as a Federal District judge for the
				  Western Washington District in 1942 and served until his retirement in 1952. He
				  was active in the fight for funds for the Grand Coulee Dam project. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>LeBreton, Preston Paul (July 27, 1923 - November 28,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Preston Paul LeBreton was Chair of the University of Washington
				  Department of Policy, Personnel Relations and Production. In 1960, he
				  relinquished the chair to teach management and organization in the College of
				  Business Administration at the UW. He was president of the Academy of
				  Management and President of the Council for Professional Education in Business.
				  In 1966, he took a year’s sabbatical in order to serve as special assistant to
				  the chief counsel for the Internal Revenue Service. In 1968, LeBreton edited 
				  <emph>Comparative Administrative Theory</emph> , a collection of essays by
				  sociologists, psychologists, anthropologists, attorneys and scholars involved
				  in university hospital and business administration.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeBretonPP1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Preston LeBreton with glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeBretonPP2</container><unittitle>Preston Paul LeBreton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ledwich, Leo Louis (September 15, 1890 - December 4,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leo Louis Ledwich was born in Iowa and grew up Yakima,
				  Washington. In 1924, he moved to Seattle and went to work at a men's store,
				  joining the Retail Clerks Union Local 174 (later Local 1001) the same year. He
				  was elected president of the union in 1925 and eventually became the
				  international vice president. He served as the reading clerk for the Seattle
				  Labor Council, the secretary of the state convention of the Washington
				  Federation of Labor and the minutes clerk for the state Senate in 1933 and
				  1936. Ledwich helped found Retail Clerks Union Local 1105. He resigned from the
				  union in 1937 to start his own business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LedwichLL1</container><unittitle>Leo Louis Ledwich</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hartsook Studio, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Arthur Trumball (November 24, 1894 - August 1,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Trumball Lee was born in Seattle and attended Ballard
				  High School, earning money for tuition at Whitman College in Walla Walla by
				  performing odd jobs, including working at a coffee shop at Pike Place Market
				  and helping dig the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks. At Whitman, he was a charter
				  member of the Washington Beta chapter of Phi Delta Theta and was just three
				  credits away from graduation when World War I broke out. A first lieutenant
				  with the 91st Division's C Company, 364th Infantry, he was wounded while
				  serving in Belgium. He earned the Distinguished Service Cross, a Purple Heart
				  and the French Croix de Guerre avec Palm. After returning from the war, he
				  married Katherine Shank. Lee joined James Farrell and Company, an import-export
				  firm where he was partner for 30 years. He retired in 1950, but was lured out
				  of retirement by an offer to help the University of Washington negotiate a
				  long-term lease for the 10-acre Metropolitan Tract, the original site of the
				  university. Lee served on the Board of Trustees for Whitman College, and
				  remained socially active in retirement, meeting each Veterans Day with the
				  remaining members of the Last Man's Club of World War I veterans, which began
				  meeting in 1938. In September 1995, former King County Superior Court Judge
				  William Wilkins died, leaving Lee as the last member of the group.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeAT1</container><unittitle>Arthur Trumball Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Chester Fairman (November 18, 1861 - February 19,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester Fairman Lee was born in Coopertown, New York. He
				  graduated from Princeton University in 1884 and took additional courses in
				  engineering at the Columbia School of Mines. He was vice president of Clark
				  Mining Machinery and president of Realty Holdings. Lee edited 
				  <emph render="italic">The Pacific Mining Journal</emph>. He married Anna Shaw
				  Williams in 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeCF1</container><unittitle>Chester Fairman Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank A. Jacobs, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on folder: Think of him faring on, as dear in the love
					 of There as the love of Here; Think of him still as the same, I say: He is not
					 dead- he is just away! For Mr. &amp; Mrs. Joseph Daniela from Mrs. Lee and
					 Fairman.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Daniel (July 1, 1806 - July 22, 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Jason Lee was one of the first Methodist missionaries to travel
				  on the Oregon Trail and settle in Oregon Country. When he traveled to Oregon in
				  1833, he selected his nephew, Daniel Lee, to be his assistant missionary.
				  Daniel Lee’s mission was located in The Dalles and on the Clatsop Plains. He
				  went to the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii) in 1835 and then returned to Oregon
				  the following year. He returned to the east in 1843 and worked as a missionary
				  in the Oklahoma Territory among the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Tribes. Lee married
				  Maria Taylor Ware, a teacher, in 1840; they had two sons.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1845?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Gordon Canfield (February 26, 1916 - November 26,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Canfield Lee was born in New York City and graduated from
				  the University of California, Berkeley in 1937. He received a master’s (1938)
				  and a doctorate (1948) from Columbia University. After three years of military
				  service during World War II, he became a member of the faculty and chair of the
				  education department of Pomona College in 1948. He returned to Columbia
				  University in 1958 to teach. Lee was Dean of the University of Washington
				  College of Education from 1961 until 1967, when he resigned to become an
				  education professor at Columbia University. During his tenure at the UW, he
				  increased professional staff and enhanced the graduate programs. He later
				  taught at Texas Tech University in Fort Worth, Texas.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeGC1</container><unittitle>Gordon Canfield Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Jason (June 28, 1803 – March 12, 1845)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jason Lee, one of the first Oregon missionaries, was
				  instrumental in the American settlement in the Oregon Country. He was born in
				  Stanstead, Quebec, Canada and attended Wilbraham Wesleyan Academy, graduating
				  in 1830. Between 1830 and 1832, he was a minister and taught school. In 1832
				  four men of the Salish or Flathead tribe journeyed to St. Louis and requested
				  someone to bring the "Book of Heaven” to the Salish people. Jason Lee
				  volunteered for service in the planned mission, and arrangements were made with
				  Nathaniel Wyeth for the small missionary group to travel with his party. The
				  group left for the west from Independence, Missouri in early 1834, ending at
				  the Hudson's Bay Company's fur trading station of Fort Vancouver. Chief Factor
				  John McLoughlin advised against creating a mission in interior Flathead land
				  and instead recommended the nearby Willamette Valley. Lee eventually settled on
				  a location northwest of the present site of Salem, Oregon. As the mission grew,
				  he was involved in politics as well as raising money for the Oregon Institute
				  (now Willamette University), a school he helped organize. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeJ1</container><unittitle>Jason Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1840-1845?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lee, Joseph Daniel (July 27, 1848 - November 22,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Daniel Lee was born in Polk County, Oregon in 1848. His
				  parents, Nicholas Lee and Sarah Hopper Lee, had crossed the plains in 1847.
				  Joseph, the eldest son, divided his time between going to school, caring for
				  the family farm, helping in his father’s store, and driving a team to Portland.
				  He took classes at a business college in Portland, and in 1870, was appointed
				  postmaster at The Dalles. He also became a partner in his father’s store. In
				  1878, he bought out his father and continued in the business for nearly
				  eighteen years. Lee was a member of Polk and Marion County conventions, state
				  conventions, and county and state committees. In 1878, he was elected to the
				  legislature from Polk County. In 1880, he was elected Senator from Polk, and in
				  1884 became the Joint Senator from Polk and Benton. He married Eliza Alice
				  Witten in 1872. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeeJD1</container><unittitle>Joseph Daniel Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lee, Robert Edward (January 19, 1807 – October 12, 1870)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Edward Lee was an American Confederate general who served
				  in the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War, during
				  which he was appointed the overall commander of the Confederate States Army. He
				  led the Army of Northern Virginia, the Confederacy's most powerful army, from
				  1862 until its surrender in 1865. In 1865, Lee became president of Washington
				  College (later Washington and Lee University) in Lexington, Virginia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LeeRE1</container><unittitle>Robert E. Lee</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H, B, Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Bradley from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leighton, Marie Alphonsine Levesque (September 2,
				  1867-April 8, 1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marie "Nin" Levesque Leighton and her sister, Emma Levesque,
				  lived in Minneapolis, Minnesota and worked at the Emporium Department Store in
				  St. Paul. In 1923, Emma moved to Seattle and wrote her sister a series of
				  letters, which her sister saved. Their great niece, Lois Vesely, found the
				  letters and transcribed them in 1999. The transcription is in UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LeightonMAL1</container><unittitle>Marie Alphonsine Levesque Leighton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 12, 1924</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Legg, Robert Swinburn (March 15, 1847 - February 2,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Swinburn Legg was born in England and came to the United
				  States in 1869. He worked as a coal miner, first in Ohio and then in Issaquah,
				  Washington. He married Jane Anderson (1850- 1888) in 1870, and Jane Fynes (1865
				  - 1908) in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leland, Alonzo (July 12, 1818 - October 24,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alonzo Leland was born in Windsor, Vermont and graduated from
				  Princeton University. After arriving in Portland in 1845, he first taught
				  school and then practiced law before starting the first daily newspaper in
				  Portland, <emph render="italic">The Democratic Standard</emph>. He also edited
				  and wrote for <emph render="italic">The Times</emph>, another Portland
				  newspaper. He was a surveyor, anti-slavery leader, and was postmaster in
				  Portland (1853-1854). In 1861, he visited the Lewiston area as a correspondent
				  for <emph render="italic">The Times</emph> and became a prominent resident,
				  mainly through his newspaper work and the publicizing of central Idaho mining
				  camps. His articles appeared frequently in Portland and California newspapers.
				  In the early 1860s, he started a saw mill, one of Asotin County's first
				  businesses, and mined quartz for several years. He later edited the 
				  <emph render="italic">North Idaho Radiator</emph> and <emph render="italic">The
				  Lewiston Teller. </emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LelandA1</container><unittitle>Alonzo Leland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a drawing from the Idaho Historical Society.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lemaster, Eunice Ella (March 27, 1871 - March 7,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eunice Ella Lemaster was the head matron of the Mother Ryther
				  Home, the predecessor to the Ryther Child Center, from 1923 until 1934.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LemasterEE1</container><unittitle>Eunice Ella Lemaster with Blind Jimmy at the Ryther
					 Home on Stoneway, near the time of Mother Ryther's death.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1934</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leon, Richard "Dick" Hayward (March 9, 1935 - November
				  7, 2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Hayward Leon graduated from Franklin High School and
				  University of Washington where he was ASUW President (1956 -1957) He received a
				  Master’s Degree from Benares Hindu University in India, a Masters of Divinity
				  from Princeton Theological Seminary, and a Doctorate of Ministry from San
				  Francisco Theological Seminary. He married Carolyn Vandiver of Yakima, WA in
				  1961. Leon was Senior Pastor at Hamburg Presbyterian Church, Hamburg, NY, Union
				  Church of Manila, Philippines, First Presbyterian Church in Spokane and
				  Bellevue Presbyterian Church. After retiring in 2001, he was Parish Associate
				  at Sammamish Presbyterian Church. He was a member of Bellevue Rotary, served on
				  the Boards of Whitworth University and Kairos USA. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeonRH1</container><unittitle>Richard Hayward Leon with UW Coach Jim Owens examining
					 a pair of boots, WSU student body president (unnamed), unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1957</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">1</container><unittitle>Leonard, Kathryn (Kate)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kathryn (Kate) Leonard is a book artist and Libraries Materials
				  Conservation Supervisor at the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersenDA1</container><unittitle>Dennis Alan Andersen standing in front of portrait of
					 Henry Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 10, 1983</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Paul Dorpat, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p> At farewell party at University of Washington Libraries
					 Suzzallo Library Smith Room. Kate Leonard is shown from the back.</p><p>File under Dennis Alan Andersen subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leslie, David (October 16, 1797 - March 11,
				  1869)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> David Leslie was an American missionary and pioneer in what
				  became the state of Oregon. A native of New Hampshire and the son of a
				  minister, he was educated at the Wilbraham Academy, where fellow missionary,
				  Jason Lee, also trained. In 1836, he joined Jason Lee as a missionary at the
				  Methodist Mission in the Oregon Country. He participated in the early movement
				  to start a government, and his home was used for some of these meetings. With
				  the closing of the mission, he became a founder of the city of Salem, Oregon,
				  and board member of the Oregon Institute, which later became Willamette
				  University. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeslieD1</container><unittitle>David Leslie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeslieD2</container><unittitle>David Leslie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photoprint issued by the Oregon Historical Society, not to be
					 resold or copied for re-sale.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Leverett, John (baptized July 7, 1616 – March 16,
				  1678/9)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Leverett was an English colonial magistrate, merchant,
				  soldier and the penultimate governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Born in
				  England, he came to Massachusetts as a teenager. He was a leading merchant in
				  the colony, and served in its military. In the 1640s he went back to England to
				  fight in the English Civil War. He was opposed to the strict Puritan religious
				  orthodoxy in the colony. He also believed the colonial government was not
				  within the power of the English crown and government, a politically hardline
				  position that contributed to the eventual revocation of the colonial charter in
				  1684. He was popular with his troops and was elected governor of the colony,
				  serving from 1673 until his death in 1679. He oversaw the colonial actions in
				  King Philip's War and expanded the colony's territories by purchasing land
				  claims in present-day Maine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeverettJ1</container><unittitle>John Leverett</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1670 and 1679?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Denison Kimberly</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Levesque, Emma Aimee (September 8, 1883 - February 25,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marie Levesque Leighton and her sister, Emma Levesque, lived in
				  Minneapolis, Minesota and worked at the Emporium Department Store in St. Paul.
				  In 1923, Emma moved to Seattle and wrote her sister a series of letters, which
				  her sister saved. Their great niece, Lois Vesely, found the letters and
				  transcribed them in 1999. The transcription is in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevesqueEA1</container><unittitle>Emma Levesque outside of a house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevesqueEA2</container><unittitle>Emma Levesque in the mountains</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1924?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevesqueEA3</container><unittitle>Emma Levesque with Frances Welch in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1924?</unitdate></did><note><p>Frances Welch and Emma Levesque worked together at Frederick
					 &amp; Nelson Department Store in Seattle.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Levine, Rabbi Raphael Harry (August 15, 1901- November
				  4, 1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Raphael Levine was born in 1901 in Vilna, Lithuania, then part
				  of the Russian Empire. He and his parents moved to Duluth, Minnesota in 1909.
				  He attended the University of Minnesota where he earned a B.A. and a law degree
				  in 1926. He became a rabbi in 1932 and served in Liverpool, England until 1938,
				  when he was invited to serve in London. He returned to the United States in
				  1941 and went on a speaking tour about his experiences with refugees and the
				  Blitz. In 1942, he was appointed rabbi of Temple de Hirsch and served as chief
				  rabbi and rabbi emeritus for 42 years. He was a prominent community leader who
				  built communication and understanding between nationalities, races, and
				  religions, and he received many humanitarian awards. He co-founded Camp
				  Brotherhood, an ecumenical conference center near Mount Vernon and he authored
				  several books. He was an advocate for children, handicapped adults, and the
				  mentally ill, and served on the board of directors of United Good Neighbors.
				  Rabbi Levine participated in <emph>Challenge</emph> with leaders of two other
				  faiths, reportedly the first interfaith program in the United States. `The
				  Seattle-King County Association of Realtors named Rabbi Levine First Citizen of
				  1976.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LevineRH1</container><unittitle>Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960-1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LevineRH2</container><unittitle>Rabbi Raphael Levine, Rev. Martin Goslin and Father
					 William Treacy during the KOMO-TV Challenge Panel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1988</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG2</container><unittitle>Martin G. Johanson with Reverend Floyd Green, Father
					 Paul Luger, Judge Charles Stokes and Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Levy, Aubrey A. (June 10, 1879 - July 21,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aubrey A. Levy was a lawyer and philanthropist. The family moved
				  to Seattle from Idaho in 1889, and his father, Aaron Levy, and his
				  brother-in-law, Isaac Cooper, started a mercantile business, Cooper &amp; Levy.
				  The store, which was later sold to the Bon Marche, was one of the principal
				  outfitters during the Alaska Gold Rush. His father also owned the first
				  Coliseum Theater and organized the first Reform Jewish congregation that became
				  Temple de Hirsch. As a young man, Levy was nationally known for his musical
				  compositions and playing ability. At the UW, he led the orchestra, and composed
				  “Princess Angeline Waltz” in honor of Chief Seattle’s daughter. He graduated
				  from the University of Washington in 1900, where he received the President’s
				  Medal for oratory. After he graduated from the UW Law School in 1902, he went
				  into private practice, specializing in leases, income tax and estate planning.
				  With his brother, Eugene Levy, and his brother-in-law, Isaac Cooper, he owned
				  the Republic Building at Third and Pike. None of them had children, and in
				  their wills, they directed the income from the building to go to charity.
				  Aubrey Levy left the majority of his estate to the University of
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevyAA1</container><unittitle>Aubrey A. Levy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis &amp; Guptill, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Levy, Henry Emanuel (June 9, 1843 - July 4,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Emanuel Levy was born in New Zealand. His parents,
				  Benjamin Levy and Esther Solomon Levy, had moved from London to New Zealand in
				  the 1830s; in 1846, the family moved to Sydney, Australia and then to
				  California. They briefly returned to England, and on the return voyage to
				  California, his father died. Henry Levy found work in New York as a shoemaker
				  before returning to the west coast, first to San Francisco and then to
				  Victoria, B.C. where he eventually secured a job on the police force under A.
				  F. Pemberton. He later worked as a watchman on the waterfront until gold was
				  discovered on the Leech River. He was unsuccessful in finding gold, so he
				  returned to Victoria where he acquired the Arcade Oyster Saloon on Government
				  Street. In 1863, he joined the Victoria Fire Department as a member of the
				  Tiger Engine Fire Company No 2. Leaving his brother in charge of the
				  restaurant, Levy went to Seattle in 1870 and started a soda water factory and
				  bottling works. He operated The Bazaar, a store that sold miscellaneous goods
				  and commodities, and invested in the salting of salmon, hop growing, and a salt
				  works at Point Roberts. He owned real estate in Seattle, and suffered major
				  losses during the Seattle Fire of 1889. Returning to Victoria, he invested in
				  residential real estate. His brother, Jacob “Jack” Levy was a baseball
				  pioneer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevyHE1</container><unittitle>Henry Emanuel Levy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 30, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gibson, Victoria B.C</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, Andrew Taylor (November 10, 1848 - November 2,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Taylor Lewis graduated from the State Normal University
				  at Normal, Illinois in 1871 and received a law degree from the University of
				  Michigan in 1875. He was the city attorney for Urbana, Illinois from 1875 to
				  1878. In 1884, he was appointed Clerk of the United States District Court of
				  the District of Alaska, and later Secretary and Treasurer of the Territory,
				  serving until 1887. Lewis moved to Oregon in 1888, where he practiced law.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinkeadJH1</container><unittitle>Copy of photograph of the first officials of the Civil
					 Government of Alaska, taken in front of the Custom House in Sitka,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1885</unitdate></did><note><p> John Kinkead, seated. Standing from left to right: Edwin W.
					 Haskett, Munson C. Hillyer, Samuel Ward McCallister, Jr., Andrew T. Lewis.</p><p>Filed under John Henry Kinkead subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, Alfred W.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Alfred W. Lewis was director of concessions at the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. He enlisted in the British Army where he
				  studied artillery and fought for the British Army during the Boer Wars. In 1910
				  took charge of the artillery of the Madero Insurgents within the corps where
				  Captain James Charles Bulger and then Colonel Antonio I. Villarreal were
				  located. He left the fight with the entrance of Francisco I. Madero to the
				  presidency of Mexico after the fall of Ciudad Juárez by the troops of General
				  Pascual Orozco. Upon returning to America, he sold the idea of re-enacting the
				  Battle of Transvaal for the 1904 St. Louis World Fair. It was one of the
				  largest attractions, using actual uniforms, 600 soldiers, and 500 horses for
				  the re-enactment. He went on to fight in the Mexican Revolutionary War,
				  retiring in May 1911, and moving to California. During the 1915 Pacific Panama
				  International Exposition, he staged the Tehuantepec Village and the
				  Forty-Niners Camp where visitors could pan for gold and diamonds.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisAW1</container><unittitle>Alfred W. Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisAW2</container><unittitle>Alfred W. Lewis seated at desk with architectural
					 drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of original.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansRD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robley Dunglison Evans in an
					 automobile with others in front of a building, during a tour of the site of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Seated in front, next to chauffeur: J. A. Kruikshank, manager
					 of Admiral Evans' lecture tour; in second seat: President of A-Y-P Board John
					 E. Chilberg and Captain Alfred W. Lewis, director of concessions; seated in
					 back: Admiral Evans and Mrs. Evans. The photo appeared in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> on March 30, 1909.</p><p>Filed under Robley Dunglison Evans subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, Haman C. (January 21, 1809 - April 17,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Haman C. Lewis was born in New York City. He was the son of a
				  ship carpenter and was apprenticed to learn the trade of a cooper. When he was
				  fourteen, he went to sea, serving six months as cabin boy, and later was
				  apprenticed to the ship carpenter. At eighteen, he went as to the Gulf Coast,
				  taking service on a Mexican privateer. In 1830, he worked on the Mississippi
				  steamboats as carpenter. After six years, he became an itinerant merchant.
				  Lewis married Mary Moore in 1839, and they had a farm in Northern Missouri.
				  In1845, they joined a company crossing the plains to The Dalles. The family
				  spent the first winter in the Willamette Valley and then moved to Benton
				  County, Oregon. Lewis obtained employment making desks for the state house, and
				  selling cattle and wheat. In later years, he devoted himself to farming,
				  stock-raising and dealing in land, cattle and horses. Lewis was a member of the
				  Oregon Constitutional Convention and served in the legislature from 1857 to
				  1860. He was the founder of Lewisburg, an unincorporated town north of
				  Corvallis and west of Albany.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisHC1</container><unittitle>Haman C. Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, James Hamilton (May 18, 1863 - April 9,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Hamilton Lewis was a State Representative from Washington
				  and a Senator from Illinois. He was born in Danville, Virginia and moved with
				  his parents to Augusta, Georgia in 1866. He attended the University of Virginia
				  at Charlottesville, studied law in Savannah, Georgia and was admitted to the
				  bar in 1882. Lewis moved to Washington Territory in 1885 and began his law
				  practice in Seattle. He was a member of the Washington Territorial legislature
				  (1887-1888) and was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-fifth Congress (March 4,
				  1897-March 3, 1899). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection. He served
				  during the Spanish-American War as inspector general with rank of colonel in
				  Puerto Rico. He ran unsuccessfully as a Democratic candidate for United States
				  Senator in 1899. He moved to Chicago in 1903 and resumed the practice of law.
				  He was the corporation counsel for Chicago 1905-1907, an unsuccessful candidate
				  for Governor in 1908 and was elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate,
				  serving from March 26, 1913, to March 3, 1919. He served as the Democratic
				  Whip, 1913-1919. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection and also ran
				  unsuccessfully as the Democratic candidate for Governor of Illinois in 1920.
				  Lewis practiced international law until he was again elected as a Democrat to
				  the United States Senate in 1930, serving until his death in 1939. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisJH1</container><unittitle>James Hamilton Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Moore, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, Joseph Reynolds (September 17, 1829 - March 19,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judge Joseph Reynolds Lewis was born in London, Ohio in 1829. He
				  was educated at the Academy of London; by the age of 17, he began teaching
				  while studying law. He was admitted to the bar in 1854. He was prosecuting
				  attorney for Washington County, Iowa and was a member of the convention at Iowa
				  City in 1856 when the Republican Party was fully organized. He was appointed an
				  associate justice of the Idaho Supreme Court by President Grant in 1869. Lewis
				  served in Boise and in Walla Walla before arriving in Seattle where he helped
				  organize the first school system. In 1881 he was one of the chief founders of
				  the Chamber of Commerce and its first president. He retired from the bench in
				  1883. During the controversy between Seattle and the Northern Pacific Railroad
				  in 1885, he was elected a member of the Territorial House of Representatives to
				  look after the interest of the city and county. In 1888 and 1889, he was the
				  chairman of the building committee which constructed the First Methodist
				  Church. In the 1890s, Lewis moved to San Jose, California where he invested in
				  the extensive prune orchards in the area. Lewis later became one of the regents
				  of the University of Southern California at Los Angeles. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisJR1</container><unittitle>Joseph Reynolds Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original drawing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lewis, Mary Bess Terry (June 13, 1884 -
				  December 2, 1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Bess Terry Lewis was the daughter of Howard Holden Lewis
				  and Betsy Jane Terry. Her father was the son of Judge Joseph R. Lewis, and her
				  mother was the daughter of Charles C. Terry, a member of the Denny Party. She
				  married Oliver Hazard Perry LaFarge in Seattle on November 29, 1907; the couple
				  had two children. Her husband, an architect, was the son of the artist John
				  LaFarge, the great grandson of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry and an uncle of
				  Oliver LaFarge, the author and anthropologist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisMBT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Mary Bess Terry Lewis and Virginia
					 Scurry Council</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisMBT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Bess Terry Lewis and Betsy
					 Scurry Van Vechten</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McClaire, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lewis, Meriwether (August 18, 1774 – October 11, 1809)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Meriwether Lewis was an American explorer, soldier, politician,
				  and public administrator, best known for his role as the leader of the Lewis
				  and Clark Expedition, also known as the Corps of Discovery, with William
				  Clark.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisM1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Meriwether Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1807?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Charles Willson Peale</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of the painting by Peale in Independence Hall,
					 Philadelphia, PA.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisM2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Meriwether Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1807?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Charles Willson Peale</persname></origination></did><note><p>Smaller copy of a painting by Peale.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisM3</container><unittitle>Meriwether Lewis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1800 and 1809?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisM4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Meriwether Lewis and William
					 Clark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1807?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
					 after a painting by Charles Willson Peale.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Liabø, Oliver Ole ( November 26, 1844 - July 29,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oliver Ole Liabø was born in Oppdal, Norway. He was a pioneer of
				  Port Madison, Washington and held several county offices.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LiaboOO1</container><unittitle>Oliver O. Liabø</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 5, 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Johnson, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lillie, Gordon William "Pawnee Bill" (February 14,1860 -
				  February 3, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>"Major" Gordon William Lillie was born in Bloomington, Illinois;
				  his family moved to Wellington, Kansas, in the 1870s. In Kansas, Lillie
				  encountered Pawnee Indians en route to reservations in Indian Territory (now
				  part of Oklahoma). Beginning in 1879, Lillie worked as an interpreter and later
				  a teacher for the Pawnee agency. In 1883 he served as a Pawnee interpreter for
				  the first season of Buffalo Bill's Wild West. Lillie later created his own
				  show, Pawnee Bill's Historic Wild West. A long-time admirer of William F. Cody,
				  Lillie formed a partnership with Cody in 1908. Their joint venture was formally
				  known as Buffalo Bill's Wild West Combined With Pawnee Bill's Great Far East,
				  but colloquially as the "Two Bills." He often billed as "Major" Lillie, but is
				  not known to have served in the active military. Because "major" was a common
				  courtesy title for U.S. Indian agents in the nineteenth century, his work on
				  the Pawnee reservation (though not as an actual agent) may have been the basis
				  for his use of the title.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>Bill Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma with Major John Burke,
					 Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill) Lillie, and Jose
					 Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p><p>Filed under William F. Cody subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lillie, May Emma Manning (March 12, 1869 - September 17,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Emma "May" Manning, the daughter of William R. Manning and
				  Mary Peak Manning, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She married Gordon
				  William "Pawnee Bill" Lillie on August 31, 1886, in her hometown. They had one
				  child. She died in 1936 in Oklahoma, at the age of 67.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>Bill Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma with Major John Burke,
					 Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill) Lillie, and Jose
					 Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p><p>Filed under William F. Cody subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Limbach, Roberta Webster (June 21, 1878 - January 26,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roberta Webster Limbach, the daughter of Robert Webster and Dona
				  Peppel Limbach, was born in Bainbridge, Ohio. She attended the New England
				  Conservatory of Music and the University of Washington. She taught school in
				  Aspen, Colorado and Boston, Massachusetts, before joining the University of
				  Washington in the College of Education. Limbach was in charge of the Bureau of
				  Teacher Services and Placement and was instrumental in placing thousands of
				  educators throughout Washington during her thirty years with the University.
				  She was married to Edmund C. Limbach, a mining engineer, who died in 1914. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LimbachRW1</container><unittitle>Roberta Limbach (standing) at her retirement
					 dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 22, 1948</unitdate></did><note><p>On May 22, 1948, a retirement dinner was held at the Edmond
					 Meany Hotel in Seattle, honoring Roberta Limbach for her thirty years of
					 service as appointment secretary for the University of Washington Bureau of
					 Teacher Service and Placement. Over 150 educators from Washington attended,
					 including Raymond B. Allen, president of the University of Washington; Dean
					 Francis F. Powers, head of the College of Education; and Pearl Wanamaker, State
					 Superintendent of Public Instruction.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LimbachRW2</container><unittitle>Roberta Limbach (seated) at her retirement
					 dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 22, 1948</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LimbachRW3</container><unittitle>Roberta Limbach with Professor John A. Finley, Kate S.
					 Underhill, unidentified man and unidentified child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1946?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lincoln, Abraham (February 12, 1809 – April 15,
				  1865)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Lincoln was an American politician and lawyer who served
				  as the 16th President of the United States from March 1861 until his
				  assassination in April 1865. Lincoln led the United States through its Civil
				  War. While doing so, he preserved the Union, abolished slavery, strengthened
				  the federal government, and modernized the economy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LincolnA1</container><unittitle>Abraham Lincoln</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1860?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alexander Hessler, Chicago, Illinois</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of the original photograph, made from a duplicate
					 negative.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LincolnA2</container><unittitle>Abraham Lincoln</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 8, 1863</unitdate><origination><persname>Alexander Gardner</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of the original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LincolnA3</container><unittitle>Abraham Lincoln</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1860?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Joseph Hill</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Presented to my friend, Prof. Edmond S.
					 Meany of Seattle, Wn. This photograph is the oldest portrait of Lincoln that I
					 know of. It has been in my possession for 53 years. Good bye, good bye, old
					 companion. Are going into good company. Joseph Hill, 15, November. (The rest is
					 illegible.)</p><p>Joseph Hill was an unofficial member of Knox College in
					 Galesburg, Illinois. When lecturers came to the college, he would take their
					 photographs. On several occasions, he photographed President Abraham Lincoln.
					 He roomed with Orville Grant, the brother of General Ulysses S. Grant, and met
					 many of the prominent men of the Civil War period. Many of his photographs and
					 negatives were destroyed in a fire at his gallery; some of the prints,
					 including one of Lincoln, were stored in a shed and were saved.</p></note><note><p>Original in Abraham Lincoln portrait collection</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LincolnA4</container><unittitle>Abraham Lincoln</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1860</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the cover of <emph render="italic">The Campaign of
					 1860, Republican Songs for the People, Original and Selected</emph> compiled by
					 Thomas Drew</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LincolnA5</container><unittitle>Abraham Lincoln</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1863?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H, B, Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Alexander
					 Hesler from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindbergh, Anne Morrow (June 22, 1906 – February 7,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anne Morrow Lindbergh was an American author, aviator, and the
				  wife of aviator Charles Lindbergh. Morrow and Lindbergh met on December 21,
				  1927 and were married on May 27, 1929. That year, she flew solo for the first
				  time, and in 1930, she became the first American woman to earn a first-class
				  glider pilot's license. In the 1930s, the couple explored and charted air
				  routes between continents, and they were the first to fly from Africa to South
				  America. She was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame (1979), the
				  National Women's Hall of Fame (1996), the Aviation Hall of Fame of New Jersey,
				  and the International Women in Aviation Pioneer Hall of Fame (1999).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghAM1</container><unittitle>Anne Morrow Lindbergh in Alaska with two unidentified
					 women</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghAM2</container><unittitle>Anne Morrow Lindbergh in Alaska with Charles
					 Lindbergh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1931</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghC3</container><unittitle>Charles Lindbergh and Anne Morrow Lindbergh in
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1931</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Lindbergh subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindbergh, Charles (Feb. 4, 1902 - Aug. 26,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Lindbergh was an American aviator, author, inventor,
				  military officer and explorer. In 1927, he emerged from the virtual obscurity
				  of a U.S. Air Mail pilot to instantaneous world fame as the result of his solo
				  nonstop flight from New York to Paris, France. He was awarded the nation's
				  highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor, for his historic exploit. In
				  the late 1920s and early 1930s, Lindbergh used his fame to promote the
				  development of both commercial aviation and Air Mail services in the United
				  States and the Americas. Before the United States formally entered World War
				  II, Lindbergh supported the isolationist America First movement, and he
				  subsequently resigned his commission as a colonel in the United States Army Air
				  Forces after being publicly rebuked by President Roosevelt for his views. He
				  supported the war effort after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and flew 50
				  combat missions in the Pacific Theater of World War II as a civilian
				  consultant, although President Roosevelt had refused to reinstate his Army Air
				  Corps colonel's commission. In his later years, Lindbergh became an author and
				  an environmentalist.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghC1</container><unittitle>Charles Lindbergh in automobile at his reception at UW
					 Husky Stadium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 14, 1927</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward C. Kilbourne</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghC2</container><unittitle>Charles Lindbergh's reception at UW Husky
					 Stadium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 14, 1927</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward C. Kilbourne</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindberghC3</container><unittitle>Charles Lindbergh and Anne Morrow Lindbergh in
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1931</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindquist, G.F. - see Gustavus F. Linquist</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsay, Nicholas Vachel (November 10, 1879 – December
				  5, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Vachel Lindsay was a poet and performance artist. Born in
				  Springfield, Illinois, he used many American Midwest themes in his work and
				  became known as the "Prairie Troubadour" because he preferred singing or
				  performing his work from stage as opposed to the written word. In the final
				  twenty years of his life, Lindsay was one of the best known poets in the United
				  States. His reputation enabled him to befriend, encourage and mentor other
				  poets, such as Langston Hughes and Sara Teasdale.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsayNV1</container><unittitle>Vachel Lindsay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsay, John James "Jack" (1877 - May 22,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John James “Jack” Lindsay was born in Phillips, Kansas and
				  attended the University of Washington from 1895 until 1898. He was the captain
				  of the football team in 1896 and 1897 and was also the business manager for the
				  <emph render="italic">Pacific Wave</emph>, the campus newspaper. In 1898, he
				  joined the party of Colonel Edward S. Ingraham, which was headed for the Alaska
				  gold fields aboard the schooner <emph render="italic">Jane Gray</emph>. The
				  ship sailed from Seattle for Kotzebue Sound on the 19th of May with sixty-one
				  persons on board, and foundered Sunday, May 22, about ninety miles west of Cape
				  Flattery, at 2 o'clock in the morning. Thirty-four of the passengers drowned,
				  including Lindsay.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsayJJ1</container><unittitle>John "Jack" Lindsay in football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1896 and 1897</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsley, Aaron Ladner (March 4, 1817 - August 12,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aaron Ladner Lindsley was born in New York and studied for the
				  ministry. He married Julia West in 1846, and the couple began their missionary
				  work in Wisconsin Territory. They returned to New York in 1852 and settled in
				  South Salem, where they spent 16 years in church and educational work. In 1868,
				  they moved to Portland, Oregon where he was installed as the first pastor of
				  the Portland Presbyterian Church. During his time in Portland, Lindsley
				  organized twenty-two churches, did missionary work in Idaho, Washington and
				  Alaska, and inaugurated the Chinese missions in the Northwest. In 1886, he
				  accepted a professorship at the San Francisco Theological Seminary. He died
				  after being thrown from a runaway carriage when it struck a log. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsleyAL1</container><unittitle>Aaron Ladner Lindsley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1883</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Towne &amp; Moore, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsley, Addison Alexander (December 16, 1848 - April
				  13, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Addison Alexander Lindsley, the son of Aaron and Julia Lindsley,
				  was born in Port Waukesha, Wisconsin, in 1848. When he was nineteen, he moved
				  with his family to Portland, Oregon. Lindsley graduated from Forest Grove
				  Pacific University in 1870 with a degree in civil engineering. He worked as a
				  civil engineer and surveyor for the Northern Pacific Railroad and for the
				  United States Government. In 1874, he was employed by the city of San Francisco
				  as the city and county surveyor. In 1882, he returned to the northwest and
				  purchased a farm in Clark County, Washington. He was a member of the
				  territorial legislature and a delegate to the constitutional convention of
				  1889. That same year, he was elected to the office of Oregon State Treasurer.
				  He made three trips to the Klondike during the gold rush, and for several years
				  was the president of the Lindsley-Wright Company, a dealer in cedar poles as
				  well as the president of the Associated Brokers Company of Portland. He was the
				  treasurer of the Oregon Society of the Sons of the American Revolution for
				  seventeen years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsleyAA1</container><unittitle>Addison Alexander Lindsley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McAlpin &amp; Lamb, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsley, Julia West (February 23, 1827 - May 2,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia West, the youngest of 12 children of John West, was born
				  in New York City. She graduated with honors in 1844 from Rutgers College, where
				  she was a gold medalist. On May 12, 1846, she married Aaron Ladnner Lindsley,
				  and the couple began their missionary work in Wisconsin Territory. They
				  returned to New York in 1852 and settled in South Salem, where they spent 16
				  years in church and educational work. In 1868, they moved to Portland, Oregon
				  where her husband was installed as the first pastor of the Portland
				  Presbyterian Church. When the North Pacific Presbyterian Board of Missions was
				  founded, Mrs. Lindsley, one of its founders, became an officer and an honorary
				  member. When her husband accepted a professorship at the San Francisco
				  Theological Seminary in 1886, she became an officer and life member of the
				  Occidental Board of Foreign Missions, whose headquarters are in San Francisco,
				  and took an active part in their philanthropic movements. She returned to
				  Portland after the death of her husband in 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsleyJW1</container><unittitle>Julia Lindsley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1883</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Towne &amp; Moore, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lindsley, Lawrence Denny (March 18, 1878 – January 3,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lawrence Denny Lindsley was an American scenic photographer who
				  also worked as a miner, hunter, and guide. Lindsley, a grandson of Seattle
				  pioneer David Thomas Denny, a member of the Denny Party, was born in a cabin in
				  Seattle. In 1895, Lindsley went to work in the Esther Mine, near Gold Creek,
				  Kittitas County and later worked on the first road along Lake Keechelus. In
				  1903, he went to work as a photo processor and photographer for the W. P.
				  Romans Photographic Company in Seattle. He owned part interest in the studio
				  when it was purchased by Asahel Curtis in 1910. This association led him to
				  work for Edward S. Curtis, where Lindsley developed some of the color negatives
				  for Curtis. As an early-day explorer of the North Cascades, Lindsley became a
				  charter member of the Mountaineers Club in 1907. Sometime between 1910 and
				  1914, Lindsley moved to Lake Chelan where he was employed by the Great Northern
				  Railway photographing Glacier National Park for the railroad’s tourist
				  literature. When Lindsley returned to Seattle in 1916, he resumed working in
				  Edward Curtis’ studio. He continued his work at the Curtis Studio and his own
				  landscape and nature photography throughout the 1920s, perfecting his technique
				  of lantern slide photography.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsleyLD1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Denny Lindsley with camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LindsleyLD2</container><unittitle>Lawrence Denny Lindsley with camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Linquist, Gustavus Francis (August 14, 1828 - January
				  23, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gustavus Francis Linquist was born in Goteborg, Sweden. He
				  immigrated to the United States, settling first in New York. During the
				  American Civil War, he served as a commissioned officer from his enlistment
				  date in 1861 until the end of the war. He married Catherine Lindborg in 1865.
				  In 1884, Linquist was the organizer and first president of the Swedish Order of
				  Valhalla, a fraternal society established for the benefit of Swedish
				  immigrants. He owned the Pioneer Factory in Tacoma, specializing in flags and
				  awnings. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LinquistGF1</container><unittitle>Gustavus Francis Linquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>His last name is spelled "Lindquist" on the photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lippy, Thomas Sergent (December 2, 1860 - September 13,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas S. Lippy was an American millionaire and philanthropist
				  who struck it rich in the Klondike Gold Rush. He was the athletic director of
				  the Seattle YMCA before he and his wife Salome joined the gold rush in 1896. He
				  sold his holdings in 1903. With his wealth, he and his wife went on a worldwide
				  tour, before building a lavishly decorated 15-room house in Seattle. He gave
				  generously to the YMCA, the First United Methodist Church, and the Anti-Saloon
				  League, and donated the land for a five-story addition to the Seattle General
				  Hospital. He also set up a free hospital for miners in Dawson City, Canada, and
				  sent a library of 1000 volumes to Skagway, Alaska. Lippy won the 1907 Pacific
				  Northwest Amateur Golf tournament, and was the Port Commissioner of the Port of
				  Seattle from 1918 to 1921. Unfortunately, his business investments, a
				  mattress-and-upholstery company, a brick company, a trust-and-savings bank, and
				  the Lippy Building, all failed, and he died bankrupt in 1931. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LippyTS1</container><unittitle>Thomas S. Lippy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of Thomas Libby and his home at 1019 James Street
					 in Seattle. The home was demolished in 1961.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lipton, Sir Thomas Johnstone (May 10, 1848 - October 2,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir Thomas Lipton was a self-made man, merchant, and yachtsman.
				  He engaged in extensive advertising for his chain of grocery stores and his
				  brand of Lipton teas. He said that his secret for success was selling the best
				  goods at the cheapest prices, harnessing the power of advertising, and always
				  being optimistic. He was the most persistent challenger in the history of the
				  America's Cup, and bequeathed the majority of his fortune to his native city of
				  Glasgow, including his yachting trophies. While visiting Seattle in November,
				  1912, he was so impressed with what he saw as perfect sailing waters that he
				  promised to commemorate his visit by donating a perpetual challenge cup to the
				  Seattle Yacht Club. The Lipton Cup became the main trophy for the International
				  6 Metre Class in the Northwest.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LiptonTJ1</container><unittitle>Sir Thomas Lipton, Hiram Conibear and other
					 unidentified men at the UW Crew House</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LiptonTJ2</container><unittitle>Sir Thomas Lipton, Hiram Conibear and other
					 unidentified men in front of a car at the UW Crew House</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1912</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lister, David (March 31, 1821 - July 20,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Lister was born in England in 1821 and came to New York in
				  1847. He worked for steamboat companies in that city until 1854, when he went
				  to Philadelphia and worked for the Delaware Canal Company. In 1864, he went to
				  Peshtigo, Wisconsin, where he established a foundry and machine shop. On
				  October 8, 1871, a fire destroyed the town, killing more than eight hundred
				  people. This fire left him penniless, but he was able to rebuild. In 1875,
				  seeking a milder climate, he moved to Tacoma and built a foundry. In 1882, at
				  Wilkinson, he successfully inaugurated coke-making in Washington Territory. His
				  foundry did all the repairs for the steamers running to and from Tacoma, as
				  well as work for the Northern Pacific Railway. Lister became the first mayor of
				  New Tacoma in 1881, before the merger of the town with Old Tacoma in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">ListerD1</container><unittitle>David Lister</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lister, Ernest (June 15, 1870 - June 14, 1919)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ernest Lister, the eighth governor of the State of Washington,
				  was born in England and came to the United States in 1884. He settled in
				  Tacoma, where his uncle, David Lister, was mayor. He worked in his uncle’s
				  foundry and was active in the union. In 1894, he held his first elective office
				  as Tacoma city councilman. He worked on the campaign of John R. Rogers in 1896;
				  when Rogers became governor, he appointed Lister as chairman of the Board of
				  Control. After Rogers’ death, Lister returned to Tacoma and became the owner of
				  the Lister Construction Company, and president and general manager of Lister
				  Manufacturing. He served as the director of the Scandinavian-American Bank of
				  Tacoma and in 1910, was one of the commissioners who framed the Tacoma city
				  charter. He ran unsuccessfully for Congress and the State Senate before being
				  elected governor in 1912; he was re-elected in 1916. As governor, he supported
				  agricultural aid, irrigation and reclamation projects, and state industrial
				  accident insurance.. Lister vetoed legislation that would have denied civil
				  rights to members of the Industrial Workers of the World, and his efforts
				  helped bring the eight-hour work day to the Pacific Northwest. He became ill
				  during his second term and relinquished his office to the Lieutenant
				  Governor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">ListerE1</container><unittitle>Ernest Lister</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 14, 1915</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Earl Bixby Depue, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p> Governor Ernest Lister and other unidentified men with
					 replica of the Liberty Bell; crowd of people standing behind bell; officer in
					 front.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH11</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Governor Ernest Lister; Dr.
					 Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; and Dr. Ernest O.
					 Holland, president of Washington State College, taken on the day of President
					 Suzzallo's inauguration.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 21, 1916</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears on page 14 of the 1916 edition of 
						<emph>The Tyee.</emph></p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Little, Daniel P. (October 22, 1831 - June 29,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Little was born in Maine and crossed the plains to
				  Oregon. In 1850, he went north to Cowlitz County where he took a Donation Land
				  Claim. He married Dorcas Corwin in Portland, Oregon in 1855.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moore, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Little, Herbert Satterwaite (October 6, 1902 - December
				  15, 1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Satterwaite Little was a lawyer and the only person to
				  serve as president of the University of Washington student body, president of
				  the UW Alumni Association (1935-1936) and president of the UW Board of Regents.
				  He was on the Board of Regents from 1960 to 1965 and was its president in
				  1964-1965. Born in Manchester, England, Little came to Seattle in 1914 and
				  attended Queen Anne High School and the University of Washington. He served as
				  president of the UW Associated Students in 1921, received a law degree from the
				  UW in 1921 and a master’s degree in political science in 1927. While attending
				  the University, he was a member of a committee which promoted construction of
				  Husky Stadium. He also served as president of the Pacific Coast Association of
				  Student Presidents. During World War II, he saw duty in the Army in the judge
				  advocate general’s office and in the Office of Strategic Services. He was
				  awarded the Bronze Star in 1945. Little was president of the first Japanese
				  Trade Fair held in Seattle in 1951, and he lectured widely in international
				  law. He was chair of the Pacific Northwest branch of the Institute of Pacific
				  Relations and a trustee of numerous civic, business and charitable
				  organizations. He was a member of the Council of the Section on International
				  and Comparative Law of the American Bar Association, the Council of Foreign
				  Relations, the executive council of the American Society of International Law
				  and the American Council of the Institute of Pacific Relations.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LittleHS1</container><unittitle>Herbert Little</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1972?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Locke, Irene Fisher (April 5, 1901 - September 23,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Irene Vivian Fisher was the daughter of Oliver David Fisher, one
				  of the founders of Fisher Flouring Mills. She married John Loor Locke in 1920.
				  After her marriage, she was active in civic affairs, serving as the volunteer
				  director of the war bond drives for Washington State and King County. She also
				  served on the Emergency Committee of the National Council on Crime and
				  Delinquency, the Washington State Council on Crime and Delinquency, the
				  National intercollegiate Studies Institute, the National Citizens Council on
				  Mental Health, and the budget and the executive committees of the Community
				  Chest. Both she and her husband enjoyed sailing and boating. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LockeJL1</container><unittitle>John Loor Locke with Irene Fisher Locke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Christmas card with photograph of Mr. and Mrs. Locke in
					 uniforms. "Merry Christmas Good Sailing in 1954 The Locke's of Seattle."</p><p>Filed under John Loor Locke subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Locke, John Loor (June 1, 1896 - April
				  2, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Loor Locke was born in Cambridge, Ohio. He graduated from
				  Broadway High School in 1914 and from Stanford University in 1918. He served in
				  the Navy during World War I. He joined Fisher Flouring Mill Company in 1919,
				  became president and general manager of the company in 1948, board chair in
				  1965 and president of the Fisher holding company in 1971. He was the director
				  of several financial and business organizations including Washington Mutual
				  Savings Bank and General Insurance Company. He was a member of the Seattle
				  Yacht Club and won several trophies. He married Irene Vivian Fisher, the
				  daughter of Oliver David Fisher, one of the founders of Fisher Flouring Mills,
				  in 1920. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LockeJL1</container><unittitle>John Loor Locke with Irene Fisher Locke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Christmas card with photograph of Mr. and Mrs. Locke in
					 uniforms. "Merry Christmas Good Sailing in 1954 The Locke's of Seattle."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lodge, Henry Cabot Jr. (July 5, 1902 – February 27,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., the son of George Cabot Lodge, a poet,
				  and the grandson of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, was a Republican United States
				  Senator from Massachusetts and a U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, South
				  Vietnam, West Germany, and the Holy See as Presidential Representative. He was
				  the Republican nominee for Vice President in the 1960 Presidential election.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LodgeHC1</container><unittitle>Crowds with signs greeting Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.,
					 possibly during his visit to Seattle as part of his West Coast campaign
					 tour</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LodgeHC2</container><unittitle>Crowds greeting Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., possibly during
					 his visit to Seattle as part of his West Coast campaign tour</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lomen, Alfred Julian (October 3, 1889 - May 17,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred, one of five brothers who were prominent in Alaska
				  business, spent over forty years in Alaska. He founded the Lomen Company with
				  his brother Carl to export reindeer meat and hides to the United States. He was
				  president of Lomen Commercial Company, which operated a machine and lighterage
				  business in Alaska. He participated in two air searches, directing the search
				  for Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Borland, who were lost in 1929. He was one of the
				  first to reach the crash site of Will Rogers and Wiley Post near Port Barrow.
				  Lomen served three terms as a senator for the Nome district in the Territorial
				  Legislature. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen2</container><unittitle>Alfred, Carl and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lomen Brothers</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred, Carl, Harry and Ralph Lomen were the sons of Judge G. J.
				  Lomen, a federal judge in Alaska, and Julie Joys Lomen. Judge Lomen and Carl
				  first went to Alaska in 1900 during the Gold Rush; the rest of the family
				  followed in 1903. The family operated several businesses, including a drug
				  store, photography studio, merchandise stores and a lighterage company. Carl
				  and Alfred also formed a company to export reindeer meat and hides to the
				  United States. They not only took photographs but also bought several
				  collections of photographers, including Frank Nowell, A. B. Kinney, B. B. Dobbs
				  and A. O Goetz; many of the negatives and commercial prints were lost when a
				  fire destroyed most of Nome in 1934. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen1</container><unittitle>Carl, Harry and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen2</container><unittitle>Alfred, Carl and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lomen, Carl Joys (July 13, 1880 - August 16,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carl Joys Lomen was an American entrepreneur and photographer
				  who was known as The Reindeer King of Alaska for his role in organizing,
				  promoting, marketing and lobbying for the reindeer industry. He went to Alaska
				  in 1900 with his father, Judge G. J. Lomen, during the Gold Rush; the rest of
				  the family joined them in 1903. He became interested in the economic
				  possibilities of reindeer, and with his brother, Alfred, formed a company to
				  export meat and hides to the United States. The family also operated other
				  businesses, including a drug store, photography studio, merchandise stores and
				  a lighterage company. In 1928, he married Laura Volstead, the daughter of
				  Senator Andrew Volstead, the author of the Volstead Act which prohibited the
				  manufacture and sale of liquor. He published his autobiography, 
				  <emph render="italic">Fifty Years in Alaska</emph>, in 1954.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen1</container><unittitle>Carl, Harry and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen2</container><unittitle>Alfred, Carl and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lomen, Harry (May 16, 1883 - November 3,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Lomen, an Alaska pioneer and businessman, was one of five
				  brothers who were engaged in a variety of businesses. He arrived in Alaska in
				  1903, joining his father and his brother Carl, and lived in Nome until 1934. He
				  moved to Seattle where he continued to work in the family businesses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LomenH1</container><unittitle>Harry Lomen seated at an easel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen1</container><unittitle>Carl, Harry and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lomen, Ralph (March 6, 1887 - December 4,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Lomen, one of five brothers who were prominent in Alaska
				  business, spent many years in Alaska. He was manager of the Lomen Reindeer
				  Corporation and later served as vice president of the Lomen Commercial Company.
				  Ralph and his brother Alfred took part in the first paid passenger flight in a
				  Boeing plane, piloted by Eddie Hubbard on May 2, 1919. He was also on the first
				  direct flight from Seattle to Nome in 1934. He served on the Nome City Council
				  and later in the House of Representatives for the Alaska Territorial
				  Legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LomenR1</container><unittitle>Ralph Lomen in office with unidentified
					 woman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen1</container><unittitle>Carl, Harry and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Lomen2</container><unittitle>Alfred, Carl and Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lomen Brothers subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReeceBC1</container><unittitle>Brazilla Carroll Reece with Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To my friends, Ralph Lomen and Carl J.
					 Lomen, whose association I have greatly enjoyed.</p><p>Filed under Brazilla Carroll Reece subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>London, Charmian Kittredge (November 27, 1871 – January
				  14, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charmian Kittredge was an American writer and the second wife of
				  Jack London whom she married in 1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ3</container><unittitle>Jack London and Charmian Kittredge London wearing
					 bathing costumes in Waikiki</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jack London subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ4</container><unittitle>Jack London and Charmian Kittredge London</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1916</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jack London subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>London, Jack (January 12, 1876 – November 22,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Griffith Chaney, better known as Jack London, was an
				  American novelist, journalist and activist. A pioneer of commercial fiction, he
				  was one of the first American authors to become an international celebrity and
				  earn a large fortune from writing. He was also an innovator in the genre that
				  would later become known as science fiction. London was part of the literary
				  group "The Crowd" in San Francisco and an advocate of animal rights, workers’
				  rights and socialism. London wrote several works dealing with these topics,
				  including <emph>The Iron Heel,</emph> and his non-fiction exposé <emph>The
				  People of the Abyss</emph>. His stories of high adventure were based on his own
				  experiences at sea, in the Yukon Territory, and in the fields and factories of
				  California. His most famous works include <emph>The Call of the Wild</emph> and
				  <emph>White Fang,</emph> both set in Alaska and the Yukon during the Klondike
				  Gold Rush, as well as the short story <emph>To Build a Fire.</emph>He also
				  wrote about the South Pacific.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ1</container><unittitle>Jack London on a sailboat, holding a book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ2</container><unittitle>Jack London </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1903</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ3</container><unittitle>Jack London and Charmian Kittredge London wearing
					 bathing costumes in Waikiki</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ4</container><unittitle>Jack London and Charmian Kittredge London</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ5</container><unittitle>Jack London, wearing a hat, sitting on the
					 ground</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ6</container><unittitle>Jack London wearing a white hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1916</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ7</container><unittitle>Jack London wearing a white hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1916</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LondonJ8</container><unittitle>Jack London in a suite and wearing a dark
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1916</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Long, Edward (June 3, 1817 - February 20,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Long was born in Columbus, Ohio. His father died when he
				  was five, and he was adopted by his uncle, David Taylor. When he was twenty
				  years of age, he moved to Iowa, where he farmed and raised stock. In 1846, he
				  married to Martha J. Wills; the following April, they joined a group leaving
				  for Oregon. They arrived at The Dalles in October, where the company disbanded.
				  Long and his family traveled by raft to Fort Vancouver. The first winter was
				  spent near the site of East Portland where Long worked for the Hudson's Bay
				  Company cutting hoop poles. In the spring of 1848, he formed a partnership with
				  George and Jacob Wills, and built a small sawmill. In 1849, Long bought a
				  donation land claim and sold his one-third interest in the mill to his
				  partners. He raised fruit, and for many years was one of the most extensive
				  growers in the state. Interested in public schools he served as director for
				  twelve years in Multnomah County school district. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongE1</container><unittitle>Edward Long</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Long, Emma (1880? - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Long was the first orphan to be taken in care by "Mother"
				  Olive Ryther, who later established the Ryther Child Home in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">23</container><container type="item">LongE1</container><unittitle>Emma Long</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Emma Long, first orphan to be taken in by
						Mother Ryther in 1884</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Long, Robert (December 20, 1846 - October 19,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Long, the son of William Long and Sarah Ferguson Long,
				  was born in Iowa. He crossed the plains to Oregon in 1862 and moved to Seattle
				  in 1869. He was a beekeeper and, except for a few years in Yakima, he lived in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongR1</container><unittitle>Robert Long with twin sister, Sarah E. Malson
					 Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Long, William George (February 20, 1894 - January 3,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William George Long was appointed to the King County Juvenile
				  Court in 1933 by Governor Clarence Martin. Long served on both the King County
				  Juvenile Court and the Superior Court from 1940 until 1970. Much of his service
				  focused on fighting juvenile delinquency and other youth issues. He was
				  considered the father of the King County Youth Service Center and helped with
				  the formation of the Seattle-King County Metropolitan Youth Commission. He
				  received many honors throughout his career, including the Wing Luke Award in
				  1966 by the Seattle-King County Youth Commission in recognition of his superior
				  service in the field of youth development. In 1937, Judge Long, along with
				  Archie Phelps and Ben Evans, worked together to create Camp Long, a park in
				  West Seattle designed to give organized scouting groups a place to learn
				  camping skills. Camp Long opened to the public in 1984. Judge Long also had a
				  weekly radio program on KIRO called <emph>The Judge's Notebook,</emph> which
				  focused on the local juvenile justice system.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth (February 27, 1807 – March
				  24, 1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was an American poet and educator
				  whose works include <emph>Paul Revere's Ride,</emph><emph>The Song of
				  Hiawatha</emph>, and <emph>Evangeline</emph>. He was the first American to
				  translate Dante Alighieri's <emph>Divine Comedy.</emph>Longfellow was born in
				  Portland, Maine and studied at Bowdoin College. He became a professor at
				  Bowdoin and later at Harvard College after spending time in Europe. His first
				  major poetry collections were <emph>Voices of the Night</emph> (1839) and 
				  <emph>Ballads and Other Poems</emph> (1841). Longfellow retired from teaching
				  in 1854 to focus on his writing, and he lived the remainder of his life in the
				  Revolutionary War headquarters of George Washington in Cambridge,
				  Massachusetts. Longfellow wrote many lyric poems known for their musicality and
				  often presenting stories of mythology and legend, becoming one of the most
				  popular American poet of his day. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">23</container><container type="item">LongfellowHW1</container><unittitle>Henry Wadsworth Longfellow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1870?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Hollyer after a portrait by Warren from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Longfellow, John Enoch (August 28, 1848 - October 28,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Enoch Longfellow, the son of David P. and Rebecca
				  Longfellow, was born in Machias, Maine. He came to Washington Territory in the
				  1870s and worked as a logger. He married Lula Boswell in 1883; the following
				  year, they moved to West Seattle where he operated a logging business. He
				  served as city treasurer of West Seattle in 1902. Longfellow Creek, one of the
				  four largest creeks in urban Seattle, is named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongfellowJE1</container><unittitle>John Enoch Longfellow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Longfellow, Lula James (February 2, 1866 - January 2,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lula James Boswell was born in George. In the 1870s, her parents
				  traveled to Arkansas by covered wagon and then by train to San Francisco. They
				  took a ship from San Francisco to Seattle. Her father, James Boswell, worked as
				  a logger in Mount Vernon. In 1883, she married John Enoch Longfellow, and the
				  following year, they moved to West Seattle where her husband had a logging
				  business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongfellowLJ1</container><unittitle>Lula James Longfellow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Longmire, David (May 8, 1844 - June 27,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Longmire was born in Indiana, the second son of James
				  Longmire and Susan Nisley Longmire. In 1853, the family were members of the
				  first wagon train of settlers to enter the Yakima Valley. The group continued
				  through Naches Pass to Yelm, Washington, where James Longmire took a donation
				  land claim. David attended a one-room log schoolhouse on Yelm Prairie that he
				  helped his father build. From 1855 to 1857, during the territory's Indian Wars,
				  he attended school in Olympia, while his father served in the legislature. In
				  1869, he married Elizabeth "Lizzie" Pollard who had crossed the plains with her
				  parents in 1864. The couple moved east of the mountains in late 1870, where
				  Longmire purchased land in the Wenas Valley. He was a rancher and one of the
				  first orchardists in the area, planting his first orchard in 1872. As more
				  people moved into the valley to farm, several located upstream from his
				  property and started drawing off water from Wenas Creek, diverting its flow
				  before it reached Longmire's land. In 1899, he filed suit, claiming that he had
				  a preemptive right to as much water as he needed for the sole reason that he
				  was there first and was using the water to irrigate his land. The Washington
				  Supreme Court decided the case in his favor 1901, establishing a precedent for
				  water use. After the death of his first wife, David married Elizabeth Lotz
				  Treat in 1890. Longmire Springs on Mount Rainier is named for his father, who
				  discovered and developed it.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongmireD1</container><unittitle>David Longmire at the camp at Greenwater</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1925?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongmireD2</container><unittitle>David Longmire and Elizabeth Lotz Longmire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Longmire, Elizabeth Lotz (May 17, 1860 - October 7,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Lotz was born in Bush Prairie, Washington. Her father,
				  George Lotz, had arrived in the future Washington Territory in 1851, and her
				  mother, Katherine Estreich, followed in 1855. Elizabeth attended school in a
				  log house in Yelm. She married Henry Charles Treat in 1875 when she was
				  fifteen. The couple lived in Kalama, Washington; Portland, Oregon; and Oakland,
				  California, while he worked on the railroad. They had two children before she
				  divorced him in 1888. She moved to Yakima where she met David Longmire; they
				  were married in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongmireD2</container><unittitle>David Longmire and Elizabeth Lotz Longmire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under David Longmire subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loomis, Lewis Alfred (October 9, 1830 - July 19,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Alfred Loomis was born in New York. He went to California
				  in 1852 and to Pacific County in Washington Territory in 1855 to visit his
				  brother, Edwin. After the death of his father, he returned to New York to care
				  for his mother. During the Civil War, he built and repaired railroads for army
				  movements. After the war, he was in Michigan for several years, before
				  eventually returning to Washington Territory where he raised sheep. To help
				  transfer wool to the waiting boats, Loomis built the first dock at Ilwaco,
				  forming the Ilwaco Wharf Company. With his brother, Edwin, he bought
				  stagecoaches to carry mail and passengers, and bought boats to take mail across
				  the Columbia River. As the need for more services became evident, he and
				  several partners started the Ilwaco Railroad &amp; Navigation Company. The
				  first track was laid in 1888; the completed line ran from the bar of the
				  Columbia River up the Long Beach Peninsula to Willapa Bay. The line ran
				  entirely in Pacific County and had no connection to any outside rail line. With
				  the coming of the automobile, the train became less of a necessity, and the
				  final run was on September 9, 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoomisLA1</container><unittitle>Lewis Alfred Loomis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loomis, Theodore Albert (April 24, 1917 - September 16,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore A. Loomis, the son of George and Sadie Loomis, was born
				  in Spokane, Washington and received his M.D. from Yale University School of
				  Medicine in 1946. His career started with an internship at the Marine Hospital,
				  U.S. Public Health Service, Seattle in 1946. In 1953, he was a Captain in the
				  U.S. Army Medical Service. After his military service, he became a Professor of
				  Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Washington School of Medicine
				  where he was a member of the original faculty. He was Washington's first state
				  toxicologist, opening the state toxicology laboratory at the UW in 1955. After
				  his retirement in 1987, he worked as a Consulting Toxicologist. He received
				  awards for Toxicology Education from the Advancement of Toxicology (1976) and
				  the Merit Award from the Society of Toxicology (1986). He served on the
				  National Safety Council, the Agricultural Advisory Board on Pesticides and
				  Insecticides for the State of Washington (1963-77), and the Scientific Review
				  Panel for Health Research, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. By 1978, he
				  had published three editions of <emph render="italic">Essentials of
				  Toxicology</emph>, co-authored with A. Wallace Hayes and was the author or
				  co-author of approximately 100 papers in the scientific literature. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoomisTA1</container><unittitle>Theodore A. Loomis with Theodore West with model car
					 created for experiment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Theodore Loomis and Theodore West were professors of
					 pharmacology at the University of Washington. In 1957, they build a machine to
					 test the effects of alcohol on a person's ability to drive. The photograph
					 shows the machine. The model car on the table is controlled by the steering
					 wheel as a road pattern rolls beneath the car. Meters and clocks measured the
					 test subject's ability to drive. Dr. Loomis is at the steering wheel while Dr.
					 West observes. A version of the photograph and an accompanying story appeared
					 in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on April 10, 1957.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lopp, Ellen Louise Kittrege (March 10, 1868 - October
				  19, 1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellen Louise Kittrege, the daughter of Charles Kittrege and
				  Katherine Forbes Kittrege, was born in Westboro, Massachusetts. She was a
				  graduate of St. Cloud Normal School in St. Cloud, Minnesota. In 1892, she went
				  to Wales, Alaska as a missionary teacher under the American Missions Board. She
				  married William Thomas Lopp in 1892, and the couple continued to teach and to
				  study Eskimo languages and Eskimo lifestyles. William Thomas Lopp was a member
				  of the Overland Relief Expedition in Alaska, then a U.S. territory. In 1890, he
				  moved to Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska to teach at a mission school and was
				  later the chief of the Alaska division of the United States Board of
				  Education.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoppELK1</container><unittitle>Mrs. Ellen Lopp in dog sled with unidentified man and
					 young girl (?) standing nearby, Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Lopp school teacher at Cape Prince of
					 Wales, entrance to Behring Straits rigged for artic (sic) sleigh ride</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lopp, William Thomas (June 21, 1864 – April 10,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Thomas Lopp was a member of the Overland Relief
				  Expedition in Alaska, then a U.S. territory. He earned a B.A. at Indiana's
				  Hanover College in 1888. In 1890, he moved to Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska to
				  teach at a mission school. He married Ellen Louise Kittredge in 1892, and the
				  couple continued to teach and to study Eskimo languages and Eskimo lifestyles.
				  Seeing that Eskimo food sources were endangered by the encroachments of the
				  burgeoning American and Canadian fishing industry, he promoted reindeer herding
				  among the native Alaskans as an alternative means of subsistence. In 1892,
				  reindeer were brought over from Siberia and a reindeer station was established,
				  with Lopp as superintendent. He moved his family to Seattle in 1902, but
				  continued involvement in Alaskan native education and reindeer herding for
				  thirty-four more years, holding a variety of government and private industry
				  positions. During his career, he established sixty-six schools, five hospitals
				  and sanitation systems, and increased prosperity in the coastal villages of
				  northern Alaska. He wrote <emph render="italic">White Sox : the story of the
				  reindeer in Alaska</emph> in 1924. Lopp Lagoon in Alaska is named after him.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoppWT1</container><unittitle>Portrait of William Thomas Lopp in fur
					 parka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 13, 1908</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoppWT2</container><unittitle>William Thomas Lopp in fur parka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lord, William Paine (July 1, 1838 – February 17,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Paine Lord was a Republican politician who served as the
				  ninth Governor of Oregon from 1895 to 1899. He had previously served as the
				  27th associate justice on the Oregon Supreme Court, including three times as
				  the Chief Justice of that court. After serving as governor, he was appointed as
				  an ambassador to Argentina in South America and later helped to codify Oregon’s
				  laws.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LordWP1</container><unittitle>William Paine Lord</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loucks, Roger Brown (August 19, 1903 - April 1,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roger Brown Loucks received his Ph.D. in Psychology from the
				  University of Minnesota in 1930, and completed further training at Rockefeller
				  University and Johns Hopkins University before joining the faculty at the
				  University of Washington in 1936. He served on the faculty here until his
				  retirement in 1968, interrupted only during World War II when served as Senior
				  Psychologist with the Army and Air Force. Loucks investigated many aspects of
				  the physiology of learning and memory throughout his career. He developed one
				  of the initial methods for manipulating the electrical activity of the brain of
				  awake, behaving animals and thus helped pave the way for the contemporary study
				  of the brain and behavior, especially as it applies to learning. He was also
				  one of the first scientists in the U.S. to demonstrate that Pavlovian
				  conditioning is a genuine phenomenon. The Roger Loucks Lectureship in the
				  Neurophysiological Bases of Learning and Memory was established to recognize
				  and pay tribute to an important pioneer in the fields of physiological
				  psychology and the neurophysiology of learning and memory. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoucksRB1</container><unittitle>Roger Brown Loucks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lough, Jacob Wallace (August 12, 1880 - November 1,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jacob (Jake) Wallace Lough, the son of George W. Lough and Sarah
				  Taylor Lough, was born in Kansas. His family moved to Seattle in the 1880s. In
				  1888, they built one of the first homes on Wallingford Avenue, then called
				  Elmer Street. Jake lived in the home for 63 years. He worked at a pharmacy in
				  Fremont in the early 1900s. He bought the business with another employee in
				  1908 and worked there until 1948, when he retired. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughJW1</container><unittitle>Jacob Wallace Lough with Stephen Andrews, Sammuel (?)
					 Andrews, Clarence Andrews and Sarah Hill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken on south bank of Portage Bay Lake, a
					 short way from the shore and about to Dalialand Flower Shop on Boyer Avenue.
					 There was a little stream, came down the valley. Evidently, it was the same
					 valley J. W. Wheeler has park now. We went there in the Andrews' boys clinker
					 built raw boat, taking along a watermelon. I took the picture with a string.
					 Must have been about 1896 as I look to be 16 years old. My first sweater which
					 was quite a favorite acquisition.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loughborough, Baron (February 3, 1733 – January 2,
				  1805)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Scottish advocate Alexander Wedderburn was first Baron of
				  Loughborough, first Earl of Rosslyn, and Lord Chancellor of Great Britain from
				  1793 to 1801. Loughborough Inlet was named by Captain George Vancouver after
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughboroughB1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Baron Loughborough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1790 and 1799?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">William Owen, London</persname></origination></did><note><p>From the painting by William Owen, now in the National
					 Portrait Gallery in London.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoughboroughB2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Baron Loughborough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1790 and 1799?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">William Owen, London</persname></origination></did><note><p>From the painting by William Owen, now in the National
					 Portrait Gallery in London. Photograph copyrighted by Walker &amp;
					 Cockrill.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lovejoy, Asa Lawrence (March 14, 1808 – September 10,
				  1882)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asa Lawrence Lovejoy was an American pioneer and politician in
				  the region that would become the U.S. state of Oregon. He was an attorney in
				  Boston, Massachusetts before traveling by land to Oregon, arriving in 1842. He
				  was a legislator in the Provisional Government of Oregon, mayor of Oregon City,
				  and a general during the Cayuse War that followed the attack on the Whitman
				  Mission in 1847. He was also a candidate for Provisional Governor in 1847,
				  before the Oregon Territory was founded, but lost that election. Lovejoy
				  continued his political career during territorial period as a member of both
				  chambers of the Oregon Territorial Legislature; he served as the first Speaker
				  of the Oregon House of Representatives in 1849. He was also a delegate to the
				  Oregon Constitutional Convention held in 1857 that paved the way for Oregon's
				  entry into the Union. He was part owner of the newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Oregon Telegraph</emph> and worked on railroad development
				  in the Willamette Valley after leaving politics. Lovejoy Street in Northwest
				  Portland and the Lovejoy Fountain in Downtown Portland are named in his honor.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LovejoyAL1</container><unittitle>Asa Lawrence Lovejoy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loveless, A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LovelessA1</container><unittitle>A. Loveless aboard ship, wearing flower
					 leis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loveless, Mrs. A. </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LovelessMrs1</container><unittitle>Mrs. A. Loveless aboard ship</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Loveless, Arthur Lamont (September 22, 1873 - January 5,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Lamont Loveless, known as an eclectic designer of houses
				  in Seattle between 1909 and 1942, was born in Big Rapids, Michigan. He
				  graduated from Big Rapids High School in 1891 and then relocated to Manistee,
				  Michigan where he worked initially as a bookkeeper and later in a bank. He was
				  accepted into the architecture program at Columbia University in 1902, but ran
				  out of funds before he could complete his degree. He then took a position with
				  one of his teachers, William Adams Delano of the firm Delano &amp; Aldrich.
				  Loveless moved to Seattle in 1907 and joined Clayton D. Wilson in the
				  partnership of Wilson &amp; Loveless, which was involved primarily in the
				  design of houses and small commercial projects. In 1912, Loveless began a brief
				  association with Daniel R. Huntington, who was appointed city architect that
				  year. The two shared an office, although Loveless appears to have practiced
				  independently after 1915. In 1927, Loveless won A.I.A. honor awards for the
				  designs of several buildings. He was elected an A.I.A. fellow in 1941. With the
				  onset of World War II, Loveless retired to manage the Studio Building, one of
				  his best-known works, which also became his residence. He traveled extensively
				  and became an award-willing amateur photographer as well as a collector of
				  textiles and Chinese snuff bottles. He continued his practice of helping
				  students with their schooling, and he remained active until his death in
				  Seattle in 1971. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD3</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD4</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD5</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD6</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox looking at drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD7</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox sitting at a kitchen
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD8</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Joseph Wade
					 Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD9</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 and Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lovett, Louis deBeelen (March 3, 1884 - May 4,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis deBeelen Lovett was born in Geneva, New York. He served as
				  an assistant in the United States Consular Service in Egypt (1905-1907) and was
				  with the engineering department of the New York, New Haven &amp; Hartford
				  Railroad from 1907 until 1917. He went overseas with the American Expeditionary
				  Force in World War I, where he was a captain of Company E, 14th Regiment of
				  railroad engineers. He was later colonel of that regiment. The British
				  Government awarded him the Distinguished Service Order. After the war, he
				  worked for General Chemical Company before joining Haydock, Schreiber &amp;
				  Company in New York as a stock broker. Lovett was married to Caroline Webster.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LovettLdeB1</container><unittitle>Louis deBeelen Lovett in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Louis deBeelen Lovett received a commission
					 as Captain at Pittsburgh in 1916. In May 1917 recruited a company of 200 men
					 from the NY &amp; NH Railroad. Sailed for France in July with the 14th Light
					 Railroad Engineers. Returned home in April 1919 as Colonel of the Regiment. Was
					 awarded the D.S.O. by King George for distinguished service with the British
					 Forces and received several testimonials from British and French officers and
					 an autographed letter of commendation for special bravery from General
					 Pershing. The photograph was enlarged from a postcard taken at Verdun while a
					 major with only one year service.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lovitt, William Vernon (February 7, 1881 - February 25,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Vernon Lovitt was born in Whiting, Kansas, and earned
				  his bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska. After graduate work at
				  the University of Chicago, Lovitt taught at the University of Nebraska, the
				  University of Washington, Harvard University, before coming to Purdue
				  University as a staff member in the Mathematics Department. He wrote several
				  textbooks, including<emph>Elementary Theory of Equations.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="item photo">Lowden, Frank Orren (January 26, 1861
				  – March 20, 1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Frank Orren Lowden was a Republican Party politician from
				  Illinois who served as the 25th Governor of Illinois and as a United States
				  Representatives from Illinois. He was also a candidate for the Republican
				  presidential nominations in 1920 and 1928. In 1933, Lowden was appointed to be
				  one of three receivers for the bankrupt Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific
				  Railroad. He served in this capacity until his death in 1943. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LowdenFO1</container><unittitle>Frank Orren Lowden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lowery, Everett</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoweryE1</container><unittitle>Everett Lowery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on matboard: Dad's best friend.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lownsdale, Daniel Hillman (April 8, 1803 - May 4,
				  1862)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Hillman Lownsdale was one of the founders of Portland,
				  Oregon. He was born in Kentucky and traveled across the plains to Oregon in
				  1845. He purchased land that would become downtown Portland in 1848 and
				  re-surveyed the city. Lowensdale established the first tannery near the current
				  location of Providence Park just west of downtown Portland; Tanner Creek, which
				  flowed by the site in the mid-19th century, was named after the tannery. He
				  served as United States postal agent during the Fillmore administration and was
				  a member of the Provisional Legislature of Oregon in 1846. He fought in the
				  Indian Wars of 1847 and 1855-56.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LownsdaleDH1</container><unittitle>Daniel Hillman Lownsdale</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lowry, Grace Louise (May 30, 1918 - May 1,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Grace Louise Yantis, the daughter of George Franklin Yantis and
				  Ruth Tower Yantis, attended the University of Washington where she majored in
				  Political Science and was on the varsity debate team. She chaired the A. A. U.
				  W.’s state priority study project on the Constitution and was a member of the
				  association’s legislative liaison committee. She also served on the Board of
				  the Thurston County League of Women Voters and was the secretary of the State
				  Capitol Historical Association. Her father was Thurston County’s state
				  representative and served as speaker of the State House in 1933 and 1945. Her
				  great-great-grandfather represented Thurston County in the first Territorial
				  Legislature in 1854. She married William M. Lowry in 1944; he was the clerk of
				  the State Supreme Court.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lowry, Michael Edward "Mike" (March 8, 1939 - May 1,
				  2017)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Edward "Mike" Lowry served as the 20th Governor of the
				  U.S. state of Washington from 1993 to 1997. He was born and raised in St. John,
				  Washington, and graduated from Washington State University in 1962. He had a
				  brief career working for the Washington State Senate and as a lobbyist for
				  Group Health Cooperative before being elected to the King County Council in
				  1975. He was elected to the United States House of Representatives from
				  Washington's Seventh Congressional District in 1978, where he served until
				  1989. Lowry twice ran unsuccessfully for the United States Senate. In a 1983
				  special election, he was defeated by Republican former Governor Dan Evans, then
				  an appointed Senator and the incumbent, in a race to replace Democrat Henry
				  "Scoop" Jackson, and in 1988 he lost to Slade Gorton, also a Republican, in a
				  close race. Lowry was elected governor in 1992 and served for a single term.
				  His principal policy initiative was enactment of a statewide system of health
				  insurance with premiums based on ability to pay. He chose not to run for
				  re-election to a second term due to a sexual harassment scandal. He was an
				  unsuccessful candidate for Commissioner of Public Lands in 2000. Lowry was
				  active in building affordable housing for Washington's migrant farm workers. He
				  headed Washington Agricultural Families Assistance, a farmworker home-ownership
				  program, and Enterprise Washington, which develops jobs in economically
				  depressed areas.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LowryME1</container><unittitle>Michael Edward Lowry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1978 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Loyhed, Frances Ames (March 17, 1861 - July 15,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frances Ames Loyhed, the daughter of John Thomas Ames and Ellen
				  Clough Ames, was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. She lived in Northfield,
				  Minnesota until her marriage to Edgar H. Loyhed on September 26, 1884.
				  Following her marriage, she lived in Seattle for several years and then made
				  her home in Faribault, Minnesota. She graduated from Abbott Academy, Andover,
				  Massachusetts. She was prominent in local state and national fraternal, civic
				  and welfare activities. Loyhed was a charter member and Regent of Charter Oak
				  Chapter, Daughters of American Revolution and served as State Regent when
				  Sibley House at Mendota was acquired by the State D.A.R. She was a member of
				  the Monday Club and Travelers Cub of Faribault, the Woman’s Century Club of
				  Seattle, and served as president of the Minnesota Federation of Women's Clubs
				  in 1911 and 1912. A charter member of the Faribault American Legion Auxiliary,
				  she served as national committeewoman of the Auxiliary in 1922 and 1923. She
				  also was active in the city and state woman's suffrage movement. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoyhedFA1</container><unittitle>Frances Ames Loyhed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph caption lists her middle name as "Ohnes" instead of
					 "Ames." Other copies of the photograph have "Ames," her maiden name, as the
					 middle name.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Luark, Michael Fleenan (July 24, 1818 - January 21,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Fleenan Luark was born in Virginia. His family was poor
				  and moved frequently. In April 1853, Michael and his brother Patterson crossed
				  the plains to Portland, arriving in August. Michael went north to the Olympia
				  area, where he farmed and worked for wages as a logger. Luark returned to
				  Indiana to rejoin his family in 1855. In 1856 he moved to Iowa, where he had a
				  farm. In 1860, he went to Colorado to prospect and work and then returned to
				  Washington Territory. Luark found his donation land claim was occupied, so he
				  arranged to sell it to the new occupants and moved to his brother’s new
				  location near Grays Harbor. He bought a farm, continued to work for wages and
				  owned the Sylvia Mill in Montesano, Washington from 1869-1885. Between 1846 and
				  1899, he produced twenty-five volumes of diaries, which provide a detailed
				  history of early life in the territory. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LuarkMF1</container><unittitle>Michael Fleenan Luark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Luark, Patterson Fletcher (December 16, 1814 - April 17,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patterson Fletcher Luark was born in Virginia. The family was
				  poor and moved frequently. In April 1853, Patterson and his brother Michael
				  crossed the plains to Portland, arriving in August. Michael went north to the
				  Olympia area, where he farmed and worked for wages as a logger. Patterson
				  joined him and established a donation land claim. He later had a farm near
				  Grays Harbor. He kept a trail diary of his experiences crossing the plains.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LuarkPF1</container><unittitle>Patterson Fletcher Luark</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lucas, Helen Elizabeth Lord (July 31, 1904 - November
				  15, 1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Elizabeth Lord, the daughter of Clarence J. Lord and
				  Elizabeth Reynolds Lord, married William Dennis Lucas in 1929. Her father was
				  president of the Capitol National Bank of Olympia. He built a mansion near the
				  State Capitol; two years after his death, his widow and daughter donated the
				  mansion to Washington State. It was converted to its present use as the State
				  Capital Museum. It is listed on both the National and Washington State Register
				  of Historic Places.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LucasHEL1</container><unittitle>Helen Lucas holding a dog</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1985</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph on Christmas card</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lucas, William Henry (September, 1858 - September 15,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Lucas was a baseball manager and promoter who
				  helped to establish baseball in the Pacific Northwest. In the 1890s, he
				  organized the Northwest League, which included Duluth and St. Paul; the league
				  was later absorbed by the American Association. He went to the Pacific
				  Northwest in the 1890s, where he organized a new Northwest League, which
				  included Seattle, Spokane, Portland and Tacoma; the league lasted two years. He
				  spent two years as the manager of the Kansas City Club and then was in the
				  lumber business in Wisconsin. He returned to the Northwest in 1901 and
				  organized the Pacific Northwest League with the four towns that were in the
				  original Northwest League. It soon expanded to eight cities before being driven
				  out after a fight between the league and a league from California. In 1903, he
				  formed the Northwest League, which banded together the cities of Vancouver,
				  Victoria, Everett, Seattle, Spokane, Portland, Tacoma and Butte. In 1910, he
				  started the Union Association in Montana. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LucasWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Lucas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "A fight to the finish," 1902 souvenir of
					 Seattle baseball club season.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Luce, Clarence Sumner (June 10, 1852 - March 22,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Sumner Luce was born in Chicopee, Massachusetts and
				  attended the four-year scientific course at Williston Seminary in Easthampton,
				  Massachusetts. By the early 1870s he was working in the office of Gridley J. F.
				  Bryant in Boston while continuing to attend classes at the Lowell Institute and
				  Harvard University. By 1880 he had opened his own Boston office, but only five
				  years later he moved to New York, where his greatest successes would occur.
				  Well-known for his exposition buildings, including the Massachusetts State
				  Building for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia (1876), Luce designed
				  New York State and City buildings for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition
				  (1903-1904), the Lewis &amp; Clark Exposition (1905), the Jamestown Exposition,
				  and the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition (1909). In New York Luce also designed
				  several commercial buildings including the Renaissance Hotel on Fifth Avenue
				  (1891). In 1907 and 1908 Luce served on the Commission charged with revising
				  the Building Laws of New York City.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LuceCS1</container><unittitle>Clarence Luce with group in front of the New York
					 State Building, Lewis and Clark Centennial American Pacific
					 Exposition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><note><p>Original in the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition
						collection.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LuceCS2</container><unittitle>Luce with unidentified man and an unidentified woman
					 with a shovel during the Lewis and Clark Centennial American Pacific
					 Exposition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Original in the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition
					 collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lucia, Ellis Joel (June 6, 1922 - November 20,
				  2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellis Joel Lucia was a freelance writer, photographer and staff
				  member of the <emph render="italic">Oregonian</emph> . He wrote several books
				  about the history of the American West, including <emph render="italic">Tough
				  Men, Tough Country</emph>, a collection of stories about the Pacific Northwest,
				  and <emph render="italic">Klondike Kate</emph>, a biography of Kitty
				  Rockwell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LuciaEJ1</container><unittitle>Ellis Lucia with typewriter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Luger, Paul Patrick October 7, 1911 - January 19,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Patrick Luger, S. J., was born in Spokane, one of three
				  brothers who attended Gonzaga University and became Jesuits. He professed his
				  first vows in 1931 and was ordained in 1942. He took an advanced degree in
				  physics at Fordham University and then taught at Seattle University for over
				  thirty years. He served on the board of the Millionair’s Club Charity, and in
				  the 1970s, began an urban ministry at the Downtown Chapel and at Providence
				  Medical Center in Portland, and at St. James Parish in Vancouver, Washington.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG2</container><unittitle>Martin G. Johanson with Reverend Floyd Green, Father
					 Paul Luger, Judge Charles Stokes and Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Luke, Wing Chong (February 18, 1925 – May 16,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wing Chong Luke was a Chinese-American lawyer and politician who
				  served as an assistant attorney general of Washington for the state civil
				  rights division from 1957 to 1962. He was later a member of the Seattle City
				  Council from 1962 until his death in 1965 in a plane crash. He was born in
				  China and came to the United States in 1930. Halfway through his senior year of
				  high school, Luke was inducted into the U.S. Army, serving in Guam, Korea, New
				  Guinea, New Britain and the Philippines, where he received the Bronze Star
				  Medal and six combat star. Following his military service, Luke entered the
				  University of Washington, graduating with a B.A. in political science and
				  public administration. He did graduate work in the same fields at the American
				  University in Washington, D.C before attending the UW School of Law where he
				  earned an LL.B. Luke was appointed Assistant Attorney General of the State of
				  Washington, in the Civil Rights Division and served in that capacity from 1957
				  to 1962. In 1962, Luke ran for an open seat on the Seattle City Council and
				  became the first Asian American to hold elected office in the Pacific Northwest
				  as well as the first person of color to hold a Seattle City Council seat. As a
				  council member, Luke focused on urban renewal, historical preservation, and
				  civil rights and was instrumental in the passing of an Open Housing Ordinance
				  in 1963. He also fought for civil rights, Indian fishing rights, urban renewal
				  and historic preservation. After his death in an airplane crash, friends and
				  supporters started the Wing Luke Memorial Foundation; the money raised went to
				  the founding of the Wing Luke Museum in 1966 to present the histories and
				  cultures of Asian immigrants and present-day issues of Asian Americans.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD14</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, Professor Hugh Bone,
					 Wing Luke, Alex Gottfried and internship class</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Professor Hugh Bone's (Pol. Sci.) first
						internship class in Olympia. Far right (w/ cigarette) is Alex Gottfried who
						later became a faculty member in Pol. Sci. Wing Luke is in front row to the
						Gov.'s right.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lull, Alphonso Ben (1844 - February 25,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alphonso Ben Lull was born in Pennsylvania and graduated from
				  the Michigan College of Medicine in 1883. He arrived in Port Angeles in 1888,
				  where he was the second physician in the town. He served in the State of
				  Washington House of Representatives from 1889 to 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LullAB1</container><unittitle>Alphonso Ben Lull</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lumley, Ellsworth Duganne (January 19, 1903 - February
				  10, 1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellsworth Duganne Lumley was born in Michigan. His parents moved
				  to Marysville, Washington in 1906 and to nearby Mukilteo in 1910, where his
				  father worked in the Crown Lumber Mill and his mother taught school. While
				  still in grade school, he became interested in birds and learned to imitate
				  bird calls. In 1924, he graduated from Western Washington Normal School in
				  Bellingham with a two year teaching degree. He taught for two years before
				  returning to school. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1929
				  with a bachelor’s degree in education. While attending the UW, he financed his
				  education by giving bird talks, illustrated with extemporaneous drawings and
				  imitations of bird songs. From 1919 to 1937, he taught biology in Great Falls,
				  Montana. He became a member of the Pacific Northwest Bird and Mammal Society, a
				  member of the Cooper Ornithological Club, the American Ornithological Union,
				  and served as president of both the Conservation League and the Seattle Audubon
				  Society. His pamphlets on the value of birds were published and made available
				  to high schools throughout the United States. He spent the summers of 1933-1935
				  at the UW Oceanography Laboratory at Friday Harbor, where he published a study
				  of the birds of the San Juan Islands. He published <emph render="italic">The
				  Teaching of Conservation in High School Biology</emph> in 1935. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LumleyED1</container><unittitle>Ellsworth Duganne Lumley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lund, Gunnar (August 30, 1866 - November 27,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gunnar Lund was born in Stavanger, Norway and came to Seattle in
				  1891. Although he studied law at the University of Oslo, he was initially only
				  able to get work as a laborer on the railroad. He later worked as a commission
				  merchant. In 1905, he went to work at <emph render="italic">The Washington
				  Posten</emph>, the largest foreign language newspaper on the Pacific Coast,
				  becoming the editor and publisher of the paper. Both of his sons worked for
				  newspapers; Roald Lund worked on <emph render="italic">The Washington
				  Posten</emph>, and John V. Lund was editor and publisher of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Camas Post</emph>. Gunnar Lund married Marie Vognild in
				  1900, and together they founded the Norwegian Hospital Association in Seattle.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LundG1</container><unittitle>Gunnar Lund</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on the front page of the November 20,
					 1935 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lund, Marie Pauline Vognild (1870 - September 16,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marie Pauline Vognild was born in Vardo, Norway and came to the
				  United States when she was 13. She married Gunnar Lund in 1900. Active in war
				  work during World War I, she was a Minute Woman on the Red Cross speakers
				  bureau and organized several Red Cross auxiliaries. She was a member of the
				  Valkyrien Lodge in Seattle from its founding in 1905 and served as its
				  president. With her husband, she organized the Norwegian Hospital Association
				  and served as its president for forty years. She was one of the organizers of
				  the Visiting Nurses Service in Seattle. After her husband’s death, she became
				  the publisher of <emph render="italic">The Washington Posten</emph>, the
				  largest foreign language newspaper on the Pacific Coast. Following a visit to
				  Norway in 1930, she wrote <emph render="italic">This is Norway</emph>. In 1927,
				  she was decorated by King Haakon of Norway in recognition of her service to
				  Norwegians in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LundMPV1</container><unittitle>Marie Pauline Vognild Lund in Red Cross
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1916 and 1918</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on the front page of the November 20,
					 1935 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lyle, Roy Carr (September 25, 1875 - April 17,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roy Carr Lyle was worn in Cedar Springs, Michigan. He worked as
				  a deputy county clerk in Grand Rapids, Michigan and as a deputy collector for
				  the Internal Revenue Service. For several years, he was the traveling library
				  organizer for the state of Michigan. He moved to Seattle in 1913, where he
				  worked in real estate. In 1921, he was appointed federal prohibition
				  administrator for Washington State and was named district administrator for
				  Washington, Oregon and Alaska in 1925. He left the post in 1930 and became the
				  district supervisor of industrial alcohol permits. He held a similar position
				  in Boise, Idaho for a time. In 1939, he was named executive secretary of the
				  King County Republican Central Committee. In 1941, he was put in charge of the
				  Washington State Liquor Control Board’s warehouse. Lyle later worked as a
				  property appraiser. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LyleRC1</container><unittitle>Roy Carr Lyle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lyman, William Denison (December 1, 1852 - June 21,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Denison Lyman was born in Portland, Oregon in 1852. He
				  received his A.B. from Williams College in 1877. In September of the same year
				  he became teacher of English literature, history, and oratory at Pacific
				  University, where he remained for ten years. After spending a year at Fresno,
				  California, endeavoring to start a raisin ranch, he subsequently taught at the
				  University of New Mexico in Santa Fe. He came to Whitman College in Walla Walla
				  in 1888. Except for the years 1890-91, when he tried to start a new college at
				  Spokane, he remained at Whitman where he taught history and served as
				  department head. In addition, he at various times taught English literature,
				  rhetoric, oratory, political economy, political science, Latin, Greek,
				  elementary geology, physiology, and astronomy. He was the author of many
				  newspaper and magazine articles and of several books, among them 
				  <emph render="italic">The Columbia River: Its history, its myths, its scenery,
				  its commerce</emph>; <emph>Lyman's History of Old Walla Walla County: Embracing
				  Walla Walla, Columbia, Garfield and Asotin counties</emph>; and 
				  <emph render="italic">Indian Myths of the Northwest</emph> . He was also known
				  as a mountain climber, having climbed most of the highest peaks of the
				  Northwest and writing descriptions of them. Lyman House at Whitman College is
				  named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LymanWD1</container><unittitle>William Denison Lyman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Lyons, Elvina Margaret "Peggy" (February 23, 1918 -
				  December 7, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elvina Margaret “Peggy” Lyons was an accomplished Scottish
				  dancer who had won numerous medals and trophies for her dancing, including the
				  Highland Championship of the Pacific Coast and Interior Canada in 1934. She
				  married Mahlon Mangolde Barr in 1936 and Victor Theodore Buettner in 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LyonsEM1</container><unittitle>Peggy Lyons with Douglas MacFarlane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1928</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Campbells are coming. Peggy Lyons, left,
					 and Douglas MacFarlane rehearse their native folk songs and dances for the
					 annual Fourth of July picnic at Fortuna Park, where they are to entertain 5,000
					 Scotsmen.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Lyons, Susie</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RonaldN1</container><unittitle>Norma Ronald, Susie Lyons, Ethel Smith and
					 unidentified child.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Norma Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>M</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Macapia, Paul Marshall (November 14, 1934 - December 5,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Marshall Macapia was a Seattle Art Museum photographer,
				  artist, medical photographer and gardener. His parents met at the University of
				  Chicago and moved to the Philippines where Paul and his older sister were born.
				  The family was interned there by the Japanese during World War II. After the
				  war, Paul graduated from the University of Chicago. He moved to Seattle where
				  he did medical photography at the University of Washington and Harborview and
				  became director of photography at Virginia Mason Medical Center. His work won
				  national and international awards, including a fellowship in London’s Royal
				  Microscopical Society. His image of a trans-illuminated photograph of a human
				  embryo won first place in the Biological Photographic Association International
				  Competition in 1965 and was used as the BPA symbol the following year. In 1972,
				  he had a solo exhibit at the Seattle Art Museum, which led to his being hired
				  by the museum where he produced dozens of exhibit catalogs, many of which
				  received national and state awards.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD3</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe and Paul Macapia looking at
					 photographs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1983</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert D. Monroe subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>MacArthur, General Douglas (January 26, 1880 – April 5,
				  1964) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Douglas MacArthur was an American five-star general and field
				  marshal of the Philippine Army. He was Chief of Staff of the United States Army
				  during the 1930s and played a prominent role in the Pacific theater during
				  World War II. He received the Medal of Honor for his service in the Philippines
				  Campaign, which made him and his father Arthur MacArthur, Jr., the first father
				  and son to be awarded the medal. He was one of only five men ever to rise to
				  the rank of General of the Army in the US Army, and the only man ever to become
				  a field marshal in the Philippine Army. During the 1951 Seattle Centennial
				  Celebration, MacArthur said a few words about the centennial and placed the
				  wreath at the base of the Alki monument. The main reason for his visit to
				  Seattle was political; he was testing the waters for a possible presidential
				  campaign in 1952. He was touring the country, giving speeches wherever he could
				  and had requested an appearance at the opening of Seattle’s year-long
				  centennial celebration. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacArthurD1</container><unittitle>General Douglas MacArthur at podium,
					 speaking</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacArthurD2</container><unittitle>General Douglas MacArthur at podium,
					 speaking</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>"Seattle's Centennial" sign is on the front of the podium.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacArthurD3</container><unittitle>General Douglas MacArthur and wife Jean being saluted
					 by honor guard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>MacArthur, Jean Faircloth (December 28, 1898 – January
				  22, 2000) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jean Faircloth MacArthur was the second wife of U.S. Army
				  General of the Army Douglas MacArthur. She attended Ward-Belmont College in
				  Nashville, and graduated from Soule College in Murfreesboro. When her father
				  died, she inherited a large fortune and traveled extensively. In 1935, she met
				  General MacArthur aboard the S.S. President Hoover; they married in New York
				  City in 1937, during Gen. MacArthur's trip home to build support for the
				  defense of the Philippines. After her husband's death, she helped with the
				  Metropolitan Opera and other charities. In her later years, she often gave
				  speeches on her late husband's military career. President Ronald Reagan awarded
				  her the Medal of Freedom in 1988, and the Philippine government gave her its
				  Legion of Merit in 1993.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacArthurD3</container><unittitle>General Douglas MacArthur and wife Jean being saluted
					 by honor guard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Douglas MacArthur subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Macbride, Thomas Huston (July 31, 1848 – March 27,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Huston Macbride served as the tenth president of the
				  University of Iowa, from 1914 to 1916. He received the Bachelor of Arts and, in
				  1873, the Master of Arts degrees from Monmouth College in Illinois. He joined
				  the University of Iowa in 1878, becoming a professor of botany in 1883. In
				  1902, he was made head of the Department of Botany and served as secretary of
				  the faculty from 1887 to 1893. His love for the outdoors and its preservation
				  inspired him to become the first president of the Iowa Park and Forestry
				  Association, organized in 1901. He founded the Lakeside Laboratory at Lake
				  Okoboji in northwest Iowa and promoted the development of state parks,
				  including the lake and park that bear his name in Johnson County, north of Iowa
				  City. Though he was president of the university for only two years, Macbride
				  served the campus for more than a half-century as a scholar, conservationist,
				  and administrator. The building that bears his name was constructed in 1904 as
				  the Hall of Natural Science and was renamed in his honor in 1934. His son,
				  Philip D. Macbride, was a Seattle attorney and a member of the University of
				  Washington Board of Regents.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacbrideTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas Huston Macbride </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacbrideTH2</container><unittitle>Thomas Huston Macbride standing, holding
					 flowers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacbrideTH3</container><unittitle>Thomas Huston Macbride and Walter Albert Jessup on
					 Inauguration Day at the University of Iowa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 12, 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frederick Wallace Kent, Iowa</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dear Mrs. Fischer: We hope you and all our
					 Boulder friends are all right. I came across this old postcard of President
					 MacBride (sic) and it made me think of you. John and I like our work at Cottey
					 College very much. My mother died last September, so my father is much alone
					 now. Affectionately, Millicent Dearth (?)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>MacClean, John Duncan (December 8, 1873 – March 28,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Duncan MacLean was a teacher, physician, politician and the
				  20th premier of British Columbia, Canada. MacLean was a practicing doctor in
				  the city of Greenwood when he was elected in the 1916 election to the
				  provincial legislature as a Liberal. He served as minister of education and
				  provincial secretary in the cabinets of Harlan Carey Brewster and John Oliver
				  before becoming minister of finance in 1924.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Macleay, Annie Frost (1854 - January 29,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Frost was born in England and came to the United States in
				  1876. Her brother, Robert Frost, was an Olympia pioneer who had arrived in the
				  1850s. She married Thomas Macleay in 1877 in Olympia. Their home was the
				  building where Governor Stevens opened the first territorial legislature. In
				  the 1870s, she organized the Olympia Amateur Dramatic Club; the plays were at
				  the Olympia Town Hall. She was active in charitable work as the treasurer of
				  the Ladies Relief Society for thirty years and was also a member of the Woman's
				  Club. Thomas had opened a store in Olympia in the 1860s and became president of
				  the Puget Sound Transportation Company in 1876. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacleayAF1</container><unittitle>Annie Frost Macleay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1918?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">MacCulsky, Alexander E. (January 7,
				  1854 - August 21, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander E. MacCulsky was born in Scotland and arrived in
				  Seattle in the early 1880s. He married Helen Struve in 1883. He was a member of
				  the pioneer grocery firm, W.D. Scott and Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E. W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard. </p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>MacDonald, James Frederick (May 14, 1889 - June 5,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> James Frederick “Mac” MacDonald was born in Seattle. He went to
				  Princess Louisa Inlet as a teenager and was so impressed with the scenery, he
				  vowed to earn enough to purchase the land. After striking it rich in Nevada, he
				  purchased the core of the park in 1919 and donated it to the Princess Louisa
				  International Society in 1953. It was acquired by the British Columbia
				  government in 1964, and it became the Princess Louisa Provincial Marine Park.
				  Hamilton Island, renamed MacDonald Island, is now a part of the park as well.
				  MacDonald was the subject of a 1976 book, <emph render="italic">Mac and the
				  Princess</emph> by Bruce Calhoun and a 1980 short film, <emph render="italic">A
				  Song for Louisa.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacDonaldJF1</container><unittitle>James Frederick MacDonald in World War I
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1917 and 1918?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gladys Partridge</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacDonaldJF2</container><unittitle>James Frederick MacDonald in suit and tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>MacDonald, John Alexander (January 10, 1815 – June 6,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir John Alexander MacDonald was the first prime minister of
				  Canada, serving from 1867 to 1873 and from 1878 to 1891. The dominant figure of
				  Canadian Confederation, he had a political career that spanned almost half a
				  century. Macdonald was born in Scotland; when he was a boy his family
				  immigrated to Kingston in the Province of Upper Canada (today in eastern
				  Ontario). As a lawyer, he was involved in several high-profile cases and
				  quickly became prominent in Kingston, which elected him in 1844 to the
				  legislature of the Province of Canada. By 1857, he had become premier under the
				  colony's unstable political system. In 1864, when no party proved capable of
				  governing for long, Macdonald agreed to a proposal from his political rival,
				  George Brown, that the parties unite in a Great Coalition to seek federation
				  and political reform. Macdonald was the leading figure in the subsequent
				  discussions and conferences, which resulted in the British North America Act,
				  1867 and the establishment of Canada as a nation on July 1, 1867. Macdonald was
				  the first prime minister of the new nation, and served 19 years; only William
				  Lyon Mackenzie King has served longer. In his first term, Macdonald established
				  the North-West Mounted Police and expanded Canada by annexing the North-Western
				  Territory, Rupert's Land, British Columbia, and Prince Edward Island. In 1873,
				  he resigned from office over a scandal in which his party took bribes from
				  businessmen seeking the contract to build the Canadian Pacific Railway;
				  however, he was re-elected in 1878. Macdonald's greatest achievements were
				  building and guiding a successful national government for the new Dominion,
				  using patronage to forge a strong Conservative Party, promoting the protective
				  tariff of the National Policy, and completing the railway. He approved the
				  execution of Métis leader Louis Riel for treason in 1885; it alienated many
				  francophones from his Conservative Party. He continued as prime minister until
				  his death in 1891. In the 21st century, Macdonald has come under criticism for
				  his role in the Chinese Head Tax and federal policies towards Indigenous
				  peoples, including his actions during the North-West Rebellion that resulted in
				  Riel's execution, and the development of the residential school system designed
				  to assimilate Indigenous children. Macdonald, however, remains respected for
				  his key role in the formation of Canada. Historical rankings in surveys of
				  experts in Canadian political history have consistently placed Macdonald as one
				  of the highest-rated prime ministers in Canadian history.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">23</container><container type="item">MacDonaldJA1</container><unittitle>John Alexander MacDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1865 and 1875?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Samuel Hollyer after a portrait by William Notman
					 from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Macfarlane, Robert Stetson (January 15, 1899 - March 6,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Stetson Macfarlane was president of Northern Pacific
				  Railway from 1951 until 1966 and was the youngest judge elected to the King
				  County Superior Court. He was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on January 15,
				  1899; the family moved to Seattle the following year. He graduated from Queen
				  Anne High School and won a scholarship to Brown University. He served in the U.
				  S. Navy from 1917 to 1919 and graduated magna cum laude from the University of
				  Washington Law School in 1922. He worked at the law firm of Chadwick, McMicken,
				  Ramsey and Rupp from 1919 until his graduation I 1922, at which time he became
				  chief deputy prosecuting attorney for King County, Washington, a position he
				  held until 1925. The next five years were spent with the law firm of
				  Schwellenbach, Merrick and Macfarlane. In 1930 he became a judge of the
				  Superior Court for King County and remained in that position until 1934. He was
				  named president of the University of Washington Alumni Association in 1931 and
				  in 1933 was honored with a distinguished service award from the U. S. Chamber
				  of Commerce. After his service as a judge, Macfarlane became the assistant
				  western counsel for Northern Pacific Railway, where he worked his way up to
				  become president of the railroad in 1951. During this time, he also served as a
				  colonel for the U. S. Army Transportation Corps in 1951 and 1952. In 1966 he
				  left the presidency to become Chairman of the Board for Northern Pacific. He
				  retired in 1971 after guiding the merger of Northern Pacific, Great Northern
				  and several other railroads into Burlington Northern. While he worked his way
				  toward the railroad’s presidency, he served as a director for the Seattle
				  School Board from 1934 t0 1950 and was president of the Seattle Chamber of
				  Commerce. He served as a director for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
				  Railroad, Pacific National Bank in Seattle, First National Bank in St. Paul,
				  the Colorado and Southern Railway, St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance, First
				  Trust Company in St. Paul, American Smelting and Refining, Minnesota Mutual
				  Life Insurance, and First Bank Stock Corporation in Minneapolis. In 1953, he
				  was named the UW’s most distinguished alumnus.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mack, Russell Vernon (July 13, 1891 – March 28,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Russell Vernon Mack served as a member of the United States
				  House of Representatives representing Washington State's 3rd District from 1947
				  to 1960. He was born in Hillman, Michigan; his family moved to Aberdeen,
				  Washington in 1895. He was educated at Stanford University in California, and
				  then at the University of Washington in Seattle. During World War I, he served
				  as a corporal in the Thirty-ninth Field Artillery, Thirteenth Division. After
				  the war, he worked in journalism in the Grays Harbor area, first at the 
				  <emph render="italic">Aberdeen Daily World</emph> from 1913 to 1934, then as
				  the owner and publisher of the <emph render="italic">Hoquiam Daily
				  Washingtonian</emph> from 1934 to 1950. He was the second ranking minority
				  member of the House Public Works committee. He vigorously represented
				  Washington in fisheries matters and was a critic of imported seafood. Mack was
				  president of the Northwest Rivers and Harbors Congress. A scholarship in his
				  memory was established at Grays Harbor College. His papers are held in UW
				  Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackRV1</container><unittitle>Russell Vernon Mack smoking a cigar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackRV2</container><unittitle>Russell Vernon Mack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackRV3</container><unittitle>Russell Vernon Mack holding a cigar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>MacFarlane, James Douglas (June 17, 1909 - April 29,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Douglas MacFarlane began playing bagpipes when he was six
				  years old and joined the Seattle Pipe Band when he was seven. He won numerous
				  awards for his piping and appearing frequently in the Seattle area during the
				  1920s. He married Margaret Gilliland in 1932.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LyonsEM1</container><unittitle>Peggy Lyons with Douglas MacFarlane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1928</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Campbells are coming. Peggy Lyons, left,
					 and Douglas MacFarlane rehearse their native folk songs and dances for the
					 annual Fourth of July picnic at Fortuna Park, where they are to entertain 5,000
					 Scotsmen.</p><p>Filed under Elvina Margaret "Peggy" Lyons subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mackenzie, Alexander (1764 - March 12, 1820)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Alexander Mackenzie was a Scottish explorer, known for his
				  overland crossing of what is now Canada to reach the Pacific Ocean in 1793.
				  This was the first east to west crossing of North America north of Mexico and
				  preceded the Lewis and Clark expedition by 10 years. He was knighted for his
				  efforts in the following year and served in the Legislature of Lower Canada
				  from 1804 to 1808.The Mackenzie River is named for him, as is the municipality
				  of Mackenzie, British Columbia, and the Mackenzie Mountains, a mountain range
				  in northern Canada.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackenzieA1</container><unittitle> Alexander Mackenzie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1800?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Thomas Lawrence</persname></origination></did><note><p>A copy of the painting in the National Gallery of Canada.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mackenzie, Donald Hector (August 12, 1901 - August 27,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald Hector Mackenzie was born in Rossland, British Columbia.
				  He attended the University of British Columbia in Vancouver before graduating
				  from the University of Washington with a Bachelor of Business Administration
				  and a Master of Business Administration. He was a member of the UW’s first
				  hockey team and was later the coach of the team. He joined the UW faculty in
				  1927 where he taught economics, accounting and business. He was head of the
				  Accounting Department and the executive officer of the Finance, Accounting and
				  Statistics Department. He was a member of the University Senate, a trustee of
				  the UW Alumni Association, a trustee of the UW Bookstore, and a member of the
				  Seattle Transit Commission, which he chaired in 1954. Mackenzie was the author
				  of several textbooks, including Fundamentals of Accounting and Mathematics of
				  Finance, as well as numerous articles for professional and trade publications.
				  A scholarship in business was established in his memory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackenzieDH1</container><unittitle> Donald Hector Mackenzie seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Paul Thomas, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in teh 1952 edition of <emph>The
					 Tyee.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mackin, Joseph Hoover (November 16, 1905 - August 12,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Hoover Mackin, a native of Oswego, New York, received a
				  B.S. in geology from New York University in 1930 and a Masters (1932) and PhD
				  (1936) from Columbia. In 1934, after completing all requirements for the
				  doctorate at Columbia other than a thesis, he accepted an appointment as an
				  instructor at the University of Washington, where he taught for twenty-eight
				  years before becoming the Farish Professor of Geology at the University of
				  Texas at Austin in 1962. During World War II, he became affiliated with the
				  U.S. Geological Survey, an organization with which he was to retain close ties
				  for the remainder of his career. He considered himself as a geomorphologist,
				  but over time, he became an engineering geologist, working on dam and reservoir
				  problems, a structural geologist and map maker, an economic geologist,
				  successful in locating and characterizing ore deposits, and a field petrologist
				  expert in volcanic ash flows and flood basalts. He was chairman of the Earth
				  Sciences Division of the National Research Council from 1963 to 1965 and
				  participated in the early planning and design of the lunar geology experiments
				  as a member of the U. S. Geological Survey team sponsored by NASA. He was the
				  author of several books, including Origins of Cascade Landscapes. The Mackin
				  Table in Antarctica is named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackinJH1</container><unittitle>Joseph Hoover Mackin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1968?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>MacKinnon, John Alexander (March 1, 1857 - July 7,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Alexander MacKinnon was born in Charlottetown, Prince
				  Edward Island. He graduated from Trinity College, Toronto University, and was a
				  member of the Royal College of Surgeons of London and a fellow of the American
				  College of Surgeons. He worked at Seattle City Hospital and the Orthopedic
				  Hospital. During World War I, he examined all applicants in Seattle for the Air
				  Service. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacKinnonJA1</container><unittitle>John Alexander MacKinnon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a Curtis Studio portrait from the series of Arctic
					 Club members.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mackintosh, Elizabeth Peebles (December 5, 1843 - June
				  2, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Peebles Mackintosh, the daughter of Hugh Peebles and
				  Emaline Palmer Peebles, came to Seattle from the East Coast in 1865, traveling
				  around Cape Horn with her sister, Anne. She was the enrolling clerk in the
				  Washington Territorial Legislature of 1869, the first woman to occupy the
				  position in the country. She married Angus Mackintosh, a prominent businessman,
				  in 1870 and was a charter member of the Woman’s Century Club. Her sister, Anne
				  M. Brown, was a teacher at Denny School in the 1900s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MackintoshEP1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Peebles Mackintosh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Mackintosh, Kenneth (October 25, 1875 - July 14,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kenneth Mackintosh, the only son of Angus and Elizabeth Peebles
				  Macintosh, was born in the family home at Third Avenue and University Street,
				  now the site of the Northern Life Tower. He attended the territorial schools
				  and entered the University of Washington. In 1890, he transferred to Stanford
				  University where he met Herbert Hoover, who became a lifelong friend. He
				  graduated from Stanford in 1895. The financial panic of the 1890s made it
				  necessary for him to earn a living, and he became a hard rock miner in
				  California. He started as a laborer and within two years was the mine
				  superintendent, saving enough money to continue his education at Columbia
				  University Law School. Mackintosh was the King County prosecuting attorney from
				  1904 to 1908. In 1912, he was appointed to the King County Superior Court by
				  Governor M. E. Hay. Mackintosh was elected to the court in 1913 and re-elected
				  in 1916. While on the bench, he was instrumental in establishing the presiding
				  judge system in King County. In 1916 he was named by Governor Ernest Lister to
				  fill a vacancy on the State Supreme Court. He was elected the next year and
				  re-elected in 1922. He served as Chief Justice in 1927. Mackintosh resigned in
				  1928 to run for the United States Senate but was unsuccessful. Under an
				  appointment from President Hoover, he served as a member of the National
				  Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement from 1929 to 1931. He was
				  appointed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals but failed to received
				  confirmation after the election of a Democratic Congress in 1932. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Macy, Jesse (June 21, 1842 – November 2,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse Macy was an American political scientist and historian of
				  the late 19th and early 20th century, specializing in the history of American
				  political parties, party systems, and the Civil War. He spent most of his
				  professional career at his alma mater, Grinnell College. He was also a leading
				  author of political science textbooks. Macy's 1896 manual on American civil
				  government, <emph render="italic">Our Government. How It Grew, What It Does,
				  And How it Does It</emph>, was an influential primer for university students
				  and his 1897 <emph render="italic">The English Constitution: A Commentary on
				  its Nature and Growth</emph> was acclaimed for providing the necessary
				  foundation in English law to correctly understand American law. He taught at
				  the University of Washington during the 1905 summer session. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MacyJ1</container><unittitle>Jesse Macy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: To Professor Edmond S. Meany with the high
					 regard of Jesse Macy, Madison, Wisc. August 8, 1900.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Macy, Preston P. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maddocks, Moses Redout (November 13, 1833 - February 25,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Moses Redout Maddocks was born in Maine. Orphaned at age
				  fourteen, he worked on his uncle’s farm while attending school. In 1856, he
				  headed west, arriving in San Francisco. After working in the mines, he traveled
				  north to the Puget Sound region, where he worked as a logger near Port Gamble.
				  Maddocks served in the State Legislature in 1863. Moving to Seattle, he built
				  the Occidental Hotel with two partners, operated a drug store and invested in
				  real estate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaddocksMR1</container><unittitle>Moses Redout Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaddocksMR2</container><unittitle>Cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry L. Yesler, and
					 Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1885 and 1886?</unitdate><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Our Fifteenth Annual
						Call</p><p>Every year, from 1870 until Henry Yesler's death in 1892,
						Gatzert, Yesler and Maddocks made social calls on New Year's Day, and the cards
						were left as mementos of their visit.</p></note><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry
					 L. Yesler, and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1890</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Nineteenth Annual
					 Greeting.</p><p>Every year, from 1870 until Henry Yesler's death in 1892,
					 Gatzert, Yesler and Maddocks made social calls on New Year's Day, and the cards
					 were left as mementos of their visit.</p><p>Filed under Bailey Gatzert subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB2</container><unittitle>Copy photo of cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry L.
					 Yesler and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1885 and 1886</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Judkins, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Our Fifteenth Annual Call,
					 Beauty Unadorned.</p><p>Filed under Bailey Gatzert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Madison, James (March 16, 1751 – June 28,
				  1836)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Madison was an American statesman and Founding Father who
				  served as the fourth President of the United States from 1809 to 1817. He is
				  hailed as the "Father of the Constitution" for his pivotal role in drafting and
				  promoting the United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MadisonJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of James Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1821?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Gilbert Stuart</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of the painting by Gilbert Stuart.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MadisonJ2</container><unittitle>James Madison, seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1810?</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Gilbert Stuart</persname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on front: From the original series painted by Stuart
					 for the Messr. Doggett of Boston.</p><p>Copy of a lithography by Nathaniel Currier after the painting
					 by Gilbert Stuart.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">23</container><container type="item">MadisonJ3</container><unittitle>James Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1770 and 1780?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Gilbert
					 Stuart from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Madsen, Charles (August 6, 1884 - August 3,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Madsen was born in Denmark and immigrated to Alaska in
				  1898. He was a fur trader in the Arctic and Siberia before settling in Kodiak,
				  where he became a world renowned big game guide and one of the first registered
				  bear guides in Alaska. He was the founder of the Kodiak Guides Association and
				  was instrumental in promoting Kodiak as a hunters' paradise. He came up with
				  the slogan "Kodiak, Home of the World's Largest Bear," putting Kodiak on the
				  map due to his enthusiastic advertising of the island and his success in
				  tracking bears. He spent his later years as a game warden and a prohibition
				  enforcement officer. <emph render="italic">Arctic Trader,</emph> a book about
				  his life, based on notes and recordings he made, was published in 1955.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MadsenC1</container><unittitle>Charles Madsen in fur parka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To Ralph Lomen with Best Wishes from Charlie
					 Madsen.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Magnuson, Warren Grant (April 12, 1905 – May 20,
				  1989)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1961 and 1963</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Warren G. Magnuson was an American lawyer and politician. He
				  received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1926, and earned a Bachelor of Laws
				  degree from the University of Washington School of Law in 1929. A member of the
				  Democratic Party, he served as a U.S. Representative (1937–1944) and a U.S.
				  Senator (1944–1981) from Washington. He served over 36 years in the Senate, and
				  was the most senior member of the body during his final two years in office.
				  His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB4</container><unittitle>Hugh Burnton Mitchell with President Harry Truman and
					 Warren G. Magnuson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1950 and 1952?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: To Paul Coughlin, with every good wish for
					 '50. Mitch.</p><p>Filed under Hugh Burnton Mitchell subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">21</container><container type="item">KennedyJF1</container><unittitle>President John F. Kennedy with Senators Warren G.
					 Magnuson and Henry M. Jackson.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph may have been taken during at groundbreaking
					 for the N-Reactor, Hanford Nuclear Reservation, Richland, Washington on
					 September 26, 1963.</p><p>Filed under John F. Kennedy suberies</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD10</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini with Senator Henry M.
					 Jackson, Senator Warren G. Magnson and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albet Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Magnusson, Carl Edward (September 29, 1872 - October 9,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>In 1904, Carl Edward Magnusson became an associate professor of
				  electrical engineering at the UW. His appointment a year later as a full
				  professor and head of the department is considered as marking the start of the
				  Department of Electrical Engineering as a separate and independent unit on
				  campus. He set ambitious goals for building the department, and he believed in
				  a close working relationship with industry, involving practicing engineers in
				  teaching classes. In about 1910, Magnusson took a leave of absence for two
				  years to work at the General Electric Company. When he returned to the UW, he
				  applied his new knowledge and experience in the academic setting. Having
				  learned how electrical transients due to faults could adversely affect
				  transmission lines, he incorporated that experience into the curriculum over
				  the next decade and wrote an authoritative book on the subject. As a result of
				  his working relationship with GE, in 1913 the company donated an electric
				  oscillograph, which led to the development of a course in electric transients,
				  probably the first such course ever to be offered in an American college.
				  During the early 1930s, Magnusson won recognition for his work on Lichtenberg
				  figures, which are imprints of a spark formed upon the surface of a plate which
				  is dusted with sulfur powder, or formed when the electrical discharge occurs
				  near a photographic plate. Magnusson published a bulletin on Hydro Power in
				  Washington, a comprehensive volume which included sites on the Columbia River.
				  During the 1930s, he served as advisor on the construction of the Grand Coulee
				  Project on the Columbia. His papers and photographs of the campus are held at
				  the University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MagnussonCE1</container><unittitle> Carl Edward Magnusson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed by Magnusson.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MagnussonCE2</container><unittitle>Signed portrait of Carl Edward Magnusson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was included in <emph render="italic">The
					 National Cyclopedia of American Biography</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MagnussonCE3</container><unittitle>Signed portrait of Carl Edward Magnusson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Main, John Fleming (September 10, 1864 - October 13,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Fleming Main graduated from Princeton in 1891 and from the
				  University of Michigan Law School. He accepted a position on the faculty of the
				  University of Washington Law School in 1904, continuing in that position for
				  five years. In 1909, he was appointed to the King County Superior Court bench.
				  He was elected to the Supreme Court in 1912 and served until his death in 1942.
				  Main was twice elected chief justice.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MainJF1</container><unittitle>John Fleming Main</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed portrait.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maizels, Deborah (March 22, 1949 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Deborah Maizels, the daughter of Samuel J. and Nettie G.
				  Maizels, was an undergraduate at the University of California at Berkeley. She
				  received her MBA from San Francisco State University and is a senior web
				  developer for Kaiser Permanente.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaizelsNG1</container><unittitle>Nettie Glickman Maizels with daughters Deborah and
					 Nancy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the February 10, 1958 edition of
					 the <emph render="italic">Jewish Transcript</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Nettie Maizels subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maizels, Nancy (July 9, 1947 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Maizels, the daughter of Samuel J. and Nettie G. Maizels,
				  was an undergraduate at the University of California at Berkeley. She received
				  her Ph.D. from Harvard University, and she continued at Harvard as a Junior
				  Fellow of the Society of Fellows. She was a Professor in the Departments of
				  Molecular Biophysics &amp; Biochemistry and Genetics at Yale University School
				  of Medicine before coming to the University of Washington in Fall, 2000 as a
				  professor, Immunology and Biochemistry, and Adjunct Professor, Pathology. She
				  was the director of the Molecular Medicine Program. Dr. Maizels retired in 2020
				  and was appointed Professor Emeritus.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaizelsNG1</container><unittitle>Nettie Glickman Maizels with daughters Deborah and
					 Nancy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the February 10, 1958 edition of
					 the <emph render="italic">Jewish Transcript</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Nettie Maizels subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maizels, Nettie Glickman (December 14, 1915 - October 4,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nettie Glickman was born in Portland in 1916, the youngest of
				  eight children. She graduated from Commerce High School (now Cleveland High)
				  and married Samuel J. Maizels the following year. Her father lost everything
				  during the Depression, and she was unable to attend college. In her late 30s,
				  and with two young daughters, she enrolled at the University of Washington; in
				  1958, she graduated Phi Beta Kappa. She went on to have a long career as a
				  Seattle court reporter. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaizelsNG1</container><unittitle>Nettie Glickman Maizels with daughters Deborah and
					 Nancy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the February 10, 1958 edition of
					 the <emph render="italic">Jewish Transcript</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maksutov, Agleida Ivanovna (1834 - December 18,
				  1862)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Princess Agleida (Adelaide) Ivanovna Bushman was the daughter of
				  a professor of English at the Naval Academy in St. Petersburg. She married
				  Prince Dmitry Maksutov, the last Governor of Russian America, in 1859.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaksutovAI1</container><unittitle>Princess Agleida Ivanovna Maksutov's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>A photograph of her gravestone. Written on front: Here rests
					 the body of Princess Agleida Ivanovna Maksutoff. Wife of Captain of 2nd rank.
					 Born in 1834 year. Died 18th December 1862. Interred in Sitka. The only
					 Princess who ever visited Alaska.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaksutovAI2</container><unittitle>Princess Agleida Ivanovna Maksutov's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maksutov, Dmitry Petrovich (May 10, 1832 – March 21,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Prince Dmitry Petrovich Maksutov was an Imperial Russian Navy
				  rear-admiral who was the last Governor of Russian America (1863 -1867). In
				  1859, he came to Russian America to work for the Russian-American Company,
				  initially as assistant to Johan Hampus Furuhjelm, whom he succeeded at the helm
				  of the company in March 1864. After the Alaska purchase in 1867, he served as
				  Russian consul in Sitka where he was in charge of the emigration of the
				  remaining Russians. In 1869, Maksutov turned over his duties to Fyodor Koskul
				  and returned to Russia. He has streets dedicated to his memory in Sitka and
				  Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MatsutovDP1</container><unittitle>Prince Dmitry Petrovich Maksutov in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maksutov, Maria Vladimirovna (1845 - June 19,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Princess Maria Vladimirovna was the daughter of a former
				  Governor General of Irkutsk and Ataman of the Trans-Baikal cossack host. She
				  met Dmitry Maksutov in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1863 and married him in
				  January 1864. The couple returned to Sitka via England, New York, Panama and
				  San Francisco, arriving in May, 1864. She was Maksutov's second wife.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaksutovMV1</container><unittitle>Princess Maria Vladimirovna Maksutov</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1864</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Bradley &amp; Rulofson, San Francisco</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Typed and written on verso: Princess Maksutov. Copy of print
					 in possession of C. D. Maxutov, her grandson. Photo made in San Francisco in
					 1864.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaksutovMV2</container><unittitle>Full length studio portrait of Princess Maria
					 Vladimirovna Maksutov</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Hubbell Collection NW. Maria Vladimirovna
					 Maksutoff (nee Aleksandrovich). Second wife of Prince Maksutov.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Malamud, Bernard (April 26, 1914 – March 18,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bernard Malamud was an American novelist and short story writer
				  who was one of the best known American Jewish authors of the 20th century. He
				  was the author of eight novels and four collections of short stories, including
				  the baseball novel, <emph render="italic">The Natural,</emph> which was adapted
				  into a film. His 1966 novel <emph render="italic">The Fixer</emph> (also
				  filmed) won both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. During the
				  late 1950s, he taught English at Oregon State University. He spoke at the
				  University of Washington on March 3, 1960.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MalamudB1</container><unittitle>Bernard Malamud</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Preston Onstad</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mallery, Joseph Arthur (April 27, 1896 - March 21,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Arthur Mallery was a Washington State Supreme Court
				  judge. He was born in Winlock, Washington and graduated from Castle Rock High
				  School. He received his undergraduate degree from Reed College in Portland and
				  graduated from the University of Washington School of Law. He taught in Cowlitz
				  County (Washington) high schools and at one time was the superintendent of the
				  Silver Lake School District. Mallery served in the Army during World War I. He
				  was admitted to the Washington State bar in 1926 and served as a prosecutor for
				  Cowlitz County from 1928 to 1934. He was an assistant U. S. attorney and police
				  judge in Tacoma before becoming a Pierce County Superior Court judge in 1940.
				  Mallery was elected to the Washington State Supreme Court in 1942 and was named
				  chief justice in 1947. He retired in 1962..</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FinleyRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Finley with fellow Washington State Supreme
					 Court Justices Joseph Mallery and Thomas Grady</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Robert C. Finley subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mallory, Rufus (January 10, 1831 – April 30,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rufus Mallory was an American educator, lawyer, and politician
				  in the state of Oregon. A native of New York, he was a teacher in Iowa before
				  moving to Oregon in 1859. He taught for several months while he studied law,
				  was admitted to the bar in 1860, and was selected as the district attorney for
				  Douglas, Jackson, and Josephine counties. He served in the Oregon House of
				  Representatives in the early 1860s. A Republican, he served as U.S.
				  Representative from Oregon for a single term from 1867 to 1869 and then
				  returned to Oregon where he was Speaker of the Oregon House. After one two-year
				  term, he was appointed as United States district attorney in 1874 and served
				  until 1882. He was then appointed as a special agent of the Treasury Department
				  in Singapore, British Malaya. At the completion of this diplomatic assignment
				  in 1883, he left Singapore and returned to Oregon to resume his law practice.
				  In1890, he became one of the founding members of the Oregon Bar Association. In
				  1887, Mallory was one of the incorporators of the Willamette Bridge Railway
				  Company. The first Morrison Street Bridge was completed in April 1887, and
				  Mallory's company operated a steam-powered streetcar across the bridge.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MalloryR1</container><unittitle>Rufus Mallory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">George Edward Perine</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MalloryR2</container><unittitle>Rufus Mallory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Malloy, Ralph Willard (May 31, 1896 - March 3,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Willard Malloy, the son of Judge John Malloy and Mary
				  Malloy, was born in Moorhead, Minnesota. He graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1916 with a Liberal Arts degree and in 1917 with a law degree. In
				  August, 1917, he enlisted in the U. S. Navy and served until July 11, 1920. He
				  taught math at Whatcom High School and later worked as a stockbroker. He
				  married Amy Moody in 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MalloyRW1</container><unittitle>Ralph Willard Malloy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ralph Malloy (Mickey), U.S.N. Camp, on UW
					 Campus, 1918.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maltby, Esther Stark (September 20, 1880 - June 15,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Esther Stark was born in the White River Valley near Auburn,
				  Washington to James Rice Stark and Elisabeth Lydia Stark, who had settled in
				  the area in 1864. Esther attended the College of Puget Sound and later taught
				  school in Lynden, Washington. In 1906, she married Harold Emery Maltby, who was
				  one of the founders of the Western Hotels chain, later to become the Westin
				  Hotels. After moving to Seattle, she was a leader in many local organizations.
				  She was a charter member of the Daughters of Pioneers of Washington and a
				  founding member of the Women's City Club, serving on its board of directors for
				  more than twenty-five years. She organized the Decouvrir Club for young married
				  people in 1929. She held leadership positions in many other organizations,
				  including the Seattle's Park Board, the Seattle Planning Commission and the
				  Northwest Conservation League. She was president of the Seattle Federation of
				  Women's Clubs (1922-1924), president of the Washington State Federation of
				  Women's Clubs (1925-1927), director of the General Federation of Women's Clubs
				  (1928-1930), and board member and later president of the Travelers Aid Society
				  (1931-1940). Preservation of forests was a top priority, and she worked with
				  Weyerhaeuser and the State Park Commission toward that goal, raising funds to
				  purchase a 63-acre virgin forest in the Cascades from the Snoqualmie Lumber
				  Company. Later this land was sold to acquire a 612-acre Federation Forest along
				  the Naches Highway. She was honored by the Seattle Federation of Women's Clubs
				  as "Woman of Accomplishment" in 1958. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MaltbyES1</container><unittitle>Esther Stark Maltby in Fortuny style gown and
					 coat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Manchester, John Alan (February 10, 1917 - January 24,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Alan Manchester was born in Batavia, New York, in 1917.
				  After studying at Oberlin College and the Art Center School in Los Angeles he
				  opened his own photography studio in New York and began designing. He designed
				  furniture, fabrics, wallpaper, houses, restaurants, offices, and the
				  Manchester-Pierce prefabricated steel fireplace, on which he has patents in the
				  United States and Canada. During the 1950s, he and Donn Pierce owned the
				  Manchester Pierce Studio in Bellevue, specializing in interior design and
				  landscape architecture. The studio included an art gallery; their first show
				  showed paintings by Morris Graves. Manchester was a judge for a juried
				  exhibition of ceramics held at the Henry Art Gallery by the Clay Club of
				  Seattle in 1952 and was often a design consultant. He moved to Taos in 1959
				  where he ran the Manchester Gallery with Dorothy Brett. He was also interested
				  in Jungian psychology and gave a series of lectures for the C. G. Jung
				  Foundation in New York City. He edited a book of psychology, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Child</emph>, by Eric Neumann, which was still in
				  rough draft at the time of Neumann's death. Manchester moved to Las Vegas in
				  1977. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">ManchesterJA1-8</container><unittitle>John Alan Manchester with Donn Pierce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Eight photographs of John Manchester (with glasses) and Donn
					 Pierce. Photographs were probably made by Dearborn Massar since they were
					 donated with the Dearborn Massar photograph collection; however, images do not
					 have any identifying information on them.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mann, Frederick M. (October 30, 1913 - April 21,
				  2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Frederick Mann received his B.A.
				  in architecture from the University of Minnesota, and his M.A. from
				  Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In Boston, he worked for the
				  architectural firm, Stone and Webster. He was a Navy Lieutenant during WWII,
				  stationed in Brazil as Chief Engineer of ship repair and re-servicing. After
				  the war, he worked for Ernest Kump in San Francisco and then opened his own
				  architectural practice with Eugene Crawford in San Rafael. He moved to Seattle
				  in 1954 and worked for Richardson Associates for the first five years. In 1959,
				  he was appointed University Architect for the University of Washington, serving
				  until 1969. Mann also helped to found the National Association of University
				  Architects. He was a consultant for various city parks and other governmental
				  projects, including his prominent role in the planting of cherry trees on the
				  University of Washington campus. He redesigned the grounds at Fort Lawton (now
				  Discovery Park) for public use when the land became the property of the City of
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MannFM1</container><unittitle>Frederick Mann</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mannering, Mary (April 29, 1876 – January 21,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Mannering, the daughter of Richard Friend and Elise
				  Whiting, was born in London. She studied for the stage under Hermann Vezin and
				  made her debut at Manchester in 1892 under her own name of Florence Friend. Her
				  American debut, in the title role in Henry V. Esmond's <emph render="italic">The Courtship of Leonie</emph>, was at Daniel Frohman's
				  original Lyceum Theatre on December 1, 1896, using the name of Mary Mannering,
				  the maiden name of her paternal grandmother. She had leading roles in other
				  plays in New York, Washington and Chicago. In 1901 she had the lead role in the
				  historical drama <emph render="italic">Janice Meredith</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">ManneringM1</container><unittitle>Mary Mannering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Manring, Benjamin Franklin (September 28, 1866 - June
				  11, 1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Manring was born in Missouri in 1866 and came
				  to Washington Territory in 1878 with his parents who settled near Garfield,
				  Whitman County. After completing courses at Spokane Business College, he became
				  active in local government affairs. He served as Whitman County Treasurer,
				  (1895-1897), mayor of Goldendale (1910) and in various county government
				  positions for several decades. A frequent writer on Pacific Northwest history,
				  he wrote <emph render="italic">Conquest of the Coeur d'Alenes, Spokanes and
				  Palouses</emph> in 1912. He married Jessie Brooks in 1910.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">ManringBF1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Franklin Manring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on verso: Very truly yours, B. F. Manring</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mansfield, Harold Hamilton (April 18, 1912 - July 25,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Hamilton Mansfield was born in White Salmon, Washington.
				  He graduated from the University of Washington in 1934 where he was the editor
				  of <emph render="italic">The Daily</emph>, the associate editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph> and a member of the Oval Club. After
				  graduation, he joined the Boeing Company as publicity and advertising manager.
				  In 1939, the company created the position of public relations manager, which
				  was eventually elevated to vice president status, and Mansfield held this
				  position for many years. In 1960, he was the special assistant to Boeing's
				  president, William H. Allen. During the Seattle World's Fair in 1962, Mansfield
				  was the chair of Boeing's Century 21 planning committee. Mansfield wrote two
				  books about the history of the Boeing Company, <emph render="italic">Vision
				  </emph>(1956) and <emph render="italic">Billion Dollar Battle</emph> (1965). He
				  married Eileen Gormley in 1935.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MansfieldHH1</container><unittitle>Harold Hamilton Mansfield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marcoe, Dr.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dr. Marcoe served aboard the <emph render="italic">Thomas R.
				  Gedney</emph>, a survey ship in the service of the U. S. Coast Survey (1875 -
				  1878) and the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1878 - 1915). He was stationed
				  in Seattle in 1900.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Marcoe1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Dr. Marcoe in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 10, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">Marcoe2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Dr. Marcoe in uniform with cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Marckworth, Gordon Dotter (January 31, 1895 - August 25,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Dotter Marckworth received his degrees in forestry from
				  Ohio State (B.S., 1916) and Yale (M.F., 1917). He worked as a forester in
				  Virginia, Texas, Tennessee, and Maryland and taught at Louisiana State
				  University and the University of Georgia before joining the faculty of the
				  University of Washington College of Forestry in 1939. He was Dean of the UW
				  College of Forestry from 1945 to 1964. He retired as Dean Emeritus and
				  Professor Emeritus in 1965. He was a leader in the field of forestry education
				  and published more than one hundred works on the subject. He also promoted
				  public education in forestry through radio programs which were broadcast for
				  more than five years. In 1941, he was appointed by Governor Langlie as chairman
				  of the Forest Advisory Committee, which reviewed forestry practices in the
				  state of Washington and made recommendations, many of which were enacted into
				  law. In 1953 the governor appointed Marckworth chairman of the Olympic National
				  Park Review Committee to study the impact of the park on the state. Marckworth
				  was a member of the State Forest Board and of the Board of Natural Resources
				  from 1957 to 1964. He was an active member of the Society of American Foresters
				  and was elected a Fellow of the society, its highest honor, in 1955. He was
				  president of the Washington State Forestry Conference from 1944 to 1960 and
				  technical director of the Institute of Forest Products from 1947 to 1957. He
				  was also a trustee of the Keep Washington Green Association, the Washington
				  State Conservation Association, and the University of Washington Arboretum
				  Foundation. He was awarded the Stewart H. Holbrook award by the Keep Washington
				  Green Association for his efforts in forest and range fire prevention. A forest
				  in the Carnation area was named for him in 1967. His papers are held in UW
				  Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarckworthGD1</container><unittitle>Autographed program with portrait from Gordon
					 Marckworth's retirement dinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 6, 1964</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarckworthGD2</container><unittitle> Gordon Marckworth in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 4, 1951</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarckworthGD3</container><unittitle>Gordon Marckworth in his office in front of bookcase,
					 holding a piece of Washington-grown Douglas Fir</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 4, 1951</unitdate><note><p>A photograph taken at the same session appears in the 1960
						edition of <emph>The Tyee.</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarckworthGD4</container><unittitle>Gordon Marckworth in his office, seated at
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 11, 1954</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1955 edition of <emph>The
						Tyee.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marcy, Effie Belle Goodell (September 19, 1862 - May 9,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Effie Belle Goodell, the daughter of Melancthon Zeingle Goodell
				  and Rebecca Euphemia Goodell, was born in Grand Mound, Washington Territory in
				  1862. Her parents had crossed the plains to Oregon in 1851 and moved to Grand
				  Mound in 1853. Effie married Harvey B. Marcy in 1888 and was a member of the
				  Montesano Woman's Club and the Grand Chapter Order of the Eastern Star.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarcyEBG1</container><unittitle>Effie Belle Goodell Marcy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marcy, Harvey Bradley (November 22, 1854 - April 6,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harvey Bradley Marcy was born in Wisconsin and came to
				  Washington Territory in the 1870s. He owned a general merchandise store in
				  Montesano, Washington and married Effie Belle Goodell in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarcyHB1</container><unittitle>Harvey Bradley Marcy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Markov, Victor William (December 28, 1915 – December 7,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor William Markov was an American football player who played
				  college football for the University of Washington Huskies. He was elected to
				  the College Football Hall of Fame in 1976 and was a unanimous choice as a
				  lineman on the University's centennial team. He earned nine varsity letters in
				  football, wrestling and track and field. After college, he played professional
				  football with the Cleveland Rams in the National Football League before joining
				  the Army. During World War II, he landed at Normandy as a company commander
				  with Gen. George Patton's Third Army. He earned the Bronze Star, the Purple
				  Heart and five battle stars while fighting in the Battles of the Bulge and the
				  Ardennes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarkovVW1</container><unittitle> Victor William Markov with Ed Rulis and Jim
					 Rucka(?)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR2</container><unittitle>Students posing with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ed Rulis, Frank
					 "Fritz" Waskowitz, unidentified, unidentified; Back row (left to right):
					 unidentified, Vic Markov, Bob Ingram, Negley England.</p><p>Written on verso: The Lindbloom bunch, Tri-Alpha House,
					 1933.</p><p>Filed under Robert Ingram subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marlow, Dorothy Marie Tilley (August 27, 1928 - November
				  12, 2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Dorothy M. Tilley married Frank Edward Marlow in 1960 in
				  Kootenai, Idaho. They divorced in 1968.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarlowFE1</container><unittitle>Frank Edward Marlow and Dorothy Marlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1966</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Frank Edward Marlow subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marlow, Frank Edward (September 5, 1909 - October 15,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Edward Marlow was the police chief in Orting, Washington.
				  He married Dorothy M. Tilley in 1960 in Kootenai, Idaho. They divorced in
				  1968.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarlowFE1</container><unittitle>Frank Edward Marlow and Dorothy Marlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1966</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marquam, Emma Kern (February 22, 1835 - May 2,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emma Kern was the daughter of Oregon pioneers William Kern and
				  Mary Ann Shull Kern; the family crossed the plains to Oregon in 1851. She
				  married Philip Marquam in 1853; the couple had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarquamEK1</container><unittitle>Emma Kern Marquam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marquam, Philip Augustus (February 28, 1823 – May 8,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Augustus Marquam was a lawyer, judge, legislator, and
				  real estate developer in Oregon. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland; the family
				  later moved to Indiana where he attended law school. He went to California
				  during the gold rush of 1849 and was elected judge in Yolo County. In 1851,
				  Marquam moved to Portland, Oregon where for many years he was the largest
				  landowner. His homestead on Marquam Hill in southwest Portland is now the site
				  of the Oregon Health &amp; Science University and the Portland Veterans Affairs
				  Medical Center. In 1862, he was elected Multnomah County judge, serving eight
				  years in the position. In 1882, Marquam was elected as a Republican to the
				  Oregon House of Representatives from Multnomah County. He was instrumental in
				  the formation of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company in 1887. He married
				  Emma Kern in 1853; the couple had eleven children. The youngest child, Thomas
				  Alfred "Tom" Marquam, served as mayor of Fairbanks, Alaska from 1923 to 1925.
				  The Marquam Bridge, Marquam Hill, Marquam Gulch and Marquam Nature Park are
				  named for him. The community of Marquam, Oregon is named for his nephew,
				  Alfred.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarquamPA1</container><unittitle>Philip Augustus Marquam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marquardt, Richard (Dick) Gordon, Sr. (June 8, 1922 -
				  August 9, 2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard (Dick) Gordon Marquardt Sr. was born at home in Coeur
				  d'Alene Idaho. His parents divorced before he was two years old, and he and his
				  older brother Fred were raised by his mother, maternal aunt, and grandparents
				  in Hayden Lake, Idaho. He moved to Seattle with his mother and brother in late
				  childhood where he attended Lincoln and Queen Anne High Schools and the
				  University of Washington. He participated in the ROTC program and served as a
				  1st Lieutenant in the United States Army during World War II. After the war, he
				  worked as a regional sales manager for many years at Watson-Hall Heating Oil
				  Company. He served in the Washington State Senate for one term in 1967 and was
				  appointed to the position of Director of the Selective Service in 1971.
				  Marquardt served as the Washington State Insurance Commissioner for four terms
				  from 1977 to 1993 and later worked as a consultant. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarquardtRG1</container><unittitle>Richard Marquardt at his desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1980 and
					 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarquardtRG2</container><unittitle>Close up of Richard Marquardt at his desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1980 and
					 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marsh, Calvin Lacon (March 18, 1873 - June 5,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Calvin Lacon Marsh was born in West Virginia. After teaching a
				  year in a rural school, he sold his few possessions and bought a train ticket
				  for Seattle, WA. He taught school for two terms in the Lake Washington area and
				  in Haller City. In 1894 Marsh and Frank B. Davis bought the 
				  <emph render="italic">Haller City Times</emph>; Marsh became sole owner of the
				  paper in 1896. In 1897 the paper was moved to Arlington, Washington, and the
				  name was changed to <emph render="italic">The Arlington Times</emph>. Marsh
				  remained the editor of the paper for 52 years until his retirement in 1946. He
				  was a noted community leader, promoting support for schools and civic
				  organizations. He was one of the organizers of the Arlington Commercial Club
				  (succeeded by the Chamber of Commerce), served as chairman of the Commercial
				  Club Agricultural committee, staged the Stillaguamish Valley Fair, and backed
				  the formation of the co-operative Arlington Creamery Association. He also
				  joined in promoting a group to develop production of fresh produce under the
				  name of North Pacific Brand. Other promotions back by Marsh’s editorials and
				  personal activities were the formation of The Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer
				  Association, the development of parks, and a flood control project on the
				  Stillaguamish River. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshCL1</container><unittitle>Calvin Marsh at his roll-top desk in the office of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Arlington Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate></did><note><p>Typed on verso: He and his desk were both retired in 1946. The
					 photograph was copied by Bert Kellogg, Port Angeles, WA. </p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshCL2</container><unittitle>Calvin Marsh reading a bound copy of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Arlington Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Marsh, David (January 11, 1844 - December 26,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Marsh was born in East Tennessee in 1844; his parents
				  moved to Iowa when he was two. In 1862, Marsh joined one of the many wagon
				  expeditions across the plains. He settled in Walla Walla Country, where he
				  spent eight or nine years in teaming and freighting from the Umatilla and
				  Wallula landings on the Snake River into the interior of Idaho. In 1871, he
				  returned to Iowa, where he met and married Emily Jane Larwood, the sister of
				  John Jacob Larwood, the auditor of Whitman County. They returned to Washington
				  Territory and settled on a homestead near Almota. In 1880, Marsh became the
				  Whitman County sheriff, serving for three successive terms. He moved to Colfax,
				  Washington Territory, where he was in the livery business with Thomas Baker.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshD1</container><unittitle>David Marsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marsh, Mary Elizabeth Strong (June 29, 1829 - April 25,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Elizabeth Strong was born in Ohio. She married Samuel
				  Putman Marsh in 1856 in Ohio and traveled west with him to his home in
				  Vancouver, Washington Territory. The couple had eight children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshMES1</container><unittitle>Mary Elizabeth Strong Marsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marsh, Samuel Putman (March 24, 1826 - March 20,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel P. Marsh was born in Medina, Ohio. He was educated in
				  Cleveland and learned the trade of a blacksmith. He was in the great Western
				  emigration, arriving in Portland in 1850. At first he worked as a blacksmith
				  and then found employment as engineer on the steamers of the Pacific Mail
				  Company, traveling between Portland and San Francisco. He spent two years as
				  engineer on the steamer <emph render="italic">Willamette</emph>, traveling
				  between Portland and Astoria. He spent one year in Sacramento before returning
				  to the Northwest. In 1856, he accepted employment as a blacksmith at Fort
				  Vancouver. He built the first blacksmith shop in Portland, Oregon and in
				  Vancouver, Washington Territory. He erected buildings in Vancouver to encourage
				  business and growth. Marsh married Mary Elizabeth Strong in 1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshSP1</container><unittitle>Samuel P. Marsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Marshall, George Catlett (December 31, 1880 - October
				  16, 1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Catlett Marshall Jr. was an American army officer and
				  statesman. He rose through the United States Army to become Chief of Staff of
				  the U.S. Army under presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman, then
				  served as Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense under Truman. Winston
				  Churchill lauded Marshall as the "organizer of victory" for his leadership of
				  the Allied victory in World War II. During the subsequent year, he
				  unsuccessfully tried to prevent the continuation of the Chinese Civil War. As
				  Secretary of State, Marshall advocated for a U.S. economic and political
				  commitment to post-war European recovery, including the Marshall Plan that bore
				  his name. In recognition of this work, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in
				  1953, the only Army general ever to receive the honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Marshall, John (September 24, 1755 – July 6, 1835)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Marshall was an American politician and lawyer who served
				  as the fourth chief justice of the United States from 1801 until his death in
				  1835. Marshall remains the longest-serving chief justice and fourth-longest
				  serving justice in U.S. Supreme Court history, and he is widely regarded as one
				  of the most influential justices to ever sit on the Supreme Court. Prior to
				  joining the Supreme Court (and for one month simultaneous to his tenure as
				  Chief Justice), Marshall served as the fourth U.S. Secretary of State under
				  President John Adams.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">23</container><container type="item">MarshallJ1</container><unittitle>John Marshall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1832</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by William G. Jackman after a portrait by Henry
					 Inman from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Marshall, S. Lizzie (April 23, 1866 - October 28,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Probably Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Marshall, daughter of George
				  and Susan Marshall, who was born in East Liverpool, Ohio. Sher married George
				  Waulmaker in Ohio in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarshallSL1</container><unittitle>S. Lizzie Marshall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Muntz &amp; Pack, Zanesville, Ohio</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Marshall, William Wesley (August 11, 1846 - January 17,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Wesley Marshall was born in Ohio and served as the
				  sheriff of Wahkiakum County circa 1850s-1889.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moore, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Martin, Charles Emanuel (September 11, 1891 - January
				  12, 1977)</unittitle><note><p>Charles E. Martin, Professor Emeritus of Political Science,
					 was born in Corsicana, Texas, and received his A.B. degree in 1914 at the
					 University of Southern California, A.M. in 1915 at the same institution, and
					 Ph. D. at Columbia in 1918. He was awarded an LL.D. degree by the University of
					 Southern California in 1942. Martin served as head of the Department of
					 Political Science at University of California at Los Angeles from 1920 to 1925,
					 and came to University of Washington in 1925 to assume the chairmanship of the
					 Department of Political Science, a position he held until 1951. At the
					 University of Washington, as Professor of International Law and Political
					 Science (1925-1962), Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences (1926-1929) and
					 Director of the Institute of International Affairs (1935-1962), Martin's long
					 and distinguished career coincided with, and was in large part responsible for,
					 the growing national reputation of the Political Science Department and the
					 programs and policies which enabled the Department to maintain that reputation.
					 Upon his retirement from the UW, he was appointed by the State Department to
					 begin an American Studies program at the University of the Philippines. His
					 papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></note></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCE1</container><unittitle>Charles Martin, standing with hand on a
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 2, 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Martin spoke at a World Affairs symposium on February 1, 1949
					 and presented a summary of Japan under the occupation. He had just returned
					 from three months of study in Japan.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCE2</container><unittitle>Charles Martin standing and holding the sari, Jewell
					 Martin seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Mrs. Martin is wearing a gold-embroidered sari that Dr. Martin
					 bought for her in India. She wore it at the University of Washington’s 32nd
					 Quarterly Dinner Symposium on World Affairs held February 28, 1951. Dr. Martin,
					 president of the symposium, was one of the principal speakers, reporting on his
					 trip as a delegate to the 11th International Conference of the Institute of
					 Pacific Relations at Lucknow, India. A photograph of her wearing the sari
					 appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>on February 20,
					 1951.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCE3</container><unittitle>Charles Martin and wife Jewell Martin; Charles Martin
					 is placing the sari on Jewell Martin's shoulders. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Mrs. Martin is wearing a gold-embroidered sari that Dr. Martin
					 bought for her in India. She wore it at the University of Washington’s 32nd
					 Quarterly Dinner Symposium on World Affairs held February 28, 1951. Dr. Martin,
					 president of the symposium, was one of the principal speakers, reporting on his
					 trip as a delegate to the 11th International Conference of the Institute of
					 Pacific Relations at Lucknow, India. A photograph of her wearing the sari
					 appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>on February 20,
					 1951.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCE4</container><unittitle>Charles Martin and Jewell Martin, looking in the
					 mirror</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Mrs. Martin is wearing a gold-embroidered sari that Dr. Martin
					 bought for her in India. She wore it at the University of Washington’s 32nd
					 Quarterly Dinner Symposium on World Affairs held February 28, 1951. Dr. Martin,
					 president of the symposium, was one of the principal speakers, reporting on his
					 trip as a delegate to the 11th International Conference of the Institute of
					 Pacific Relations at Lucknow, India. A photograph of her wearing the sari
					 appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>on February 20,
					 1951.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Martin, Clarence Daniel (June 29, 1886 – August 11,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence D. Martin was the 11th Governor of the state of
				  Washington. A Democrat, he served two terms from 1933 to 1941. Martin was born
				  and raised in Cheney in eastern Washington. He graduated from the University of
				  Washington in Seattle in 1906 and joined his father in running the Cheney Grain
				  and Milling Company. From 1928 to 1936 Martin was the mayor of Cheney, and
				  while still in office, was elected governor of the state of Washington in 1932.
				  He was known as the "people's governor" for his strict frugality in government
				  spending and oversaw large economic projects such as the Grand Coulee Dam to
				  put people to work during the Great Depression .Philosophically and politically
				  Martin was a conservative Democrat who, while governor, placed the welfare of
				  the people of the state above party politics. His tenure as governor reflected
				  the sound business and financial practices which guided his entire life. He
				  tempered fiscal conservatism with humanitarian concern for those suffering
				  under the height of the depression. When Martin left office there was still
				  unemployment and economic distress, but the state had weathered the worst years
				  of the depression. Martin died in 1955 at the age of 69 and is buried at
				  Fairmount Memorial Park in Spokane. Martin Stadium and Academic Center, the
				  football stadium at Washington State University in Pullman, was named in his
				  honor at its opening in 1972</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD1</container><unittitle>Governor Clarence D. Martin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>On verso: The pledge of Governor Martin.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD2</container><unittitle>Governor Clarence D. Martin with group signing SB 151
					 creating a division for the blind in the State Department of Social Security,
					 making appropriations and providing for the blind and the prevention of
					 blindness</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 15, 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. C. Gerard</persname></origination></did><note><p>Standing (L-R): State Representative George Twidwell, State
					 Representative Victor Skinner, John Nelson with his seeing-eye dog, State
					 Senator Joseph Walter Thein.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD3</container><unittitle>Governor Clarence Martin with stack of petitions
					 containing 125,000 signatures for Initiative 141 40 mill limit, presented by
					 Laurence S. Booth and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>The Washington Property Tax Levy Limits Initiative, also known
					 as Initiative 114, was on the November 3, 1936 ballot in Washington as an
					 Initiative to the People, where it was approved. The measure limited the
					 aggregate annual rate of levy on real and personal property for state, county,
					 city, school district and road districts to forty mills and limited the tax
					 levy for public universities to two mills.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Martin, De Loss Kellogg (January 27, 1892 - March 14,
				  1968)</unittitle><note><p>DeLoss Kellogg Martin graduated from Polytechnic College of
					 Engineering at Oakland, California with a B.S. degree. He went to Alaska for
					 the Alaska Packers Association where he assisted with the installation and
					 operation of their radio facilities. He served as radio operator on the
					 steamship <emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph> and for the Alaska Packers
					 Association’s Nushagak Cannery in Bristol Bay during the summer of 1916. He
					 wrote about his experiences on board the ship and observations while working at
					 the cannery. On August 27, 1916, after the last packers’ boats left, Martin
					 helped close the cannery. He then traveled up the Nushagak River, spending over
					 three months near the village of Koliganek before returning to Dillingham at
					 the end of January 1917. During World War I, he served as an ensign with the
					 U.S. Navy and then joined the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, where
					 he worked in development and research in many aspects of radio, communications,
					 air traffic control and microwave transmission. After retiring in 1952, he
					 worked for the Air Navigation Development Board in Washington, D.C. His
					 writings are held at the Alaska State Library and at the University of
					 Wyoming.</p></note></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinDLK1</container><unittitle>DeLoss Kellogg Martin in uniform, facing camera with
					 arms folded</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinDLK1</container><unittitle>DeLoss Kellogg Martin in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1918 and 1919</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Martin, Jewell Boone (May 3, 1890 - February 7,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jewell Boone Martin was the wife of Charles Emanuel Martin.
				  During World War II, she was active in the American Red Cross as a member of
				  the Gray Ladies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCE2-4</container><unittitle>Three photos of Charles and Jewell Martin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 13, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Mrs. Martin is wearing a gold-embroidered sari that Dr. Martin
					 bought for her in India. She wore it at the University of Washington’s 32nd
					 Quarterly Dinner Symposium on World Affairs held February 28, 1951. Dr. Martin,
					 president of the symposium, was one of the principal speakers, reporting on his
					 trip as a delegate to the 11th International Conference of the Institute of
					 Pacific Relations at Lucknow, India. A photograph of her wearing the sari
					 appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>on February 20,
					 1951.</p><p>Filed under Charles Emanuel Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Martin, William C. (May 15, 1822 - June 25,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William C. Martin was born in West Virginia in 1822 and went
				  west to Missouri in 1841. In 1843 he joined a company traveling to Oregon,
				  where he took up a claim at Howell’s Prairie. In 1848 he enlisted in a company
				  of a hundred and fifty men that went to the Walla Walla after the murder of
				  Marcus Whitman. After the defeat of the Native Americans at Sand Hollow, he was
				  left in charge at Waiilatpu to protect the immigrants. In 1849 Martin went to
				  California, and, although successful in mining for gold, found that he made
				  more money as a hunter and provider of game. In 1850 he began the business of
				  buying cattle in Oregon and driving them to Yreka and other Northern California
				  towns. He continued this business until 1862, when he heard of the discovery of
				  gold in Idaho. He stopped midway when he discovered gold on the John Day River
				  and remained there thirteen years, mining gold and quartz. Martin had a ranch
				  at Camas Prairie and later moved to Pendleton, Oregon. He was sheriff of
				  Champoeg County, Siskiyou County and Umatilla County. In 1886, he was elected
				  mayor of Pendleton and in 1888 was successful as candidate for county
				  judge.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinWC1</container><unittitle>William C. Martin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Mary I (February 18, 1516 – November 17,
				  1558)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Queen Mary I, also known as Mary Tudor, and as "Bloody Mary" by
				  her Protestant opponents, was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 until
				  her death in 1558. She is best known for her vigorous attempt to reverse the
				  English Reformation, which had begun during the reign of her father, Henry
				  VIII. Her attempt to restore to the Church the property confiscated in the
				  previous two reigns was largely thwarted by Parliament, but during her
				  five-year reign, Mary had over 280 religious dissenters burned at the stake in
				  the Marian persecutions. Mary was the only child of Henry VIII by his first
				  wife, Catherine of Aragon, to survive to adulthood. Her younger half-brother,
				  Edward VI, succeeded their father in 1547 at the age of nine. When Edward
				  became mortally ill in 1553, he attempted to remove Mary from the line of
				  succession because he supposed, correctly, that she would reverse the
				  Protestant reforms that had taken place during his reign. Upon his death,
				  leading politicians proclaimed Lady Jane Grey as queen. Mary speedily assembled
				  a force in East Anglia and deposed Jane, who was ultimately beheaded. Mary was,
				  excluding the disputed reigns of Jane and the Empress Matilda, the first queen
				  regnant of England. In July 1554, Mary married Philip of Spain, becoming queen
				  consort of Habsburg Spain on his accession in January 1556. After Mary's death
				  in 1558, her re-establishment of Roman Catholicism was reversed by her younger
				  half-sister and successor, Elizabeth I.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">24</container><container type="item">Mary1</container><unittitle>Queen Mary I</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1554</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Robert Graves after a portrait by Antonis Mor</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mason, Allen Chase (December 22, 1855 -November 9,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allen Chase Mason was born in Polo, Illinois. He went to college
				  in Bloomington, Illinois, and graduated from Illinois Wesleyan University in
				  1875. He was a high school principal and teacher, read the law and was admitted
				  to the Illinois bar. In 1883, he and his family moved to Tacoma with plans for
				  him to practice law. He became involved in real estate, and in 1884, built gas
				  and electric plants in Olympia. In 1886, Mason established the Shore Line
				  Railroad, which was purchased by Northern Pacific. He joined forces with Nelson
				  Bennett to build street car lines in Tacoma. He eventually sold his interest,
				  but later founded other street car companies and built the line through the
				  Proctor District to Pt. Defiance. He also invested in irrigation works near
				  Yakima and in farming in Palouse, and became a director of several Northwest
				  banks. He became the largest stockholder in the Tacoma Theater building, a
				  stockholder in the Tacoma Hotel, and an investor in the Tacoma smelter. He
				  built downtown real estate blocks in Tacoma, Fairhaven and Yakima. He put much
				  of his development efforts into residential growth and advertised heavily
				  throughout the country to attract newcomers, coining the phrase “City of
				  Destiny.” He was responsible for platting and selling 13 additions in Tacoma’s
				  north end, adding streets, bridges, wharves, warehouse operations and viaducts.
				  He donated the land for Puget Park. In 1888, he was elected to the board that
				  launched the school that became the University of Puget Sound. Within a decade
				  of arriving in Tacoma, Mason was a multimillionaire. In the Panic of 1893,
				  Mason personally bought back houses from anyone who asked, losing all his money
				  in the process. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC1</container><unittitle>Allen Chase Mason</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original carte-de-visite portrait of Allen Mason moved to PH
					 Coll 1034 Photographer, I.B. Davidson, Tacoma, Washington Territory.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC2</container><unittitle>Allen Chase Mason</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mason, Charles Henry (March 4, 1830 – July 29,
				  1859)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Henry Mason was the first Secretary of State for
				  Washington Territory and was acting Governor for two and a half years while the
				  territorial Governor, Isaac Ingalls Stevens, conducted railroad surveys and
				  concluded treaties with First Nations tribes and confederations. Mason was born
				  in Fort Washington, Maryland and moved at the age of seven to Rhode Island. He
				  graduated with honors from Brown University in 1850 and was recommended for the
				  bar shortly after. In September 1853, he received the political appointment as
				  Secretary of State and came west. As Acting Governor, he served the state in
				  time of war, from October 1855 to January 1856, as hostilities between settlers
				  and First Nations peoples erupted in Snohomish, King, Pierce, and Thurston
				  Counties. Historians assess his efforts during this time as "marked with
				  energy, decision, and wisdom." Mason called for volunteers, maintained peaceful
				  relations with non-hostile bands, and treated all parties with fairness. Mason
				  assisted Stevens in the negotiations of the Medicine Creek and Point No Point
				  Treaties and was credited as the secretary of the treaty commissions. Mason
				  transported documents to the nation's capital and secured funding for
				  territorial aid. He died after a brief illness at Olympia, Washington
				  Territory. Mason County, Washington was renamed in 1864 in honor of this
				  politician.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Henry Mason</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1853 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from <emph>The Hitory of Puget Sound Country</emph>
					 by William F. Prosser, opposite page 257. Reprinted in<emph>History of
					 Washington</emph> by Clinton A. Snowden, page 378</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mason, Horace Edwin Cooper (April 28, 1863 -May 21,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Edwin Cooper Mason was born in Leiscester, England. For
				  six years, he was the pastor at the First Congregational Church in Pullman
				  before accepting the position as pastor of the University Congregational Church
				  in Seattle where he served from 1904 until 1929. He then became pastor emeritus
				  of the church.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonHEC1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Horace Mason</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Mason, Oliver Stanley (June 16, 1901 - September 25,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oliver Stanley Mason, the son of James B. and Mary A. Mason, was
				  born in Idaho. He served in the Army Air Corps during World War II and later
				  worked as a mechanic and as a truck driver. His sister, Gladys Mason, was
				  married to Commodore Duey Ryan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Massar, Phyllis Dearborn (May 24, 1916 - January 8,
				  2011) [folder empty]</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phyllis Dearborn Massar graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1937. She studied photography at the Clarence H. White School of
				  Photography and took courses taught by Ansel Adams at the Museum of Modern Art
				  in New York City. Her architectural photography was influenced by the F/64
				  group of photographers, and her photographs were recognized for a sense of
				  balance and exactness in their composition. She traveled in Italy with her 4x5
				  camera on commissions to chronicle the architecture of Andrea Palladio and of
				  Filippo Brunelleschi. In the 1970s she curated several photographic exhibits
				  and print exhibits at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As an art historian, she
				  was author of many articles and monographs as well as the book 
				  <emph render="italic">Presenting Stefano Della Bella</emph>. The photographs of
				  architectural works in the Pacific Northwest made from 1943-1963 with her
				  husband, Robert Massar, are archived under the professional name of
				  Dearborn-Massar in the UW Libraries, Special Collections Division. </p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mastin, William H. (January 11, 1840 - April 30,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William H. Mastin was born in Illinois. He was living in
				  Washington Territory by 1870, where he worked as a saddler and later owned a
				  variety store and a grist mill. He was a city councilman in Colfax,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MastinWH1</container><unittitle>William H. Mastin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Matheny, David Layson (August 25, 1844 - April 2,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Layson Matheny was born on the Tualatin Plains of Oregon
				  in 1844. His parents, Adam M. Matheny and Sarah Jane Layson, had eloped and
				  traveled to Oregon in one of the first wagon trains. David married Elvira C.
				  Barker in 1878. He worked as an orchardist and landscaper.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MathenyDL1</container><unittitle>David Layson Matheny sitting in a rocking chair with
					 wife Elvira Matheny standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 19,
					 1913</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Matheny, Elvira Chadwick Brown Barker (July 6, 1844 -
				  February 20, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elvira Chadwick Brown was the daughter of Elias Brown and
				  Lucinda (Cox) Brown. She married William Clement Barker on June 27, 1860. They
				  had three children: Cary Clement Barker (1862), Mary Henrietta Barke (1866),
				  and Burt Brown Barker (1874). Elvira and William divorced in 1874. Elvira
				  married David Layson Matheny in October 1878 in Oregon; his parents were Oregon
				  pioneers of 1843. Elvira Brown Matheny has been memorialized as the "Pioneer
				  Mother" by a bronze statue erected on the grounds of the University of Oregon
				  in Eugene, Oregon by her son, Dr. Burt Brown Barker. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MathenyDL1</container><unittitle>David Layson Matheny sitting in a rocking chair with
					 wife Elvira Matheny standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 19,
					 1913</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under David Layson Matheny subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mather, Cotton (February 12, 1663 – February 13,
				  1728)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cotton Mather was a socially and politically influential New
				  England Puritan minister, prolific author, and pamphleteer. He left a
				  scientific legacy due to his hybridization experiments and his promotion of
				  inoculation for disease prevention, though he is most frequently remembered
				  today for his involvement in the Salem witch trials.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MatherC1</container><unittitle>Cotton Mather</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1700?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mathews, Francis (Frank) (August 26, 1843 - November 13,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis (Frank) Mathews was born in Scotland and served during
				  the U. S. Civil War on the<emph render="italic"> U.S.S. John Adams. </emph>He
				  came to Washington in 1868 and settled in Pierce County, Washington. He spent
				  his final years at the Washington Soldiers Home in Orting, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MathewsF1</container><unittitle>Francis (Frank) Mathews and daughter Maud Louise
					 Mathews</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mathews, Maud Louise (August 31, 1879 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maud Louise Mathews was the daughter of Francis (Frank) Mathews
				  and Catherine Gobar Mathews.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MathewsF1</container><unittitle>Francis (Frank) Mathews and daughter Maud Louise
					 Mathews</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Francis Mathews subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mathewson, Christopher (Christy) (August 12, 1880 –
				  October 7, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Christopher "Christy" Mathewson, nicknamed "Big Six," was a
				  Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher who played 17 seasons with the New
				  York Giants. He was among the most dominant pitchers in baseball history and
				  ranks in the all-time top ten in several key pitching categories, including
				  wins, shutouts, and ERA. In 1936, Mathewson was elected into the Baseball Hall
				  of Fame as one of its first five members. He grew up in Factoryville,
				  Pennsylvania, and began playing semiprofessional baseball when he was 14 years
				  old. He played in the minor leagues in 1899, recording a record of 21 wins and
				  two losses. He pitched for the New York Giants the next season but was sent
				  back to the minors. He would eventually return to the Giants and go on to win
				  373 games in his career, a National League record. He led the Giants to victory
				  in the 1905 World Series by pitching three shutouts. Mathewson never pitched on
				  Sundays, owing to his Christian beliefs. Mathewson served in the United States
				  Army's Chemical Warfare Service in World War I and was accidentally exposed to
				  chemical weapons during training. His respiratory system was weakened from the
				  exposure, causing him to contract tuberculosis, from which he died in Saranac
				  Lake, New York in 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MathewsonC1</container><unittitle>Christy Mathewson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1923</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Keystone View Company, New York</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Accompanying material describes Mathewson's return to baseball
					 as head of the Boston Braves.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Matsunaga, Fumio (November 24, 1871 - February 21,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reverend Fumio Matsunaga was born in Japan and had a teaching
				  post at Meiji Gakun University in Vancouver, B. C., Canada during World War I.
				  He resigned his post to become a minister at the Japanese Methodist Church in
				  Vancouver, B.C., leaving in 1917 to serve at the New York Shudoka Church in
				  1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NaganoJM3</container><unittitle>Group photograph in front of the Methodist Church in
					 Vancouver, B. C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Reverend Matsunaga's farewell. All the
					 members of the Methodist Church. May 1917. Also mother's farewell picture. Left
					 for USA this year 1917.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Jack Manzo Nagano subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Matthes, Francois Emile (March 16, 1874 – June 21,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francois Emile Matthes was a geologist and an expert in
				  topographic mapping, glaciers, and climate change. He mapped remote areas of
				  the American West for the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and his maps
				  coincided with the development of those areas into national parks. He is one of
				  the founders of the Association of American Geographers and served as its
				  president. Matthes resolved a dispute about formation of the Yosemite Valley,
				  and his findings on glaciers introduced the terms nivation and Little Ice Age.
				  He married Edith Lovell Coyle on June 7, 1911 and later that day, the couple
				  departed for the state of Washington so Matthes could resume mapping Mount
				  Rainier. In 1949 the Sierra Club, of which Matthes had served as honorary
				  vice-president, named Matthes Crest and Matthes Lake in his honor. The
				  Cryosphere Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers (AAG)
				  sponsors the François Émile Matthes Award which was first presented in 2007. It
				  is given to meritorious individuals for their Lifetime Time Achievements in
				  Cryospheric Science. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MatthesFE1</container><unittitle>Francois Emile Matthes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bachrach, Baltimore &amp; Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Matthison, Edith Wynne (November 23, 1875 – September
				  23, 1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith Wynne Matthison was an Anglo-American stage actress who
				  also appeared in silent films. She was born in Birmingham, England and was
				  educated in King Edward's Grammar School and Midland Institute. In 1896, she
				  began to appear in musical comedy and joined Ben Greet's company. She
				  specialized in Shakespeare and classic drama almost from the start of her
				  career. In 1904 she appeared in Goldsmith's <emph render="italic">She Stoops to
				  Conquer</emph> in the United States. She appeared in three silent films, 
				  <emph render="italic">National Red Cross Pageant </emph></p><p>(1917), <emph render="italic">The Governor's Lady</emph> (1915)
				  and <emph render="italic">Animated Weekly, No. 54</emph> (1913). Matthison
				  married the playwright Charles Rann Kennedy in 1898 and acted in many of his
				  plays. They both taught at Bennett Junior College in Millbrook, New York. She
				  was also a member of the Advisory Council of the Congressional Union for Woman
				  Suffrage.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MatthisonEW1</container><unittitle>Edith Wynne Matthison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Hugh Stuart Campbell</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: With best love to Louise from Edith Wynne
					 Matthison.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mattson, Norman A. (November 6, 1917 - March 28,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norman Mattson was the secretary of the Pensioner's Association
				  and secretary of ILWU Local 1 in Raymond, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpurrellJM1</container><unittitle> Lance Graham, Jack Spurrell and Norman Mattson with
					 the Longshoremen's Statue in Raymond, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>In 1937 the International Longshoremen's Association Local
					 38-92 (AFL) became the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union
					 (ILWU) Local 1, the first CIO local of the ILWU chartered in the state of
					 Washington. ILWU Local 1 was based in Raymond, Washington (on Willapa Bay), and
					 existed until it merged with Aberdeen Local 24 in 1976. The Pacific Coast
					 Pensioner's Association was intended to provide union workers with accident or
					 retirement benefits; in 1988, the Pensioner's Association had a statue carved
					 to commemorate the history of shipping industry in the port of Raymond. The
					 statue is a full-length figure of a longshoreman, dressed in overalls and cap.
					 He is standing on a crate, with a rolled object under his proper right arm.</p><p>The back of the photo indicates that Graham was the carver;
					 however, the Smithsonian lists John Dempsey as the sculptor.</p><p>Filed under Jack Spurrell subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>May, Charles Culbertson (September 19, 1887 - March,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles C. May began his university career at Cornell, where he
				  was elected captain of the freshmen football team; he also was on the track and
				  crew teams. In 1907, he was on the varsity team before transferring to the
				  University of Washington in 1908. He was ineligible for varsity play in 1908
				  due to the transfer rule, but joined the varsity football team under Coach Gil
				  Dobie in 1909. He graduated from the UW in 1910 with a degree in civil
				  engineering. He became a member of the UW faculty in 1912 and served for two
				  years. He spent two years in private engineering work before returning to the
				  UW. He was one of the first enlisted men to leave Camp Lewis for the war and
				  came out of the service as a first lieutenant to resume his place at the
				  University. In 1926, he was appointed chair of the Faculty Athletic Commission
				  and joined the Board of Control at the same time. He was later superintendent
				  of buildings and grounds for the University. He served the UW for forty years,
				  retiring in 1952.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MayCC1</container><unittitle>Charles Culbertson May in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maynard, Catherine Troutman Simmons Broshears (July 19,
				  1816 - October 20, 1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine Troutman Simmons was born in Kentucky and married
				  Israel Broshears in 1832. In March, 1850, she and her husband, along with
				  several family members, set off for Oregon. In June, near Fort Kearney,
				  Nebraska, the party was stricken with cholera, and her husband and mother died.
				  Dr. David Maynard was en route to California when he came across the Broshears
				  party; he provided medical care to them and joined them on their Oregon
				  travels. They reached Olympia on September 25, 1850. Catherine moved in with
				  her brother Michael Simmons, and Maynard settled nearby. On December 24, 1852,
				  the Oregon legislature granted Maynard a divorce from his first wife, and
				  Maynard and Catherine were married January 15, 1853. The couple moved to
				  Seattle and started the Seattle Exchange, the town's first store. She provided
				  detailed first-person accounts of many important events from Seattle’s early
				  days to her biographer, Thomas Prosch, whose book <emph render="italic">David
				  S. and Catherine T. Maynard</emph> was published shortly before her death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardCTSB1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Catherine Maynard </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">LaRoche, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardCTSB2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Catherine Maynard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardCTSB3</container><unittitle>Catherine Maynard at Lake View Cemetery sitting by Dr.
					 David Maynard's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate></did><note><p>Two copies.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Maynard, David Swinson (Doc) (March 22, 1808 – March 13,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Swinson Maynard, an American pioneer, doctor, and
				  businessman, was one of Seattle's primary founders and civic boosters. He was
				  an advocate of Native American rights, and when Washington became a territory
				  in 1853, Maynard was appointed to be in charge of Indian relations. His
				  friendship with Chief Seattle was important in the formation of the city of
				  Seattle, and it was he who proposed the city be named for this important chief.
				  Maynard was Seattle's first doctor, second lawyer, a Justice of the Peace, and
				  architect of the Point Elliott Treaty of 1855. He and his wife, Catherine,
				  opened one of the first hospitals in Seattle, which served both settlers and
				  Native Americans.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardDS1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of David Maynard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. M. Sammis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0101/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Copy of tintype.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardDS2</container><unittitle>David Swinson Maynard, with glasses on
					 forehead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1868?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardDS3</container><unittitle>David Swinson Maynard, with glasses on
					 forehead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1868?</unitdate></did><note><p>Enlargement of previous portrait</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardDS4</container><unittitle>David Swinson Maynard wearing glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaynardCTSB3</container><unittitle>Catherine Maynard at Lake View Cemetery sitting by Dr.
					 David Maynard's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Catherine Maynard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mays, Carl William (November 12, 1891 – April 4,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carl William Mays was a right-handed pitcher in Major League
				  Baseball from 1915 to 1929. Although he won over 200 games, 27 in 1921 alone,
				  and was a member of three world championship teams, Mays is primarily
				  remembered for throwing the beanball that killed Ray Chapman of the Cleveland
				  Indians on August 16, 1920. Chapman became the only Major League player to die
				  as a direct result of an on-field injury. Mays was never elected to the
				  Baseball Hall of Fame despite having lifetime statistics comparable to some
				  other pitchers who were. After his playing career, Mays served as a scout for
				  Cleveland and Milwaukee clubs.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MaysCW1</container><unittitle>Carl William Mays</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 3,
					 1921</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Underwood &amp; Underwood, New York</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Accompanying material discusses whether Mays would pitch in
					 the opening game of the World Series.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McAlister, Daniel Allison (February 6, 1842 - April 14,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Allison McAlister was born in Illinois. When he was
				  twenty, he went to Missouri to visit his uncle, Samuel Harvey McAllister, and
				  found him preparing to travel to the Pacific Coast. He and his uncle joined the
				  Yount train, and McAlister rode the entire distance on horseback. By the fall
				  of 1862, he took up a land claim near Grand Ronde. He farmed and taught school
				  before selling his claim and buying livestock. He gradually bought more land
				  and was one of the first horse breeders in Eastern Oregon. He served two terms
				  in the state senate. In November, 1867, he married Nancy J. Moe.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McAlisterDA1</container><unittitle>Daniel A. McAlister</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The illustration consists of two drawings, one of the
					 McAlister ranch and one of his home, with an inset portrait.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McAllister, Samuel Ward (July 27, 1855 - May 31,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Ward McAllister, Jr. was a judge in California. In 1884,
				  he was appointed district court judge of the Alaska Territorial Supreme Court;
				  he held only one court session in Sitka before leaving the territory. He was
				  suspended in July, 1885 and vacated office August 28, 1885. He sued the U. S.
				  Government for salary due until the expiration of his appointment; the U. S.
				  Supreme Court disallowed his claim. His father, the self-appointed arbiter of
				  New York society from the 1860s to the early 1890s, coined the term "The Four
				  Hundred" to describe the number of people in New York who he considered worthy
				  of notice.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KinkeadJH1</container><unittitle>Copy of photograph of the first officials of the Civil
					 Government of Alaska, taken in front of the Custom House in Sitka,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1885</unitdate></did><note><p> John Kinkead, seated. Standing from left to right: Edwin W.
					 Haskett, Munson C. Hillyer, Samuel Ward McCallister, Jr., Andrew T. Lewis.</p><p>Filed under John Henry Kinkead subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McAndrew, Ruby El Hult (August 14, 1913 - February 18,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruby McAndrew, who wrote under her maiden name of Ruby El Hult,
				  was an author and historian. Over more than six decades, she authored several
				  books and dozens of magazine articles, among them the 1952 
				  <emph render="italic">Steamboats in the Timber,</emph> about the steamboat
				  trade on Lake Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, before World War I; <emph render="italic">Untamed Olympics: the Story of a Peninsula</emph> in 1954; and 
				  <emph render="italic">Lost Mines and Treasures of the Pacific Northwest</emph>
				  in 1957. Her last book, <emph render="italic">An Olympic Mountain
				  Enchantment,</emph> was published in 1989. During her early years, she lived in
				  Spokane and on farms near Lake Coeur d’Alene. After graduation from Spokane’s
				  Lewis and Clark High School in 1932, and Northwestern Business College two
				  years later, she took writing classes at University of Washington and then was
				  an assistant editor of Washington State Journal of Nursing from 1949 to 1952.
				  Her first husband, merchant seaman Capt. S. John Sether, died at sea in 1959.
				  She later married Raymond McAndrew, who died in 1978. She donated the majority
				  of her original manuscripts, notes, photos and correspondence to the UW and WSU
				  libraries.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McAndrewREH1</container><unittitle>Ruby El Hult McAndrew, seated with
					 typewriter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1967</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Eleanor Garst</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ruby El Hult at work. "More Lost Mines." Her
					 office, Santa Barbara, California.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McBride, Ella Etna (November 17, 1862 - September 14,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ella E. McBride was an internationally noted fine-art
				  photographer, avid mountain climber, environmentalist and civic leader. From
				  1907 until 1916, she ran the photography studio of Edward S. Curtis and for
				  more than 30 years operated her own successful Seattle photography studio.
				  During her nearly 103 years, she maintained successful professions in the
				  fields of art, education, and business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE1</container><unittitle>Cast of <emph render="italic">Treasure Island
					 </emph>performance at the Seattle Soroptimists Club luncheon at the Olympic
					 Hotel; Lois Sandall (as Long John Silver), Ella McBride (as Darby McGraw),
					 Jessie Kelly (as Jim Hawkins), Rose Morgan (as Black Dog) and Mary Ann Wells
					 (as Captain Billy Bones)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 29, 1926</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the September 30, 1926 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE2</container><unittitle>Ella McBride, Lee Ellenwood and Lena Hemphill
					 performing in Luncheon Program: <emph render="italic">The Ballet Dancers</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.McBrideEE2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The director was Mary Ann Wells.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Ella McBride</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride &amp; Anderson, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on front: Duane Haley for (?) and Ella. Written on
						verso: Ella McBride, Soroptimist.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE4</container><unittitle>Photograph of Ella McBride seated in chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing October 2023</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE5</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with Mary Drew at the Seattle Soroptimist
					 Club luncheon at the Olympic Hotel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 31, 1959</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE6</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with Victor Christgau, executive director
					 of the Social Security Administration</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE7</container><unittitle>Ella McBride with David Jordan, her
					 grand-nephew</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 29, 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE8</container><unittitle>Photo of Ella McBride on her 100th birthday holding
					 telegram dated November 14, 1962</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 14, 1962</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McBride, Henry (February 7, 1856 – October 7,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry McBride was the fourth Governor of Washington State (1901
				  to 1905) and was the first governor of Washington to be born in a western
				  state. Born in Farmington, Utah, he studied for the priesthood of the Episcopal
				  Church at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut but did not complete his
				  course of study due to illness. He moved to Washington Territory in 1882 and
				  taught school at Oak Harbor on Whidbey Island while he studied law. From 1887
				  to 1889 he was a practicing attorney in partnership with E. M. Carr and Harold
				  Preston. He was prosecuting attorney for the counties of Whatcom, Skagit, and
				  Snohomish from 1889 to 1891. Appointed by Governor Elisha P. Ferry in 1891 and
				  elected to a full four-year term in 1892, he served as Superior Court Judge for
				  the Skagit and Island Counties from 1891 to 1896. He was elected to the office
				  of Lieutenant Governor of the state of Washington in 1900 and became Governor
				  upon the death of Governor John Rankin Rogers on December 26, 1901; he served
				  until 1905. After leaving office, he returned to his law practice, served as
				  president of a savings and loan association, and worked in the lumber
				  business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideH1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Henry McBride</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0102/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideH2</container><unittitle>Henry McBride and staff in a field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1901 and 1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photograph">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photo, cropped.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McBride, James (February 9, 1802 – December 18, 1875)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James McBride was an American politician, and educator. A native
				  of Tennessee, he served in the Oregon Territorial Legislature, was the United
				  States Minister to Hawaii (1863 - 1866), and was one of the founders of the
				  Oregon Republican Party. James McBride was educated in Nashville and then moved
				  to Missouri where he married Mahala Miller on June 20, 1830. McBride practiced
				  medicine in Missouri before the family immigrated to Oregon Country in 1846. In
				  Oregon he taught school, practiced medicine, farmed, and preached. In 1850, he
				  was elected to the Territorial Council, the upper chamber of the Oregon
				  Territorial Legislature. He was later named Oregon Territory's first school
				  superintendent. In 1863, he was appointed by President Abraham Lincoln as
				  Minister to the Kingdom of Hawaii, serving there until 1866. He retired from
				  government service in 1867 and settled at St. Helens, Oregon. Two of McBride's
				  sons, George and John, served in the United States Congress representing
				  Oregon, and Thomas was chief justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. A daughter,
				  Louisa, married Oregon's third governor, George L. Woods.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideJ1</container><unittitle>James McBride</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McBride, Thomas Allen (November 15, 1847 - September 9,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Allen McBride was an American attorney and judge in
				  Oregon. He was born in Yamhill County, Oregon near Lafayette, Oregon, one of
				  fourteen children of Doctor James McBride and his wife Mahala Miller McBride.
				  Thomas attended school in Vancouver, Washington where he also read law and then
				  studied at what is now Linfield College. He was admitted to the bar on October
				  6, 1870. In 1876 he was elected to the Oregon House of Representatives as a
				  Republican from Columbia County. In 1877 he moved to Salt Lake City, Utah,
				  returning to Oregon in 1880. He practiced law at Oregon City before becoming
				  the district attorney for Clatsop County, serving until 1892. In 1892, he
				  became Clatsop County Circuit Court judge, serving until 1909. On May 1, 1909,
				  Oregon Governor Frank W. Benson appointed McBride to the state Supreme Court to
				  fill the vacancy created when Justice Robert S. Bean resigned. McBride then won
				  a full six year-term in the 1914 election, was re-elected in 1920 and again in
				  1926. During his time on the bench, he was chief justice of the court from 1913
				  to 1915, 1917 to 1921, and then from 1923 to 1927. He died in office on
				  September 9, 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideTA1</container><unittitle>Thomas Allen McBride</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCall, John Marshall (January 15, 1825 - November 4,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Marshall McCall was born in Pennsylvania and migrated to
				  Yreka, California during the gold rush. He then turned north in 1850 to take
				  mining claims on tributaries on the Applegate River outside Jacksonville,
				  Oregon. McCall farmed along Wagner Creek until 1856, ran a store, and in 1859
				  purchased interest in the Ashland Flour Mill. In 1861 the First Oregon Cavalry
				  formed, and he was commissioned 2nd Lieutenant of Company D. By 1865, he was
				  promoted to Captain. After the Civil War, McCall served the region in several
				  political offices, including serving as the first treasurer of the city of
				  Ashland, and was the founder of the Ashland Woolen Mill. In 1876 he was elected
				  on the People's Ticket as a representative to the Oregon State Legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCallJM1</container><unittitle>John Marshall McCall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCandless, Bruce (August 12, 1911 – January 24,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The son of Commodore Byron McCandless. Bruce McCandless
				  graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1932. He served on USS
				  Indianapolis and USS Case and was serving on the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  San Francisco</emph> at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked on December 7,
				  1941. On November 13, 1942, during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, Japanese
				  gunfire killed all other officers on the San Francisco's bridge except
				  McCandless, who took command for the rest of the battle. For his conduct he was
				  awarded the Medal of Honor and promoted to full Commander. He continued to
				  serve on the <emph render="italic">San Francisco</emph> until 1944, when he
				  took command of the newly commissioned destroyer <emph render="italic">USS
				  Gregory</emph> (DD-802). On April 8, 1945, during the Battle of Okinawa, 
				  <emph render="italic"> the Gregory</emph> was attacked and damaged by four
				  kamikazes, and McCandless was awarded the Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry
				  during the battle. Captain McCandless retired on September 1, 1952, with a
				  terminal promotion to the rank of Rear Admiral. He died in Washington, D.C. on
				  January 24, 1968 and was buried in the Naval Academy Cemetery in Annapolis,
				  Maryland. In 1971, the frigate <emph render="italic">USS McCandless</emph>
				  (FF-1084) was named in honor of RADM McCandless and his father, Commodore Byron
				  McCandless. There is also a street at the U.S. Naval Academy named after him.
				  His son is NASA astronaut, Captain Bruce McCandless II,</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCandlessB1</container><unittitle> Bruce McCandless in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCarthy, Joseph LePage (October 19, 1913 - May 8,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph LePage McCarthy researched wood chemistry and taught at
				  the University of Washington from 1941 until his retirement in 1984, serving as
				  graduate dean from 1957 to 1974. After retiring, he accepted a professorship at
				  Nanjing Forestry University in China. A native of Spokane, Washington, he
				  graduated from the University of Washington in 1934, received a master's degree
				  at the University of Idaho in 1936, and a doctorate in chemistry at McGill
				  University. His principal research interests were thermodynamics, the chemistry
				  of cellulose and the development of cleaner techniques in pulp processing. He
				  was the author of some 170 scientific papers. McCarthy's studies took him to
				  forestry laboratories from Europe to China and earned him an international
				  reputation. He was a founder of the Pacific Science Center Foundation and
				  served on the boards of the Northwest Arts Council, the Seattle Art Museum and
				  the Seattle Library Foundation, among others. In his later years, he also
				  continued his consulting work for the Georgia Pacific and Weyerhaeuser paper
				  companies. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCarthyJL1</container><unittitle>Joseph LePage McCarthy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John A. Moore, UW Office of Information Services, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCarty, Jonathan Warren (May 20, 1833 - May 14,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jonathan Warren McCarty was born in North Carolina; the family
				  moved to Indiana when he was six. In 1853, he traveled on the Oregon Trail with
				  his older sister, arriving in the Puyallup River Valley where he started a
				  farm. He married Ruth Jane Kincaid in 1855; they had six children. During the
				  treaty wars, the family moved to Fort Steilacoom where their eldest daughter,
				  Clara, who became the first person to graduate from the University of
				  Washington, was born. After the war, he returned to the Puyallup River area
				  where he rebuilt the farm and also delivered mail. In 1870, the family moved to
				  Seattle so that the children would have better educational opportunities. Ruth
				  died in 1880, and McCarty married Sara Ann Westbrook in 1883. In 1889, he
				  leased his farm and moved to Tacoma where he managed rental properties. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCartyJW1</container><unittitle>Jonathan Warren McCarty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCarty, Reverend John D. (June 7, 1798 – May 10,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John D. McCarty was the first missionary Episcopal priest in the
				  Washington Territory and served as the only United States Army chaplain at the
				  front during the Mexican War. He was instrumental in founding and establishing
				  numerous Episcopal churches in Western New York and the Northwest. He was born
				  in Rhinebeck, New York. As a young man, he studied law and briefly practiced
				  for three years. He then decided to enter the ordained ministry of the
				  Protestant Episcopal Church. McCarty joined the United States Navy in 1825 as
				  an acting chaplain. He left the Navy in 1826 and was ordained a priest in the
				  Protestant Episcopal Church 1827. He began his work as a missionary in Oswego
				  County, New York, remaining until 1845. When the Mexican American War broke out
				  in 1846, McCarty enlisted in the United States Army as a brigade chaplain. He
				  was the only brigade chaplain in the Mexican American War and the only official
				  chaplain to be stationed at the front in Mexico. After the war, he was
				  stationed in Missouri until being sent to Oregon. He reached Portland in 1853,
				  traveling by ship by way of Panama. In addition to his duties in Portland, he
				  also ministered to Hudson’s Bay Company Fort Vancouver and the adjacent U. S.
				  Army Fort Vancouver. In 1854, he was transferred by the U.S. Army to Fort
				  Steilacoom, Washington Territory. He retired as U. S. Army chaplain in 1867 and
				  resigned as rector of St. Luke’s, the first Episcopal Church in Washington
				  Territory, in 1868. He died in Washington D. C. in 1881.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCartyJD1</container><unittitle>John D. McCarty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCartyJD2</container><unittitle>John D. McCarty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCarver, Julia Ann McCoy (November 19, 1825 - May 14,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julia Ann McCoy was born in Missouri and came to Oregon in 1847
				  with her first husband, Garrett Buckalew. After his death, she married Morton
				  Matthew McCarver in 1848. She followed McCarver to the gold fields of
				  California and Idaho and then back to Oregon before the couple moved to the new
				  city of Tacoma. They had nine children, all girls.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCarverJAM1</container><unittitle>Julia Ann McCarver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCarver, Morton Matthew (January 14, 1807 - April 17,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Morton Matthew McCarver was an American politician and pioneer
				  in the West. A native of Kentucky, he helped found cities in Iowa, Oregon, and
				  Washington and was also involved in the early government of California. While
				  in Iowa, he served as commissary general of Iowa, earning him the nickname of
				  general. He traveled the Oregon Trail west, arriving in Oregon in 1843. He
				  served in the Provisional Legislature of Oregon, including as the first speaker
				  of that body, and fought in the Rogue River Wars. In 1849, he went to
				  California where he helped found Sacramento, constructing housing to rent out.
				  He was elected to a legislature designed to govern the city and also elected to
				  serve at the Constitutional Convention of 1849. Returning north, McCarver
				  helped found Tacoma, Washington which he considered to be the most likely
				  terminus of the planned transcontinental railroad, purchasing lots, platting a
				  town site and selling lots. He married Julia Ann McCoy Buckalew in 1848.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCarverMM1</container><unittitle>Morton Matthew McCarver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCarverMM2</container><unittitle>Morton Matthew McCarver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Gen'l M. M. McCarver, Tacoma WT, A pioneer
					 of 1843.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McClane, Helen Cooper Judson (April 14, 1834 - October
				  1, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Cooper Judson, the daughter of Lewis Judson and Elmira
				  Roberts Judson, was born in New York. The family traveled to Oregon on the ship
				  <emph render="italic">Lausanne</emph> via Cape Horn, arriving in 1840. They
				  settled at the mission below Salem where her father was one of the first
				  missionaries. She married John Burch McClane in 1849.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClaneHCJ1</container><unittitle>Helen McClane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McClane, John Burch (January 31, 1820 - January 21,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Burch McClane was born in Philadelphia and came to Oregon
				  in 1843, driving the first wagon from Fort Hall to Oregon. He took a donation
				  land claim near present day Salem, Oregon and built one of the first grist
				  mills. He took part in the Cayuse War of 1847. In the fall of 1848, McClane
				  went to California, attracted by the finding of gold, returning to Oregon in
				  May, 1849. On his return, he started a general merchandise store, the second in
				  the town. In 1850 he became Salem's first postmaster and was elected county
				  treasurer the same year. In 1853 he returned to the Atlantic coast, where he
				  remained three years. In 1861 he was again appointed postmaster. From 1865 to
				  1872, he was state librarian. He served as bailiff of the Supreme Court for ten
				  years, and from 1885 to 1889 served as agent at the Grand Ronde Indian Agency.
				  He married Helen Cooper Judson in 1849.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClaneJB1</container><unittitle>John Burch McClane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>McClellan, General George Brinton (December 3, 1826 –
				  October 29, 1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Brinton McClellan was an American soldier, civil
				  engineer, railroad executive and politician. A graduate of West Point,
				  McClellan served with distinction during the Mexican-American War and later
				  left the Army to work in railroads until the outbreak of the American Civil
				  War. Early in the war, McClellan was appointed to the rank of major general and
				  played an important role in raising a well-trained and organized army, which
				  would become the Army of the Potomac; he served a brief period (November 1861
				  to March 1862) as general-in-chief of the Union Army. McClellan organized and
				  led the Union Army in the Peninsula Campaign in southeastern Virginia from
				  March through July 1862. He failed to maintain the trust of President Abraham
				  Lincoln and was removed from command in November. McClellan went on to become
				  the unsuccessful Democratic Party nominee in the 1864 presidential election
				  against Lincoln. He served as the 24th Governor of New Jersey from 1878 to
				  1881. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClellanGB1</container><unittitle>General George B. McClellan and Mrs. Mary Ellen
					 McClellan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>She is seated; he is standing.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClellanGB2</container><unittitle>General George B. McClellan and Mrs. Mary Ellen
					 McClellan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>She is standing; he is seated and reading a newspaper.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">24</container><container type="item">McClennanGB3</container><unittitle>George B. McClennan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Frederick Girsch after a portrait by Mathew Brady
					 from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McClellan, Mary Ellen Marcy (May 6, 1835 - February 13,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ellen Marcy was the daughter of Major General Randolph
				  Barnes Marcy and a descendant of Mayflower passenger Deacon John Dunham. She
				  was in love with Lt. Ambrose P. Hill (eventually Gen A. P. Hill, CSA) and
				  wanted to marry him, but her father was against the marriage. By the time she
				  was 25, she had received and turned down 9 marriage proposals. She eventually
				  said yes to George McClellan; they married in 1860. Their son George became
				  mayor of New York City, and their daughter May married a diplomat and settled
				  in Nice, France where Mary Ellen lived after the death of her husband.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClellanGB1</container><unittitle>General George B. McClellan and Mrs. Mary Ellen
					 McClellan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>She is seated; he is standing.</p><p>Filed under George B. McClellan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClellanGB2</container><unittitle>General George B. McClellan and Mrs. Mary Ellen
					 McClellan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>She is standing; he is seated and reading a newspaper.</p><p>Filed under George B. McClellan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCloy, Ruth Glascott (July 8, 1914 - July 31,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth Glascott McCloy was on a number of network variety shows in
				  Chicago before moving to Seattle in 1939. She was the host of the Ruth and Dick
				  Show with Dick Keplinger on <emph>KOMO</emph> radio in the 1940s and the host
				  of <emph>This Woman’s World</emph> on <emph>KOMO TV</emph> in the 1950s. She
				  was also the public relations director for Western International Hotels and a
				  member of the Seattle Women's Commission in 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McClure, Amy Patricia (February 25, 1912 - May 26,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amy Patricia McClure, the daughter of Walter and Amy McClure,
				  was born in Seattle and graduated from the University of Washington in 1933.
				  She was the director and head counselor of the UW women's residence halls in
				  the 1950s and was president of the Seattle area chapter of the American
				  Association of Group Workers. She was also active in the Girl Scouts, serving
				  as regional program chair. She married A. Arthur Hemenway in 1955 and divorced
				  him in 1964.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClureAP1</container><unittitle>Patricia McClure seated on couch in the Husky Union
					 Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClureAP2</container><unittitle>Close-up of Patricia McClure</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Close-up of previous photo; this version appears in the 1953 
					 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McClure, Edgar (December 30, 1861 - July 27,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar McClure was a professor of chemistry and physics at the
				  University of Oregon. He fell to his death on Mount Rainier after making the
				  first barometric computations of the mountain's elevation; his death was the
				  first recorded climbing fatality on Mount Rainier. McClure Rock is named for
				  him, commemorating the site where he fell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McClureE1</container><unittitle>Edgar McClure</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1897?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCombs, James Andrew (June, 1838 - September 9,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Andrew McCombs was born in Iowa and came to Walla Walla,
				  Washington in 1862. He married Josephine Denny in 1871. In partnership with
				  Arthur Denny and others, he organized the Union Water System to supply water to
				  Seattle; the city purchased the system in 1891.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCombsJA1</container><unittitle>James Andrew McCombs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hart's Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCombs, Josephine L. Denny (August 23, 1849 - February
				  19, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josephine Denny, the daughter of Samuel Denny and Lucy Dow
				  Denny, was born in Indiana and moved to California with her parents in 1866.
				  Four years later, the family moved to Seattle where she married James McCombs
				  in 1871. Her parents gave her the land of what is now Carkeek Park as a wedding
				  gift.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCombsJLD1</container><unittitle>Josephine McCombs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Hart's Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCombs, Thomas Hedger (May 23, 1881 - August 13,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas McCombs was the son of James McCombs and Josephine Denny
				  McCombs. He worked as a farmer, never married, and lived with his mother until
				  his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeagravesSC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sarah Chatham with her first grade
					 class at Denny School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate></did><note><p>One of the children, Tom McCombs, is identified. The photo is
					 a copy of the original.</p><p>Filed under Sarah Chatham Seagraves subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">33</container><container type="item">SeagravesSC2</container><unittitle>Sarah Chatham, Tom McCombs and the first grade class
					 at Denny School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: First grade, Denny School, 1887. Miss Chatam
					 (sic), now Mrs. Seagrave, Tom McCombs boy second from right in back row. My
					 girl 4th from right in bottom row. I was not there that day. J. M. Lough</p><note><p>Filed under Sarah Chatham Seagraves subseries.</p></note></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McConnell, William John (September 18, 1839 – March 30,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William John McConnell was the third Governor of Idaho, serving
				  from 1893 until 1897. Born in Michigan, McConnell headed west as a freight
				  wagon driver and ended up in California where he found work as a miner, store
				  clerk, cowboy, and teacher. In 1862, he moved to Oregon, where he taught school
				  and then followed the gold rush into the Idaho Territory the following year. In
				  1865 he was appointed a Deputy U.S. Marshal for Idaho Territory. At the end of
				  his two-year term, he returned to California. He moved to Oregon in 1871 where
				  he owned a general store and ran cattle. In 1882, he was elected to the state
				  senate, and was then selected as the senate president. Around 1879, McConnell
				  began investing in the growing town of Moscow, Idaho, and in 1884 he moved his
				  family there. When leaders convened a constitutional convention, preparatory to
				  Idaho statehood, McConnell represented Latah County. After Idaho became at
				  state in 1890, McConnell was one of its first U.S. Senators and then was
				  elected governor in 1893. McConnell did not run for a third term; he received
				  an appointment in the Bureau of Indian Affairs, a position he held until 1901.
				  He later served as an Immigration Service Inspector from 1909 until his death
				  in 1925. His daughter Mary married attorney William E. Borah, who served six
				  terms in the U.S. Senate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McConnellWJ1</container><unittitle>William John McConnell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCord, Howard (November 3, 1932 - November 3,
				  2022)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard McCord was born in El Paso, Texas, in 1932. He served in
				  the Navy during the Korean War, received his BA from University of Texas in
				  1957, and his MA from the University of Utah in 1958. He taught at Washington
				  State University from 1960 to 1971, and at Bowling Green State University from
				  1971 to 2000. He was director of the Creative Writing Program there for many
				  years and was later an emeritus professor of English. At various times he was a
				  Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Alaska Southeast,
				  California State University at Northridge, and Navaho College. Among his many
				  honors and awards are two Fellowships from The National Endowment for the Arts,
				  two Fellowships from The Ohio Arts Council, the 1990 Ohioana Award for Poetry,
				  the Nancy Dasher Award for his novel, <emph render="italic">The Man Who Walked
				  to the Moon,</emph> the 1988 Golden Nugget Award from the University of Texas
				  at El Paso, the D.H. Lawrence Fellowship from the University of New Mexico, a
				  Scholarly Achievement Award from BGSU and a Research Fellowship to Iceland and
				  Lapland, a Fulbright Award to India, and a National Woodrow Wilson Fellowship.
				  McCord was the author of over three dozen books. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCordH1</container><unittitle>Howard McCord</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McCormack, Claude Gilbert "Mike" (December 14, 1921 -
				  November 7, 2020)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Claude G. "Mike" McCormack was born in Basil, Ohio and began
				  college at the University of Toledo in 1939, worked for two years, and then
				  entered military service in 1943. From 1946 to 1949, he attended Washington
				  State College and received Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in Physical
				  Chemistry. He worked briefly at the University of Puget Sound, and then spent
				  twenty years as a research chemist with the atomic energy facilities of the
				  Atomic Energy Commission at Hanford. In 1956, he was elected to a public office
				  as member of the Washington State House of Representatives and was re-elected
				  in 1958. In 1960, he was elected to the State Senate, serving until 1970. In
				  1970, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives where he was
				  a member of the House Science and Technology Committee and Chairman of the
				  Subcommittee on Energy Research and Production. He was a co-sponsor in a
				  successful attempt to pass legislation intended to facilitate general
				  conversion of the United States to the metric system of measurement which was
				  signed into public law in 1975. After he lost his bid for a sixth term, he
				  worked in Washington D.C. as a member of the Space Telescope Institute Council.
				  In the 1990s he lived in Ellensburg, Washington where he created and ran the
				  Institute for Science and Society, which taught science literacy to K-12
				  teachers. In 1990, he received the Charles Lathrop Parsons Award, which
				  recognizes outstanding public service by a member of the American Chemical
				  Society. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McCormackCG1</container><unittitle>Claude G. "Mike" McCormack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and
					 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">McCullough, Thomas Joseph "Tim" (July
				  4, 1910 - October 14, 1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Joseph "Tim" McCullough served as King County Sheriff
				  from 1954 until 1963.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDermott, James Adelbert (December 28, 1936 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James A. "Jim" McDermott was born in Chicago. He received a B.
				  S. Degree from Wheaton College in 1958 and an M.D. from the University of
				  Illinois Medical School in 19673. He served a residency in adult psychiatry,
				  University of Illinois Hospitals and a residency in child psychiatry,
				  University of Washington Hospitals. From 1968-1970 he served in the U. S. Navy
				  as a Lt. Commander, psychiatrist, and later practicing psychiatrist and
				  assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Washington. He
				  was elected to the Washington State House of Representatives and served from
				  1970 to 1973; elected to the State Senate in 1974 and served until 1987 when he
				  retired from the Senate to serve as a regional medical officer for the U. S.
				  Foreign Service in Africa. He was elected to the House of Representatives in
				  November 1988 and served until 2016 when he announced that he would not run for
				  re-election. He represented the 7th Congressional District of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDermottJA1</container><unittitle>James A. McDermott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDevitt, Joseph T.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph T. McDevitt was the proprietor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Sultan City Journal</emph> and also owned the Monte
				  Cristo Mercantile Company in Monte Cristo, Washington. With his partner, M. L.
				  Davis, he organized the Horse Shoe Bend Gold Mining Company in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDevittJT1</container><unittitle>Joseph T. McDevitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Morse, San Francisco</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: To Edmond S. Meany, Rep. Press Association,
					 Washington's World Fair Building with Compliments of Jos. T. McDevitt,
					 Proprietor, Sultan City Journal, Sultan City, Wash. (Postmarked April 19,
					 1893).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonald, Angus (October 15, 1816 - February 1,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Angus McDonald was born in Scotland and immigrated to Canada in
				  1838 where he entered the service of the Hudson Bay Company. In 1852 he was
				  appointed head of the extensive Colville district, including all traditional
				  posts north of Walla Walla, Washington, far into British Columbia. MacDonald
				  held this position until 1871 when the Company finally gave up its last posts
				  in the United States. He lived the rest of his life in Montana Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldA1</container><unittitle>Angus McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1876?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Angus McDonald of Fort Colville, Stevens
					 Co., Wash. From copy; original taken about 1876-7.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>McDonald, Donald A. (October 13, 1880 - January 6,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald McDonald was born in Napa, California, the son of Judge
				  Frederick A. McDonald and Mary Baldwin McDonald. The family came to Seattle in
				  1890. McDonald graduated from the University of Washington Law School in 1905
				  and also received a degree from Yale University in 1906. He helped found the
				  law firm of Carkeek, McDonald and Kapp the same year. He was a member of the
				  Washington State Industrial Insurance Commission after World War I and was
				  federal prohibition director for Washington and Alaska in 1919. McDonald was an
				  assistant district attorney in 1917 and 1918 and was a Democratic state
				  representative for three terms starting in 1932. He helped establish the first
				  relief bill in the 1930s. McDonald served as a Superior Court judge for twenty
				  years before he retired in 1956 at the mandatory retirement age of 75. After
				  his retirement, he rejoined the law firm he helped establish.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonald, Elisabeth McComber Sampson (December 24, 1827
				  - December 10, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elisabeth "Betsey" McComber Sampson, the daughter of Abiel and
				  Bathsheba Sampson, was born in Massachusetts. She married Harley McDonald in
				  1847 and traveled with him around Cape Horn to San Francisco in 1848. The
				  couple later lived in Oregon, where Harley was an architect. They had eight
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldEMS1</container><unittitle>Elisabeth McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonald, Harley (July 21, 1825 - July 29,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harley McDonald was born in Rhode Island. He married Elisabeth
				  "Betsey" Sampson in 1847 and the next year, in company with his wife, made the
				  trip around Cape Horn to San Francisco. He had studied architecture, and while
				  in California, built Burgoyne’s Bank building, completed government work under
				  Lieutenant William T. Sherman, and constructed the first theater and the first
				  Protestant church in San Francisco. Arriving in Portland in August, 1850, he
				  built the first Academy building, the first Congregational church, and the
				  first water works. He also built the first steamboat, the<emph render="italic">Hoosier</emph>, which was launched in September, 1850. He
				  constructed the first brickyard in Portland and furnished the material for the
				  Holman building among others. He also worked for the government as an
				  architect, supervising many federal buildings throughout the state. He lived in
				  Forest Grove and Salem before moving back to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldH1</container><unittitle>Harley McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonald, James Roy (April 16, 1844 - November 26,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Roy McDonald was born in Ireland and immigrated to the
				  United States with his family in 1850. He came to Seattle in 1888 and was
				  connected with the Merchants National Bank and the Satsop Railroad. He was the
				  president of the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railroad, which later became
				  part of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldJR1</container><unittitle>James Roy McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1888?</unitdate></did><note><p>The portrait appeared in <emph render="italic">The Northwest
					 Magazine</emph> April 1888.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonald, Lucile Saunders (September 1, 1898 - June 23,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucile Saunders McDonald was a Pacific Northwest journalist,
				  historian and author of children's books. She attended the University of
				  Oregon, and early in her career worked at <emph render="italic">the Eugene
				  Daily Guard</emph>, <emph render="italic">The Bulletin (Bend, Oregon)</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Oregonian </emph> and <emph render="italic">The
				  Statesman-Journal </emph>(Salem, Oregon). She went on to write for newspapers
				  from Alaska to South America, including <emph render="italic">The Seattle Daily
				  Times</emph>, <emph render="italic">The New York Times</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">United Press International</emph>, <emph render="italic">
				  The Bellevue Journal-American</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Cordova
				  Daily Times</emph>. She wrote or co-authored 28 books and with Zola Helen Ross,
				  co-founded the Pacific Northwest Writers Association. McDonald was a member of
				  the Seattle Free Lances, the Authors League of America, Theta Sigma Phi's
				  National Executive Board, and the New York Newspaperwoman's Club. Her
				  autobiography, <emph render="italic">A foot in the door: The reminiscences of
				  Lucile McDonald</emph>, was published in 1995. She was a 1959 Headliner Awards
				  Recipient from the Association for Women in Communications. She also received
				  awards from the Washington State Historical Society (1980 and 1981), the
				  National Science Teachers Association (1981), the Pacific Northwest Historians
				  Guild (1987), the Bellevue Arts Commission (1989), and the Washington State
				  Press Women's Torch Bearer award for pioneering in journalism. She married
				  Harold D. McDonald in 1922.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldLS1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Lucille McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Autographed by Lucille McDonald.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldLS2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Lucille McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph from a magazine.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDonaldLS3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Lucille McDonald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDonnell, Robert E. (November 16, 1872 - January 2,
				  1960) - see Herbert Hoover collection</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Robert E. McDonnell founded Burns and McDonnell, an engineering
				  firm in Kansas City, Missouri in 1898.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDowell, Edith Emily (September 14, 1878 - January 25,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith and Grace McDowell were the daughters of Ohio farmers
				  Daniel McDowell and Helen Wilson McDowell. They went to business school in
				  Toledo and traveled the country working as public stenographers. During World
				  War I, they worked as assistants to Congressmen and then as war correspondents
				  for the <emph render="italic">Daily Oklahoman</emph>. After the war, they
				  traveled to the Hawaii Territory with a Congressional delegation. They had
				  discovered Hawaiian music at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition and while in
				  Hawaii, learned the music they would help popularize on the mainland. Upon
				  their return to the States, they began to perform, teach, tour, record, and
				  finally broadcast their music on radio using MacDowell as their professional
				  name. They became one of the most popular early radio acts in the country,
				  broadcasting first from New York and New Jersey, then regularly from WFAA in
				  Dallas, Texas (1922-1927). They recorded several popular and religious songs,
				  as well as Hawaiian folk tunes and were known as “The Sweethearts of the Air.”
				  They toured with author Ilya Tolstoy, and helped the New Thought movement gain
				  traction in the public consciousness. They wrote their memoir, 
				  <emph render="italic">All Aboard</emph>, in the 1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDowellEE1</container><unittitle>Edith and Grace McDowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1929</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: With sincere love from Edith &amp;
					 Grace McDowell, January 1929. A happy week.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McDowell, Grace C. (February 28, 1881 - July 28,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith and Grace McDowell were the daughters of Ohio farmers
				  Daniel McDowell and Helen Wilson McDowell. They went to business school in
				  Toledo and traveled the country working as public stenographers. During World
				  War I, they worked as assistants to Congressmen and then as war correspondents
				  for the <emph render="italic">Daily Oklahoman</emph>. After the war, they
				  traveled to the Hawaii Territory with a Congressional delegation. They had
				  discovered Hawaiian music at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition and while in
				  Hawaii, learned the music they would help popularize on the mainland. Upon
				  their return to the States, they began to perform, teach, tour, record, and
				  finally broadcast their music on radio using MacDowell as their professional
				  name. They became one of the most popular early radio acts in the country,
				  broadcasting first from New York and New Jersey, then regularly from WFAA in
				  Dallas, Texas (1922-1927). They recorded several popular and religious songs,
				  as well as Hawaiian folk tunes and were known as “The Sweethearts of the Air.”
				  They toured with author Ilya Tolstoy, and helped the New Thought movement gain
				  traction in the public consciousness. They wrote their memoir, 
				  <emph render="italic">All Aboard</emph>, in the 1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McDowellEE1</container><unittitle>Edith and Grace McDowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1929</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: With sincere love from Edith &amp;
					 Grace McDowell, January 1929. A happy week.</p><p>Filed under Edith McDowell subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McElroy, Ebenezer Burton (September 17, 1842 - May 4,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ebenezer Burton McElroy, the son of James and Mary (Smith)
				  McElroy, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania. He began his career as a
				  teacher in 1861. In September of that year he enlisted in the First West
				  Virginia Infantry, serving until 1863. He re-enlisted in the One Hundredth
				  Pennsylvania Roundheads and served until the end of the war. He then attended
				  college for two years and taught school in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. In
				  1873, he moved to Corvallis, Oregon where he taught in the public schools. In
				  1875, he was elected to a chair in the Agricultural College, remaining until
				  1882, when he was elected State Superintendent of Public Instruction. He was
				  re-elected in 1886 and again in 1890. Upon his retirement from office in 1895,
				  he was offered and accepted a chair in the University of Oregon. He was a
				  member of the G. A. R., and in 1890 was elected Department Commander for
				  Oregon. He married Agnes McFadden in 1869. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyEB1</container><unittitle>Ebenezer Burton McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McElroy, Harry Bates (February 23, 1861 - March 18,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry B. McElroy was the son of Thornton F. McElroy, one of the
				  pioneers of Thurston County, Washington. He became a prominent businessman in
				  the area. His father, Thornton F. McElroy, with James W. Wiley, established in
				  Olympia the first newspaper published north of the Columbia River. The first
				  issue appeared on September 11, 1852, and was named <emph render="italic">The
				  Columbian</emph> , its main purpose being to advocate the organization of the
				  new Territory of Columbia. The newspaper's name was changed to 
				  <emph render="italic">Pioneer</emph> and later to <emph render="italic">Pioneer
				  and Democrat</emph> . Harry inherited his father's file of the first paper and
				  maintained a file of newspapers covering the entire history of the Territory
				  and State of Washington. He was one of the contributing editors of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Washington Historical Quarterly</emph> for over ten
				  years. He married Carrie Marian Williams in 1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyHB1</container><unittitle>Harry Bates McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Albert L. Jackson, Berlin Building, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McElroy, Matthew J. (March 1858 - March 5,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew (Matt) J. McElroy was born in Maine and came to Skagit
				  County, Washington in the 1880s. He was a member of territorial legislature
				  from Skagit, 1887-8 and was the last surviving member of the Washington State
				  Constitutional Convention. He traveled to Alaska during the Klondike gold rush
				  and later worked in the timber industry. He married Mary Williamson in
				  1882.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyMJ1</container><unittitle>Matthew J. McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1887 and 1888</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington Territory</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyMJ2</container><unittitle>Matthew J. McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1920?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bushnell, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McElroy, Thornton Fleming (July 24, 1825 - February 4,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thornton Fleming McElroy was the co-owner with J.W. Wiley of
				  Washington's first newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Columbian</emph>,
				  published in Olympia on September 11, 1852. The paper's main purpose was to
				  advocate for the organization of the new Territory of Columbia. The point in
				  that name was lost when the new territory received the name of Washington. The
				  newspaper's name was changed to <emph render="italic">Pioneer </emph>and later
				  to <emph render="italic">Pioneer and Democrat.</emph> He was the mayor of
				  Olympia in 1875 and was also the territorial printer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyTF1</container><unittitle> Thornton Fleming McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1858?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McElroyTF2</container><unittitle> Thornton Fleming McElroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">G. D. Morse, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on verso: Morse's Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco,
					 Cal, Souvenir.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Bessie Eulalia (June 5, 1874 - November 4,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bessie Eulalia McFarland, the daughter of William O. and Susana
				  Slover McFarland, married Harry Sherman Brink on December 15, 1897. The couple
				  lived in Whitman County, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Elsie May Wesseller (June 1, 1877 - December
				  27, 1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elsie Mae Wesseller, the daughter of Henry H. and Lorma
				  Wesseller, married Kenneth Cushing McFarland, a civil engineer for the city of
				  Tacoma, in 1909. McFarland exhibited her flowers at the Tacoma Chrysanthemum
				  Show in November 1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandEMW1</container><unittitle>Elsie Mae Wesseller McFarland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Sterling Studio, Tacoma, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Jessie Ellen (February 8, 1872 - March 25,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jessie Ellen McFarland, the daughter of William O. and Susana
				  Slover McFarland, was born in Grays Harbor County, Washington Territory. She
				  married Richard Price on May 1, 1889; the couple had five children and lived in
				  Republic, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, John Enos (December 5, 1877 - April 7,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John E. McFarland, the son of William O. and Susana Slover
				  McFarland, served as a Justice of the Peace in Renton for eighteen years,
				  retiring in 1947.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Joseph Charles (September 23, 1879 -
				  September, 3, 1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Charles McFarland, the son of William O. and Susana
				  Slover McFarland, worked as an engineer in the gold mines, and later as a
				  shoemaker and garage keeper. He married Helen Hayward Gontenbein; the couple
				  has one child and lived in Portland, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Mary Elizabeth (January 22, 1871 -
				  ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Elizabeth McFarland, the daughter of William O. and Susana
				  Slover McFarland, married William T. Beck on March 6, 1889. The couple had
				  three children, Elsie, Hazel and Marion.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, Susanna Slover (October 11, 1854 - June,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susanna Slover, the daughter of Enos Slover and Mary Jane Taylor
				  Slover, was born in Oregon City in 1854. She married William O. J. McFarland in
				  1870; the couple had six children. After William died in 1880, she married Dr.
				  Joseph B. Price, a widower, in 1882. Price worked as a physician for the
				  Quinault Indian Agency, and Susanna worked as a matron for the agency. After
				  Price died, Susanna married Walter H. Ede. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS1</container><unittitle>Susanna Slover McFarland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, William Obadiah Jesse (July 29, 1833-October
				  10, 1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Obadiah Jesse McFarland was born in 1833 in St Louis,
				  Missouri, and the family moved to Illinois when he was an infant. At the age of
				  19 he set out in a mule wagon with two friends, crossing the plains and
				  arriving in California in 1852. He worked his way north, reaching Elma,
				  Washington in the 1860s. He bought a gristmill from Thomas Taylor and on May
				  10, 1870 married Thomas's granddaughter Susannah Slover. In addition to the
				  income from the flour mill, he also hunted sea otters off the coast in Grays
				  Harbor in the summer. He was also sheriff and assessor for Chehalis County from
				  1870-1872. His original homestead was on the north side of Elma; however, in
				  1879 he filed on a claim two miles north of Oyhut so that he could be closer to
				  the ocean and his hunting grounds. He died as the result of a shooting accident
				  when his nephew was showing some friends the new rifle William had ordered and
				  accidently discharged it, shattering Williams's legs. By the time the doctor
				  arrived six days later, gangrene had set in. He was buried by his home next to
				  Conner Creek.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ1</container><unittitle>William Obadiah Jesse McFarland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1878?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McFarland, William Slover (February 2, 1876 - October 7,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Slover McFarland, the son of William O. and Susana
				  Slover McFarland, married Ellen (Ella) Baily in Basin, Montana, on May 28,
				  1906. He worked as a blacksmith and a miner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandWOJ2</container><unittitle>William McFarland with Susanna McFarland and children
					 Bessie Eulalia, William S., Mary Elizabeth, John E. and Jessie
					 Ellen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878?</unitdate></did><note><p>William McFarland is holding son William Stover McFarland;
					 Susana is holding son John Enos McFarland.</p><p>Filed under William O. J. McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McFarlandSS2</container><unittitle>Susanna McFarland (seated) with children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susanna Slover McFarland subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGee, Mary Ida (January 3, 1892 - November 2,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ida McGee was a teacher at the Woodstock School in
				  Mussoorie, Uttarakhand State, India in 1931. The daughter of Amos McGee and Ida
				  Sutliff McGee, she was born in Rice County, Minnesota and grew up in Folsom,
				  California. She went to India in 1920 with the Foreign Mission of the
				  Presbyterian Church, and taught school in Mussoorie, southeast of Lahore.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">24</container><container type="item">McGeeMI1</container><unittitle>Primary school group of Woodstock School, Mussoorie,
					 Uttarakhand State, India</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate></did><note><p>Mary MGee is likely one of the teachers seen in the group.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGilvery, Napoleon Bonaparte (April 28, 1825 - July 13,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Napoleon Bonaparte McGilvery was born in the Lake of the Woods,
				  Upper Canada, at the Hudson’s Bay Post where his father was an officer. In 1839
				  he came to Vancouver outpost of Hudson’s Bay where he worked until 1844. He
				  then left the British and moved to Howell’s Prairie. In 1846, with the outbreak
				  of the war with Mexico, he went to California and joined the American
				  volunteers, who were soon incorporated in Jose C. Frémont’s forces. He was in
				  the campaign from Monterey to Los Angeles and was at the capture of San Luis
				  Obispo. The next year he was with Commodore Stockton, crossing the plains to
				  Missouri. He returned in 1848 to Vancouver, but immediately left for
				  California, digging gold for two years. He joined Captain Warner’s exploring
				  party, which made an expedition to Goose Lake, where the Captain was killed in
				  a fight with the Native Americans; McGilvery escaped unhurt. He traveled the
				  California coast before returning to the Willamette Valley. He married Sarah
				  Flett in 1853, and the couple settled near Vancouver, Washington Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McGilveryNB1</container><unittitle>Napoleon Bonaparte McGilvery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGlinn, John Paul (May 10, 1845 - November 19,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Paul McGlinn was born in County Leitrim, Ireland and
				  immigrated to the United States with his parents, Patrick and Katherine McGlinn
				  in 1850. The family settled in Logansport, Indiana. As a young man, he traveled
				  west to Washington Territory where he worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs
				  at Neah Bay and in Snohomish County. He later moved to La Conner, Washington
				  where he founded McGlinn House, one of the first hotels in the area. He married
				  Elizabeth Barbara Benn in 1875; the couple had six children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McGlinnJP1</container><unittitle>John Paul McGlinn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGovern, Foster Lincoln (February 12, 1897 - April 22,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Foster Lincoln McGovern graduated from the University of
				  Washington, where he was captain of the varsity wrestling team. He served in
				  the Navy during World War I. After the war, he worked for the Chamber of
				  Commerce in various posts, eventually becoming staff vice president. He worked
				  to promote trade between Washington and Alaska and chaired the Alaska
				  Development Committee for Washington State. He married Helen Miller in
				  1922.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McGovernFL1</container><unittitle>Foster Lincoln McGovern with wife Helen
					 McGovern</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> June 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appears in the June 25, 1933 issue of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> . Foster McGovern was going on a
					 goodwill tour of Alaska with the Seattle Chamber of Commerce aboard 
					 <emph render="italic">The Aleutian.</emph> The caption for the photo states:
					 "Mr. Foster McGovern took time off from his work of pinning badges on Chamber
					 representatives to pose with Mrs. McGovern for this picture."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGovern, Helen Marie Miller (April 11, 1899 - August
				  24, 1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Marie Miller graduated from the University of Washington
				  and married Foster Lincoln McGovern in 1922. She was active in community
				  affairs and was the president of the University of Washington Alumnae
				  Association in 1943.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McGovernFL1</container><unittitle>Foster Lincoln McGovern with wife Helen
					 McGovern</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> June 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appears in the June 25, 1933 issue of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> . Foster McGovern was going on a
					 goodwill tour of Alaska with the Seattle Chamber of Commerce aboard 
					 <emph render="italic">The Aleutian.</emph> The caption for the photo states:
					 "Mr. Foster McGovern took time off from his work of pinning badges on Chamber
					 representatives to pose with Mrs. McGovern for this picture."</p><p>Filed under Foster Lincoln McGovern subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGraw, John Harte (October 4, 1850 – June 23, 1910)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John McGraw was born in Maine and left in 1876 for the West
				  Coast. Arriving penniless in Seattle in late December 1876, he gained initial
				  employment as a hotel clerk before serving as Seattle City Marshall. He was
				  appointed Seattle Chief of Police by the Seattle City Council in 1879, prior to
				  being elected to the office of King County Sheriff for the years 1882, 1884 and
				  1888. While serving as sheriff, he studied law. He was elected governor in
				  1892, serving from 1893 to 1897. After he left office, an apparent shortage of
				  $10,000 was found in the accounts of the sheriff’s office. There was no
				  evidence of embezzlement; however, McGraw pledged to repay the funds. He
				  mortgaged everything he had and then went to Alaska in search of gold to pay
				  back what he considered a debt of honor. He spent two years there and returned
				  with enough to pay the debt and give him a start in business. He served as
				  president of both Seattle First National Bank and the Seattle Chamber of
				  Commerce, pursued real estate and mining interests in Alaska, started the
				  insurance and real estate firm McGraw, Kittinger and Case, and was the vice
				  president of the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition. He worked to secure funds for
				  the Lake Washington Ship Canal; the final approval for the canal was signed
				  three days after his death. A bronze statue of McGraw stands at McGraw Square
				  in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH1</container><unittitle>John McGraw, Mark Thomas McGraw and Byron Thorpe Carr
					 on the porch of a cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: McGraw's home at Rampart. Gov. John H.
					 McGraw, Tom McGraw and Mr. Carr.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH2</container><unittitle>Portrait of John McGraw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: John H. McGraw, Governor, 1893-1897.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH3</container><unittitle>Portrait of John McGraw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: J. H. McGraw, Vice-President, Alaska
					 -Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH4</container><unittitle>Portrait of John McGraw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on verso: J. H. McGraw, 1st Vice-President, Alaska
					 -Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGraw, Mark Thomas (March 29, 1877- November 11,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mark Thomas McGraw was the son of John Harte McGraw. He
				  accompanied his father to Alaska in search of gold. After his return, he worked
				  as a county clerk and as a deputy U.S. Marshall. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGrawJH1</container><unittitle>John McGraw, Mark Thomas McGraw and Byron Thorpe Carr
					 on the porch of a cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: McGraw's home at Rampart. Gov. John H.
					 McGraw, Tom McGraw and Mr. Carr.</p><p>Filed under John Harte McGraw subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McGuire, Francis (July 4, 1810 - January 13,
				  1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis McGuire was born in Brooks County, West Virginia. As a
				  young man, he engaged in the business of trading on the Mississippi River. He
				  crossed the plains with an ox team im 1851, arriving in Portland in 1852. He
				  purchased a farm in Washington County and farmed for three years. In 1855, he
				  returned to Portland where he engaged in business and was involved in the
				  Mechanics Fair, the first of its kind in the state. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McGuireF1</container><unittitle>Francis McGuire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKaig, Robert Raymond (April 30, 1880 - January 6,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Raymond McKaig, a prominent member of the Nonpartisan
				  League and the Progressive Party, was born in Ligonier, Indiana. His father was
				  a Methodist-Episcopal minister, and the family moved to various Nebraska towns
				  and then to Minneapolis. McKaig graduated from Hamline University in St. Paul,
				  Minnesota, in 1900, and from Drew Theological Seminary in 1903. He was a
				  minister in Wisconsin and Minnesota until 1913, when illness prompted him to
				  leave the ministry and move his family to a North Dakota ranch. While ranching,
				  McKaig became involved in the Grange and politics. In 1916 he joined Arthur
				  Townley’s Nonpartisan League and began using his evangelistic skills to bring
				  about political and economic change. His work for the League took him to
				  Colorado and the Pacific Northwest in 1917, and the next year he was appointed
				  National Nonpartisan League Field Secretary. Liking Boise, he moved his family
				  there and used it as his base for expanding the League in Idaho. He was
				  especially effective in organizing the farmers and he was an active member of
				  the Idaho Grange until his death. In 1922, McKaig helped form the Idaho
				  Progressive Party from a coalition of Nonpartisans, Democrats, and Republicans.
				  Dissension within the party later led him to support the Republicans. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McKaigRR1</container><unittitle>Robert Raymond McKaig</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tucker Photography, Boise, Idaho</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKay, George Frederick (June 11, 1899 – October 4,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Frederick McKay, a prolific modern American composer, was
				  born in Harrington, Washington. McKay's initial college studies began in
				  accounting at Washington State University and continued in music at the
				  University of Washington under Carl Paige Wood. In 1923, McKay became the first
				  graduate in composition studies at Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New
				  York. Carl Paige Wood brought him back to the University of Washington as a new
				  faculty member in 1927. McKay founded the composition department at the
				  University and began a four-decade tenure of composing, teaching and leading
				  performing groups in concerts of contemporary and American works in the Seattle
				  metropolitan area. He composed works in various styles, including 70 orchestral
				  works and nearly 1,000 musical titles. He also conducted the Seattle Symphony
				  on several occasions. McKay held the Alchin Chair of Music at the University of
				  Southern California in the summer of 1939, succeeding Arnold Schoenberg and
				  Howard Hanson in that capacity, and returned to teach at USC for two more
				  visiting sessions in later years. He also had visiting professorships at
				  Oregon, Michigan and Drake. Among his students were William Bolcom, John Cage,
				  Goddard Lieberson and Earl Robinson.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McKayGF1</container><unittitle>George Frederick McKay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EppersonG1</container><unittitle> Gordon Epperson with Harold Paul Whelan and George
					 McKay examining the score of McKay's cello concerto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1947</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gordon Epperson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKay, William Cameron (May 18, 1824 - January 2,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Cameron McKay was born at Fort George, the son of
				  trapper and guide Thomas McKay and his wife, Timmee lkul Tchinouk, the daughter
				  of Tshinouk (Chinook) chief Concomly. He was also the grandson of Alexander
				  McKay, who died on the <emph render="italic">Tonquin </emph>when it sank off
				  the west coast. His grandmother had married John McLaughlin of the Hudson’s Bay
				  Company. McLaughlin sent William and his brothers to be educated in the eastern
				  United States. He attended schools in Massachusetts and completed his medical
				  studies in Geneva, New York. He received his medical license in 1843. He
				  subsequently worked at a frontier trading post, as a government agent in treaty
				  negotiations with several Northwest Indian tribes and then as a commanding
				  officer of the Warm Springs Indian Scouts during the American Army’s campaign
				  against the Paiutes in 1886 and 1887. He was then assigned as a government
				  physician attached to Indian Agencies serving at Warm Springs, Klamath and
				  finally the Umatilla Reservation. He died on the Umatilla Reserve of a heart
				  attack on January 2, 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McKayWC1</container><unittitle>William Cameron McKay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>McKechnie, Robert Edward (April 25, 1861 – May 24,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Edward McKechnie was a physician and the second
				  chancellor of the University of British Columbia. He lectured in medical
				  history at the University of British Columbia before being elected to its
				  senate in 1912 and becoming its second chancellor in 1918, holding the latter
				  position until his death in 1944. He was the university's longest-serving
				  chancellor, serving for 26 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKee, Charlotte Ruth Karr (March 28, 1874 - March 8,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charlotte Ruth Karr McKee was the daughter of James and Abigail
				  Walker Karr and granddaughter of Presbyterian missionaries Elkanah and Mary
				  Richardson Walker. Born in Hoquiam, Washington, she was a graduate of the
				  University of Washington, earning both Bachelors (1895) and Masters (1896)
				  degrees, and was active in civic affairs. She served as president of the
				  Federation of Women's Clubs of Washington (1913-1915), state vice regent of the
				  Daughters of the American Revolution, was a member of the State Defense Council
				  in World War I and the first councilor of the Minute Women in 1919 and 1920.
				  She was a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Washington from
				  1917 to 1924 and was said to be the first woman in the United States to be
				  elected president of a university Board of Regents. McKee Hall, a women’s
				  dormitory, was named for her. In 1945, she published a book based on Mary
				  Richardson Walker's diaries,<emph render="italic"> Mary Richardson Walker: Her
				  Book</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McKeeCRK1</container><unittitle>Charlotte Ruth Karr McKee with group of
					 women</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The photograph was possibly taken during the Phi Beta Kappa
					 luncheon held on the University commons, June 12, 1917.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKelvy, Jane Wiley (August 25, 1917 - September 19,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jane Wiley, the daughter of Robert and Mabel Harriet Watt Wiley,
				  attended the University of Washington where she was a member of the Pi Beta Phi
				  sorority. She married William Rush McKelvy, an attorney; the couple had four
				  children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKenzie, John Vernon (September 11, 1887 - November 11,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vernon McKenzie received his A.B. from the University of Toronto
				  and his master’s degree from Harvard. He began his newspaper career at the 
				  <emph render="italic">San Francisco Post &amp; News</emph> and was later a
				  reporter and editor for newspapers in the United States and Canada, including
				  the<emph render="italic"> Seattle Times</emph>. He was editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">Maclean’s Magazine </emph>and editor-in-chief of the
				  International Magazine Company of New York. He became the director of the
				  University of Washington’s School of Journalism in 1928. He was a veteran of
				  both World Wars, serving as a major in the United States Army Air Corps in
				  World War II and with the Royal Air Force during World War I. He was president
				  of the American Association of Schools of Journalism from 1939 until 1941. He
				  was teaching at the University of the Seven Seas, a floating college aboard
				  ship, when he died.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item"> McKenzieJV1</container><unittitle>John Vernon McKenzie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKinlay, Archibald (June 4, 1811 - October 4,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Archibald McKinlay was born in 1811 in Killin, Perthshire,
				  Scotland. He entered the service of the Hudson's Bay Company as an apprentice
				  clerk at York Factory in 1832. He eventually became Chief Factor and Trader in
				  charge of Willamette Falls. He married Sarah Julia Ogden in 1840. He was on
				  leave from 1849 to 1850 and retired from the HBC in 1851, remaining in Oregon.
				  After his HBC service he created the firm of Allan, McKinlay &amp; Company in
				  Oregon City with G. T. Allan and Thomas Lowe. They operated as an agent of the
				  HBC in Willamette Falls until severe flooding in December 1860 left the
				  business in ruins. In 1862 McKinlay moved his family to Lac La Hache, where
				  Sarah’s father had settled. They established a ranch and roadhouse that catered
				  to travelers moving through on the Cariboo Road. In 1876 he was named one of
				  the commissioners of the Joint Indian Reserve Commission. He was not supportive
				  of the Dominion’s involvement in the commission and placed the settlers’
				  interests ahead of the Okanagans’ reserve needs. The JIRC was disbanded and
				  reduced to a single commission in 1878. He spent later retirement years with
				  his wife at Savona, British Columbia. He died in Savona in 1891 and was
				  interred in the local cemetery. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McKinlayA1</container><unittitle>Archibald McKinlay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>McKinlay is spelled "McKinley" on the lithograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McKinley, William (January 29, 1843 – September 14,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William McKinley was an American politician and lawyer who
				  served as the 25th President of the United States from March 4, 1897 until his
				  assassination in September 1901, six months into his second term. McKinley led
				  the nation to victory in the Spanish–American War, raised protective tariffs to
				  promote American industry, and maintained the nation on the gold standard in a
				  rejection of inflationary proposals.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McKinleyW1</container><unittitle>President William McKinley with Admiral Dewey on the
					 reviewing stand of the U. S. Capitol Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1899</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">McKinleyW2</container><unittitle>Portrait of McKinley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1897 and 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="Engraver">William Edgar Marshall, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McLaughlin, Ross William (May 28, 1932 - July 17,
				  2021)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ross William McLaughlin was born in Seattle, Washington where
				  his father, William McLaughlin, worked for Seattle Public Light and his mother,
				  Olive McLaughlin, taught first grade for 40 years. He was senior class
				  president at Roosevelt High School, graduating in 1950, and served in the U.S.
				  Navy Reserves until 1954. He graduated from University of Washington with a
				  degree in Business Administration in 1954. While at the UW, he participated in
				  the Big "W" Club, was Varsity Ski Team Captain, ran track, and was a member of
				  the UW Ski Squad from 1950 until 1954. After graduation, he worked for Kaiser
				  Cement and Gypsum Corporation. McLaughlin was an active member in the
				  Associated General Contractors and state cement organizations, the Portland
				  Chamber of Commerce, the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association and many other
				  golf, social and philanthropic including the Ancient Skiers Organization. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">McLaughlinRW1</container><unittitle>Ross William McLaughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="[photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1952 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McLoughlin, Dr. John (October 19, 1784 – September 3,
				  1857) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John McLoughlin, baptized Jean-Baptiste McLoughlin, was a
				  French-Canadian, later American, Chief Factor and Superintendent of the
				  Columbia District of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Vancouver from 1824 to
				  1845. He was later known as the "Father of Oregon" for his role in assisting
				  the American cause in the Oregon Country in the Pacific Northwest. In the late
				  1840, his general store in Oregon City was famous as the last stop on the
				  Oregon Trail. The title "Father of Oregon" was officially bestowed on him by
				  the Oregon Legislative Assembly in 1957 on the centennial of his death. Many
				  public works in Oregon are named after him, including the John McLoughlin
				  Bridge, McLoughlin Boulevard, and numerous schools.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McLoughlinJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John McLoughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McLoughlinJ2</container><unittitle>John McLoughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dr. John McLoughlin, the King of Vancouver,
					 after a daguerreotype presented to Mary S. Barnes by S. A. Clarke of Salem,
					 Oregon. The daguerreotype was given to Mr. Clarke by John Quinn Thornton, the
					 first supreme judge of Oregon, and is at present in the library of the Leland
					 Stanford Junior University. (Signed) Mary. S. Barnes, May 21, 1897</p></note><note><p>Photograph made from daguerreotype image of McLoughlin</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McLoughlinJ3</container><unittitle>John McLoughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Doctor John McLoughlin, from daguerrotype
					 owned by Mrs. Myrick, his favorite granddaughter. Copyright by George F.
					 Holman, 501 Chaqmber of Commerce Building, Portland Oregon. Do not
					 reproduce.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMahon, Edward (April 3, 1873 - June 16,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward McMahon graduated from the University of Washington with
				  a B.A. in philosophy in 1898. During his first year, he and two fellow students
				  moved into an abandoned tool and powder house left after the completion of
				  Denny Hall; called “The House of Blazes” for the many debates held there, it is
				  considered to be the first dormitory on campus. He was also the editor of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Pacific Wave</emph>, the student newspaper. After
				  graduation, he taught for four years in the Seattle Public Schools and was
				  principal of the Georgetown School. He did post –graduate work at the
				  University of California and received his M.A. from the University of Wisconsin
				  in 1907. He joined the University of Washington in 1907 as a professor of
				  history and later became head of the department. In 1936 he was voted most
				  popular teacher at the University. He married Theresa Schmid in 1900; she
				  taught economics at the University of Washington for many years. They both
				  retired in 1940. His papers are held in UW Special Collections. McMahon Hall,
				  one of the UW’s oldest and largest student dormitories, was named for
				  Professors Edward and Theresa McMahon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMahonE1</container><unittitle>Edward McMahon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMahonE2</container><unittitle>Edward McMahon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1915 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mushet, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMahon, Theresa Schmid (April 29, 1878 - June 27,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theresa Schmid was born in Tacoma, Washington and grew up on
				  Mercer Island. She entered the University of Washington as a pre-freshman at
				  the age of 16. After graduating with a B. A. in English, she married Edward
				  McMahon in 1900. She taught briefly at a Seattle high school before she and her
				  husband enrolled in PhD programs at the University of Wisconsin, where Theresa
				  completed her doctorate in sociology, which also housed economics. The pair
				  later returned to the University of Washington where they would teach until
				  their retirement in 1940, Theresa in the Department of Economics, and Edward in
				  the Department of History. McMahon began teaching in the UW Department of
				  Economics in 1911, under the leadership of her former instructor, J. Allen
				  Smith. She taught courses in elementary economics and labor history and became
				  an outspoken proponent of worker’s rights, labor unions, and the eight-hour
				  workday. She researched and wrote widely on women's rights and labor rights,
				  including her 1925 book <emph render="italic">Social and Economic Standards of
				  Living.</emph> She wrote an autobiographical memoir, <emph render="italic">My
				  Story</emph>, in 1959. Her papers are held in UW Special Collections. McMahon
				  Hall, one of the UW’s oldest and largest student dormitories, was named for
				  Professors Edward and Theresa McMahon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMahonTS1</container><unittitle>Theresa Schmid McMahon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1946?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMahonTS2</container><unittitle>Theresa Schmid McMahon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of the original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMicken, Maurice (October 12, 1860 - January 31,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maurice McMicken, the son of WilliamMcMicken and Rowena J.
				  Ostrander McMicken, was born in Dodge County, Minnesota. His father was
				  involved in the construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad between Kalama,
				  Cowlitz County and Tacoma in the early 1870s and became surveyor general of
				  Washington Territory; his family moved to the territory in 1874. Maurice
				  McMicken entered the University of California at Berkeley in 1877. He moved to
				  Seattle in the fall of 1881 and went to work as a law clerk with the firm of
				  Struve &amp; Haines. In July 1882, he was admitted to the bar and one year
				  later became a member of the firm. By 1936, when he retired from active
				  practice, the firm was known as McMicken, Rupp &amp; Schweppe. McMicken was
				  involved in the incorporation of the First Avenue and Madison Street Cable
				  Companies and served as the company secretary. He was director of the H.F.
				  Ostrander Corporation, president of the East Waterway Dock &amp; Warehouse
				  Company and secretary of the Yesler Estaton. McMicken was at one time the
				  publisher of the <emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>. He was a member of
				  the Washington States and Seattle Bar Associations, the Arctic Club, and was a
				  charter member of the Rainier and Seattle Yacht Clubs. A passionate yachting
				  enthusiast, he spent summers living on his 92-foot boat, <emph render="italic">The Lotus</emph> . He had the boat built at the Sloan Shipyard
				  in Seattle, specifically to cruise the inland marine waters of Washington,
				  British Columbia and southeast Alaska. At the time, it was the largest cruising
				  houseboat on the west coast of the U.S. He married Alice Smith (1864 -1921) in
				  1885, and Laura Rumsey (1877-1954) in 1923.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMickenM1</container><unittitle>Maurice McMicken</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMickenM2</container><unittitle>Maurice McMicken</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMickenM3</container><unittitle>Photograph of Maurice McMicken's home in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMillan, John Campbell (February 21, 1875 - June 29,
				  1938) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John C. McMillan, the son of William McMillan and Margaret
				  Campbell McMillan, was born in Pictou, Nova Scotia. He married Anne McDonald in
				  Nova Scotia in 1898. He moved to Seattle in the late 1890s where he was
				  involved in the lumber trade.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMillanJC1</container><unittitle>Photograph of John C. McMillan's home at 1707 16th
					 Avenue in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The architecture firm Bebb &amp; Mendel designed the house in
					 1903. Copy of the original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMillen, Capt. James Harvey (May 10, 1823 - June 16,
				  1913) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James H. McMillen was born in Attica, New York and spent his
				  childhood years in Ohio and Illinois. In March 1845, he traveled across the
				  plains by ox-team, arriving in Oregon City in October where he found employment
				  in Governor Abernethy's mill. During the Cayuse Indian war, he was one of the
				  first to volunteer and was employed building fortifications for the defense of
				  the soldiers. In the spring of 1849 he traveled to the gold fields of
				  California. With the money he earned, he bought a large farm on the Tualatin
				  plains. In 1865 he sold his farm and purchased a tract on the Willamette River
				  where he laid out McMillen's addition in East Portland. He also built several
				  mills, served as a councilman in East Portland, and was director and clerk of
				  the school board. He was one of the incorporators and served as president of
				  the North Pacific History Company, which published the History of the Pacific
				  Northwest, and held the office of captain of Multnomah Camp No. 2, Indian War
				  Veterans. He married Margaret Wise in 1845; she died eleven months later,
				  leaving a son. In 1852, he married Tirzah Barton, the daughter of Captain
				  Edward Barton, who arrived in Oregon in 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMillianJH1</container><unittitle>James Harvey McMillen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Betwen 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMillen, Tirzah Barton (November 26, 1832 - June 21,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tirzah Barton, the daughter of Captain Edward Barton and Hannah
				  Pyle Barton, crossed the plains from Ohio to Oregon in 1851. She was a teacher
				  before marrying James Harvey McMillen in 1852.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMillenTB1</container><unittitle>Tirzah Barton McMillen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Betwen 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMinn, Bryan Towne (February 29, 1886 - November 5,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bryan Towne McMinn was a member of the University of Washington
				  faculty for 44 years until his retirement in 1964. He headed the mechanical
				  engineering department for 27 years. Born in Superior, Wisconsin, he moved with
				  his family to Portland in 1906. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Oregon State
				  University and a master’s degree from the University of Washington. He was a
				  fellow and past vice president of the American Society of Engineers and was a
				  member of a number of engineering honorary societies. He was also active in the
				  American Society of Engineering Education. His papers are held in UW Special
				  Collections, and there is a Bryan T. McMinn Endowed Research Professorship in
				  Mechanical Engineering at the UW.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMinnBT1</container><unittitle>Bryan Towne McMinn in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1952 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McMullin, LaFayette "Fayette" (May 18, 1805 – November
				  8, 1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>LaFayette “Fayette” McMullin, a 19th-century politician, was the
				  second appointed Governor of Washington Territory, serving from 1857 to 1859.
				  Born in Estillville, Virginia, he attended private schools as a child and then
				  worked as a driver and teamster. He became a member of the Senate of Virginia
				  in 1839, serving until 1849. He was elected as a Democrat to the United States
				  House of Representatives in 1848, serving from 1849 to 1857. He served as
				  chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Department of the Navy from
				  1851 to 1855 and chairman of the Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings
				  from 1855 to 1857. He was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in
				  1852 and 1856. McMullin was appointed by President James Buchanan, as
				  Territorial Governor of Washington in 1857, serving until 1859. He was elected
				  as a Democrat to the Confederate House of Representatives in 1863, serving from
				  1864 until the end of the Confederacy in 1865. After the war, he engaged in
				  agricultural and banking pursuits and unsuccessfully ran for Governor of
				  Virginia in 1878. McMullin died in a train accident on November 8, 1880 in
				  Wytheville, Virginia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McMullinL1</container><unittitle>LaFayette “Fayette” McMullin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original daguerreotype</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McNeil, Anne Holmquist (December 30, 1873 - June 6,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anne Holmquist McNeil, the daughter of Thomas McNeil and Anne
				  Holmquist McNeil, was born in Denver, Colorado. She received her B.P. in
				  English Literature and Pedagogy from the University of Wisconsin and her M.P.
				  in Librarianship also from the University of Wisconsin. Her thesis was entitled
				  <emph render="italic">Library Reading in the Public Schools.</emph> She taught
				  in the Janesville Graded School for four years and later accepted a position as
				  librarian at the Milwaukee State Normal School. She married Francis Porter
				  Johnson in 1907 in Lucas, Ohio.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McNeilAH1</container><unittitle>Anne Holmquist McNeil</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 14, 1907</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Brown &amp; Company, Detroit, Michigan</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Lovingly yours, Anne H. McNeil.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McPhee, William Henry (March 11, 1868 - December 4,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William " Grizzly Bill" McPhee was on the first city council of
				  Nome, Alaska. He was one of three financiers of the Lloyd party's successful
				  march to the top of Mt. McKinley in April 1910. McPhee was a gold miner and
				  gambler and owned Fairbanks’s Hotel Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McQuesten, Leroy Napoleon "Jack" (July 9, 1836 -
				  September 4, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leroy Napoleon "Jack" McQuesten, a pioneer in Alaska and Yukon
				  as an explorer, trader, and prospector, was known as the "Father of the Yukon."
				  Other nicknames included "Yukon Jack," "Captain Jack," "Golden Rule McQuesten,"
				  and "Father of Alaska." Together with partners Arthur Harper and Captain Alfred
				  Mayo, he founded Fort Reliance and a wide network of trading posts in the
				  Yukon. Their post was such a point of reference, that prospectors both up and
				  downriver named creeks and rivers in reference to their distance from Fort
				  Reliance, as in Sixtymile River and Fortymile River. In 1894, McQuesten founded
				  Circle City, Alaska, which developed the largest log cabin district in the
				  North Country and set up the Alaska Commercial Company in town. He was the most
				  successful financially of the trio, becoming a multi-millionaire by 1898 and
				  buying a large Victorian mansion for his family when they moved about that time
				  to Berkeley, California. He wrote a memoir, <emph render="italic">Recollections
				  of Leroy N. McQuesten, Life in the Yukon 1871-1885</emph>, which was published
				  posthumously in 1952. A tributary of the Yukon River is named McQuesten River
				  for him, and he is in the Alaska Mining Hall of Fame. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McQuestenLN1</container><unittitle>Leroy Napoleon McQuesten</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McReary, John (February 23, 1840 - September 18,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John McReary was born in Maine and came to Port Gamble,
				  Washington Territory in 1861. He began logging and engaged in milling and
				  merchandising. He was one of the founders of the town of Union on Hood Canal.
				  He was a member of the Territorial House and Territorial Council and was a
				  member of the Constitutional Convention in 1889. He served in the first State
				  Legislature. McReary was a member of the Capitol Commission, the Board of
				  Regents and served on the University Land and Building Commission. He was a
				  member of the committee that selected the locations for the state hospital in
				  Steilacoom, the United States penitentiary on McNeill Island, and the state
				  college (now Washington State University) in Pullman. In 1870, he married
				  Fannie Dow Gove, who came to the West Coast with her family in 1851 when she
				  was three.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McRearyJ1</container><unittitle>John McReary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers Photo Studio, Olympia</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>McVeigh, Rev. Malcolm J. (February 11, 1931 - March 6,
				  2022 )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Malcolm J. McVeigh was born in New Jersey and graduated from
				  Rutgers University. He served as a missionary in Angola between 1958 and 1961
				  where he taught and worked on agriculture and village improvement projects. In
				  1974, he wrote <emph render="italic">God in Africa</emph>. He spoke at the
				  University of Washington on February 12, 1962.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">McVeighMJ1</container><unittitle>Malcolm J. McVeigh pointing to a map of
					 Africa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1962</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mead, Albert Edward (December 14, 1861 – March 19,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Edward Mead was the fifth Governor of Washington, serving
				  in that position from 1905 to 1909. He was born in Kansas and received his
				  formal education at Southern Illinois Normal University and at Northwestern
				  University's Union College of Law in Chicago. After graduating from law school
				  in 1885, he returned to Kansas to practice law for four years. In 1889, he
				  moved to Washington Territory. He served as Mayor of Blaine, Washington (1892),
				  as a member of the Washington State House of Representatives (1892), and as
				  prosecuting attorney for Whatcom County, Washington from 1898 to 1903. Mead's
				  election to the governor's office in 1904 over U.S. Senator George Turner was
				  considered a significant upset at the time. During his tenure, he supported
				  legislation establishing a Railroad Commission, and acts establishing a State
				  Bank Examiner, a State Tax Commission, and a State Highway Commission. After
				  his term as governor ended, Mead moved to Bellingham, Washington, where he
				  returned to private practice as a lawyer and served as president of the Chamber
				  of Commerce. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE1</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE2</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. D. Rogers, Olympia</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE3</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead on the UW Campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE4</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead on the UW campus with University
					 President Thomas F. Kane, Professor Edmond S. Meany and Everett Voorhees
					 Thompson, orderly of the day.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mead, Elwood (January 16, 1858 – January 26,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elwood Mead was a professor, politician and engineer, known for
				  heading the United States Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) from 1924 until his
				  death in 1936. Mead was born in Patriot, Indiana, and graduated from Purdue
				  with a Bachelor of Science in 1882. He worked for the U.S. Army Corps of
				  Engineers in Indianapolis for seven months before leaving to teach mathematics
				  at Colorado Agricultural College. He developed and taught the first class on
				  irrigation engineering in the United States and also worked for the Colorado
				  State Engineer's Office. In 1888, Mead became the territorial and state
				  engineer of Wyoming. From 1888 until 1899, he was key in drafting the water
				  laws for Wyoming and was a major supporter of the Cody Canal, one of the
				  nation's first Carey Act projects. In 1899, Mead was appointed head of
				  irrigation investigations for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, directing
				  irrigation studies across the west. In 1907, Mead was appointed Chairman of the
				  State Rivers and Water Supply Commission of Victoria, Australia, serving for
				  four years. In 1911, he became the professor of Rural Institutions, University
				  of California, and chairman of the California Land Settlement Board. His ideas
				  about developing efficient rural communities would later influence what would
				  become the Resettlement Administration communities of the New Deal. He
				  continued to serve in California until 1924, when he was appointed Chairman of
				  the Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) where he oversaw the planning and of
				  construction of major water control and irrigation projects in the West
				  including the Hoover, Grand Coulee and Owyhee dams. Lake Mead, formed by the
				  construction of the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River, was named after Mead.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadE1</container><unittitle>Elwood Mead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meadows, Abraham (Charles) Henson (March 10, 1859 –
				  December 9, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Henson Meadows, also known as Charlie Meadows and
				  Arizona Charlie, was an American showman and sharpshooter, and a contemporary
				  of "Buffalo Bill" Cody whose Wild West Show inspired Meadows to pursue his own
				  performing career. Born in Visalia, California, he moved with his family to
				  Arizona. In the summer of 1882, after Apaches raided the Meadows ranch north of
				  Payson, killing his father and brother, Meadows took over running the ranch. In
				  1884, he helped organize Payson’s first rodeo, dubbed the “world’s oldest,
				  continuous rodeo.” He was soon working in Wild West shows, including that of
				  Buffalo Bill Cody’s. In 1893, Charlie formed his own show in Phoenix and took
				  it on the road to California. He went to Australia to head a Wild West show.
				  When gold was discovered in Yukon Territory in 1896, he organized a party to
				  take burros from Arizona to the Yukon to use as pack animals. Once he arrived,
				  he filed on some paying gold mining claims and began printing the 
				  <emph render="italic">Klondike News.</emph> The theatre he opened in Dawson,
				  Yukon Territory is still in operation. On 1901, Meadows moved to California and
				  then to Yuma, Arizona where he operated a cattle ranch and intermittently
				  printing a newspaper called <emph render="italic">The Valley Hornet
				  </emph>under the pseudonym I. Sting. He died in 1932.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadowsACH1</container><unittitle>Abraham Henson Meadows</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896?</unitdate></did><note><p>Note accompanying the photograph: Charles Meadows, builder of
					 the theatre. He had a colorful past in Arizona with Indian riots there, and was
					 called 'Arizona Charles.' He was an old trouper and traveled around the world
					 with shows before going to Dawson. He met and married his wife in Singapore;
					 she was also a variety performer. They had their own act at the Palace Grand
					 when it opened.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Meakim, Roger J. (March 3, 1884 - May 3,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roger Meakim was a Superior Court Judge. Born in Burlington,
				  Iowa, Meakim graduated from Iowa State University in 1904 and received his law
				  degree two years later. He began his law practice in Seattle in 1907. He
				  practiced for more than 20 years before being appointed to a newly created
				  judgeship in 1934 by Governor Clarence Martin. Meakim was a member of the
				  College Club and held every office in the club, including the presidency. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meany, Edmond S. (December 28, 1862 – April 22,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edmond S. Meany was a professor of botany and history at the
				  University of Washington. He was an alumnus of the university, having graduated
				  as the valedictorian of his class in 1885. Meany also earned a Master of
				  Science from the University of Washington in 1899, and a Master of Letters from
				  the University of Wisconsin in 1901. In 1926 he was awarded an honorary Doctor
				  of Laws from the College of Puget Sound. He was elected as a Washington state
				  legislator for the 1891 and 1893 sessions. Meany was an active supporter of the
				  local Boy Scouts of America organization, the Seattle Area Council. From 1906
				  until his death, he served as managing editor of the Washington Historical
				  Quarterly (renamed the Pacific Northwest Quarterly the year after his death).
				  From 1908 until his death, he also served as president of the Mountaineers, a
				  hiking and climbing club. Mount Meany in the Olympic Mountains, Meany Crest on
				  Mount Rainier, Meany Hall for the Performing Arts on the Seattle campus of the
				  University of Washington, Camp Meany (a Cub Scout camp on the Olympic Peninsula
				  from 1939 to 1942 and now a part of Camp Parsons), and Meany Middle School in
				  Seattle, Washington are all named in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE4</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead on the UW campus with University
					 President Thomas F. Kane, Professor Edmond S. Meany and Everett Voorhees
					 Thompson, orderly of the day.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Edward Mead subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E. W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard. </p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meares, Captain John (1756 – January 29,
				  1809)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Meares was a navigator, explorer, and maritime fur trader,
				  best known for his role in the Nootka Crisis, which brought Britain and Spain
				  to the brink of war. He joined the Royal Navy as a captain's servant and was
				  commissioned a lieutenant in 1778. In 1783 he joined the merchant service and
				  in 1785, formed the Northwest America Company for collecting sea otter furs by
				  trade with the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast and selling
				  them in China. The East India Company held a monopoly on British trade in the
				  Pacific and required all British traders to be licensed with the company and
				  pay duties. Meares did not license his ships with the East India Company and
				  instead tried to conceal the illegal activity by using the flag of Portugal. In
				  1789 vessels owned by Meares' company were seized on the grounds of violating
				  Spanish rights of trade and navigation on the coast. He sailed to England where
				  he submitted a report to the Home secretary exaggerating the permanence of his
				  settlement in Nootka Sound and the financial losses sustained by his company.
				  When the issue was taken up in the House of Commons, the Royal Navy began to
				  make preparations for hostilities. War was averted with the Nootka Conventions,
				  a series of three agreements between the Kingdom of Spain and the Kingdom of
				  Great Britain, signed in the 1790s, which averted a war between the two empires
				  over overlapping claims to portions of the Pacific Northwest coast of North
				  America. Cape Meares, in the present United States state of Oregon, is named
				  after Meares. Also named after him is Meares Island, Meares Point and Meares
				  Bluff in British Columbia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MearesJ1</container><unittitle>John Meares</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">William Beechey, London</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving after a picture by William Beechey.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mears, Herbert Richard (July 14, 1923 - July 13,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in New York City, Herbert Mears was interested in art from
				  a young age. He attended the Harrison School of Fine Arts, studied under
				  Fernand Leger in Paris and went on to paint and study in various studios in
				  France and Italy before his arrival in Houston in 1951. With colleague David
				  Adickes, whom he had met in Paris, Mears decided to open an art school, the
				  Studio of Contemporary Arts. However, money was tight, and Mears found
				  employment as a draftsman for Houston Lighting and Power Company. He later
				  taught at the University of Houston, Rice University and Hill County Arts
				  Foundation. He was the Summer School Director of the Houston Museum of Fine
				  Arts. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MearsHR1</container><unittitle>Herbert Mears</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meckstroth, Theodore William (February 5, 1868 -
				  December 28, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore William Meckstroth was born in Wakefield, Ohio and came
				  to Seattle in 1889. He was employed by the Northern Pacific Railway for 49
				  years, retiring in 1939. He was a freight agent and later president of the
				  Veterans Association of the Northern Pacific Railway 1936-1937. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeckstrothTW1</container><unittitle>Theodore William Meckstroth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Medcalf, John T. (June 14, 1843 - May 23,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John T. Medcalf, the son of William and Martha Medcalf, was born
				  in Montreal, Canada and moved to Iowa with his family in 1845. They moved to
				  Missouri in 1851 before crossing the plains in a covered wagon in 1852. He had
				  a farm in Montesano, Washington, was a member of the Territorial Legislature
				  and was active in politics.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MedcalfJT1</container><unittitle>John T. Medcalf</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on verso.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Medcalf, Martha Ann Binns (February 28, 1814 - October
				  23, 1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Ann Binns was born in Dukinfield, England and came to the
				  United States in 1831. She married William Medcalf in Toronto, Canada in 1842,
				  and the family moved to Iowa in 1845. They moved to Missouri in 1851 before
				  crossing the plains in a covered wagon in 1852. They settled in Chehalis,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MedcalfMAB1</container><unittitle>Martha Ann Medcalf</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Medcalf, William (April 10, 1813 - November 10,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Medcalf was born in Dublin, Ireland and immigrated to
				  Canada in 1818. In the 1830s, he was a sailor on the Great Lakes. He married
				  Martha Ann Binns in Toronto, Canada in 1842. The family moved to Iron Hills,
				  Iowa in 1845 and then to Missouri in 1851. In 1852, they crossed the plains in
				  a covered wagon, arriving in Chehalis, Washington. After Martha's death, he
				  married Cordelia Newton in 1883; he divorced her in 1886 and moved to
				  Montesano, Washington where his son John lived.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MedcalfW1</container><unittitle>William Medcalf</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meeds, Edwin Lloyd (December 11, 1927 – August 18,
				  2005)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Lloyd Meeds, an American politician, served as a member of
				  the United States House of Representatives from 1965 to 1979, representing the
				  Second Congressional District of Washington as a Democrat. He was born in
				  Dillon, Montana, and while in high school, his family moved to Monroe,
				  Washington. He served in the United States Navy from 1946 to 1947 and
				  afterwards owned and operated a gas station. He earned his law degree from
				  Gonzaga University in 1958. Meeds first won election to the House in 1964 and
				  won each of his subsequent bids for re-election with comfortable margins from
				  1966 up to 1974. In that year, when US District Court Judge George Hugo Boldt
				  ruled that treaties entitled Native Americans to half of the fish caught in
				  their usual and customary fishing grounds, Meeds angered many of his
				  constituents with his comment that the tribes had the law on their side and
				  that people needed to move on. As a result, he won his 1976 reelection by only
				  542 votes. While a representative, Meeds was known for his work on conservation
				  and education issues. He helped create the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area and the
				  North Cascades National Park. A memorial to Meeds was erected at the Snow Lake
				  trailhead near Snoqualmie Pass on September 13, 2007, in honor of his work in
				  the creation of Alpine Lakes Wilderness. Following his retirement from the
				  House in 1979, he became a Washington lobbyist, and in contrast to his
				  conservation efforts in Washington State, he was central to efforts to limit
				  land preservation in the bill that eventually became the Alaska National
				  Interest Lands Conservation Act, signed into law by President Jimmy Carter in
				  December, 1980. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeedsEL1</container><unittitle>Edwin Lloyd Meeds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1965 and
					 1979</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meek, Joseph Lafayette "Joe" (February 9, 1810 – June
				  20, 1875</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph "Joe" Meek was a trapper, law enforcement official, and
				  politician in the Oregon Country and later Oregon Territory of the United
				  States. A pioneer involved in the fur trade before settling in the Tualatin
				  Valley, Meek would play a prominent role at the Champoeg Meetings of 1843 where
				  he was elected as a sheriff. Later he served in the Provisional Legislature of
				  Oregon before being selected as the United States Marshal for the Oregon
				  Territory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeekJL1</container><unittitle>Joe Meek</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photograhper">Buchtel &amp; Stolte, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meeker, Ezra Manning (December 29, 1830 – December 3,
				  1928) (see PH Coll 596)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ezra Manning Meeker was an American pioneer who traveled the
				  Oregon Trail by ox-drawn wagon as a young man, migrating from Iowa to the
				  Pacific Coast. Late in life, he worked to memorialize the Trail, repeatedly
				  retracing the trip of his youth. Once known as the "Hop King of the World," he
				  was the first mayor of Puyallup, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR2</container><unittitle> William R. Jarman with Ezra Meeker and Nicholas Vance
					 Sheffer at the Old Settlers Picnic in the Skagit Valley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R. E. Hawley</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Wm. R. Jarman (standing), Ezra Meeker
						(center), N. V. Sheffer.</p><p>Photograph published in <emph render="italic">The Skagit
						River Journal</emph> of August 30, 2007.</p><p>Filed under William R. Jarman subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meeuse, Bastiaan J. D. (May 9, 1916 - July 27,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bastiaan J. D. Meeuse, a UW botany professor whose five decades
				  of research on the exotic but stinky voodoo lily resulted in numerous
				  contributions to science, died July 27, 1999. Born on May 9, 1916, to Dutch
				  parents in Indonesia, Meeuse gained fame in 1961 with his book <emph>The Story
				  of Pollination.</emph> He also served as a consultant in the making of a
				  documentary, <emph>Sexual Encounters of the Floral Kind,</emph> which was
				  released in the 1980s. Meeuse, who joined the UW botany faculty in 1952 after
				  getting his education in the Netherlands, spent most of his time studying the
				  heat-and-stench generating pollination phase of the voodoo lily, a relative of
				  the corpse flower that came into rare bloom in July in the UW’s Botany
				  Greenhouse. In the 1980s, he and colleagues wrote a landmark paper stating that
				  the heat trigger for thermogenic plants is salicylic acid, a relative of
				  aspirin. Scientists now believe salicylic acid helps regulate growth and
				  development in many plants and that implanting heat-generating genes may help
				  citrus trees avoid frost damage. Previously, he found a moss enzyme that
				  oxidizes oxalic acid. Today, that enzyme helps monitor blood in people who
				  produce excess oxalic acid, which can cause deadly calcium-oxalate crystals in
				  their kidneys. Meeuse decided to study biology because his interest was piqued
				  by a famous botanical garden near his home. In addition to his prolific
				  research career (he published more than 200 scientific articles), Meeuse was
				  well known for his caring personality and support of students. In 1978, Meeuse
				  established a unique herbarium collection of the species Garden loosestrife
				  (Lysimachia vulgaris) at Washington University. The plant, a native of the
				  wetlands of eastern Europe and Asia, became the focus for research that
				  continues into the potential threat it poses to the native character of
				  environmentally sensitive wetlands.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeeuseBJD1</container><unittitle>Professor Bastiaan Meeuse in lab with
					 plant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 10, 1957</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Megler, Joseph George (March 10, 1838 – September 10,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph George Megler, generally known as J. G. Megler, was a
				  German-American salmon cannery owner and politician in Washington. He was a
				  member of the Washington House of Representatives for the first legislature in
				  1889 and served two terms thereafter. He was also a member of the Washington
				  State Senate for five terms. During his political career, he held the positions
				  of Speaker of the House and President pro tempore of the Senate. He has been
				  described as the father of the salmon hatcheries in Washington. Megler was born
				  in Germany. Left an orphan by the age of 9, he emigrated to the U.S. along with
				  his younger brother and two sisters to join an uncle in New York. Megler
				  entered military service for the Union in 1861 and saw action in the battles of
				  Fort Henry, Donelson, Shiloh, Vicksburg and Red River. He was honorably
				  discharged at New York in October 1865 and joined his brother in Astoria,
				  Oregon late that year. In 1871, he moved to Chinook, Washington to join the
				  salmon cannery of Ellis, Jewett and Chambers as the manager. In 1873, he built
				  a salmon cannery on the Washington side of the Columbia River, gradually
				  expanding operations, building and running an additional salmon cannery in
				  Aberdeen, Washington from 1887 to around 1893, operating a fish receiving
				  station in Astoria, and bringing in new technologies and practices. Megler
				  quickly recognized the danger of overfishing on the Columbia and was an early
				  proponent of legislated fishing limits and of fish hatcheries as a method to
				  combat the collapse of salmon fisheries as seen in California and on the East
				  Coast. He was one of the founders of The Oregon &amp; Washington Fish
				  Propagating Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeglerJG1</container><unittitle> Joseph George Megler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and
					 1900?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photograhper">Buchtel &amp; Stolte, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination><note><p>Printed on front: J. G. Megler, Republican Representative,
						25th District, Wahkiakum County</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meier, Aaron (May 22, 1831 - August 16,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aaron Meier came to California from Bavaria during the Gold
				  Rush, spending time as an itinerant peddler in southern Oregon. In 1857, he
				  arrived in the Oregon Territory and opened a mercantile store in Portland. He
				  began selling merchandise that arrived by steamer from San Francisco and in
				  covered wagons traveling the Oregon Trail. He hired Emil Frank in 1870 and
				  Emil’s younger brother Sigmund Frank in 1872. A year later, Emil Frank became
				  Meier’s partner and the store became known as Meier &amp; Frank. Sigmund Frank
				  became a partner in the store in 1884, and a year later married Aaron’s only
				  daughter, Fannie Meier. In 1888, Emil Frank left the partnership, and Sigmund
				  Frank became Meier’s sole partner just before Meier died in 1889. At Sigmund
				  Frank’s death, Aaron Meier’s elder son, Abe Meier, became president. His
				  younger son, Julius became vice president and general manager; Julius was later
				  elected governor of Oregon, serving from 1931 to 1935. In 1966, the May Company
				  purchased Meier &amp; Frank, and a year later Meier &amp; Frank’s operations
				  merged with the Robinsons-May division in Los Angeles. In 2005 Federated
				  Department Stores, the parent company of Macy's, purchased May Department
				  Stores and announced that all of the stores owned by Federated would be renamed
				  “Macy’s.” The downtown Portland location closed in 2017; a portion of the
				  building was converted to a hotel. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeierA1</container><unittitle> Aaron Meier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Issued for one-time use. Credit line
					 required.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Melbourne, Frank (? - August 25, 1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Melbourne was one of the best known of a small group of
				  rainmakers active in the Great Plains during the early 1890s. A native of
				  Australia, he came west from Ohio in 1891 with his brother. Melbourne, also
				  known as "The Rain King," "The Rain Wizard," and later as "The Rain Fakir,"
				  worked in Nebraska, Kansas, and Colorado. Melbourne practiced and popularized
				  the idea of manufacturing gas on the ground, thus creating a cloud which
				  ascended and united with the upper air, causing rainfall. He was highly
				  publicized and charged high prices for his services. In speaking of his
				  experiences as a rain maker, he later admitted that the whole thing was humbug,
				  and that he never possessed any more power in that respect than any other man.
				  On August 25, 1894, he was found dead in a Denver hotel; suicide was
				  suspected.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MelbourneF1</container><unittitle>"Melburne (sic) as Jupiter Pluvius"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 8, 1891</unitdate></did><note><p>Cartoon from the <emph render="italic">Rocky Mountain
					 News</emph>. Printed on front: He made it rain yesterday in Cheyenne.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MelbourneF2</container><unittitle>Cartoon of Frank Melbourne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1891?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Precipitating rain by explosives.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Melchoir, Joseph - see Melody Choir</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Melse, Edward W. (January 3, 1863 - August 10,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward W. Melse was the builder and operator of the Sunset
				  Telephone Company, Seattle's pioneer telephone system. The company was located
				  on the southeast corner of 2nd Avenue and Cherry Street, the present site of
				  the Alaska Building. He arrived in Seattle in 1882 as the head of the telephone
				  company. He was the deputy city controller from 1908 until 1910 and later
				  worked in mining and for the Internal Revenue Service as an accountant in the
				  tax division. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ColmanLJ1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of the first Seattle telephone
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The first Seattle telephone office, which
					 opened March 7, 1883, as re-enacted before the Chamber of Commerce. Miss Joene
					 Beattie is seated at the switchboard as Miss Harriet Hanson, the first
					 operator. A group of original patrons of the exchange or members of their
					 families is standing nearby. The group includes (left to right): L. J. Colman,
					 Professor Edmond Meany, Merle Denny, A. E. MacCulsky, Laurence Booth, E. W.
					 Melse, and Captain W.R. Ballard. </p></note><note><p>Filed under Laurence J. Colman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Menges, Gary L. (September 11, 1937 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gary L. Menges served as preservation administrator and
				  associate director of the University of Washington Library system for 33 years
				  until he retired in 2013. He had previously worked at Cornell University, the
				  University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and the University of Texas-Austin. His
				  ACRL activities ranged from serving as chair of the Conference Executive
				  Committee for the Third National ACRL Conference in Seattle in 1984 and serving
				  as chair of RBMS (1992–93), helping to organize the Washington State ACRL
				  Chapter. His photographs and corresponding negatives depicting shoppers,
				  vendors and streets at Pike Place Market in Seattle in the 1980s are held in UW
				  Special Collections. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MengesGL1</container><unittitle>Gary L. Menges</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1984?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the January 1984 issue of the 
					 <emph render="italic">College &amp; Research Libraries News</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mentrin, Charles J. (November 11, 1911 - March 17,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Mentrin was the business agent for the Packinghouse
				  Union 186 and was later the international vice president for the Amalgamated
				  Meatcutters and Butcher Workers Union.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BairdHW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry W. Baird with Charles J.
					 Mentrin and Santa Claus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 17, 1955</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Mentrin presenting a plaque to Harry W. Baird at the
					 Packinghouse Union's annual Christmas party</p><p>Filed under Harry W. Baird subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">DoyleCW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Doyle, secretary for the
					 Central Labor Council, and Charles Mentrin, assistant secretary, with a four
					 year old girl, Klee, who was the poster child for the American Federation of
					 Labor's United Good Neighbor Fund drive</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 10, 1955</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Forde Photographers, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Klee is wearing the buttons of over 100 American Federation of
					 Labor locals to urge labor support of the fund drive; her image appeared on the
					 Labor Council's poster endorsing the campaign. The photograph appeared in the
					 July 10, 1955 edition of the <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Charles W. Doyle subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Menzies, Archibald (March 15, 1754 – February 15,
				  1842)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Archibald Menzies was a Scottish surgeon, botanist and
				  naturalist. While working at the Royal Botanic Gardens, he drew the attention
				  of Dr. John Hope, professor of botany at Edinburgh University, who encouraged
				  him to study medicine there. Having qualified as a surgeon, Menzies joined the
				  Royal Navy as assistant surgeon and was present at the Battle of the Saintes in
				  1782. In 1786 Menzies was appointed surgeon on board the <emph render="italic">Prince of Wales</emph> on a fur-trading voyage round Cape Horn
				  to the northern Pacific. This ship visited North America, China and Hawaii (the
				  Sandwich Isles) several times, and Menzies collected a number of new plants on
				  this voyage. On his return to Great Britain, he was elected a fellow of the
				  Linnean Society. In 1790, Menzies was appointed as naturalist to accompany
				  Captain George Vancouver on his voyage around the world on 
				  <emph render="italic">HMS Discovery</emph>. In 1794, while Discovery spent one
				  of three winters in Hawaii, Menzies, with Lieutenant Joseph Baker and two other
				  men, made the first recorded ascent the summit of Mauna Loa. He later served
				  with the Navy in the West Indies. After retiring from the Navy, he became a
				  doctor and surgeon at Notting Hill, London and was the leader of the Linnean
				  Society. Menzies' name is commemorated in the scientific names of several of
				  the plants he discovered, and many of the specimens he collected are planted in
				  London’s Kew Gardens. He also introduced the Chile Pine or Monkey Puzzle tree
				  to Britain; it became a favorite tree in the formal gardens of the nineteenth
				  century. Point Menzies in British Columbia is named for him, and the Ainapo
				  Trail he used to climb Mauna Loa is also known as Menzies Trail.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MenziesA1</container><unittitle>Archibald Menzies</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: From the painting by (Eden Upton) Eddis, now
					 in the possession of the Linnean Society of London, who gave special permission
					 for this photograph to be made. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mercer, Thomas (March 11, 1813 – May 25,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Mercer was born in Harrison County, Ohio, the eldest son
				  of Aaron and Jane (Dickerson) Mercer; among his brothers were Aaron Mercer and
				  Asa Mercer, who both became Seattle pioneers. His father had a woolen factory
				  where Thomas worked; by age 14, he was the foreman. In 1834, the family moved
				  to Illinois, and Thomas started a small store before becoming a farmer. He
				  married Nancy Brigham in 1838, and in 1852, he and his wife and four children
				  crossed the plains to Oregon; his wife died during the journey. The first
				  winter was passed in Salem, where Mercer purchased one-half interest in a
				  blacksmith shop. In the summer of 1853 he traveled to Seattle, where he took up
				  a claim adjoining that of David T. Denny. Mercer served as Seattle’s first
				  teamster and milkman. With the organization of King County in 1854, he was
				  appointed one of the first commissioners, and in 1858 was elected probate
				  judge, a position he held for ten years. With the increased settlement of the
				  town and demand for residence property, Mercer platted the town of Eden and
				  later that of West Seattle. He gave English names two large Seattle lakes
				  previously known by their Native American names, suggesting that the larger
				  lake be called Lake Washington after George Washington and the smaller lake be
				  named Lake Union. Later, the island in Lake Washington was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MercerT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Mercer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1898?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">E. G. Williams &amp; Brothers, New York</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed by Thomas Mercer.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MercerT2</container><unittitle>Thomas Mercer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1898?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MercerT3</container><unittitle>Thomas Mercer's residence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">After 1883</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The residence was located on First Avenue South, south of
					 Washington Street.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Merriam, Cyrus Knapp (January 29, 1849 - December 6,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cyrus Knapp Merriam was born in Maine to a family associated
				  with the Merriam-Webster publishing firm. He graduated from Colby College and
				  received his medical education at Bellevue Hospital and at the medical
				  department of the University of the City of New York (later part of Columbia
				  University). He was in private practice in Lowell, Massachusetts until 1880,
				  when he was appointed acting assistant surgeon of the U. S. Army. He was
				  assigned to the Washington Territory, serving at Vancouver Barracks, Fort
				  Colville, Fort Coeur d’Alene, Fort Spokane and Camp Chelan. In 1887, he was a
				  founder of the Spokane Medical Society and was its secretary for the first two
				  years. He helped organize the Washington State Medical Society and served as
				  president 1890-1891. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MerriamCK1</container><unittitle>Cyrus Knapp Merriam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Merrick, Frank Leonce (October 26, 1881 - March 13,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Leonce Merrick was a reporter for the <emph>Seattle
				  Times</emph> and a columnist for the <emph>Washington Post</emph>. He was born
				  in Xenia, Ohio in 1881. After receiving newspaper training in Washington, he
				  was assistant director of the Press Bureau for the St. Louis Exposition of
				  1904, Press Bureau manager of the Portland Lewis and Clark Exposition of 1905,
				  and in 1907 organized the Press Bureau of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
				  in Seattle. He was later employed by the<emph> Seattle Times</emph>.
				  Subsequently, he went in the garage business and operated the Pacific Highway
				  Garage on Stewart Street near First Avenue in Seattle. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MerrickFL1</container><unittitle>Frank Leonce Merrick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on verso: Portland. Lewis and Clark Centennial
					 Exposition</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Merrifield, Cyrus Reed (May 27, 1875 - September 29,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cyrus Reed Merrifield, the son of Austin Sherwin Merrifield and
				  Elisabeth Reed Merrifield, was born in Sublette, Illinois and graduated from
				  Ottawa University. He taught mathematics at Grand Island College before
				  becoming a rancher and farmer. In 1899, he and his brother, Irving Newton
				  Merrifield, were directors of Consolidated Light and Fuel; the company was
				  formed to supply light and heat to private parties and to construct a pipe line
				  from the oil and gas fields of Southeastern Kansas to Kansas City. He married
				  Nellie Walker in 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MerrifieldCR1</container><unittitle>Cyrus Reed Merrifield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ottawa, Kansas.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Merritt, Fred </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MerrittF1</container><unittitle>Fred Merritt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John Kimball Stevens, McVickers Theater, Chicago, Ill</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Grandson of Gen. Merritt, Old beau of Maude
					 (illegible) in Springfield, Illinois.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Metzler, Everett Milton "Metz" (June 12, 1930 - June 17,
				  2011) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Everett Milton “Metz” Metzler was a firefighter for the city of
				  Sterling, Illinois for 27 years. He then worked for the office of the State
				  Fire Marshal for 17 years, before retiring. The son of Everett L. and Bernettie
				  R. (Hefner) Metzler, he was a veteran of the Korean War, serving in the Navy
				  from 1951-1955. He married Billie Anne Williams on Oct. 2, 1954, in Kensington,
				  Maryland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MetzlerEM1</container><unittitle>Everett Milton “Metz” Metzler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meyer, Max Friedrich (June 14, 1873 – March 14,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Max Friedrich Meyer was a German-born American psychologist.
				  Born in Danzig, he immigrated to the United States where he became Professor of
				  Experimental Psychology and initiator of the Psychology Department at the
				  University of Missouri. His work largely concerned neurology and its
				  relationship to behavior. He was also co-developer of the Lipps and Meyer law
				  concerning melodic intervals of music. He was dismissed from the University of
				  Missouri due to his academic involvement with a questionnaire concerning
				  opinions about marriage and sex issued as a project by one of his students. The
				  university was subsequently censured by the American Association of University
				  Professors in an early case regarding academic freedom due a professor. Meyer
				  invented the tonality diamond, popularized by the theories of composer Harry
				  Partch. In 1930, he was the president of the Midwestern Psychological
				  Association and the president of the Southern Society for Philosophy and
				  Psychology. He is the author of several books, including <emph render="italic">Psychology of the Other</emph>(1921) and <emph render="italic">How we hear: How tones make music</emph>(1950). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeyerMF1</container><unittitle>Max Friedrich Meyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Leguizamo, Tacuba 40, Mexico City</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Meyers, Victor Aloysius "Vic" (September 7, 1897 – May
				  28, 1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Victor “Vic” Meyers was a jazz bandleader and Washington State
				  Democratic Party politician. At age 21, he put together a 10-piece band, and by
				  1919 he was given a contract to lead the house band at the Rose Room in
				  Seattle’s Hotel Butler. In 1927, his band had a residency at the Trianon
				  Ballroom, Seattle's leading dance venue of the time, and he later opened Club
				  Victor. In 1932, Doug Welch and some other newspapermen at the Seattle Times
				  encouraged Meyers to enter the city's mayoral race. Welch saw Meyers as a joke
				  candidate he could use as an anchor for satiric stories on the race. Meyers
				  originally ran as a joke, but eventually began to campaign seriously. Although
				  he didn’t win, he decided to run for lieutenant governor in the fall 1932
				  election. He gained the Democratic nomination in the September primary and won
				  in the general election. He and his band played at the inaugural ball. He
				  became known as a leader of the left wing of the state Democratic Party, and he
				  went on to serve five terms as Lt. Governor and later eight years as Secretary
				  of State, from 1956 until 1964. He lost a third bid in 1964 after being
				  implicated in a scandal related to the mishandling of the petition for an
				  anti-gambling initiative. In 1977, the Washington legislature designated the
				  golf course at Sun Lakes State Park as the "Vic Meyers Golf Course" and renamed
				  Rainbow Lake as "Vic Meyers Lake." Meyers is a member of the Northwest Music
				  Association Hall of Fame.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeyersVA1</container><unittitle> Vic Meyers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Michael, Frank E. (January 19, 1895 - September 9,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank E. Michael, the son of Maurice and Mary Michael, was born
				  in Minnesota and moved with his family to Chehalis, Washington at an early age.
				  He served in the Army during World War I. He graduated from Portland Dental
				  College and had a dental practice in Seattle for over twenty years. He was
				  State Vice-Chair of the American Legion and president of the Men’s Club of
				  Temple de Hirsch. He married Selma Shore in 1917. His sister was Sadie Michael
				  Silverstone. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard W. Peterson with Sadie Michael, Martin
					 Deggeller, Marjorie Bloyd and Frank Michael</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under H. W. "Pete" Peterson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Michael, Sadie (September 11, 1896 - February 19,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sadie Michael, the daughter of Maurice and Mary Michael,
				  graduated from high school in Chehalis, Washington and received her B.A. in
				  Education from the University of Washington in 1918. She taught school in
				  Puyallup and Mount Vernon, Washington. She married Herschel Silverstone in New
				  York City in 1922. Her brother, Frank, was a dentist in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard W. Peterson with Sadie Michael, Martin
					 Deggeller, Marjorie Bloyd and Frank Michael</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under H. W. "Pete" Peterson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Michels, Daisy</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MichelsD1</container><unittitle>Daisy Michels</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1893 and 1896?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Faber Photo Studio, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p> Studio portrait of woman in long white dress. Copy of
					 photograph; original in Coll. 334.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Milczewski, Marion Anthony (February 12, 1912 - June 18,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marion Anthony Milczewski, a native of Saginaw, Michigan, held
				  baccalaureate degrees from the Universities of Michigan and Illinois and a
				  master of Library Science degree from the University of Illinois. He was the
				  assistant librarian at University of California Berkeley before becoming
				  director of the University of Washington Libraries (1960 - 1977). During his
				  tenure, he presided over the expansion of the Suzzallo Library. He served on
				  the State Advisory Council for Libraries and was a consultant on libraries for
				  the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations in Brazil and Columbia. At the time of his
				  death, he was a professor emeritus at the UW. His professional associations
				  included the American Library Association, Association of Research Libraries,
				  Consortium of Western Universities and Colleges, Seminar on the Acquisition of
				  Latin American Materials, Library Art Committee, U.W., and Western Association
				  of Schools and Colleges the Accteditation Team.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilczewskiMA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Marion Milczewski accepting a gift of
					 microfilm of Sears Roebuck catalogues from Louis Bye</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jack H. Johnson, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilczewskiMA2</container><unittitle>Marion Milczewski</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John A. Moore, Office of Information Services, University of Washington, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilczewskiMA3</container><unittitle>Marion Milczewski with Robert D. Monroe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of News Services, University of Washington, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miles, Ziba Cooper (March 25, 1834 - April 2,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ziba Cooper Miles, the son of Orison Miles and Samantha Peck
				  Miles, was born in New York in 1834. He emigrated westward in the 1860s, making
				  four different stops in as many states long enough to entitle him to be called
				  a pioneer in each. Miles reached Seattle in 1870. Shortly after his arrival, he
				  opened a general store at the corner of Mill and Commercial Streets, now First
				  Avenue and Yesler Way. and Charles H. Piper joined him as a partner. During the
				  Gold Rush, the store served as an outfitter for the miners traveling to Alaska.
				  They relocated the store to First and Spring in 1901. In 1910, he closed the
				  retail store to focus on his wholesale and contracting business; bankruptcy
				  proceedings began in 1911. He married Rose Spencer in 1892.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilesZC1</container><unittitle>Ziba Cooper Miles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Millard, William James (January 30, 1883 - December 13,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William James Millard was born in Mississippi and came to
				  Olympia in 1917 as the state law librarian. He was appointed to the State
				  Supreme Court in 1928 and elected in 1930, re-elected in 1936 and 1942. He was
				  defeated in 1948. In 1956, he was elected to serve an unexpired term on the
				  court and served until 1957. In 1960, he was the Republican nominee for
				  lieutenant governor, losing to John Cherberg. In 1943, he spent a month’s
				  vacation working as a carpenter’s helper in the Puget Sound Shipbuilding
				  Company’s plant in Olympia to help with the war effort.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillardWJ1</container><unittitle> William James Millard in judge's robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Miller, Elmer (February 12, 1898 -
				  January 11, 1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer Miller was a teacher and labor activist. He taught history
				  at Queen Anne High School from 1930 until his retirement in 1963. During his
				  career, he was a strong voice in teacher unions, which he represented before
				  the Seattle School Board and the King County Labor Council. He was vice
				  president of the American Federation of Teachers and president of the local and
				  state chapters of the Federation. He was director of publications for the State
				  Federation, director of community relations for the Seattle Federation, and
				  editor of the monthly magazine, <emph render="italic">Washington
				  Teacher.</emph> He was appointed to a three year term on the Seattle Human
				  Rights Commission in 1964 .</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with Frank N. Morris,
					 member of AF of L Local 200, Joe David, and Elmer Miller, past president of the
					 Local 200</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph was from the <emph render="italic">Labor
					 News</emph>.</p><p>Filed under John A. Cherberg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, George Roberts Hauser (June 21, 1832 - July 2,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Roberts Hauser Miller was born in Ireland in 1832 and
				  immigrated to the United States when he was 9. He traveled to the Oregon
				  Territory in 1855 via the Panama Canal, settling first at Fort Steilacoom. He
				  served with the 9th Infantry during the Indian Wars. After five years of
				  service, he decided to go to Oregon and California. Miller eventually settled
				  in Oregon City where he worked as a carpenter. He always wore a button in his
				  coat lapel indicating that he had served in the Indian Wars. He married Mary
				  Ann Powell in 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerGRH1</container><unittitle>George Miller, wearing hat, standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerGRH2</container><unittitle>George Miller standing, John Kelly sitting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Preston M. Hart, Oregon City, Oregon</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: John Kelly sitting. Mr. Kelly was a drummer
					 boy on Massichusetts (sic) revenue cutter.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Isaac Newton (May 12, 1828 - November 20,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Newton Miller, Jr. crossed the plains from Indiana to
				  Oregon in 1850 and took up a donation land claim. He married Emaline Clark in
				  1853.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerIN1</container><unittitle>Isaac Newton Miller, Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1873?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Joaquin (September 8, 1837 – February 17,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cincinnatus Heine Miller, better known by his pen name Joaquin
				  Miller, was an American poet and frontiersman. In 1852, his family crossed the
				  plains to Oregon and settled in the Willamette Valley. He moved to northern
				  California during the California Gold Rush and then to the mining camps of
				  northern Idaho. During these years, he worked as a mining camp cook, lawyer,
				  judge, Pony Express rider newspaper writer and editor. He attended Columbia
				  College in Eugene, Oregon in 1858-1859 and was admitted to the Oregon bar in
				  1860. Between 1862 and 1866 he owned a pony express and a newspaper, the 
				  <emph render="italic">Eugene Democratic Register,</emph> and was a county judge
				  in Canyon City, Oregon. In 1868, he had published his first book of poetry,
				  which attracted little attention. He traveled to England in 1870, where he
				  published <emph render="italic">Songs of the Sierras,</emph> which was
				  well-received by the British press and which gave him his nickname as the "Poet
				  of the Sierras.” In 1877, he returned to California to write. He also traveled
				  to the Yukon as a newspaper correspondent during the Gold Rush. The Lewis and
				  Clark Exposition honored him on July 15, 1905 with "Joaquin Miller Day," the
				  first special event in honor of an individual; it marked the close of Western
				  Authors' Week.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerJ1</container><unittitle>Joaquin Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing June 2022</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerJ2</container><unittitle> Joaquin Miller standing by one of the pillars in the
					 Forestry Building at the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 15, 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the July 16, 1905 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Oregonian</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerJ3</container><unittitle>Joaquin Miller on the steps of the Oregon Building at
					 the Lewis and Clark Exposition, possibly with President Jefferson Myers of the
					 Oregon State Commission and four unidentified people.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 15, 1905</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, John F. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, John Ripin (May 23, 1938 – October 4,
				  2017)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Ripin Miller, an American politician, was a member of the
				  United States House of Representatives from 1985 to 1993, representing the 1st
				  congressional district of Washington as a Republican. He graduated with a BA
				  from Bucknell University in 1959 and received his LL.B. from Yale Law School
				  and an MA in Economics from Yale Graduate School in 1964. Prior to being
				  elected congressman, he was active in state and municipal governments, serving
				  as assistant attorney general for Washington, vice president and legal counsel
				  for the Washington Environmental Council, and Seattle City Councilman
				  (1972-1979). While on the City Council, he oversaw the rehabilitation of the
				  Pike Place Market. He founded Seattle's urban P-Patch program, a gardening
				  allotment program that was first of its kind in the nation. Miller served as
				  the director, Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons for the U.S.
				  State Department, with the rank of Ambassador-at-Large, starting in 2002.
				  Miller resigned effective December 15, 2006, to join the faculty of George
				  Washington University. He later taught at Yale University and was named a
				  Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Governmental Studies at the University of
				  California, Berkeley. Miller served as a distinguished senior fellow in
				  international affairs and human rights with the Discovery Institute and served
				  as chair of the Institute prior to his time with the State Department.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerJR1</container><unittitle>John Ripin Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerJR2</container><unittitle> John Ripin Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Philip</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerP1</container><unittitle>Philip Miller wearing Liberty Loan "V" lapel
					 pin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Robert Cunningham (July 3, 1899 - June 11,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Cunningham Miller was born in Blairsville, Pennsylvania
				  and graduated from Greenville College in 1920. He went to the University of
				  California in Berkeley, where he obtained his Master’s degree on the behavior
				  of bush-tits. He changed from ornithology to marine biology for his doctoral
				  studies and obtained his Ph.D. at Berkeley in 1923. From 1924 until 1938 he
				  served as professor of zoology and oceanography at the University of
				  Washington, taking a two-year leave from 1929 to 1931 to serve as biology
				  professor at Lingnan University in Canton, China. In 1937, he married Lea Van
				  Paymbroeck who was also a professor at the UW. Because the rules at that time
				  that prohibited a husband and wife from both working on the faculty, he
				  accepted the directorship of the California Academy of Sciences in San
				  Francisco and remained there until his retirement in 1963. During his 25 years
				  as director, the Academy made many advances including the building of the
				  Alexander F. Morrison Planetarium, the Lovell White Hall of Man and Nature, the
				  Alice Eastwood Hall of Botany, the renovation of the Steinhart Aquarium, and
				  the expansion of the various research departments. In addition, he continued a
				  strong interest in both marine biology and avian research. He was especially
				  interested in the flight and the effect of photoperiodism on robins. In 1969 he
				  received the Academy’s highest award, the Fellows’ Medal.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Cunningham Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Imogene Cunningham, San Francisco, CA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerRC2</container><unittitle>Robert Cunningham Miller with ornithology class at the
					 University of Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 3, 1934</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor B. Scheffer, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerRC3</container><unittitle>Robert Miller at Friday Harbor marine biology station
					 with newborn harbor seal pup</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor B. Scheffer, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerRC4</container><unittitle>Robert Cunningham Miller in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee Photo Lab, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Samuel C. (December 28, 1828 - November 11,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel C. Miller was born in Ashland, Ohio. At the age of 25, he
				  crossed the country to the California gold fields. Too late for the gold rush
				  at Sutter’s Mill, he continued on to Oregon where he met Franklin and David
				  Freer, brothers who had also followed stories of gold through California and
				  Oregon. The three men moved on to Walla Walla in 1862 where they discovered
				  that miners in Idaho and Montana needed food and supplies, and Walla Walla was
				  the closest place to find them. Miller and the Freers went into business
				  freighting supplies by mule trains. By 1870 wagon roads were replacing mules,
				  so they sold their mules and equipment and bought a trading post at the
				  confluence of the Columbia and Wenatchee Rivers. The trading post provided food
				  and supplies for the early settlers of the valley and served as the first bank
				  and lending institution in the area. In October 1874, Miller changed the town
				  name in his ledger from Wenatchee to Millersburg and became the valley’s first
				  (unofficial) postmaster. Mail could be left at the trading post and carried on
				  from there by travelers heading for the next settlement. Ten years later, the
				  government approved his application for a formal post office, with Miller as
				  postmaster, and the town’s name was changed back to Wenatchee. He remained
				  postmaster until December of 1890 when the post office was moved and a new
				  postmaster was appointed. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerSC1</container><unittitle>Samuel C. Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1903 and 1906?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">B. C. Collier, Wenatchee, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Miller, Vincent DePaul (May 15, 1916 - February 7,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vincent DePaul Miller was executive vice president of Vincent B.
				  Miller, a real estate firm founded by his father in 1914. He joined the firm in
				  1936. Miller, born in Seattle, was a graduate of Garfield High School. He was a
				  director of the Metropolitan Federal Savings and Loan Association, a president
				  of the Seattle-King County Board of Realtors, and a trustee of the American
				  Legion Foundation. He served during World War II and was a Commander in the
				  Naval Reserve, retiring from the Reserves in 1970.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, W.H. - See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Miller, Walter P. (November 6, 1876 - September 14,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Miller, an early Northwest photographer, was a partner
				  with Asahel Curtis for several years. Born in Illinois, he moved to Washington
				  with his parents, first to Port Angeles and then to Seattle in 1900. In
				  addition to his partnership with Curtis, he was a newspaper photographer before
				  going into business for himself as a commercial photographer. He was known for
				  his marine photography, having taken many photographs of rthe Seattle
				  waterfront. He also supplied photographs and stories for <emph>The Seattle
				  News-Letter</emph>, a local weekly. Miller was a member of both of the
				  expeditions to Mt. McKinley by the explorer, Frederick A. Cook. He died on his
				  yacht, <emph>Mon Reve</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Curtis at right, above, with
					 group of men and women in front of and on a train, possibly a Seattle Chamber
					 of Commerce group; Walter Miller at left with camera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis and Miller, Seattle WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Asahel Curtis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Miller, Winlock William (October 15, 1870 - June 19,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Winlock William Miller was the son of William Winlock Miller,
				  the first mayor of Olympia; the town of Winlock, Washington was named for his
				  father. His mother, Mary McFadden Miller, managed the family estate after her
				  husband’s death and became the first woman director of a bank in Washington
				  Territory. Miller was born in Olympia and graduated from Yale in 1894. He read
				  law with Judge Thomas Burke, but never practiced as an attorney. Instead, he
				  managed the family corporation and interested himself in community affairs.
				  During World War I, he served as the Federal Fuel Administrator for Washington
				  State, and in 1922 headed the Washington National Parks Association. He served
				  as a UW Regent from 1913 until 1957, with the exception of the years 1926 to
				  1934. As a regent, he was chair of the building and grounds committee and took
				  a leading role in the University’s building program. He was active in promoting
				  the UW Crew, and a shell was named for him. He was a member of the board of
				  Seattle General Hospital and served on the board of overseers for Whitman
				  College. Miller Hall, formerly the Education Hall, was renamed to honor his
				  service to the University. He married Martha Louise Keating in 1904. The couple
				  had two sons; Winlock William Miller Jr. and Pendleton Miller.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerWW1</container><unittitle>Winlock William Miller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roger Dudley, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MillerWW2</container><unittitle>Winlock William Miller leaning on against a fireplace
					 mantle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roger Dudley, Seattle, WA</persname></origination><note><p>The photo was taken at the same time as the previous
						photograph.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mills, Andrew Jackson (May 8, 1841 - December 25,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Jackson Mills was born in Cuba, Lake County, Illinois. He
				  served in the Illinois Cavalry from 1861 until 1865. In 1866, he married Maria
				  McCollum. The couple moved to the Dakota Territory where he served three terms
				  in the Dakota Legislature, including one term as speaker. In the 1880s, they
				  settled in Fruit Valley, Clark County, Washington Territory where they had a
				  farm. He was elected as messenger of the Washington State House in 1889 and
				  later as a representative of Clark County in 1895.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MillsAJ1</container><unittitle>Andrew Jackson Mills</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 8, 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, WA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Presented to Edmond S. Meany by W. M.
					 Chandler, Lewiston, Ida., March 1933.</p><p>Signed on verso by A. J. Mills</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mills, Blake David (April 8, 1912 - December 29,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Blake David Mills was born in Seattle and earned undergraduate
				  degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering at the UW in 1933 and 1934,
				  respectively. He received his master's degree in mechanical engineering at the
				  Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1936. Mills joined the Naval Reserve
				  in World War II and served in Washington, D.C., where he helped design weapons.
				  He joined the University of Washington in 1946 and taught mechanical
				  engineering until his retirement in 1977. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MillsBD1</container><unittitle>Blake David Mills</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Milroy, Robert Huston (June 11, 1816 – March 29,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Huston Milroy was a lawyer, judge, and a Union Army
				  general in the American Civil War, most noted for his defeat at the Second
				  Battle of Winchester in 1863. After the war, Milroy was a trustee of the Wabash
				  and Erie Canal Company and, from 1872 to 1875, he was the superintendent of
				  Indian Affairs in the Washington Territory and an Indian agent for the
				  following ten years. He died in Olympia, Washington in 1890, and is buried in
				  the Masonic Memorial Park at Tumwater, Washington. He was the author of 
				  <emph render="italic">Papers of General Robert Huston Milroy</emph>, published
				  posthumously in 1965 and 1966.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MilroyRH1</container><unittitle>Robert Huston Milroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from <emph render="italic">The History of
					 Puget Sound</emph>, volume 2, page 74.</p></note></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Milroy, Valerius Armitage (August 17, 1855 - May 4,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Valerius Armitage Milroy, the son of General Robert Houston
				  Milroy and Mary Jane Armitage Milroy, was born in Indiana and came to Olympia,
				  Washington in 1873. He served as postmaster for eight years. In later years, he
				  became a city and county clerk and was also clerk of the Superior Court for one
				  term.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MilroyVA1</container><unittitle>Valerius Armitage Milroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1927?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Milton, John (December 9, 1608 –
				  November 8, 1674)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Milton was an English poet, polemicist, man of letters, and
				  civil servant for the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell. He wrote
				  at a time of religious flux and political upheaval, and is best known for his
				  epic poem <emph render="italic">Paradise Lost</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MiltonJ1</container><unittitle>John Milton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="Engraver">Edward Radclyffe, London</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Milton aetat 10. After a photograph from the
					 original picture in the possession of Edgar Disney, Esq., of the Hyde,
					 Ingatestone, Essex.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Minagawa, Takeshi (January 10, 1919 - May 28,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Takeshi Minagawa, the son of Harushige and Natsu Arimoto
				  Minagawa, was born in Seattle and attended Broadway High School. He was
				  interned with his parents and sister in Idaho before joining the Military
				  Intelligence Service Language School. He married Kiyoko Shiratori in 1943.
				  After the war, he and his wife lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MinagawaT1</container><unittitle> Takeshi Minagawa in military uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Minor, Thomas Taylor (February 20, 1844 – December 2,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Taylor Minor was a physician, businessman, civic and
				  political leader who founded the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway and
				  served as mayor of Seattle and Port Townsend, Washington. He was born in the
				  East Indies and graduated from Yale Medical School in 1867. He moved to Port
				  Townsend, Washington in 1867 and later served as mayor. Miller moved to Seattle
				  in 1882 and became Seattle's mayor in 1887. He was active in politics, serving
				  as a delegate to the Republican National Conventions of 1876, 1880 and 1888.
				  For twelve years, he also served as a member of the Republican National
				  Committee. He drowned when a boat in which he, G. Morris Haller and Lewis Cox
				  were rowing from Stanwood to Whidbey Island sank. Seattle’s Minor Avenue and T.
				  T. Minor Elementary School were named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MinorTT1</container><unittitle> Thomas Taylor Minor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR2086/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Minshall, Robert James (August 25, 1898 - September 4,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>When Robert James Minshall was a student at Stadium High School
				  in Tacoma, he flew with Eugene Ely in Portland and later worked as Ely’s
				  “grease monkey.” He did mechanical work for G. W. Stromer in South Tacoma, had
				  his own machine shop, and bought one of Stromer’s Benoist tractor planes. He
				  joined the Boeing Company in 1918 while studying engineering at the University
				  of Washington. Minshall first worked on the PW-9 pursuit project and was the
				  design engineer for the Monomail where his expertise in modern aircraft
				  construction was critical for the new transports. He became the vice president
				  of engineering for the company and directed the design of the Boeing 314
				  Clipper ships. He was awarded the Wright Brothers Medal for aircraft design in
				  1936 and in 1940, the Musick Memorial Trophy for valuable contributions toward
				  the safety of life in the air, especially with regard to transoceanic flying.
				  He held numerous aviation patents. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MinshallRJ1</container><unittitle>Robert James Minshall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1941?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Minto, John (October 10, 1822 – February 25,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Minto IV was born in Wylam, England. The Minto family
				  immigrated to the United States in 1840. Minto began working at age eight in
				  the coal mines of Pennsylvania. In 1844 he moved to Oregon, crossing the plains
				  with the Gilliam Company. During this journey, he met his future wife, Martha
				  Ann Morrison, the daughter of Captain Robert Wilson Morrison; he married her in
				  1847. Minto became a prominent sheep farmer in Oregon and was a four-time
				  Republican representative in the state legislature. He also volunteered for the
				  militia during the Cayuse War and years later helped locate Minto and Santiam
				  passes through the Cascade Mountains east of Salem, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MintoJ1</container><unittitle>John Minto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Minto, Martha Ann Morrison (December 17, 1831 –
				  September 6, 1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Ann Morrison was born in Missouri on December 17, 1831.
				  She came to Oregon with her father, Capt. Robert Wilson Morrison, who had
				  organized a company of immigrants and brought them across the plains with ox
				  teams in 1844. They settled on Clatsop Plains, in what is now Clatsop County.
				  In 1847, Martha married John Minto, whom she had met on the Oregon Trail; the
				  couple had eight children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MintoMAM1</container><unittitle>Martha Ann Minto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mires, Austin E. (February 11, 1852 - March 3,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Austin E. Mires was born in Iowa; his family crossed the plains
				  to Oregon in 1853, settling in the Umpqua Valley. He graduated from Umpqua
				  University in Wilbur, Oregon in 1876 and from the University of Michigan Law
				  School in 1882. He served as a railway mail agent for three years and the chief
				  clerk of the Oregon Senate 1882-1883. He moved to Ellensburg, Washington in
				  1883 where he was vice president of the Ellensburg National Bank. Mires was the
				  first mayor of Ellensburg, serving six terms. He also served as the city
				  treasurer for two terms, was a member of the Constitutional Convention of
				  Washington, a Supervisor of the U. S. Census for the 2nd District of Washington
				  in 1900, the prosecuting attorney for Kittitas County, and in 1928 became a
				  Superior Court Judge. He was president of the Washington State Bar Association
				  and the Kittitas Bar Association. He married Mary Loretta Rowland in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MiresAE1</container><unittitle>Austin E. Mires with Mary L. Mires</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 2, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor J. Farrar, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Austin E. Mires &amp; wife of Ellensburg.
					 Photo by Victor J. Farrar, taken at Olympia, March 2, 1916.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mires, Mary Loretta Rowland (May 24, 1862 - December 17,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Loretta Rowland was born in McMinnville, Oregon; her family
				  moved to Kittitas County in 1874. She married Austin Mires in 1884. She took
				  many photographs of the people and places in Kittitas County, and her
				  photography collection is a valuable resource for early Kittitas County
				  history. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MiresAE1</container><unittitle>Austin E. Mires with Mary L. Mires</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 2, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor J. Farrar, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Austin E. Mires &amp; wife of Ellensburg.
					 Photo by Victor J. Farrar, taken at Olympia, March 2, 1916.</p><p>Filed under Austin E. Mires subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitchell, Hugh Burnton (March 22, 1907 – June 10,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Burnton Mitchell was a U.S. Senator and Congressman who
				  served as a member of the United States Senate from 1944 to 1946 and as a
				  member of the United States House of Representatives from 1949 to 1953
				  representing the state of Washington. He attended Dartmouth College from 1926
				  to 1929, but dropped out because of family finances. He worked briefly as a
				  reporter for <emph render="italic">The Great Falls Leader</emph>, and in 1931
				  moved to Washington to work for <emph render="italic">The Everett News.</emph>
				  In 1933, Mitchell joined the staff of 2nd District Representative Monrad C.
				  Wallgren. When Wallgren defeated Arthur B. Langlie for governor in 1944, he
				  appointed Mitchell to fill his Senate seat. Mitchell did not win re-election in
				  1946, and resigned on December 25, 1946 to give his successor seniority in
				  committee assignments important to Washington State. In 1948, Mitchell won
				  election to the House of Representatives in the First Congressional District
				  and was re-elected in 1950. Mitchell advocated prudent development of the
				  state's natural resources, particularly a Columbia River Authority to manage a
				  balanced, integrated river resource system, and proposed an Asian Marshall Plan
				  to thwart the post-World War II communist threat. Mitchell lost a race for
				  governor in 1952, and subsequently lost two attempts at a Congressional seat.
				  He defended civil liberties when they were under attack, and, on the state
				  level, was a longtime supporter of an income tax. As a citizen, he lobbied
				  doggedly during the early 1950s for a federally operated high dam at Hells
				  Canyon, on the Oregon-Idaho border. He was later appointed by President Carter
				  to the Presidential Commission on Japanese Internment during World War II. This
				  Commission considered that Constitutional guarantees had been violated by
				  internment and recommended reparation to those affected. Mitchell was known as
				  a reformer while in Congress and helped expose the scandal surrounding the sale
				  of World War II surplus property. Mitchell spent his later years in the
				  transportation industry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB1</container><unittitle>Hugh Burnton Mitchell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB2</container><unittitle>Hugh Burnton Mitchell at the Washington State
					 Federation of Labor Annual Convention in Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1950</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Greenway, Reliance Photo Service, Seattle WA</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB3</container><unittitle>Portrait of Hugh Burnton Mitchell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Walters Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB4</container><unittitle>Hugh Burnton Mitchell with President Harry Truman and
					 Warren G. Magnuson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1950 and 1952?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: To Paul Coughlin, with every good wish for
					 '50. Mitch.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitchell, John Hipple (June 22, 1835 – December 8,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Hipple Mitchell was a controversial American lawyer and
				  politician who served as a Republican United States Senator from Oregon on
				  three occasions between 1873 and 1905. He also served as State Senate
				  President, did the initial legal work involved in the dispute that led to the
				  landmark Supreme Court case of Pennoyer v. Neff, and later was involved with
				  the Oregon land fraud scandal involving his use of political influence in the
				  federal government to help clients with their land claims. He was indicted and
				  convicted while a sitting U.S. Senator, one of only twelve sitting U.S.
				  Senators ever indicted, and one of only five ever convicted. The town of
				  Mitchell, Oregon is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellJH1</container><unittitle>John Hipple Mitchell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitchell, John R. (January 31, 1861 - March 24,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John R. Mitchell was born in Halifax County, Virginia. He came
				  to Olympia in 1888 where he formed the law firm of Root and Mitchell with Milo
				  A. Root, who also later served on the high court. Mitchell served as prosecutor
				  of Thurston County for one term and in 1908 was elected to the Superior Court
				  for Thurston and Mason Counties. He was re-elected twice before being appointed
				  to the State Supreme Court, where he served for eighteen years before retiring
				  in1937. He married Hallie Price in 1891. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellJR1</container><unittitle>John R. Mitchell in judicial robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitchell, Sam (July 3, 1930 - December 8,
				  2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sam Mitchell was born in Newark, New Jersey and was a star
				  athlete in high school. He earned a sports scholarship at the University of
				  Washington. From 1949 to 1953, he played football, baseball and basketball for
				  the Huskies. He was a quarterback and defensive back at the University of
				  Washington, earning letters 1950 through 1952. He also played baseball for the
				  Huskies, lettering from 1951 through 1953. He was drafted by the Philadelphia
				  Phillies to play baseball, but an injury ended playing career. Mitchell began
				  his teaching career in Toppenish, Washington in 1955, but spent the majority of
				  his 40 years teaching biology and science at Federal Way and Jefferson High
				  Schools. He was also a football, basketball and softball coach. He was active
				  in coaching girls’ sports throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and started
				  basketball camps for junior high athletes to prepare them for the high school
				  level. Mitchell’s commitment to local youth sports led to his induction in the
				  Federal Way Athletic Hall of Fame inaugural class of 2008. He was married to
				  State Representative Maryann Mitchell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellS1</container><unittitle>Sam Mitchell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitchell, William Henry (November 13, 1834- March 14,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Mitchell was born in Chicago in 1834. His father,
				  Henry Mitchell, a native of Scotland, immigrated to Chicago where he started
				  the Mitchell Wagon Company, a well-known brand on the American frontier.
				  William Mitchell crossed the plains to Oregon in 1853. He worked as a
				  blacksmith and fought in the Indian Wars of 1855-1856. After the war, he
				  started a bakery and butcher shop in Olympia and later a grocery store. In
				  1868, he started a saw mill in Tumwater, Washington which he operated until
				  1881. Mitchell then became the Pacific Coast agent for the Mitchell Lewis Wagon
				  Company, establishing branches in Portland and Seattle. In later years, he had
				  a farm in the Olympia area. He married Martha Johns in 1859; she had crossed
				  the plains in the same wagon train. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Mitchell with unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original. Written on front: William H. Mitchell and a
					 friend.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mitsui, James Masao (September 11, 1940 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Masao Mitsui, the son of Japanese immigrants, was born in
				  1940 in Skykomish, Washington. A year later, his family was forced to relocate
				  to the Tule Lake Relocation Camp in California. The family was held there for a
				  year and a half before they were allowed to move to Lamona, Washington, where
				  his father found a job working for the Great Northern Railroad. This profound
				  experience made a lasting impression on Mitsui and has continued to influence
				  his work by combining his personal experience with the realm of the political.
				  His first book, <emph render="italic">Journal of the Sun</emph>, received the
				  Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award in 1974. His other books include 
				  <emph render="italic">Crossing the Phantom River</emph>.<emph render="italic">After the Long Train</emph>, and <emph render="italic">From A
				  Three-Cornered World.</emph> He earned a B. A. in education from Eastern
				  Washington University, and a B. A. and an M. A. from the University of
				  Washington. He taught in high schools and at the Shemer Art Center, Arizona
				  State University, Southern New Hampshire University, and Rio Salado
				  College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitsuiJM1</container><unittitle>James Masao Mitsui</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moeller, Jule E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoellerJE1</container><unittitle>Jule E. Moeller and Marguerite E. Coreleijlo (?)
					 performing<emph render="italic"> A Soldier's Farewell</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1895</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oscar M. Pausch, Saginaw, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>One of the women in the photograph may be Julia Emma Moeller
					 (April 25, 1872 - December 12, 1960), the daugher of Frederick Moeller and
					 Fredericka Bader Moeller, who was born in Michigan. She married James Monroe
					 Rose in 1901 in Saginaw.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoellerJE2</container><unittitle>Jule E. Moeller and Marguerite E. Coreleijlo (?)
					 performing<emph render="italic"> A Soldier's Return</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1895</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oscar M. Pausch, Saginaw, Michigan</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mohr, Paul Frederick (June 28, 1849 - December 10,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul F. Mohr was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, June 28, 1849. In
				  1868, he went to Germany to study civil engineering at the Polytechnic
				  Institute of Stuttgart. After three years of study and travel, he returned to
				  the United States where he worked for the Pennsylvania Company as assistant
				  engineer. In 1872 and 1873, he made the survey for the Texas Pacific Railway
				  Company through New Mexico and Arizona, returning to Cincinnati when the latter
				  road was halted during the panic of 1873. He entered into a partnership with
				  his father, who founded one of the oldest and largest manufacturing concerns in
				  Cincinnati. He soon became prominent in many business undertakings, was a
				  director of the Cincinnati &amp; Portsmouth Railway, a director of the Chamber
				  of Commerce and of the Cincinnati Board of Trade. In 1882 he was a delegate to
				  the National Board of Trade. In 1887 he became a member of the executive
				  committee of the National Distillery Association, where he met Anthony M.
				  Cannon of Spokane Falls, who encouraged him to come to Washington. Cannon and
				  Mohr organized a company to construct a railway into the Palouse country, and
				  Mohr became director of the new Spokane &amp; Palouse Railway Company as well
				  as the engineer in charge of construction. He was also a director and was
				  engineer in charge of the construction of the Spokane &amp; Idaho Railway and
				  manager and chief engineer of the Seattle, Lake Shore &amp; Eastern Railway. He
				  was also vice-president of the Farmers Transportation Company, the Snoqualmie
				  Coal &amp; Iron Company, and the Columbia Railroad &amp; Navigation Company. He
				  married Harriet Burrows Eshleman in 1876.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MohrPF1</container><unittitle>Paul Frederick Mohr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moldenhour, Herman Alfred (November 5, 1880 - December
				  14, 1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herman A. Moldenhour, a Seattle architect, began work as an
				  office boy for the architectural firm of Saunders and Lawton, a firm that
				  specialized in large office and apartment buildings. He later became a partner
				  in the firm of Lawton and Moldenhour. After Lawton’s death in 1928, Moldenhour
				  continued with an independent practice. He designed the Fourth &amp; Pike,
				  Republic, and Bigelow Buildings in Seattle, as well as Masonic Temples in
				  Seattle and Alderwood Manor. From 1944 to 1950, he was the supervising
				  architect for the original Seattle Tacoma Airport administration building. He
				  played on the Seattle YMCA basketball team for 12 years, a team that won six
				  Pacific Northwest and Pacific Coast Championships.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoldenhourHA1</container><unittitle>Herman A. Moldenhour</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monohon, Leander Lee (April 25, 1859 - July 29,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leander Lee Monohon, a miner and civil engineer, was one of the
				  original 14 charter members of the Washington State Good Roads Association and
				  was its last surviving charter member. He was born in Roseburg, Oregon and
				  arrived in Seattle in 1871. His father, Martin Monohon, established a homestead
				  on the southeastern shore of Lake Sammamish, Washington in 1877; the mill town
				  of Monohon grew up around the site. The town was destroyed by a fire in 1925.
				  As a young man, Leander became interested in civil engineering, and helped
				  survey the Northern Pacific railroad track across the Northwest before settling
				  on May Creek, near modern-day Renton, in 1884. He mined and worked in Canada's
				  Yukon Territory and in Alaska for a dozen years during the 1890s and 1900s. In
				  addition to his work with the Good Roads Association and as an engineer, he
				  served on the Renton City Council and as a King County Commissioner. He was
				  active in promoting the Cedar River Waterways District and was the first
				  president of the King County Pioneers' Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item"> MonohonLL1</container><unittitle>Leander Lee Monohon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bushnells, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH8</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson at the 48th annual meeting of
					 the Washington Good Roads convention in Bellingham in September, 1946; Thomson
					 and Lee Monohan are seated in the front row.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1946</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH10</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson with Lee Monohan and Mr.
					 Putnam during the 48th annual meeting of the Washington Good Roads convention
					 in Bellingham in September, 1946.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1946</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Lee Monohan and R. H. Thomson questioning
						a paper in Mr. Putnam's hands.</p><p>Mr. Putnam may be Charles Edgar Putnam (1881-1952), former
						assistant state highway engineer and the design engineer for the Ross Dam
						Project.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monohon, Martin (October 26, 1820 - September 8,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Monohon, a pioneer settler and a member of the Oregon
				  State Legislature, was born in Ohio. His family moved to Tippecanoe County,
				  Indiana, where he grew up. In June 1841, he married Sarah Routh, and they
				  settled on her father's farm. A daughter, Samantha, was born in 1844, and Sarah
				  died six weeks later, leaving Monohon to raise Samantha alone. Late in 1844, he
				  headed west, leaving Samantha behind with his in-laws. He made it as far as
				  Fort Des Moines, Iowa (now Des Moines), where he operated a livery stable and
				  was active in politics. On October 16, 1851, he married Isabelle Speer. It was
				  the second marriage for both, and Isabelle also had a daughter, Henrietta, from
				  her prior marriage. Martin, Isabelle and Henrietta moved to Oregon Territory in
				  1853. Monohon volunteered for service in the Rogue River Indian War in southern
				  Oregon in the mid-1850s. During this time, he also carried the U.S. mail from
				  Roseburg to Eureka, California. Monohon and his family moved to Seattle in 1871
				  and later homesteaded on the eastern shore of Squak Lake, today known as Lake
				  Sammamish. He built a log house and a ferry landing at the site, which soon
				  became known as Monohon's Landing, and a town grew up around the site. It
				  burned down in 1925. Monohon lived in his log house until 1906, devoting much
				  of his attention to raising livestock, although he was also active in
				  Republican politics in King County. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonohonM1</container><unittitle>Martin Monohon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Elison A. Lynn, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monroe, James (April 28, 1758 – July 4,
				  1831)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Monroe, the fifth U.S. president, oversaw major westward
				  expansion of the U.S. and strengthened American foreign policy in 1823 with the
				  Monroe Doctrine, a warning to European countries against further colonization
				  and intervention in the Western Hemisphere. Monroe, a Virginia native, fought
				  with the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War (1775-83) and then
				  embarked on a long political career. A protégé of Thomas Jefferson, Monroe was
				  a delegate to the Continental Congress and served as a U.S. Senator, Governor
				  of Virginia and minister to France and Great Britain. In 1803, he helped
				  negotiate the Louisiana Purchase, which doubled the size of the U.S. As
				  President, he acquired Florida, and also dealt with the contentious issue of
				  slavery in new states joining the Union with the 1820 Missouri Compromise.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeJ1</container><unittitle>James Monroe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">26</container><container type="item">MonroeJ2</container><unittitle>James Monroe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by John
					 Vanderlyn from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monroe, Louise Harrison (May 9, 1868 - December 16,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louise Harrison Monroe, the daughter of Dr. William A. and Sarah
				  Louise Monroe, was born in Macon City, Missouri and came to Washington
				  Territory in 1887. She graduated from the University of Washington and taught
				  school in Tacoma before marrying Newton Erwood Walton. She was a charter member
				  of The Aurora Club of Tacoma, a member of the board of the Presidents’ Council
				  of Women’s Organizations, the Woman’s Club House Association, the D.A.R. and
				  the League of Women Voters. She was active in securing better immigration and
				  naturalization laws and taught classes for foreign born students.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeJ1</container><unittitle>Louise Harrison Monroe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward J. Hamacher, North Yakima, Washington Territory</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy; original photograph in Coll. 334. Written on front: With
					 best regards, Louise Monroe.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monroe, Robert Duain (October 31, 1918 - September 25,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Duain Monroe had a long career with the University of
				  Washington Libraries, serving from 1958 until 1980 when he retired. He was head
				  of Special Collections at the UW and in 1981 received the Washington State
				  Historical Society's David Douglas award. He was president and a charter member
				  of the Book Club of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD1</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe with Mary Randlett and Larry
					 Kreisman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD2</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe, Sunny Sue Kaynor and an unidentified
					 woman looking at books during an Alumni Vacation College Session</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1979</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD3</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe and Paul Macapia looking at
					 photographs</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1983</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Joe Freeman, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MilczewskiMA3</container><unittitle>Marion Milczewski with Robert D. Monroe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of News Services, University of Washington, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Marion Milczewski subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsGO4</container><unittitle>Archbishop George Otto Simms with Robert D. Monroe,
					 curator of Rare Books at the University of Washington, examining a
					 manuscript.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Otto Simms subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Monsky, Henry (February 2, 1890 - May 4,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Monsky was born in Omaha, Nebraska, the son of Abraham
				  Monsky, an Orthodox cantor who had immigrated to the United States from
				  Lithuania in the 1880s. Monsky received his Bachelor of Laws degree from
				  Creighton University in 1912. By profession a lawyer, his work with Jewish and
				  non-Jewish welfare groups, including member of government advisory bodies, won
				  him nation-wide recognition. The prime mover behind the organization of the
				  American Jewish Conference in 1944, Monsky served first as one of three
				  co-chairman of its Interim Committee, and in 1946 was elected to head the
				  committee, which is the top body of the Conference. He was active in the
				  national leadership of the B’nai B’rith; under his guidance B’nai B’rith
				  membership doubled and its service program was expanded. He served on many
				  boards and spoke to many groups, including interfaith groups, on issues of
				  juvenile justice and as a child welfare advocate, established the AZA, the
				  world’s largest Jewish youth organization, and received appointments from
				  Presidents Roosevelt and Truman. He served as the International President of
				  B’Nai B’rith, helping to form the National Jewish Conference, serving as editor
				  of the <emph render="italic">National Jewish Monthly</emph>, and consulting
				  with the U.S. delegation at the formation of the United Nations. He played an
				  important role in helping Father Edward Flanagan start what became a famous
				  Omaha home for youths and is widely believed to be the anonymous donor who
				  loaned the priest money to pay the home’s first monthly rent. Boys Town today
				  considers Monsky, to be one of its “founding fathers.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonskyH1</container><unittitle>Henry Monsky</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1944</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harry Johnson, Chicago, Ill</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Best wishes, Henry Monsky.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Montgomery, Elizabeth Rider (July 12, 1902 - February
				  19, 1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Rider Montgomery was the co-author of many of the
				  "Dick and Jane" reading primers published from the 1930s through 1970.
				  Montgomery, who wrote primarily for juveniles, contributed to many other
				  textbooks and was the author of more than 70 published books and plays. Raised
				  in the Midwest, she was a longtime resident of Seattle and more than a few of
				  her works featured Northwest themes. Montgomery was honored for her work many
				  times over the course of her long career. Her accolades included the Seattle
				  Historical Society's Certificate of Merit, the Pacific Northwest Writer's
				  Conference Henry Broderick Award, the National Federation of Press Women's
				  Honor Award, and the National League of American Pen Women's Award of Honor.
				  She married Arthur Julesberg in 1963. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MontgomeryER1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Rider Montgomery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dorothea Aranyi, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MontgomeryER2</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Rider Montgomery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Walters, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moody, Zenas Ferry (May 27, 1832 – March 14,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zenas Ferry Moody was the seventh Governor of Oregon, serving
				  from 1882 to 1887. He was born in Granby, Massachusetts, to Thomas Hovey and
				  Hannah Ferry. The family immigrated to Oregon Territory in 1851, traveling the
				  Isthmus of Panama route. Moody was a surveyor and store keeper in Brownsville,
				  Oregon until moving to Illinois in 1856. He then returned to Oregon in 1862
				  when he settled in The Dalles and started a general store. He was also
				  responsible for surveying the Umatilla Indian Reservation. In 1865 he organized
				  the Oregon &amp; Montana Transportation Company and was a major shipper of
				  Oregon wool from Eastern Oregon. n 1880, he was elected to the Oregon House of
				  Representatives. During his only term there, he also served as Speaker of the
				  House. In 1882, he was elected as the seventh Governor of the state of Oregon,
				  serving until January, 1887. His son Malcolm A. Moody, served in the United
				  States Congress, and another son, Ralph E. Moody, served in the Oregon House of
				  Representatives and as assistant attorney general of Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoodyZF1</container><unittitle>Zenas Ferry Moody</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Moon, D. B.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Moon, Peter (April 3, 1846 - November 8,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Moon was a Civil War veteran and a member of Company C
				  117th New York Infantry from 1862 to1863 when he was discharged due to
				  disability. He was one of the last known survivors of the 117th Regiment. He
				  lived in Seattle after the war and was affiliated with the Moore Theater. He
				  was a member of the GAR for 56 years and a member of the Odd Fellows Lodge for
				  55 years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moore, James Alexander (September 23, 1861 - May 21,
				  1929) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James A. Moore played a large part in building construction, the
				  promotion of commerce and industry, and the physical layout of Seattle between
				  his arrival in 1887 and his departure 26 years later. Born in Nova Scotia, he
				  came to Seattle from Syracuse, New York, and began developing and selling
				  residential subdivisions, including the Latona, Brooklyn, and Fremont
				  additions. To provide transportation, he helped form the Lake Union
				  Transportation company, which ran small steamers across the lake. Other
				  residential developments followed at University Heights, Rainier Beach, and on
				  Capitol Hill. In 1900, he attempted to lease for commercial development the
				  University of Washington’s Metropolitan tract, but his bid was not accepted. He
				  subsequently invested in properties further north, including the landmark Denny
				  Hotel, which he renamed the Washington Hotel. In 1907, he built the Moore
				  Theater, at the time one of the largest theaters on the West Coast. He invested
				  his real estate money in the creation of a steel industry in the northwest,
				  buying and expanding a used mill in Irondale, Washington. After losing his
				  fortune in this endeavor, he left Seattle and went back to real estate
				  development, creating Moore Haven in Florida. By 1920 he was in New York
				  representing shipping interests. He ended up in San Francisco where his main
				  efforts were devoted to developing mining properties in Oroville, California,
				  including a large tunnel for the Magalia mine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreJA1</container><unittitle>Portrait and cartoon of James Moore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The cartoon shows Moore holding a watering can with a dollar
					 sign on it and watering small buildings in pots.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreJA2</container><unittitle>Portrait drawing from the opening night program of the
					 Moore Theater</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreJA3</container><unittitle>Cartoon of James Moore pulling the Washington
					 Hotel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="cartoonist">E. F. Bro(s)ze, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moore, Marshall Frank (February 12, 1829 – February 26,
				  1870)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marshall Frank Moore was an American Civil War veteran, an
				  attorney, and the seventh Governor of Washington Territory. He was born in
				  Binghamton, New York, and attended Yale University. Moore served as a state
				  judge in the Common Pleas Court and as a prosecuting attorney in Sioux City,
				  Iowa. He joined the Union Army during the Civil War and commanded the 69th Ohio
				  Infantry Regiment and led various brigades for much of the war. He was at Rich
				  Mountain, Shiloh, Chickamauga, Jonesboro and Missionary Ridge. He resigned in
				  1864 and was brevetted major general on March 13, 1865. Moore was Governor of
				  Washington Territory from 1867 to 1869 and a delegate to the United States
				  Congress from Washington Territory in 1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreMF1</container><unittitle>Marshall Frank Moore in Civil War uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moore, Miles Conway (April 17, 1845 – December 18,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Miles Conway Moore was the 14th and last Territorial Governor of
				  Washington Territory. He served seven months in office as governor, his
				  two-year term ending prematurely when Washington attained statehood in November
				  1889. Born in Rix Mills, Ohio, Moore moved to Wisconsin with his parents in
				  1857 and attended the Bronson Institute in Point Bluff, Wisconsin. In 1863,
				  Moore moved to Blackfoot, Montana and then to Walla Walla, Washington where he
				  took a job as a clerk in a general store. In 1869, he partnered with H. E.
				  Johnson and Company to form Paine Brothers and Moore, where he worked until
				  1877 as a dealer of general merchandise and farm supplies. He married Mary
				  Elizabeth "Molly" Baker on March 26, 1873, and the couple had three sons. Moore
				  served two terms as a member of the Walla Walla City Council, 1877 and 1878. He
				  was elected to the office of Mayor of Walla Walla in 1877. In March 1889, Moore
				  was appointed by President Benjamin Harrison as the final Governor of
				  Washington Territory. Taking office in April 1889, he dealt with major fire
				  disasters in Seattle, Spokane, and Ellensburg while preparing for the
				  transition from territory to statehood on November 11, 1889. Moore served as
				  vice-president and president of the Baker-Boyer National Bank, and three years
				  on the executive council of the American Bankers Association. In 1913, he was
				  elected president of the board of overseers for Whitman College in Walla
				  Walla.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreMC1</container><unittitle>Miles Conway Moore </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooreMC2</container><unittitle>Miles Conway Moore </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moore, Philip Durland (February 1826 - September 29,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Durland Moore was born in New Jersey and spent his early
				  years on the family farm. He served a pharmacy apprenticeship in Macon, Georgia
				  and in New York City, where he operated a drug store for many years. He arrived
				  in Puget Sound in 1862 as the deputy collector of customs. In 1863, President
				  Lincoln appointed him collector of internal revenue for Washington and Idaho.
				  After serving in that capacity for about five years, he again accepted the
				  office of deputy collector of customs, filling that office under four different
				  collectors. He later engaged in mining pursuits in California and Arizona
				  before returning to farming in Mason County. In the winter of 1890 he was
				  appointed by Governor Ferry as state librarian. He was an active in the
				  anti-slavery movement and enjoyed the acquaintance of William Lloyd Garrison,
				  Wendell Phillips, Theodore Parker, Frederick Douglas, Samuel J. May and other
				  leading abolitionists. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoorePD1</container><unittitle>Philip Durland Moore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> Circa 1905?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ida B. Smith, Olympia, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on verso.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moorhouse, Thomas Leander "Lee" (February 28, 1850 -
				  June 1, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Leander "Lee" Moorhouse was a photographer and an Indian
				  agent for the Umatilla Indian Reservation. From 1888 to 1916, he produced over
				  9,000 images documenting urban, rural, and Native American life in the Columbia
				  Basin, and particularly Umatilla County, Oregon. He was born in Marion County,
				  Iowa and as a child traveled the Oregon Trail to Walla Walla, Washington with
				  his family in 1861. As an adult, he worked as a miner, surveyor, rancher,
				  businessman, civic leader, real estate operator, and insurance salesman. In
				  addition to acting as an Indian agent, from 1879 to 1883 he served as an
				  Assistant Adjutant General of the Third Brigade of the Oregon State Militia.
				  Moorhouse considered himself an amateur photographer, but in the 1880s the
				  hobby became an increasingly important part of his life. Unlike many amateur
				  photographers of the period, Moorhouse worked with and mastered the cumbersome
				  and exacting equipment of professionals, including gelatin dry glass plate
				  negatives, large cameras, and a tripod. He captured a significant variety of
				  images on the development of the Oregon Territory. He published a short book of
				  photographs and created postcards featuring his work. Three hundred of his
				  photographs were purchased by the U.S. Bureau of American Ethnology in the
				  1930s. Seven thousand images by Moorhouse are maintained by the Special
				  Collections &amp; University Archives of the University of Oregon Libraries.
				  Another 1,400 images were given to the Umatilla County Library.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoorhouseTL1</container><unittitle>Thomas Leander "Lee" Moorhouse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moores, John Henry (June 26, 1821 - December 16,
				  1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Henry Moores was born in Alabama, and at an early age moved
				  with his parents to Danville, Illinois. He married to Virginia L. Lamon in
				  1847; the couple had five children. In 1852 the family immigrated to Portland,
				  Oregon by ox-team, a journey that took seven months. In March of the following
				  year, they moved to Salem, where he started a merchandising business and built
				  the brick block known as the Moores’ Block. For many years, he served as
				  Councilman and Mayor of Salem, and later as the State Senator representing
				  Marion County. He was one of the founders and promoters of the State
				  Agricultural Society, for many years acting as its Treasurer, and was one of
				  the State Commissioners for the purchase of grounds for State buildings, the
				  Penitentiary and State Asylum. Moores was a trustee of Willamette University
				  and donated both time and money for its support. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MooresJH1</container><unittitle>John Henry Moores</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Moran, Robert (January 26, 1857 – March 27,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Moran was a Seattle shipbuilder who served as the city's
				  mayor from 1888 to 1890. A native of New York City, Moran arrived in Seattle in
				  1875. After years of working on steamboats,, he earned enough money to send for
				  his family and, by 1882, he and his brothers started a marine repair business
				  which prospered during the Klondike Gold Rush. In 1888, Moran was elected mayor
				  of Seattle for a term of one year. Near the end of his service, a fire
				  destroyed most of the central business district. Moran's leadership in
				  coordinating the recovery activities won him a second term in the following
				  month's election. He was instrumental in the successful rebuilding of
				  businesses, including the public overhaul of Seattle's water system and the
				  establishment of a savings and loan association. Following his mayoral service,
				  Moran devoted all his efforts to his shipbuilding business and in 1904, his
				  shipyard launched the USS Nebraska, Washington State's only battleship. He was
				  told in 1905 that he had one year to live, and he retreated to Orcas Island in
				  Puget Sound' where he built the Moran Mansion, now the centerpiece of Rosario
				  Resort. Moran spent the remainder of his life in retirement on Orcas Island. He
				  donated 2,700 acres of Rosario to the state for preservation, which became
				  Moran State Park in 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>More, Charles Church (January 21, 1875 - November 19,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Church More received a bachelor's degree in civil
				  engineering from Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania in 1898 and received
				  master's degrees from Cornell University in 1899 and 1901. In 1900, he served a
				  one-year appointment as acting professor of civil engineering at the University
				  of Washington. He returned to the UW in 1904 as assistant professor and was
				  made full professor in 1912. He was head of the Department of Civil Engineering
				  from 1917 to 1925 and was professor of structural engineering from 1925 until
				  1947 when he became professor emeritus. In 1946, the new Civil Engineering
				  Building was named the Charles Church More Hall. He served in World War I and
				  was honorably discharged with the rank of Major, with letters of commendation
				  from the War Department for the development of engineering instructional
				  methods at the Engineers' School at Camp Humphreys, Virginia. He was Secretary
				  of the John More Association for 25-years and Associate Secretary until his
				  death. He married Myra Hadlock Ober in August, 1904 at Fort Worden, Washington.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoreCC1</container><unittitle>Charles Church More</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1902?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p> The photograph was published in the 1902 
					 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>. Written on verso: Cousin Cully to Carl
					 Gould, Jr.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoreCC2</container><unittitle>Charles Church More</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>More, Myra Ober (September 23, 1878 - September 4,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Myra Ober was born in Beverly, Massachusetts and came to
				  Seattle in 1902 to teach school. She married Charles Church More on August 17,
				  1904. Her father was Arthur K. Ober; his sister, Alice Ober, was the mother of
				  Dorothy Fay Gould, whose son was Carl Gould, Jr.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoreMO1</container><unittitle>Myra Ober More</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Cousin Myra to Carl Gould, Jr.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morgan, Hiram D. (October 1, 1822 - October 19,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram D. Morgan was born in Mt. Ayre, Ohio. During his boyhood,
				  his parents moved to Marion, Ohio where he learned the carpenter’s trade. In
				  1846 he moved to Oskaloosa, Iowa, and in 1853 became one of the Davis Party,
				  crossing the plains to Oregon. At Cascades, he was employed by Bush &amp; Baker
				  in building boats. He later moved to Olympia, where he continued to build
				  boats. When the Indian Wars broke out in 1855 he was engaged by Michael T.
				  Simmons, an Indian agent, to act as his secretary. Morgan was soon selected by
				  the Indians to act as their agent and build houses on the Squakson and the
				  Puyallup Agencies. In 1861 he was appointed by the government as agent of the
				  Tulalip Reservation. He re-crossed the plains in 1858, returning to Olympia to
				  establish a homestead. In 1875, he went to California, returning to Washington
				  Territory later that year to start a grocery business. In 1876 he started a new
				  home and a sawmill business at Snohomish, Washington Territory. He served as a
				  probate judge, justice of the peace and county commissioner. He married Anna
				  Maria Van Arsdell in 1844; she died in 1846, leaving one child. He married Mary
				  J. Trout in 1848.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorganHD1</container><unittitle>Hiram D. Morgan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Morgan, Lane November 11, 1949 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lane Morgan, the daughter of Murray Morgan and Emily Rose
				  Northcutt Morgan, graduated from Stanford University. She is the author and
				  editor of numerous books on Pacific Northwest food and history including 
				  <emph>The Ethnic Food Market Guide</emph> and<emph> The Territorial Seed
				  Company Cookbook.</emph> She is the co-author with Murray Morgan and Paul
				  Dorpat of <emph>Seattle, a pictorial history</emph>. She also taught English
				  and jornalism at Nooksack High School and Western Washington University in
				  Bellingham.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DorpatPL2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Dorpat with Murray Morgan and
					 Lane Morgan holding a copy of <emph>Seattle, a pictorial
					 history</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul Dorpat subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morgan, Murray Cromwell (February 16, 1916 - December
				  22, 2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Murray Morgan was born in Tacoma and graduated from Stadium High
				  School in 1933. He attended the University of Washington and was editor for its
				  paper, <emph render="italic">The Daily</emph>. He graduated from UW in 1937 and
				  then went to Columbia University in New York where he received a master's
				  degree in communication. Morgan was a journalist for the regional 
				  <emph render="italic">Hoquiam Daily</emph> as well as national news outlets,
				  including <emph render="italic">Time</emph> and the <emph render="italic">New
				  York Herald Tribune</emph>. He was a noted historian of the Pacific Northwest,
				  particularly Puget Sound. He wrote <emph render="italic">Skid Road</emph>,
				  about the history of Seattle and <emph render="italic">Puget's Sound
				  </emph>about Tacoma. Among other topics, he wrote about the Alaska Gold Rush,
				  the Columbia River, and the Aleutian Islands. He also taught history at Tacoma
				  Community College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DorpatPL2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Paul Dorpat with Murray Morgan and
					 Lane Morgan holding a copy of <emph>Seattle, a pictorial
					 history</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul Dorpat subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Morgan, Rose</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rose Morgan was a teacher and photographer who contributed "then
				  and now" photographs to the Seattle Historical Society's book 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Century 1852-1952</emph>. She was active in the
				  Seattle Soroptimists Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE1</container><unittitle>Cast of <emph render="italic">Treasure Island
					 </emph>performance at the Seattle Soroptimists Club luncheon at the Olympic
					 Hotel; Lois Sandall (as Long John Silver), Ella McBride (as Darby McGraw),
					 Jessie Kelly (as Jim Hawkins), Rose Morgan (as Black Dog) and Mary Ann Wells
					 (as Captain Billy Bones)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 29, 1926</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the September 30, 1926 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mori, Toshio (March 3, 1910 – April 12,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Toshio Mori was an American author who wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Yokohama, California</emph> (1949), <emph render="italic">The Chauvinist and Other Stories</emph> (1979), and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Woman from Hiroshima</emph> (1980). He was born in
				  Oakland, California and grew up in San Leandro. During World War II, he and his
				  family were interned at Topaz War Relocation Center in Utah, where Mori edited
				  the journal <emph render="italic">Trek</emph> for a year. After the war, Mori
				  returned to the Bay Area where he continued to write. His stories often echoed
				  and reflected the life of Japanese Americans in pre and postwar America. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoriT1</container><unittitle>Toshio Mori</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morishima, James Kenji (October 23, 1938 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Kenji Morishima was an associate dean in Graduate Studies
				  at the UW , director of the UW Office of Institutional Educational Research,
				  and the founding director of the Asian American Studies Program at the UW He
				  resigned as the director of the Asian American Studies Program in October, 1975
				  due to concerns about funding and support for the program. In 1976, he received
				  a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to support an Asian American
				  writers conference. With Stanley Sue, he is the author of <emph render="italic">The Mental Health of Asian Americans</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorishimaJK1</container><unittitle>James Kenji Morishima</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mary Levin, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moritz, Robert Edouard (June 2, 1868 - December 28,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Edouard Moritz was born in Christianstal, Germany and
				  with his family, immigrated to Nebraska in 1875. He joined the University of
				  Washington in 1904 as head of the Mathematics and Astronomy Departments and
				  taught at the UW for 36 years. He was the author of <emph render="italic">The
				  Elements of Plane Trigonometry</emph> . His son, Harold K. Moritz, taught in
				  the Civil Engineering Department from 1928 until 1966.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MoritzRE1</container><unittitle>Robert Edouard Moritz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 15, 1918</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morris, Esther Hobart (August 8, 1814 – April 3,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born Esther Hobart McQuigg, she was orphaned as a child and then
				  apprenticed to a seamstress. In 1841, she married Artemus Slack, a civil
				  engineer. When Slack died, she married John Morris, a merchant. In 1869, they
				  moved to South Pass City, a gold-rush boom town in Wyoming Territory. Popular
				  stories and historical as well as by state and federal public monuments, point
				  to Morris as a leader in the passage of Wyoming's suffrage amendment; however,
				  Morris herself never claimed any credit. When R. S. Barr, the justice of the
				  peace, resigned in protest of Wyoming Territory’s passage of the women’s
				  suffrage amendment in December, 1869, the Sweetwater County Board of
				  Commissioners appointed Morris as justice of the peace, making her the first
				  female justice of the peace in the United States. She began her tenure as
				  justice on February 14, 1870, serving a term of fewer than nine months. Her
				  involvement in women's causes also continued after she left South Pass City.
				  She participated in the American Woman Suffrage Association Convention in San
				  Francisco in 1872. In August 1873, she was nominated by the Woman's Party of
				  Wyoming as a candidate to the Wyoming Territorial Legislature, a nomination
				  that Morris declined. In 1876, she served as vice president of the National
				  American Woman Suffrage Association and addressed the National Suffrage
				  Convention in Philadelphia that same year. Since 1960, a statue of her has been
				  one of Wyoming's two statutes in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the
				  United States Capitol. Another statue stands at the Wyoming State Capitol.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisEH1</container><unittitle>Esther Hobart Morris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Written on verso: Credit William
					 Robertson Coe Library, University of Wyoming.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morris, Frank N. (August 15, 1921 - October 3,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank N. Morris was a graduate of the University of Washington.
				  He taught school and was the salary chairman of the Seattle Federation of
				  Teachers in the 1960s and a member of the AF of L Local 200.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with Frank N. Morris,
					 member of AF of L Local 200, Joe David, and Elmer Miller, past president of the
					 Local 200</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gene Weber, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph was from the <emph render="italic">Labor
					 News</emph>.</p><p>Filed under John A. Cherberg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morris, Warren Leland (March 5, 1888 - October 4,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Warren Leland Morris was a newspaper reporter and an executive
				  in a steel mill before taking a job as a sales manager of a real estate company
				  that was developing the Cleveland Euclid-Golf Residential section. During World
				  War I, he served as a captain in the Motor Transport Corps in Washington, D. C.
				  After the war, he returned to the real estate business where he was soon
				  elected president of the Cleveland Real Estate Board and served as a committee
				  member of the National Realtor Association. With a partner, he formed the
				  Ostendorf-Morris Company, which build federal housing projects and defense
				  plants, eventually becoming one of the largest privately held commercial real
				  estate firms in Ohio. During the 1940s, he was the president of the American
				  Institute of Real Estate Appraisers. He married Marian Ogden in 1913.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisWL1</container><unittitle>Warren L. Morris and James W. Wheeler at Sunrise Park,
					 deer in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1941</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Warren L. Morris, 1 free deer, J. W.
					 Wheeler, Sunrise Park.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Robert Erskine with Warren L. Morris
					 and James W. Wheeler at Sunrise Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1941</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert C. Erskine subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morris, William (March 24, 1834 – October 3,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Morris was an English textile designer, poet, novelist,
				  translator, and socialist activist. Associated with the British Arts and Crafts
				  Movement, he was a major contributor to the revival of traditional British
				  textile arts and methods of production. His literary contributions helped to
				  establish the modern fantasy genre, while he played a significant role in
				  propagating the early socialist movement in Britain. Morris is recognized as
				  one of the most significant cultural figures of Victorian Britain; though best
				  known in his lifetime as a poet, he posthumously became better known for his
				  designs. Founded in 1955, the William Morris Society is devoted to his legacy,
				  while multiple biographies and studies of his work have seen publication. Many
				  of the buildings associated with his life are open to visitors, much of his
				  work can be found in art galleries and museums, and his designs are still in
				  production. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Morris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on front: Yours very truly, William Morris.</p><p>The photograph appeared in <emph>University Magazine</emph>,
					 1878.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morris, William A.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William A. Morris was an assistant professor of history at the
				  University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisWA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William A. Morris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 11, 1912</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ralston, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: To my friend, Edmond S. Meany, commemorating
					 a half decade of service in the History Department of the University of
					 Washington. Wm. A. Morris.</p></note></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Morrison, Annie Mansan (November 15, 1843 - March 1,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Mansan, the daughter of John Mansan, was born in West
				  Lubec, Maine. She married Michael David Morrison in 1870. They initially lived
				  in Seabeck, Washington before moving to Seattle in the late 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Annie Mansan Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Ellis (May 20, 1849 - September 13,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellis Morrison was born in Pennsylvania in 1849 and educated in
				  the public schools of that state and in the Pennsylvania Military College,
				  graduating in 1871 with a degree in civil engineering. He was one of the
				  engineers for the New York &amp; Oswego Midland Railroad until the project was
				  completed. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in Pennsylvania but never
				  practiced. Morrison served as city engineer for Newcastle, Pennsylvania and
				  built the municipal water system there. He also designed and built the water
				  systems of several other cities in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana. From 1880 to
				  1885 he was a member of the Pennsylvania legislature. During his time in
				  Seattle, he was engaged in real estate and financial operations and was
				  president of the firm of Morrison and Eshelman, financial agents. Active in the
				  Republican Party, he was elected to the state legislature in 1892, two years
				  after his arrival in Seattle, and presided over the sessions the House as
				  speaker. He served as city councilman from 1902 until 1908 and acted as chair
				  of the Republican state central committee in 1902. In 1908 he was candidate for
				  the office of lieutenant governor on the Republican ticket. Morrison was
				  associated with the development of Seattle for nearly twenty-five years. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH11</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson, William H. Murphy and Ellis
					 Morrison on a trip to study locations for a power house.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Reginald H. Thomson, (center), on a trip
						to study location for a power house, 1902. City Councilmen William H. Murphy
						(left) and Ellis Morrison accompianed him.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Herber Thomson subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Frank (November 23, 1859 - March 12,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Morrison was born in Ontario, Canada. He became an
				  apprentice printer and joined the Typographical Union Local 16 in 1886 where
				  his membership remained throughout his life. He earned a law degree from Lake
				  Forest University and was admitted to the Illinois bar in 1895. In 1896, he was
				  elected Secretary of the American Federation of Labor and served until 1939. In
				  1940, Morrison became secretary emeritus and served as a counselor to the
				  active officials of the Federation. He was a leader with Samuel Gompers,
				  president of the Federation, in legislation to protect the unions. Their
				  efforts resulted in the enactment of the labor provisions of the Clayton
				  Anti-Trust Act of 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonF1</container><unittitle>Frank Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate><note><p>Labor Day card from the International Union United
						Automobile Workers of America</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Michael David (May 1,1844 - December 22,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael David Morrison, the son of Alexander Morrison and
				  Elizabeth McFall Morrison, was born in Scotland and came to the United States
				  in 1860. He traveled around Cape Horn in 1869, arriving in the Port Angeles
				  area where he worked in a sawmill as a saw filer. He married Annie Mansan in
				  1870. The couple moved to Seattle in the late 1880s. He was a member of the
				  Washington Pioneer Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonMD1</container><unittitle>Michael David Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Nancy Irwin (April 27, 1809 - November 3,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Irwin was born on April 27, 1809, in Fleming County,
				  Kentucky and moved in 1815 with her parents to Missouri. She married Robert
				  Wilson Morrison in 1831. She and her husband joined a wagon train to Oregon in
				  1844, reaching Fort Vancouver in late 1844. Robert Morrison staked a claim the
				  Clatsop Plains near present day Astoria, Oregon, and Nancy Morrison and the
				  children joined him in January 1845. The couple had nine children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonNI1</container><unittitle>Nancy Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Nelson John (June 6, 1891 - October 16,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nelson John Morrison was born in Tacoma and graduated from
				  Stadium High School. He studied at the University of California (1910-1911) and
				  graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1915 with a B. S. degree in
				  architecture. He began his career with the architecture firm of Hill and Mock
				  in Tacoma in 1923 after serving in the Navy during World War I. He became a
				  principal of the firm Hill, Mock and Morrison in 1929. The firm was later
				  renamed Mock and Morrison and finally Morrison Architects in 1954. He was
				  elected the first president of the Southwest Washington chapter of the American
				  Institute of Architects in 1954. His work includes Puyallup High School, Tacoma
				  General Hospital, Tacoma Vocational School, and buildings on the campus of the
				  University of Puget Sound, including the Field House and the Music Building. He
				  was a member of the Tacoma Fine Arts Association and exhibited there and at the
				  American Art Gallery in Tacoma. Morrison was mayor of Fircrest, Washington
				  (1945 – 1952). An accomplished pianist, he was noted for giving musical
				  performances at the dedications for the schoolhouses he had designed. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonNJ1</container><unittitle>Nelson John Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Sidney C. Halvorson</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Robert Wilson (March 14, 1811 - May 15,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Wilson Morrison was born on March 14, 1811, in Fleming
				  County, Kentucky. In 1822 he moved with his parents to Montgomery County,
				  Missouri, living with them until his marriage in 1831 to Nancy Irwin. Two years
				  later the couple moved to Clay County, and then to Clinton County. After the
				  Platte Purchase of 1837, they into that frontier region. In 1844, they joined a
				  wagon train heading to Oregon that included John Minto and Willard H. Rees and
				  was under the leadership of Colonel Cornelius Gilliam. Morrison was chosen one
				  of the captains. At the Vermilion, the train split, with part of the group
				  continuing on under the direction of Colonel Gilliam while the greater part of
				  the company remained under the command of Morrison. The Morrison led train
				  reached Fort Vancouver in November, 1844. Morrison staked a claim on the
				  Clatsop Plains, on the ocean shore near the mouth of the Columbia, and the rest
				  of the family joined him in January 1845. Morrison was a pioneer in raising
				  grain on the plains and erected a grist and saw mill. He served during the
				  Cayuse War and was the officer in charge of the fort at The Dalles. He was
				  elected and served as a member of the first legislature of the State of Oregon.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonRW1</container><unittitle>Robert Wilson Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrison, Sidney Wallace ("Sid") (May 13,
				  1933-)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sidney "Sid" Morrison is an American politician and a former
				  member of the United States House of Representatives from Washington. He
				  graduated from Washington State University in Pullman with a Bachelor of
				  Science degree in 1954. Following graduation, he enlisted and served in the
				  United States Army from 1954 - 1956. From 1966 to 1974, Morrison was a member
				  of the Washington House of Representatives, representing the 15th District. He
				  served the 15th District in the Washington Senate from 1974 until 1980. He was
				  elected as a Republican to the 97th United States Congress and to the five
				  succeeding Congresses, serving from January 3, 1981 until January 3, 1993. In
				  1992 Morrison was a candidate for governor, but he was defeated in the primary
				  by Attorney General Ken Eikenberry. In early 1993, Morrison was appointed by
				  Governor Mike Lowry to be the Director of the Washington State Department of
				  Transportation, a position he filled until 2001. He was appointed to the Board
				  of Trustees for Central Washington University in 2005. He is a partner of the
				  family-owned Morrison Fruit Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisonSW1</container><unittitle>Sidney Morrison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1981</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morrow, Jackson Lee (John) (October 18, 1827 - September
				  22, 1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jackson Lee (John) Morrow was born in Kentucky on October 17,
				  1827. He spent his early youth there and then went to Iowa with his parents,
				  where he was educated. He married Nancy McEwan in 1849. In 1853, they crossed
				  the plains to Olympia, Washington, where he started a mercantile business. He
				  was elected county auditor and served as lieutenant colonel on the Governor's
				  staff during the Puget Sound War pf 1855 -1856 and was involved in the
				  relocation of tribes. In 1863, he moved to LaGrande, Oregon where he started a
				  general merchandising business, served on the city council and was County
				  Treasurer of Union County for four years. He began his partnership with Henry
				  Heppner, and they built the first house in what was to become the town of
				  Heppner, then located in Umatilla County. Morrow was elected to the Oregon
				  Legislature and was the prime mover in a bill to establish a separate county
				  which was named in his honor. Morrow and his wife had eight children. Their
				  son, James William Morrow, served in the Oregon State Senate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrowJL1</container><unittitle>Jackson Lee Morrow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Col. John L. Morrow, Heppner, OR.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW3</container><unittitle> John William Redington in scout uniform, holding
					 rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Pioneer pathfinders of the Pacific
					 Northwest. Photographs on page include: Hon Jackson Lee Morrow, Judge William
					 P. Dutton, Henry Heppner and Hon. James William Morrow.</p><p>Filed under John William Redington subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Morrow, James William (May 5, 1859 - May 16,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James William Morrow, the son of Jackson Lee and Nancy (McQueen)
				  Morrow, was born in Olympia, Washington Territory The family later moved to
				  LaGrande,Oregon where he was raised and educated. He was admitted to the bar in
				  1898. Morrow was the proprietor and owner of the Palace Hotel in Heppner, owned
				  a ranch in the county, and property in Portland. He served eight years as
				  county clerk of Morrow County, and served as both a representative and a
				  senator for the Eastern Oregon Counties of Morrow and Umatilla in the Oregon
				  State Legislature. In the early 1900s, he became the tax agent for the Oregon
				  &amp; Washington Railroad &amp; Navigation Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW3</container><unittitle> John William Redington in scout uniform, holding
					 rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Pioneer pathfinders of the Pacific
					 Northwest. Photographs on page include: Hon Jackson Lee Morrow, Judge William
					 P. Dutton, Henry Heppner and Hon. James William Morrow.</p><p>Filed under John William Redington subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morse, Edward A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorseEA1</container><unittitle>Professor Edward Morse with George Thomas
					 Palmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Scotford &amp; Co, Tacoma, Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><bioghist><p>Edward A. Morse taught Latin and Greek at Washington College
					 in 1890.</p></bioghist><note><p>In January 1884 Washington College was a Seattle school with
					 45 students. After a brief name change to Yesver College, it reopened on
					 September 2, 1886 in Tacoma with its name restored and with a $50,000 endowment
					 by Charles B. Wright. Advertised as a boarding and day school for young men and
					 boys, it accepted pupils as young as ten. It started with 65 pupils, half of
					 them day students. The college was sponsored by the Episcopal Church; its
					 companion school in Tacoma was the Annie Wright Seminary for girls. Students at
					 Washington College published <emph render="italic">The Collegian</emph> twice
					 each month. A new president in August of 1892 determined that the school would
					 not reopen until the spring. It apparently never did, due at least in part to
					 the financial panic of 1892-93. Washington College officially closed in 1896
					 with its resources going to Annie Wright Seminary.</p><p>Original in Coll. 334 Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers. Handwritten on verso of original: George Thomas Palmer and tutor
					 Professor Edward Morse, Washington College. Tacoma, Washington. 1890.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Morse, Captain George Washington (April 22, 1830 –
				  December 23, 1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Washington Morse was born at Brunswick, Maine where his
				  father was a shipbuilder. When he was twenty years old, he shipped as a
				  carpenter on a voyage around Cape Horn to San Francisco, arriving there in
				  August, 1850. The voyage was continued to Australia, to London and back home in
				  Maine. He returned to California in 1851 to the mining camps, where he acquired
				  enough gold to start a pack train. He freighted into the mining camps until
				  1858, when he traveled to the mines in the Fraser River region. He spent the
				  winter on the Nooksack River in Washington Territory, where he sold his pack
				  train and returned to shipbuilding. In 1861 he was appointed sub Indian agent
				  under Samuel D. Howe, stationed first at La Conner and later at Tulalip. For
				  several years, Morse was owner and master of the schooner <emph>Granger,</emph>
				  freighting to Puget Sound and British Columbia ports and making an occasional
				  voyage to Alaska. In the meantime, he had started a farm near Oak Harbor, which
				  became his permanent home. He was county commissioner when the territory became
				  a state and was elected to the first state legislature. He was re-elected in
				  1890, and again in 1896 and in 1908. While State Representative in 1907, he
				  introduced the first bill calling for the erection of the Deception Pass
				  Bridge, although the bridge was not completed until after his death. A
				  miniature of the proposed bridge was on display at the Alaska-Yukon Exposition
				  in 1909.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorseGW1</container><unittitle>George Washington Morse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Morse, Samuel Finley Breese (April 27, 1791 – April 2,
				  1872) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Finley Breese Morse was an American inventor and painter.
				  After having established his reputation as a portrait painter, Morse
				  contributed to the invention of a single-wire telegraph system based on
				  European telegraphs. He was a co-developer of Morse code and helped to develop
				  the commercial use of telegraphy. In 1975, Morse was inducted into the National
				  Inventors Hall of Fame.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">26</container><container type="item">MorseSFB1</container><unittitle>Samuel F. B. Morse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H, B, Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Napoleon
					 Sarony from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moses, Chief Joe (1866? - December 13, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chief Joe Moses, Pits-ka-stoo-ya or Pits-sku-stu-ya, son of
				  Speng-eck-steetsa, was the brother of Chief Moses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MosesCJ1</container><unittitle>Chief Joe Moses, in full length feathered headdress,
					 standing on fur rug outside of a house and holding a rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1903?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward H. Latham</persname></origination></did><note><p>Chief Joe is wearing earrings, bracelet, breastplate over
					 plain shirt, breechcloth, leggings and beaded moccasins. He is wearing Chief
					 Moses' war bonnet.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mosher, Lafayette Howe (September 1, 1824 – May 27,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lafayette Howe Mosher was an American politician and judge in
				  Oregon. Mosher was born near Latonia Springs in Kentucky and was educated at
				  Woodward College in Cincinnati where he received a Bachelor of Arts in 1843. He
				  later moved to Oregon Territory, arriving in 1853. In 1854, he was involved in
				  a movement in Southern Oregon to create a new territory, Jackson Territory. In
				  1855 he was appointed as a registrar for the Southern Oregon District of the
				  land office, and in 1870, he was appointed to the Oregon State Senate after the
				  winner of the seat accepted a federal position and became ineligible for the
				  legislature. In 1873, he was appointed by Oregon Governor La Fayette Grover to
				  the Oregon Supreme Court to replace Andrew J. Thayer who had died in office.
				  His term ended the following year. Mosher married Winnifred Lane, the daughter
				  of former governor Joseph Lane, in 1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MosherLH1</container><unittitle>Lafayette Howe Mosher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Moss, Sidney Walter (March 17,1810 - September 24,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sidney Walter Moss, the son of Moses and Katherine Buckford
				  Moss, was born in Paris, Kentucky. As a young man, he learned the trade of
				  stone-cutting, and worked in Ohio and Indiana on buildings, canals, and the
				  Madison &amp; Indianapolis Railway. By 1841 he was in charge of the
				  stone-cutting department at Fort Smith in Kentucky. In 1842, he joined the
				  company of Doctor White who was headed for Oregon. Reaching Oregon City in
				  September 1842, he opened a hotel and the first livery stable west of the Rocky
				  Mountains. He built first ferry-boat run on the Willamette, dug the first well,
				  built the first board fence in Oregon City, and built the first school in
				  Clackamas County. After four years, he built a larger hotel and operated it
				  until 1858. Between 1849 and 1854 he also carried a stock of goods and had a
				  mercantile business. Moss invested in farming property and farmed until 1871.
				  He acted as assessor without salary, traveling in that capacity from Vancouver
				  to Eugene, and from The Dalles to Astoria, and was a clerk of the circuit
				  court. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MossSW1</container><unittitle>Sidney Walter Moss</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Mother Joseph (April 16, 1823 – January 19, 1902)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart, S.P., born Esther Pariseau in
				  Saint-Elzéar, Quebec, Canada, was a Canadian Religious Sister who led a group
				  of the members of her congregation to the Pacific Northwest of the United
				  States. There, under her leadership, they established a network of schools and
				  healthcare to service the American settlers in that new and remote part of the
				  country. She was responsible for the completion of eleven hospitals, seven
				  academies, five schools for Native American children, and two orphanages
				  throughout an area that now encompasses Washington, northern Oregon, Idaho, and
				  Montana. For her contributions to the development of that region, she was
				  honored by the State of Washington as one of the two people allowed to
				  represent it in the National Statuary Hall Collection in Washington, D.C.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MotherJ1</container><unittitle>Mother Joseph</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Mowell, Ada Sprague (November 22, 1867 - January 6,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ada Sprague was born in Ada County, Idaho; the family moved to
				  Thurston County in December 1869, eventually settled on a homestead on Black
				  Lake. Her father died in 1875, leaving his wife and children to care for the
				  farm. After graduating from the University of Washington, Ada taught in
				  Thurston County schools for over a decade, ending her career as principal of
				  Lincoln School in Olympia. She married Dr. John Wilson Mowell in 1898. Her
				  husband was active in community affairs, serving on the Olympia City Council
				  and as Olympia Health Officer. He aided in the establishment of Industrial
				  Insurance and was the first Medical Director of the Washington State Industrial
				  Insurance Commission, while maintaining his medical career. She was a member of
				  the Ladies’ Relief Society, Woman’s Club of Olympia, Civic Improvement Club,
				  Eenati Club, History Club, Thurston County Educational Club, and the
				  Tuberculosis League. In addition, she helped organize the Daughters of the
				  Pioneers and was a charter member of their Thurston County chapter. She
				  supported social reforms such as women’s suffrage and efforts to ban child
				  labor. As a member of the Woman’s Club of Olympia, she took an active role,
				  serving as chair of many departments, and was president for eight terms. During
				  World War I, she served as the Chairman of the Woman’s Work Committee of the
				  Thurston County Council of Defense, making her both the sole woman on the
				  Council and the head of the county’s “Minute Women” volunteers. In this role,
				  she helped implement government home front programs during the war period,
				  including promoting voluntary rationing, selling Liberty bonds and raising
				  money for the Red Cross. After the war, she was a leader in the Minute Women
				  Association of Thurston County which promoted patriotic causes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MowellAS1</container><unittitle>Ada Sprague Mowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 2, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor Farrar, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mowry, William Augustus (August 13, 1829 - May 22,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Augustus Mowry was born in South Uxbridge, Massachusetts
				  and was educated at Uxbridge Academy, Phillips Academy, and Brown University.
				  He received his A. M. degree from Brown, his Ph.D. from Bates and his LL.D from
				  Whitman College. He was principal of English High School in Providence
				  (1858-1864), Senior Principal of English and Classical School in Providence
				  (1864-1884), editor of the<emph render="italic">Journal of Education</emph>
				  (1884-1886), and the magazine <emph render="italic">Education</emph>
				  (1886-1891). He was the superintendent of schools in Salem (1891-1894),
				  president of the Rhode Island Institute of Instruction (1864-1866), President
				  of the American Institution of Instruction (1880-1882), president of the
				  Department of Higher Education of the National Education Association, and a
				  member of numerous historical, religious and education clubs. Mowry wrote many
				  historical works, including <emph render="italic">Marcus Whitman and the Early
				  Days of Oregon</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MowryWA1</container><unittitle>William Augustus Mowry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">E. G. Williams &amp; Brother, New York</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: I am sending you under separate cover, photo
					 of Wm. A. Mowry, author of several publications rel. to your country, with my
					 compliments. (You have them in stock.) Yours very truly, F. J. Wilder, Wilder's
					 Bookshop, Boston, November 15, 1914.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Mudge, Zachary (January 22, 1770 – October 22, 1852)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zachary (variously Zacharia or Zechariah) Mudge was an officer
				  in the British Royal Navy, best known for serving in the historic Vancouver
				  Expedition. He later served during the American Revolutionary War, the French
				  Revolutionary Wars, and the Napoleonic Wars, commanding several ships. Point
				  Mudge on Quadra Island is named for him; he was the first European to sight it
				  from a nearby mountain. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MudgeZ1</container><unittitle>Zachary Mudge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1800?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Admiral Zachary Mudge, for whom Cape Mudge
					 was named. (He was a lieutenant with Vancouver.) From a special photograph of
					 the painting by John Opie, now owned by Arthur Mudge, Esq., Sidney of Plympton,
					 Devon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Muir, John (April 21, 1838 – December 24,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Muir was an influential naturalist, author, environmental
				  philosopher, glaciologist and early advocate for the preservation of wilderness
				  in the United States. His letters, essays, and books describing his adventures
				  in nature, especially in the Sierra Nevada, have been read by millions. His
				  activism helped to preserve the Yosemite Valley, Sequoia National Park and many
				  other wilderness areas. The Sierra Club, which he co-founded, is a prominent
				  American conservation organization. The John Muir Trail, a hiking trail in the
				  Sierra Nevada, Muir Woods National Monument, Muir Beach, John Muir College,
				  Mount Muir, Camp Muir, Muir Grove, and Muir Glacier were named in his honor as
				  was John Muir Way, a 130-mile-long route, in Scotland. In his later life, he
				  devoted most of his time to the preservation of the Western forests. As part of
				  the campaign to make Yosemite a national park, Muir published two landmark
				  articles on wilderness preservation in <emph render="italic">The Century
				  Magazine</emph> , <emph render="italic">The Treasures of the Yosemite</emph>
				  and <emph render="italic">Features of the Proposed Yosemite National
				  Park</emph> ; this helped support the push for U.S. Congress to pass a bill in
				  1890 establishing Yosemite National Park. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MuirJ1</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Muir as a young man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MuirJ2</container><unittitle>Portrait of John Muir</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">M. Craig</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MuirJ3</container><unittitle>John Muir with John Burroughs during the Harriman
					 Alaska Expedition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward S. Curtis</persname></origination></did><note><p>From the Harriman Alaska Expedition Photograph Album
					 Collection PH Coll 333.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munks, Arminda Van Volkenberg (December 3, 1857 - March
				  5, 1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arminda Van Volkenberg met William Munks in the early 1880s when
				  her parents moved to March's Point, and her father, Francis Van Volkenberg,
				  purchased the Munks Store. She married William Munks on August 11, 1881. The
				  couple had three sons, William, Leonard and Merton. In March 1887, following
				  her delivery of twin boys, she and the babies died.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunksW2</container><unittitle>William Munks and wife Arminda Van Volkenberg
					 Munks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 11, 1881?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Munks subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munks, Olive Blanche Benson (August 22, 1868 - June 15,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Olive Blanche Benson, the daughter of Asa Benson and Emma
				  Pittman Benson, was born in Knox County, Illinois. She married William Munks on
				  August 23, 1888, and the couple had two sons, Chester and Gerald. Munks died in
				  1898, and Olive married William S. Rauch in 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunksW3</container><unittitle>William Munks and wife Olive Blanche Benson
					 Munks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1888?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Munks subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munks, William (January 23, 1823 - November 19,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Munks was born in Ohio in 1822. A veteran of the Mexican
				  War, he headed west in the late 1840s. He trapped, placer mined, and worked for
				  the Indian Department until settling in 1859 on Fidalgo Island, where he was
				  one of the earliest pioneers. In 1859, he and Enoch Compton were hired by the
				  American commission to mark the boundary between Canada and the United States;
				  while J. G. Bertrand was employed by the British. In 1861 he opened a general
				  store and trading post which he operated for more than 30 years. He was one of
				  the leading citizens of the area, owning considerable land and serving for 20
				  years as postmaster at Fidalgo. He donated land for the first Fidalgo
				  school.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunksW1</container><unittitle>William Munks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunksW2</container><unittitle>William Munks and wife Arminda Van Volkenberg
					 Munks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 11, 1881?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunksW3</container><unittitle>William Munks and wife Olive Blanche Benson
					 Munks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1888?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munro, Alexander Braid - see Edward Eldridge
				  subseries</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Braid Munro was born in Scotland and later changed his
				  name to Edward Eldridge. He joined the British merchant marine service at an
				  early age. In 1846, he left the merchant marine service and hired on a schooner
				  on Lake Erie. In 1849 he traveled to the California gold fields before
				  eventually settling in Bellingham Bay in 1853. He worked at a mill, in the
				  Sehome coal mines and at a school before taking up a claim near Squalicum
				  Creek. Between 1856 and 1858, he served as the first probate judge for Whatcom
				  County; his other political offices included County Commissioner, County
				  Auditor, County Treasurer and Deputy Collector of Customs. Over the next two
				  decades, he became the political voice for Whatcom County in the Territorial
				  Legislature, serving in the House in 1864, 1865, and 1866. He was Speaker in
				  1866 and was a vocal advocate for women's suffrage. He officially changed his
				  name from Alexander Braid Monro in 1873, although he had been using the name
				  “Eldridge” for many years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EldridgeE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edward Eldridge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Edward Eldridge subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munro, Ralph Davies (June 25, 1943 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Davies Munro is a retired Republican politician who served
				  as the 13th Secretary of State of Washington. First elected in 1980, he served
				  five terms. Munro was born in 1943 in Seattle, Washington, and grew up on
				  Bainbridge Island. His Munro grandparents were Scottish immigrants who settled
				  on Bainbridge Island in the late 1880s, and Ralph was raised in the house that
				  was once the Munro Family Store. He graduated from Western Washington
				  University with a B.A. in Education and Political Science. After graduation
				  from Western Washington University, he went to work at the Boeing Company where
				  he was trained as an industrial engineer. At the same time, he became very
				  involved as a volunteer with developmentally disabled children. Governor Daniel
				  J. Evans appointed Munro as the state's first volunteer coordinator in 1969. In
				  this position, he helped citizens volunteer their time in service to state
				  agencies, schools and other organizations. In 1972, he was recruited on a White
				  House loan to help develop ACTION, the federal volunteer agency in Washington.
				  D.C. After returning to Washington State, he drafted legislation and budgets
				  relating to public schools, colleges and universities, the disabled, and
				  volunteer programs as well as promoting economic development and serving as the
				  state’s goodwill ambassador. He has been active in environmental issues and
				  historic preservation, and coordinated private, state and federal efforts to
				  develop the Bald Eagle Preserve on the Skagit River. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunroRD1</container><unittitle>Ralph Davies Munro</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunroRD2</container><unittitle>Ralph Davies Munro</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1990 and 1999?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Munson, Emily Talbot Keller (March 28, 1842 - June 2,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emily Talbot Keller was born in East Machias, Maine to Goddard
				  Dodge Keller and Betsy Simontam Keller. She and her future husband, Josiah Hill
				  Munson, kept journals on the <emph render="italic">Toando</emph> , the vessel
				  which brought them from Maine to Washington Territory. The<emph render="italic"> Toando </emph>departed Sept 23, 1858 from Boston,
				  Massachusetts and arrived at Port Gamble, Washington March 28, 1859. Emily
				  married Josiah on April 5, 1859. For many years, they lived in Olympia where
				  Josiah held several important public positions. The couple had seven children.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MunsonETK1</container><unittitle>Emily Talbot Keller Munson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jennings, Oakland, CA</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murayama, Milton Atsushi (April 10, 1923 – July 27,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Milton Atsushi Murayama was an American novelist and playwright.
				  A Nisei, he wrote the 1975 novel <emph render="italic">All I Asking for Is My
				  Body,</emph> which is considered a classic novel of the experiences of Japanese
				  Americans in Hawaii before and during World War II. Murayama was born in
				  Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii to Japanese immigrant parents from Kyushu. After
				  graduating from high school in Lahaina in 1941, he attended the University of
				  Hawaii. He served in the Territorial Guard after the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
				  but was abruptly discharged with other Japanese Americans. He soon volunteered
				  with Military Intelligence. As a native speaker of Japanese, he was sent to
				  Taiwan as a translator to help facilitate the surrender and repatriation of
				  Japanese troops there. He returned to Hawaii in 1946 and completed his B.A. in
				  English and philosophy at the University of Hawai'i. He then attended Columbia
				  University under the G.I. Bill, earning a master's degree in Chinese and
				  Japanese in 1950. After completing his postgraduate work at Columbia, Murayama
				  moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked at the Armed Forces Medical Library
				  from 1952 to 1956, before moving to San Francisco. While still at Columbia, he
				  completed the first draft of his novel. It was not particularly well received
				  when it was first published in 1975; however, the book won the American Book
				  Award of the Before Columbus Foundation in 1980. When it was reissued by the
				  University of Hawaii in 1988, it received critical acclaim. Murayama received
				  the Hawai'i Award for Literature in 1991.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurayamaMA1</container><unittitle>Milton Atsushi Murayama</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1990 and 1999?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murie, Margaret E. Thomas (August 18, 1902 – October 19,
				  2003)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Margaret E. Thomas Murie was a naturalist, author, adventurer,
				  and conservationist. She helped in the passage of the Wilderness Act and was
				  instrumental in creating the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. She was born in
				  Seattle, Washington and moved to Fairbanks, Alaska with her family when she was
				  five years old. She attended Reed College for two years before transferring to
				  Simmons College (Massachusetts) for a year, then transferred to and became the
				  first woman to graduate from the Alaska Agricultural College and School of
				  Mines, (now the University of Alaska Fairbanks), with a degree in business
				  administration in 1924. She met Olaus Murie in Fairbanks, and they married in
				  1924. From 1927 onward, the Muries were residents of Jackson, Wyoming, where
				  they studied ecology, specifically the elk population. They took on work as
				  director and secretary of the Wilderness Society, helping draft recommendations
				  for legislation and policy. After her husband died in 1963, she traveled to
				  Alaska, Tanzania, and New Zealand studying wild areas, assessing areas for
				  Wilderness qualities and working to protect nature from exploitation. 
				  <emph render="italic">Two in the Far North</emph>, a memoir published in 1962,
				  chronicles her early life, her marriage, and research expeditions in Alaska.
				  She wrote <emph render="italic">Island Between</emph>, published in 1977, and 
				  <emph render="italic">Wapiti Wilderness</emph>, published in 1966 with her
				  husband as co-author. In 1956, Murie began a campaign with her husband to
				  protect what is now the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and with U.S. Supreme
				  Court Justice William O. Douglas, persuaded President Dwight Eisenhower to
				  establish the Arctic National Wildlife Range. She served as a consultant to the
				  Wilderness Society, the National Park Service and the Sierra Club, among many
				  other organizations. Murie returned to Alaska to survey potential wilderness
				  areas for the National Park Service and worked on the Alaska National Interest
				  Lands Conservation Act that was signed by President Carter in 1980. She was the
				  recipient of the Audubon Medal, the John Muir Award, and the Presidential Medal
				  of Freedom, the highest civilian honor awarded by the United States. Just prior
				  to her 100th birthday in 2002, Murie received the J.N. Ding Darling
				  Conservationist of the Year Award, the National Wildlife Federation's highest
				  honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurieMET1</container><unittitle> Margaret E. Thomas Murie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Murphy, Father John J. (1900 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Father John J. Murphy, Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI) was the
				  chaplain of the Catholic Seamen's Club for over 22 years. The Catholic Seamens'
				  Club became a fixture in Seattle because of his work, and he developed strong
				  ties with area labor union leaders and with Seattle's Mayor and other city
				  officials. He held monthly luncheons that were attended by a cross-section of
				  the city and helped raise money for the club and the population it served. In
				  1961, he was president of the National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea
				  Conference.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">7</container><container type="item">CherbergJA4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Cherberg with group of men
					 including Father John Murphy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Labor News</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under John A. Cherberg subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murphy, John Miller (November 3, 1839 - December 20,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Miller Murphy was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He was
				  orphaned at an early age. When he was ten years old, he crossed the plains to
				  Oregon with his sister and brother-in-law. He attended the first school in
				  Portland during the winter of 1850. Murphy learned the printer's trade in the
				  office of <emph render="italic">The Weekly Times</emph> and was one of the
				  first newsboys for <emph render="italic">The Oregonian. </emph>He worked on
				  newspapers in Oregon and Vancouver, Washington before starting 
				  <emph render="italic">The Washington Standard</emph> in Olympia in 1860. 
				  <emph render="italic">The Standard, </emph>a weekly, operated uninterrupted for
				  more than a half-century. He married Eliza Jane McGuire in 1861; the couple had
				  eleven children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurphyJM1</container><unittitle>John Miller Murphy in wheelchair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1916?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurphyJM2</container><unittitle>John Miller Murphy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Program for the Golden Anniversary of <emph render="italic">The Washington Standard</emph>, dated November 19, 1910.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurphyJM3</container><unittitle>John Miller Murphy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: John Miller Murphy, born 1839. Came to
					 Oregon 1850, began publishing <emph render="italic">The Washington
					 Standard</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurphyJM4</container><unittitle>John Miller Murphy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: John Miller Murphy, Member City Council, 1st
					 Ward.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Murphy, William Hall (June 8, 1869 -
				  October 29, 1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Hall Murphy was born in Brockville, Ontario and came to
				  Seattle in 1886. During the Seattle fire of 1889, he was the captain of the
				  volunteer horse-drawn Engine Company #1. In 1889 he opened the first retail
				  meat market north of Lake Union in the Fremont neighborhood. He served on the
				  Seattle City Council for eleven years (1900 -1910), and in 1940, was elected
				  honorary mayor of Fremont.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GoddardAJ1</container><unittitle>Albert J. Goddard with William H. Murphy and George F.
					 Cotterill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert J. Goddard subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH11</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson, William H. Murphy and Ellis
					 Morrison on a trip to study locations for a power house.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Reginald H. Thomson, (center), on a trip
						to study location for a power house, 1902. City Councilmen William H. Murphy
						(left) and Ellis Morrison accompianed him.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Herber Thomson subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murray, David (October 28, 1831 - June 8,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Murray was born in Maine and at the age of twenty traveled
				  to California aboard a sailing vessel. Reaching California, he settled at
				  Vallejo, working on Mare Island, where the government works and navy yard now
				  are. After finishing his employment there, he worked in mining, lumbering and
				  ranching. During the Caribou gold rush of 1862, he established a ranch on the
				  Fraser River and worked there until 1870. That year, he relocated to the
				  Kittitas Valley, where he bought a ranch near Yakima. At one time, he owned the
				  largest herd of cattle in the area and was one of the “cattle kings” of
				  Washington Territory. He also owned considerable property around Ellensburg and
				  was a director and shareholder in the First National Bank. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurrayD1</container><unittitle>David Murray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurrayD2</container><unittitle>Residence of David Murray</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Printed on front: Residence of Hon. David Murray,
						Ellensburgh (sic), W.T.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murrow, Edward Roscoe (April 25, 1908 – April 27,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Roscoe Murrow, born Egbert Roscoe Murrow, was an American
				  broadcast journalist and war correspondent. He first gained prominence during
				  World War II with a series of live radio broadcasts from Europe for the news
				  division of CBS. Murrow graduated from Washington State College (now
				  University). He served as president of the National Student Association
				  (1929–31) and worked to bring German scholars displaced by Nazism to the United
				  States. He joined the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) in 1935 and was sent
				  to London in 1937 to head the network’s European Bureau. Murrow’s highly
				  reliable and dramatic eyewitness reportage of the German occupation of Austria
				  and the Munich Conference in 1938, the German takeover of Czechoslovakia in
				  1939, and the Battle of Britain during World War II brought him national fame.
				  After the war Murrow became CBS vice president in charge of news, education,
				  and discussion programs. He returned to radio broadcasting in 1947 with a
				  weeknight newscast. With Fred W. Friendly, he produced <emph render="italic">Hear It Now</emph>, an authoritative hour-long weekly news
				  digest, and moved on to television with a comparable series, 
				  <emph render="italic">See It Now</emph>. Murrow was a notable force for the
				  free and uncensored dissemination of information during the American
				  anticommunist hysteria of the early 1950s. In 1954 he produced a notable exposé
				  of the dubious tactics of Senator Joseph McCarthy, who had gained prominence
				  with flamboyant charges of communist infiltration of U.S. government agencies.
				  Murrow also produced<emph render="italic"> Person to Person </emph>(1953–60)
				  and other television programs. He was appointed director of the U.S.
				  Information Agency in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurrowER1</container><unittitle> Edward R. Murrow at his typewriter in wartime
					 London</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1939 and 1945</unitdate></did><note><p>CBS publicity photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Murry, James B.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MurryJB1</container><unittitle> James B. Murry with a dog, standing by a car and
					 holding several animal pelts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: James B. Murry, Attorney, Seattle.
					 "Ray"-short hair airedale.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Myers, Robert (See John F. Vandevanter)</unittitle></did></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>N</unittitle></did><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nadeau, Ira</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Nadeau was the Director General of the Alaska Yukon Pacific
				  Exposition.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJF2</container><unittitle>James Francis Smith visiting the Igorrote Village,
					 Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition; Igorotte Chief, on left, Director General Ira
					 Nadeau, in center and Governor General James F. Smith, of the Philippines, on
					 the right.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank H. Nowell, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy; the orginal photograph is held in Special Collections
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, AYP367</p><p>See James Francis Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Nagano, Jack Manzo (March 27, 1855-May 21,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jack Manzo Nagano was the first Japanese immigrant in British
				  Columbia and possibly in Canada. At 23, he emigrated from Japan to Canada in
				  1877, arriving in New Westminster, British Columbia. He became a salmon
				  fisherman working in the Fraser River and later moved to Vancouver to load
				  timber onto ships. He returned to Japan briefly in 1884, then moved to Seattle,
				  Washington, to open a tobacco and restaurant business. He returned to Canada in
				  1892 to open a hotel and store, among other businesses. He lost all his
				  possessions in a fire in 1922 and moved back to Kuchinotsu, Japan, the city of
				  his birth, where he died a year later. The Canadian Mount Manzo Nagano, near
				  Owikeno Lake, BC, was officially named in his honor, to commemorate the arrival
				  of Japanese immigrants to Canada.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NaganoJM1</container><unittitle>The Nagano store on Government Street, Victoria B.C.,
					 with Mr. and Mrs. Nagano, Mr. Ishii and Ms. Izima (?) in front of
					 store</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Last visit to Victoria.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NaganoJM2</container><unittitle>Jack Manzo Nagano and group of unidentified men in
					 front of the Nagano store in Victoria, B. C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NaganoJM3</container><unittitle>Group photograph in front of the Methodist Church in
					 Vancouver, B. C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Reverend Matsunaga's farewell. All the
					 members of the Methodist Church. May 1917. Also mother's farewell picture. Left
					 for USA this year 1917.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nagano, Tayo (September 15, 1864 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tayo Nagano was born in Japan and immigrated to Canada in 1897.
				  She was married to Jack Manzo Nagano.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NaganoJM1</container><unittitle>Nagano store on Government Street, Victoria B.C., with
					 Mr. and Mrs. Nagano, Mr. Ishii and Ms. Izima (?) in front of store</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Jack Manzo Nagano subseries. Written on verso:
						Last visit to Victoria.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Neale, Sir Harry Burrard (September 16, 1765 – February
				  7, 1840) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Admiral Sir Harry Burrard-Neale, 2nd Baronet, born Harry
				  Burrard, was a British officer of the Royal Navy, and Member of Parliament for
				  Lymington. He was the son of William Burrard, the governor of Yarmouth Castle
				  on the Isle of Wight, and nephew of Sir Harry Burrard, 1st Baronet, of
				  Walhampton, whom he succeeded in 1791. In 1795 he adopted the additional name
				  of Neale on his marriage to Grace, daughter of Robert Neale. Burrard
				  distinguished himself during the Mutiny at the Nore in 1797. He was one of the
				  Lords of the Admiralty between 1804 and 1807, and was promoted to rear-admiral
				  on July 31, 1810. He became Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet in 1823.
				  Burrard Inlet was named in his honor by Captain George Vancouver in June 1792,
				  during his expedition of exploration in the Pacific Northwest. During the later
				  development of the city of Vancouver, a major north-south thoroughfare, Burrard
				  Street, was named for the inlet, which subsequently gave its name to Burrard
				  Bridge, one of the three major bridges that connect downtown Vancouver to its
				  suburbs to the south.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NealeHB1</container><unittitle>Sir Harry Burrard-Neale</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1810 and 1819?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: From a mezzotint by C(harles) Turner after
					 painting by Matthew (Mather?) Brown. Photography from the collection of
					 Augustin Rischgitz, London.</p><p>Stamped on verso: Photographed by Augustin Rischgitz</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Neely, David Andrew (July 18,1823 - December 31,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Andrew Neely was born to John and Mary Davis Neely in
				  Murray County, Tennessee, on July 18, 1823. In 1824 his parents moved to West
				  Tennessee, and settled on government land where his father established a farm.
				  Neely married Irena Kemp in 1844. After farming in Tennessee and Missouri, he
				  crossed the plains with his wife and three sons. The trip across the plains
				  took five months; they reached White River, King County, Washington Territory,
				  on October 1, 1854. During the Indian War of 1855, he joined Company H, of the
				  First Regiment of volunteers, and acted as scout. After the war, he returned to
				  the Donation claim, where he farmed and had a dairy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NeelyDA1</container><unittitle>David Andrew Neely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, Alfred (November 21, 1879 - December 10,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Nelson was born in Sweden and came to Seattle in 1903
				  where he bought land in the Green Lake district. He opened Nelson's Blacksmith
				  Shop, later Nelson's Bodyworks, at Green Lake Boulevard Northeast and Second
				  Avenue Northeast. He married Anna Marie Carlsson, also a native of Sweden, in
				  1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonA1</container><unittitle>Alfred Nelson at his blacksmith shop with two
					 unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonA2</container><unittitle>Alfred Nelson at his work at his forge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, Dale</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonD1</container><unittitle>Dale Nelson, in profile, seated and wearing a fur or
					 knit hat.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dale Nelson, Olympia Wn.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, Everett John (October 18, 1900 - September 29,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Everett John Nelson, the son of John C. Nelson and Annie
				  Raphaelson Nelson, was born in Castle Rock, Washington. He received his B.A.
				  (1923) and M.A. (1925) from the University of Washington. He received a second
				  M. A. from Harvard in 1928 and a PhD in philosophy and mathematical logic from
				  Harvard in 1929. He did postdoctoral studies in Germany and France before
				  joining the faculty of the University of Washington in 1930 as an assistant
				  professor. He was Professor of Philosophy from 1941 to 1952 at the UW and also
				  served as executive officer of the Philosophy Department from 1946 to 1952.
				  From 1952 until 1968, he served as Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the
				  Philosophy Department at Ohio State University. Nelson was a Guggenheim Fellow,
				  1939-1940. He served as consulting editor of to the <emph render="italic">Journal of Symbolic Logic</emph> (1936-1950) and was a member
				  of the American Association of University Professors, the Association of
				  Symbolic Logic, and the Metaphysical Society of America. He served as president
				  of the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association 1946-1947. He
				  served in the U. S. Naval Reserves during World War II. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonEJ1</container><unittitle>Everett John Nelson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 15, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Tyee, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1952 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note><note><p>Missing July 2022</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the University of Washington Philosophy
					 Department faculty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (L-R): Melvin Rader, Everett J. Nelson, Herbert
					 Phillips; back row (L-R): Herbert Wallace Schneider, others unidentified</p><p>The two unidentified men in the back row may be Abraham Irving
					 Melden (1910-1991) and John Herman Randall Jr. (1899-1880)</p></note><note><p>Filed under Herbert J. Phillips subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, John Edgar (November 19, 1879 - May 3,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Edgar Nelson was born in Vale, Denmark and came to the
				  United States with his parents, Jacob and Anna Nelson, in 1883. He moved to
				  Hoquiam, Washington in 1910, where he operated the Nelson Hotel. He was blind
				  and went to the Seeing-Eye Institution in Morristown, N. J. where he took
				  courses and secured one of their guide dogs. He was married to Violet
				  Hughes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD2</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with group signing SB 151 creating a
					 division for the blind in the State Department of Social Security, making
					 appropriations and providing for the blind and the prevention of
					 blindness</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 15, 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. C. Gerard</persname></origination></did><note><p>Standing (L-R): State Representative George Twidwell, State
					 Representative Victor Skinner, John Nelson with his seeing-eye dog, State
					 Senator Joseph Walter Thein.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, George Driver (July 13, 1950 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Driver "Pinky" Nelson is an American physicist,
				  astronomer, science educator, and a former NASA astronaut. He received a
				  Bachelor of Science degree in Physics from Harvey Mudd College in 1972, and a
				  Master of Science and a Doctor of Philosophy degrees in Astronomy from the
				  University of Washington in 1974 and 1978, respectively. He was selected as an
				  astronaut candidate by NASA in January 1978. He has logged a total of 411 hours
				  in space, including 10 hours of EVA flight time. Nelson left NASA in June 1989
				  and became an assistant provost at the University of Washington. He now directs
				  the Science, Mathematics and Technology Education program at Western Washington
				  University in Bellingham. He is also the principal investigator of the North
				  Cascades and Olympic Science Partnership, a mathematics and science partnership
				  grant from the National Science foundation. Nelson has performed astronomical
				  research at the Sacramento Peak Solar Observatory, Sunspot, New Mexico; the
				  Astronomical Institute at Utrecht and the University of Göttingen Observatory,
				  and at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics in Boulder, Colorado).
				  He has received the NASA Exceptional Engineering Achievement Medal, NASA
				  Exceptional Service Medal, three NASA Space Flight Medals, AIAA Haley Space
				  Flight Award, Fédération Aéronautique Internationale V. M. Komarov Diploma, and
				  the Western Washington University Faculty Outstanding Service Award. In 2009,
				  Nelson was inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. He is also an elected
				  member of Washington State Academy of Science and an Elected Fellow of the
				  American Association for the Advancement of Science. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonGD1</container><unittitle>George Driver Nelson in NASA uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1980</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NASA, Washington D.C</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonGD2</container><unittitle>George Driver Nelson in NASA uniform with
					 helmet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1980?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">NASA, Washington D.C</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nelson, Margery (Marg) Catherine (July 10, 1899 -
				  November 12, 1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margery Catherine Raibley was born in Los Angeles to Michael W.
				  Raibley and Fannie Taylor Raibley. She married Einar Robertson in Los Angeles
				  in 1919, and the couple moved to Chinook, Washington. They had four children
				  before divorcing in 1937. She then married Walter Edward Nelson, a fisherman,
				  and spent many years working as a cook on his halibut boat. After ten years,
				  she started attending classes for fiction writers and soon sold her first book.
				  She had over fifteen young adult books published, including 
				  <emph render="italic">A Girl Called Chris</emph> and <emph render="italic">Storm at Anderson Point</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NelsonMC1</container><unittitle>Margery Catherine Nelson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Good luck to the writing ship (?),
					 Sincerely, Marg.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nelson, Warner</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR1</container><unittitle>Robert "Bob" Ingram standing, Warner Nelson
					 seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933?</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Robert "Bob" Ingram subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nelson, Wendell (May 14, 1886 -
				  November 11, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wendell Nelson graduated from the University of Washington in
				  1912 and married Margaret Daggett in 1914. He was head of the employment
				  department for General Electric in Schenectady, N.Y.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">4</container><container type="item">BlairHO2</container><unittitle>Wendell Nelson, Nathan (Nate) Blair, Homer Blair and
					 Horace H. Crary at Rees's Camp, later the site of Paradise Inn on Mount
					 Rainier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Homer Orrin Blair subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nesmith, James Willis (July 23, 1820 – June 17,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Willis Nesmith was an American politician and lawyer from
				  Oregon. Born in New Brunswick to American parents, he grew up in New Hampshire
				  and Maine. A Democrat, he moved to Oregon Country in 1843 where he entered
				  politics as a judge, a legislator in the Provisional Government of Oregon, a
				  United States Marshal, and after statehood a United States Senator and
				  Representative. Nesmith’s grandson, Clifton N. McArthur, and son-in-law, Levi
				  Ankeny, both served in Congress.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NesmithJW1</container><unittitle>James Willis Nesmith </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original and copy.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NesmithJW2</container><unittitle>Election Day poster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1847</unitdate><note><p>When George Abernethy defeated A. L. Lovejoy for governor of
						the Oregon provisional government, J. Quinn Thornton, supreme judge of the
						provisional government, who was appointed by Abernethy, engaged in bitter
						controversy with James Nesmith over alleged misrepresentations of the southern
						immigration route of 1846. Thornton ignored Nesmith's challenge to fight a
						duel, and Nesmith published a response in the <emph render="italic">Oregon
						Spectator</emph>.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Neuberger, Richard Lewis (December 26, 1912 - March 9,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Lewis Neuberger was born in Portland, Oregon. During
				  high school, he worked on the school paper; after graduation, he worked for one
				  year at <emph render="italic">The Oregonian</emph>. He attended the University
				  of Oregon, but left before obtaining his journalism degree. In 1934, his byline
				  appeared in <emph render="italic">The New York Times</emph> for the first time.
				  Less than two years later, he was named by <emph render="italic">The New York
				  Times</emph> as their regular correspondent for the Pacific Northwest, a post
				  he held until his election to the Oregon State Senate in 1949. A Democrat, he
				  served in the State Senate until 1954 when he ran for the U. S. Senate.
				  Neuberger served from 1954 until his death in 1960; his wife, Maureen,
				  succeeded him in office. During his time in the Senate, he championed civil
				  rights, clean air, clean water and the preservation of natural resources. One
				  lasting mark Neuberger left as a Senator was the creation of the Oregon Dunes
				  National Recreation Area on the Pacific Coast of Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NeubergerRL1</container><unittitle>Richard Lewis Neuberger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CoonSH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Representative Sam Coon debating
					 Senator Richard Neuberger in the Hood River High School auditorium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 26, 1955</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Samuel H. Coon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Neumann, Frank (February 11, 1892 - May 22,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Neumann, an authority on earthquakes, was a seismologist
				  at the University of Washington. He taught at the UW from 1953 until his
				  retirement in 1962, when he was given the title of assistant professor emeritus
				  of geology. He remained active in the department until two months before his
				  death. Neumann, a native of Baltimore, graduated from Baltimore Polytechnic
				  Institute in 1910. In the next year he joined the United States Coast and
				  Geodetic Survey as a geophysicist. In 1925 he became chief of the seismology
				  branch of the survey's division of geomagnetism and seismology, a post he held
				  until he joined the University of Washington in 1953. He was president of the
				  Seismology Society in 1949, and from 1948 to 1951 was a vice president of the
				  International Seismology Association. He also belonged to the Geological
				  Society and the Geophysical Union.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NeumannF1</container><unittitle>Professor Frank Neumann with a globe and a chart of
					 the Aleutian Islands Earthquakes in March, 1957</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NeumannF2</container><unittitle>Professor Frank Neumann with seismographic
					 equipment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Gertrude Grace Wiggin (December 1865 - December
				  9, 1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Grace Wiggin, the daughter of Nathaniel and Angie
				  Batchelder Wiggin, married Walter Edward Newbert in 1888. In 1907, the couple
				  homesteaded in an area south of La Push, Washington on the Olympic Peninsula.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Ira Howard (March 29, 1901 -August 23,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Howard Newbert, the son of Walter and Gertrude Newbert,
				  worked as a fireman and oiler for steamship companies. During World War II, he
				  served in the Merchant Marines. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Julian Willard (September 20, 1896 - May 3,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julian Willard Newbert, the son of Walter and Gertrude Newbert,
				  entered the property and investment field in the 1930s. During and after World
				  War I, he was in the Merchant Marine. After his marriage to Doris Reef in 1923,
				  he worked in machine shops, sawmills, as a house painter and many other jobs.
				  When jobs were scarce after the 1929 stock market crash, he and Doris used
				  their savings to buy a service station in Tacoma. They then began to buy other
				  properties, and owned and operated several apartment buildings. In a
				  partnership with Floyd Clodfelter, Newbert bought the Exeter Hotel in 1950. In
				  1968, Newbert and a later partner, E. R. Weller, began a 43 acre residential
				  development in Las Vegas and planned a condominium development in Federal Way,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Karl Marx (February 5, 1899 - August 25,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Karl Marx Newbert, the son of Walter and Gertrude Newbert, was
				  born in Westport, Missouri. He worked as a merchant seaman for many years
				  before becoming the owner and operator of the Karma House Apartments in
				  Seattle. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Martha Adams (1840 - May 8, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha L. F. Adams, the daughter of Samuel and Martha Adams,
				  married John C. Newbert in Newport, Rhode Island in 1865 and divorced him in
				  1877. She and her son, Walter Edward Newbert, established homesteads on the
				  Olympic Peninsula in 1907. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Paul Revere (April 18, 1894 - February 15,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Revere Newbert, the son of Walter and Gertrude Newbert,
				  served overseas in World War I and in a Naval hospital during World War II.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Rose May (September 19, 1903 - January 7,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rose May Newbert, the daughter of Walter and Gertrude Newbert,
				  was born in Kansas City, Missouri and moved to the Olympic Peninsula with her
				  family in 1907. She married Constantine Peters in 1926.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Vinton Eustace (January 26, 1892 - August 24,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vinton Newbert, the son of Walter and Gertrude Newbert, was born
				  in Kansas City, Missouri. He traveled to Seattle with his father in 1904; the
				  rest of the family joined them in 1907. Vinton worked as a civil engineer and
				  engineering consultant. He kept diaries and journals documenting his work and
				  his family's experiences as homesteaders on the Olympic Peninsula; he donated
				  more than 60 volumes to the Washington State Historical Society. He served in
				  World War I and worked for the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers during World War
				  II. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p><p>Filed under Walter Edward Newbert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newbert, Walter Edward (November 12, 1865 - January 1,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Newbert first came west to Seattle with his son Vincent
				  in 1904. In the fall of 1907, the rest of the family joined them, and Walter
				  took a job on the west side of the Olympic Peninsula. Traveling from Seattle to
				  Neah Bay and then by dugout canoe around Cape Flattery, the Newberts arrived at
				  Third Beach, south of the mouth of the Quillayute River. Because of his
				  education as a civil engineer, he was put in charge of a crew working on the
				  north end of the proposed railway which was to run from Grays Harbor to Lake
				  Ozette. He discovered that the land was unmarked on official government land
				  office maps, and he took up two homesteads in the area, one in his name and one
				  in the name of his mother. The name given the homesteads was Seaholme. Over a
				  period of approximately three years, the Newbert family worked to establish a
				  community on their acreage. Making use of wood and other materials at the site
				  of an abandoned oil prospecting operation further north on the beach, the
				  Newberts constructed a cable tramway from the bluff to the ocean. An old mine
				  car was set on a short section of track built paralleling the bluff and used to
				  move heavy building materials and supplies. A schoolhouse was built for the
				  Newbert children and for the children of Theodore Rixon and William F. Taylor
				  who each had homesteads to the north and south, respectively. Other buildings,
				  a burial plot and a telephone line to nearby Mora were added. Newbert’s wife,
				  Gertrude, died in 1910, and the homestead sites were eventually abandoned.
				  Newbert later worked as an engineer in Denver and New York.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewbertWE1</container><unittitle>Walter E. Newbert with mother Martha and wife
					 Gertrude, along with children Vinton, Paul, Julian, Karl, Ira, and
					 Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1904 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Two photos, original and copy. The copy has the names of the
					 individuals written on the reverse. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newell, Bernice Emely (August 16, 1862 - May 14,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bernice Emely Newell was a newspaper writer, arts booster, and
				  impresario who brought dozens of world-famous musicians to Tacoma to perform in
				  her ‘Artist Course of Concerts’ from 1904 to 1927. Newell was born in New York
				  and married Kenneth Hendry in 1888; the couple had one child, Doris, before
				  divorcing. In 1890, she started her newspaper career on the 
				  <emph render="italic">Tacoma Morning Globe.</emph> She later became the society
				  editor and writer for the <emph render="italic">Tacoma News Tribune.</emph> She
				  edited <emph render="italic">The Society Blue Book of Tacoma and Olympia
				  1908-1909</emph> and wrote <emph render="italic">Stories of the Yakima Valley
				  Indians</emph> and <emph render="italic"> The Mountain</emph> a book of poems.
				  She moved to San Francisco in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewellBE1</container><unittitle>Bernice Emely Newell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Albert L. Jackson, Tacoma</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Coll. 334, A. L. Jackson</p><p>Written on front: Bernice E. Newell, Journalist, Author of The
					 Mountain.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newell, Gordon Roy (January 31, 1913 - February 18,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Roy Newell, a native of Olympia, Washington, attended St.
				  Martin's College, Central Washington University and the University of
				  Washington. He was a soldier in World War II and the Korean War, a Port of
				  Seattle commissioner, a member of the Seattle Park Board, a history teacher and
				  a journalist. He ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Seattle in 1960; during the
				  campaign, his car was bombed in front of his house. The bombing came at a time
				  of bitter controversy over the pinball industry in Seattle, when Newell had
				  demanded that pinballs be outlawed in the city. Newell was fascinated with
				  ships and wrote many histories, usually in conjunction with Joe Williamson. As
				  an editorial writer for <emph render="italic">The Daily Olympian</emph>, he
				  wrote a series of articles which later became a book, <emph render="italic">So
				  Fair a Dwelling Place</emph> . He wrote over twenty books, including 
				  <emph render="italic">S.O.S. North Pacific</emph>, <emph render="italic">Ships
				  of the Inland Waters</emph>, <emph render="italic">Pacific Steamboats</emph> , 
				  <emph render="italic">Pacific Tugboats</emph>and <emph render="italic">Totem
				  Tales of Old Seattle</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewellGR1</container><unittitle>Gordon Roy Newell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jeffers Studio, Olympia, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newell, Robert T. (March 30, 1807 - November 14,
				  1869)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Newell was born near Zanesville, Ohio. When he was
				  eighteen, he joined a fur trapping expedition headed west, and spent the next
				  ten years trapping with his friend, Joe Meek. He soon earned the nickname
				  “Doc,” although he had no professional medical training. He came by his
				  nickname for his success tending to minor medical problems. With the departure
				  of the American fur companies in 1839-1840, Newell and Meek decided to move
				  west to settle in the Willamette Valley. Newell made his first home on the
				  Tualatin Plains, near what is today Hillsboro. He also lived in Oregon City
				  before acquiring land in Champoeg in 1844. He was present at the Champoeg
				  meeting gathered to vote in favor of organizing a territorial government and
				  was selected as a member of the legislative committee. He later served in the
				  provisional government in 1844 and in the newly formed House of Representatives
				  in 1845. He was elected Speaker in 1845 and 1847. As a result of his experience
				  in negotiating with Indian tribes, both as a fur trapper and peace commissioner
				  following the Whitman massacre, Newell was appointed as Indian Agent within the
				  new territorial government in 1849. He opened a general store in Champoeg in
				  1851 and was elected postmaster that same year. In 1855, prompted by the
				  outbreak of the Yakama Indian uprising, he organized a group of fifty scouts
				  who patrolled the area west of Walla Walla. After the war, he served as
				  chairman of the Marion County Democratic Convention in 1858 and was a member of
				  the new Oregon State Legislature in 1860. Newell Spring and Newell Creek are
				  named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewellRT1</container><unittitle>Robert T. Newell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newell, William Augustus (September 5, 1817 – August 8,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Augustus Newell, an American physician and politician,
				  was a three-term member of the United States House of Representatives, served
				  as a Republican as the 18th Governor of New Jersey, and as the 11th Governor of
				  the Washington Territory from 1880-1884. He is probably best known for, and was
				  most proud of, the Newell Act, which created the United States Life-Saving
				  Service, a Federal agency that grew out of private and local humanitarian
				  efforts to save the lives of shipwrecked mariners and passengers. It ultimately
				  merged with the Revenue Cutter Service to form the United States Coast Guard in
				  1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewellWA1</container><unittitle>William Augustus Newell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newman, "Packer" Jack &amp; Hannah (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Newman, William B. D. (March 10, 1827 - May 14,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William B. D. Newman was born in Kentucky, and two years later
				  accompanied his parents to Ohio. At the age of fifteen, he began work on the
				  banks of the Ohio River and on farms in Ohio, Mississippi and Louisiana. In
				  1848 he was in Indiana where he joined a party preparing to cross the
				  continent. The party arrived in Olympia in November. In 1854 he was engaged by
				  Governor Stevens to take a census of the Indians, and in the summer of 1855 was
				  working with Charles Byles in surveying the territory. In the fall of that year
				  he joined a company of volunteers during the Indian Wars, acting first as wagon
				  master, and after the building of the blockhouse on White River, as sergeant at
				  that post. In 1857, Newman settled on the Lower Chehalis, where he had a farm
				  and built a saw mill. He married Mary A. Reed in 1868; the couple had three
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NewmanWBD1</container><unittitle>William B. D. Newman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nichol, Walter Cameron (October 15, 1866 – December 19,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Cameron Nichol was a Canadian journalist, newspaper
				  editor and publisher, and the 12th Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia
				  (1920-1926). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nichols, Amelie Katherine (October 22, 1905 - September
				  10, 1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amelie Katherine Nichols, the daugher of Joseph and Nora
				  Nichols, was born in California and graduated from the University of Washington
				  in 1927 with B. S. in Liberal Arts. She married William Emmett Kneass
				  (1905-1953); they had a daugher, Nora. She married Alfred Elkinton in 1961. She
				  worked as a bookkeeper and later as a curator.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM2</container><unittitle>Mount Rainier excursion: Helen Morrill, Harold
					 Stevenson, Warner Chapson, Amelia Nicoles, Gertrude Sennes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Morrill Wolfle subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nichols, Rowena (1867 - October 2,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rowena Nichols was an artist who did magazine illustrations and
				  taught art in Seattle and Ashland, Oregon. The daughter of Artillery and
				  Matilda Pruitt, she was born in Oregon and studied art in San Francisco. She
				  spent six years in Alaska in the 1890s. In conjunction with August Hubert, she
				  did a statue of "Old Jennie," the last survivor of the Rogue River Tribe, for
				  the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1908. She married William A. Nichols in
				  1889 and married Herbert Davys in 1892 after her divorce from Nichols. She
				  married John G. Leinss in 1902. She left her collection of art works to the
				  state of California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NicholsR1</container><unittitle>Rowena Nichols painting at her easel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peter Britt, Jacksonville, OR</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph is from the Southern Oregon Historical Society,
					 Jacksonville, Oregon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Nichols, William Russell (April 29, 1858 - February 10,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Russell Nichols was a pioneer contractor and builder who
				  active in street paving, railroad construction and industrial development in
				  Tacoma for many years. Born on a farm near Shelbyville, Illinois, Nichols came
				  west when he was 21, going first to Leadville, Colorado and then to Los Angeles
				  before reaching Tacoma on May 16, 1883. He was the treasurer of the Independent
				  Asphalt Paving Company and for many years was the manager of the Pacific Coast
				  Gypsum Company. He built the Crystal Palace Market and the four-story People’s
				  Store in 1895. A devoted Mason, Nichols was a member of Tacoma Lodge No. 22, F.
				  &amp; A. M., a member of the Scottish Rite and Knights Templar and was one of
				  the earliest potentates of Afifi Temple. He was also a member of the University
				  Union Club and of the Tacoma Country and Golf Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMSr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Sr., with William Russell
					 Nichols, James R. Stirrat, Herman Goetz and Fred T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Lawton Gowey Street Railroad
						Photograph Collection, PH Coll. 209.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Sr. subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nickell, Charles (February 16, 1856 - April 20,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Nickell was born in Yreka, California in 1856. He
				  started in the newspaper business at the age of 16, working at the <emph>Yreka
				  Journal</emph> and completing his printer’s apprenticeship in twenty months. In
				  1871 he moved to Jacksonville, Oregon where he worked as compositor and
				  reporter on the <emph render="italic">Democratic Times</emph> until December,
				  1872, when he formed a partnership with P.D. Hull, and purchased the paper. A
				  fire in 1873 burned the office and entire plant, but Nickell was soon back in
				  business. In 1874 he became sole proprietor of the paper, which soon had the
				  largest circulation of any newspaper published in Oregon outside of Portland.
				  He later established the <emph render="italic">Southern Oregonian.</emph>
				  Nickell invested in real estate, owning about six thousand acres in Southern
				  Oregon and property in Multnomah County, and was the president of the Oregon
				  Press Association. He married Ella Prim, the daughter of Judge P.P. Prim, in
				  1881.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NickellC1</container><unittitle>Charles Nickell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nickels, Adelaide Grace (May 6, 1873 - May 21,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adelaide Grace Nickels was the daughter of Captain Edward
				  Nickels, who sailed his own vessel from Bath, Maine to Puget Sound in the
				  1860s. The family home was at Third and Union. in Seattle. She graduated from
				  the University of Washington in 1892 with a bachelor’s degree in teaching, and
				  taught at T. T. Minor School until 1902. From 1902 until 1930 she was head of
				  the elementary staff at St. Nicholas School. She was forced by ill health to
				  turn down the opportunity to be head of the school, and she retired in 1930.
				  Nickels was a member of the Sunset Club, the Women’s University Club and the
				  Daughters of the Pioneers., and invested in real estate in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NickelsAG1</container><unittitle>Adelaide Grace Nickels</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Farber, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Adelaide Nichols.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nickels, Captain Edward A. (August 1835 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward A. Nickels was born in Maine, a captain of steam ships
				  and tug boats in Tacoma, sailed his own vessel from Bath, Maine to Puget Sound
				  in the 1860s. His daugher was Adelaide Grace Nickels. For years he commanded
				  the Tacoma Mill Company ship <emph>The Dashing Wave</emph> and was in her when
				  she broke the record from San Francisco to Tacoma. He later commanded the tugs 
				  <emph>Holyoke</emph> and<emph>Tacoma.</emph> He was appointed captian of the U.
				  S. revenue cutter<emph>Active</emph> in 1898. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NickelsEA1</container><unittitle>Captain Edward A. Nickels with Captain
					 Donovan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1894?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photogrpaher">Elite Studio (Jones &amp; Lutz), San Francisco</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nickum, Ihrma Haskamp (September 15, 1906 - February 23,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ihrma (Irma) Haskamp, the daughter of Henry William Haskamp and
				  Colette Quinn Haskamp, was born in Saskatchewan, Canada. She was educated in
				  Europe, attended Swarthmore College, and the Babson Institute, and graduated
				  from Webber College in Florida. She married William Bowman Nickum on August 31,
				  1934 at the home of Eliza Ferry Leary. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LearyEF2</container><unittitle>Eliza Ferry Leary with Ihrma Haskamp Nickum (right)
					 and Mary Haskamp Kost (left)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 31, 1934</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Watters, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Ihrma Haskamp married William Bowman Nickum at Eliza Leary's
					 home on August 31, 1934; her aunt, Mary Haskamp Kost, was a member of the
					 wedding party.</p><p>Filed under Eliza Ferry Leary subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Niemeir, Mildred Jean Gilbreath (May 9, 1912 - July 29,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mildred Jean Gilbreath, a Seattle journalist and writer, was a
				  1928 graduate of Roosevelt High School in Seattle. She married Edward Arville
				  Niemeir in 1932. The couple spent ten years in Panama, and she wrote a history
				  of the country, <emph render="italic">The Panama Story</emph>, in 1968. In
				  1958, she and her husband sailed aboard the 40' cruiser <emph>Shield</emph> on
				  a a year-long, 20,000 mile journey that circumnavigated and bisected the United
				  States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NiemeirMJG1</container><unittitle>Mildred Niemeir</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dolph Zubick, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Niemeyer, Charles (May 11, 1838 - February 4,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Niemeyer was born in Machias, Maine. He married Isabella
				  Ream in 1858. The couple moved to Washington in the 1870s where he secured
				  title to land in the west central part of Snohomish County and established a
				  farm. Neimeyer and neighbors Horace Andrus and W. A. Clark cut down trees and
				  built a road so they could move their families, furniture and animals in
				  sleighs drawn by oxen to the valley. On October 4, 1888, Niemeyer granted a
				  right-of-way to the Northern Pacific Railway. The town of Machias was platted
				  and named by L. W. Getchell in 1890 after he and others bought 80 acres from
				  Neimeyer to begin the town. Machias at the turn of the century was a bustling
				  community with a railroad depot, stores, a school, a church and a post office
				  where a trailhead is now located. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NiemeyerC1</container><unittitle>Charles Niemeyer with wife Isabella</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. U. Roberts, Snohomish, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Niemeyer, Isabella Ream (November 3, 1838 - March 28,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isabella Malissa Ream was born in Ohio and married Charles
				  Niemeyer in 1858. The couple moved to Washington in the 1870s and began farming
				  in what is now Snohomish County. They had nine children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NiemeyerC1</container><unittitle>Charles Niemeyer with wife Isabella</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">O. U. Roberts, Snohomish, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Niemeyer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Niles, John Jacob (April 28, 1892 - March 1,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Jacob Niles was an American folksinger, folklorist, and
				  composer of solo and choral songs. He was attracted to folk songs while working
				  as a surveyor in the Appalachians. After he served in World War ,I he was
				  educated at the music conservatories in Cincinnati, Ohio, and Lyon, France and
				  at the Schola Cantorum of Paris. In 1921 in New York City, Niles became master
				  of ceremonies at the Silver Slipper nightclub before teaming up with Marion
				  Kerby, with whom he toured widely in the United States and Europe as a
				  folksinger. He made his own lutes and Appalachian dulcimers and specialized in
				  the songs of the Appalachian Mountain region. His ballad collections frequently
				  included material that he composed or arranged, as well as ballads transcribed
				  directly from oral sources. His published works include <emph render="italic">Songs My Mother Never Taught Me</emph> (1929; with Douglas
				  Moore), <emph render="italic">Songs of the Hill Folk</emph> (1934), 
				  <emph render="italic">The Shape Note Study Book</emph> (1950), and 
				  <emph render="italic">The Ballad Book of John Jacob Niles</emph> (1961). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NilesJJ1</container><unittitle>John Jacob Niles with dulcimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1945</unitdate></did><note><p>John Jacob Niles appeared in a lecture-concert at the
					 University of Washington April 13, 1945, sponsored by the Walker-Ames Fund.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nims, Luther Bingham (March 8, 1837 – December 25,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Luther Bingham Nims was an American politician in the state of
				  Washington. He served in the Washington House of Representatives from 1895 to
				  1897 and 1889 to 1890</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NimsLB1</container><unittitle>Luther Bingham Nims</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on front: Regard of L. B. Nims; written on verso: L. B.
					 Nims of Cosmopolis, Wash. Presented to Edmond S. Meany by W. M. Chandler,
					 Lewiston, Ida., March 1933.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nixon, Julie (July 5, 1948 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julie Nixon, an American author, is the younger daughter of
				  Richard Nixon, 37th President of the United States, and Pat Nixon, First Lady
				  of the United States. Born in Washington, D.C. while her father was a
				  Congressman, Julie and her elder sister, Patricia Nixon Cox, grew up in the
				  public eye. Her father was elected U.S. Senator from California when she was
				  two; Vice President of the United States when she was four. In 1968, she
				  married David Eisenhower, grandson of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NixonRM1</container><unittitle>Richard Nixon with wife Pat Nixon and daughters Tricia
					 and Julie at the Seattle World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 10, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard Nixon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nixon, Patricia "Tricia" (February 21, 1946 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patricia "Tricia" Nixon is the elder daughter of the 37th U.S.
				  President Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon, and sister to Julie Nixon
				  Eisenhower. In her father's public career, she performed a ceremonial role, in
				  contrast to her younger sister Julie Nixon Eisenhower's more political
				  involvement. Tricia accompanied him on many campaign stops and, after his
				  inauguration, on state trips around the world. She is married to Edward Finch
				  Cox and is the mother of Christopher Nixon Cox.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NixonRM1</container><unittitle>Richard Nixon with wife Pat Nixon and daughters Tricia
					 and Julie at the Seattle World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 10, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard Nixon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nixon, Richard Milhous (January 9, 1913 – April 22,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard Milhous Nixon was an American politician who served as
				  the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 until 1974, when he
				  resigned from office, the only U.S. president to do so. He had previously
				  served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and
				  prior to that as a U.S. Representative and also Senator from California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NixonRM1</container><unittitle>Richard Nixon with wife Pat Nixon and daughters Tricia
					 and Julie at the Seattle World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 10, 1962</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nixon, Thelma Catherine "Pat" (March 16, 1912 – June 22,
				  1993)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thelma Catherine "Pat" Nixon was an American educator and the
				  wife of Richard Nixon, the 37th President of the United States. During her more
				  than 30 years in public life, she served as both the Second (1953 to 1961) and
				  First Lady of the United States (1969 to 1974). As First Lady, Pat Nixon
				  promoted a number of charitable causes, including volunteerism. She oversaw the
				  collection of more than 600 pieces of historic art and furnishings for the
				  White House, an acquisition larger than that of any other administration. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NixonRM1</container><unittitle>Richard Nixon with wife Pat Nixon and daughters Tricia
					 and Julie at the Seattle World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 10, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard Nixon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Noble, Frank A. (March 10, 1868 - August 29,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank A. Noble, the son of Frederick Augustus Noble and Caroline
				  Downing Noble, was born in Michigan. The family moved to Seattle in the late
				  1880s. Frank graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 1896. He
				  married Effie White in 1900.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NobleFA1</container><unittitle>Frank A. Noble</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nobles, Orie Nelson (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Noland, Pleasant Calvin (September 29, 1830 - February
				  9, 1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Pleasant Calvin Noland was born in Holt County, Missouri. He
				  served in the Mexican War of 1848 for eighteen months and then traveled to
				  California in 1849. He mined for two years before returning to California via
				  Panama. In 1853, Noland went to Oregon with a company that became stranded for
				  42 days in the mountains on the Harney Lake trail; the company was finally
				  rescued by settlers. He eventually settled in Creswell, Lane County,
				  Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NolandPC1</container><unittitle>Pleasant Calvin Noland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nordhoff, Charles (August 31, 1830 – July 14,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Nordhoff was an American journalist and writer. He was
				  born in Erwitte, Germany (Prussia) in 1830, and emigrated to the United States
				  with his parents in 1835. He was educated in Cincinnati and apprenticed to a
				  printer in 1843. In 1844, Nordhoff went to Philadelphia where he worked for a
				  short time in a newspaper office. He then joined the United States Navy in
				  1845, serving three years. After his Navy service, he remained at sea from 1847
				  in the merchant service, and then on whaling and fishing ships until 1854. From
				  1853 to 1857, he worked in various newspaper offices, first in Philadelphia,
				  then in Indianapolis. He was employed by <emph render="italic">Harpers</emph>
				  from 1857 until 1861, when he went to work on the staff of the 
				  <emph render="italic">New York Evening Post</emph> and later contributed to the
				  <emph render="italic">New York Tribune.</emph> From 1871 to 1873 Nordhoff
				  traveled in California and visited Hawaii. He then became Washington
				  correspondent of the <emph render="italic">New York Herald</emph>, 1874-1890. 
				  <emph render="italic">The Valley of Cross Purposes</emph>, an extensive
				  biography by Carol Frost, PhD, was published in 2017. He was the father of
				  Walter Nordhoff, author of <emph render="italic">The Journey of the
				  Flame,</emph> penned under the name "Antonio de Fierro Blanco", and of Evelyn
				  Hunter Nordhoff, America's first female bookbinder and printmaker. He was the
				  grandfather of Charles Bernard Nordhoff, co-author of <emph render="italic">Mutiny on the Bounty</emph> . Nordhoff Street, in the San
				  Fernando Valley of Los Angeles, is named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NordhoffC1</container><unittitle>Charles Nordhoff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R. H. Furman, San Diego, California</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on front of photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nordstrom, Hilda Carlson (August 25, 1877 - May 27,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hilda Carlson was born in Sweden. In 1900, she married John W.
				  Nordstrom, founder of the shoe store in Seattle that became the Nordstrom
				  Department Store line.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NordstromJW3</container><unittitle>John Nordstrom and Hilda Carlson Nordstrom standing in
					 front of a house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John W. Nordstrom subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nordstrom, John Wilhelm (February 15, 1871 – October 11,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Nordstrom was a Swedish American businessman who was the
				  co-founder of the Nordstrom department store chain. He was born Johan Wilhelm
				  Nordström (later anglicizing it to "John") in the village of Alvik, near Luleå.
				  Nordstrom's father, a blacksmith, wainwright, and part-time farmer, died when
				  Nordstrom was eight. Three years later, Nordstrom's mother took him out of
				  school to work on the family farm. He emigrated to the United States at the age
				  of 16. Arriving in America with $5 to his name, he worked his way across the
				  continent taking jobs on railways and in mines, lumber camps and shipyards,
				  eventually arriving in Seattle, Washington in 1896. While working at a sawmill
				  he read a newspaper account of the discovery of gold in the Klondike and headed
				  to Alaska to make his fortune. Nordstrom invested in a claim on Gold Run, but
				  his right to the claim was challenged, and a lawsuit was filed. Nordstrom was
				  delighted when another party offered him $30,000 for the claim. He sold it,
				  split the money with his two partners, and returned with his share to the
				  warmer climate of Seattle. In Seattle, Nordstrom attended business school,
				  built two rental houses on Capitol Hill, and decided to join his friend, Carl
				  Wallin, in the shoe business. He and Wallin opened Wallin &amp; Nordstrom, a
				  shoe store, at Fourth Avenue and Pike Street in 1901. From that first shoe
				  store grew the Nordstrom retail empire. John Nordstrom retired in 1928 selling
				  his stake to his sons Everett Nordstrom and Elmer Nordstrom. His initials JWN
				  are used as the Nordstrom ticker symbol on the New York Stock Exchange.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NordstromJW1</container><unittitle>John Wilhelm Nordstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0125/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NordstromJW2</container><unittitle>John Wilhelm Nordstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NordstromJW3</container><unittitle>John Nordstrom and Hilda Carlson Nordstrom standing in
					 front of a house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Norris, George William (July 11, 1861 – September 2,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George William Norris was a politician from the state of
				  Nebraska in the Midwestern United States. He served five terms in the United
				  States House of Representatives as a Republican, from 1903 until 1913, and five
				  terms in the United States Senate, from 1913 until 1943, four terms as a
				  Republican and the final term as an independent. Norris was defeated for
				  reelection in 1942. Norris was a leader of progressive and liberal causes in
				  Congress. He is best known for his intense crusades against what he
				  characterized as "wrong and evil", his liberalism, his insurgency against party
				  leaders, his isolationist foreign policy, his support for labor unions, and
				  especially for creating the Tennessee Valley Authority. Norris was also the
				  prime Senate mover behind the Rural Electrification Act, which brought
				  electrical service to underserved and unserved rural areas across the United
				  States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NorrisGW1</container><unittitle>George William Norris</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1944?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Norton, Caroline Bachelor (1808- March 31,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline Bachelor was born in Farmington, Maine. She married
				  Zachariah C. Norton, a ship captain, in New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1833 and
				  for the first ten years of the marriage, lived with him aboard his ship. In
				  1849, Captain Norton began carrying passengers and freight between San
				  Francisco and Portland. The couple settled first in Portland and later on a
				  farm in Clackamas County. After Captain Norton's death, Caroline remained on
				  the farm for two years before moving back to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NortonC1</container><unittitle>Caroline Bachelor Norton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Norton, Zachariah C. (December 29, 1808 - February 13,
				  1879)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zachariah C. Norton was born in Farmington, Maine. When he was
				  fourteen years old, he was sent to sea by his father for the purpose of
				  learning navigation. He rapidly rose in the estimation of ship owners and was
				  given the command of a vessel when in his early twenties. In 1833 he married
				  Caroline Bachelor, and she traveled on board the ship with him for the next ten
				  years. During that time he was in the European and West India trade, and he was
				  able to invest in various vessels. In 1847 he built the brig 
				  <emph render="italic"> Sequin,</emph> and in her made several trips to the West
				  Indies and to South American ports. After hearing of the gold rush in
				  California, he sailed to San Francisco rather than returning to New York.
				  Norton left Buenos Aires on April 10, 1848 and sailed through the Golden Gate
				  142 days later. In November, he left San Francisco for Oregon with the
				  intention of working the Columbia River trade. The passage to the mouth of the
				  river took a week, but the trip up the river to Portland took 54 days. The
				  first mail that came to Oregon in United States postal sacks came on the first
				  trip of the <emph render="italic">Sequin,</emph> and Norton soon began carrying
				  mail, freight and passengers between California and Oregon. He abandoned
				  sea-faring to live in Portland, where he built one of the first frame store
				  buildings, sold merchandise, and then took up a land claim in Clackamas County
				  outside of Portland. He and his wife helped many of the immigrants who had
				  reached Portland destitute after the journey across the plains.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NortonZC1</container><unittitle>Zachariah C. Norton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Norval, John W. (June 5, 1840 - December 5,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John W. Norval was born in Fulton, Illinois and was educated at
				  Lombard College. At the age of twenty, he went to California and began teaching
				  school. He went to the mines of Eastern Oregon in 1861, and mined there and in
				  British Columbia and Idaho seven years. In 1868 Norval settled in Union County,
				  and engaged in farming and stock-raising. During the Bannock War, he enlisted
				  in a volunteer company and was elected captain. In 1878, he was appointed by
				  Governor Thayer as a major of the Third Brigade of the Oregon Militia. Norval
				  ran for the state legislature three times before being elected Joint Senator
				  for Union and Wallowa counties in 1888. He married Catherine J. Tuttle in
				  1867.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NorvalJW1</container><unittitle>John W. Norval</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Novikow, Elias Theodore (January 1, 1902 - August 28,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elias Theodore Novikow was born in Karaourgan Kars, Russia. He
				  taught at the University of Science and the Arts in Oklahoma before joing the
				  faculty of the University of Washington in 1947 as a professor of Russian
				  language.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpectorI2</container><unittitle>Ivar Spector with Margaret Marian Spector, Elias
					 Novikow and two unidentified women.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Spector, Dr. Spector and Elias Novikov
					 (sic)</p><p>Filed under Ivar Spector subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nowell, Frank Hamilton (February 19, 1864 – October 19,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Hamilton Nowell was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. By
				  age 21, he joined his father in Juneau, Alaska to work for the Nowell Gold
				  Mining Company. During his tenure in Alaska, he worked in various capacities as
				  a wholesale representative, accountant, agent, and manager. While vacationing
				  in Florida, he met Elizabeth Helen Davis; they married in 1894 and moved to
				  California where Nowell served as his father's West Coast agent. It was during
				  this time that he became interested in photography, a passion that increased
				  significantly when he returned to Alaska. He settled in Nome to work for the
				  Ames Mercantile Company. In 1900, he moved to Teller, Alaska, where he opened a
				  regional branch of Miner's Supply Company. Fascinated by the landscape and the
				  residents, he began to chronicle its people, culture and traditions. He opened
				  a studio in Nome, where he produced panoramic images of such famous cities as
				  Nome, Juneau, and Fairbanks, as well as lesser-known localities. He also
				  photographed railroads, steamships, canneries, and mining operations. While
				  living in Alaska, Nowell made frequent business visits to Seattle and worked on
				  a collaborative nine-volume photographic compilation entitled 
				  <emph render="italic">The Art Work of Seattle and Alaska.</emph>He moved to
				  Seattle where he became the official photographer for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
				  Exposition in 1909. His photographs were on display at the exposition and
				  featured in official pamphlets and souvenir books. His studio specialized in
				  commercial portraiture, but also provided other various services including
				  enlargements and lantern slides. Nowell continued working well into his 90s
				  before retiring. Many of Frank H. Nowell's photographs are in the University of
				  Washington Digital Collection and the Alaska State Library digital
				  archives.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NowellFH1</container><unittitle>Frank Hamilton Nowell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roger Dudley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Noyes, George Ira (September 26, 1986 - July 31,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Ira Noyes was the executive secretary of the Seattle Real
				  Estate Board in the 1920s and 1930s. He married Ruth Downing in 1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Landon with Harold Sparkman, James M. Sparkman,
					 George Noyes and James. W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1932</unitdate></did><note><p>In the foreground are papers bearing the certified signatures
					 on the initiative petition for the 40 mil tax limit bill. A version of this
					 photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on
					 Sunday, July 10, 1932, indicating that the papers were filed on Friday, July 7,
					 1932.</p><p>Filed under Daniel Landon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Noyes, Melissa Ann Longfellow (May 30, 1835 - March 16,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melissa Ann Longfellow, the daughter of Amasia B. Longfellow and
				  Patience Williamson Longfellow, was born in Maine. She married Charles Jackson
				  Noyes, a ship captain, in 1854. In the 1870s, they lived in Port Gamble,
				  Washington where Charles worked as a ship carpenter. They later moved to
				  Whidbey Island and Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NoyesMAL1</container><unittitle>Melissa Ann Longfellow Noyes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nugent, James (November 16, 1845 - July 7,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain James Nugent played an important role in shipping in
				  Puget Sound. He was born in Boston, Massachusetts in a district that was then
				  largely given to the building of clipper ships. His father, also named James,
				  was a contractor and builder. As a young man, Captain Nugent learned the
				  carpenter's trade, which he followed for eleven years. In 1867, he decided to
				  go to the Pacific Northwest. He first settled at Port Madison where he
				  purchased the sailing sloop<emph render="italic"> J. C. Caswell</emph> and
				  obtained a contract for carrying the mail from Olympia to Seattle. Later he
				  became owner of the steamer <emph render="italic">Success</emph>, which he
				  operated between Seattle and Port Blakely. He also owned the steamers 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle</emph> and <emph render="italic">Michigan</emph>
				  and became a familiar figure in connection with the shipping industry in the
				  northwest. In 1876, he married Emily Fish; they had one daughter. His home in
				  Port Blakely became known all over the world for his generosity. Nugent and his
				  wife made it a practice of entertaining skippers from all ports, keeping open
				  house and extending hospitality to hundreds. In 1891, the couple moved to
				  Seattle, where they erected a residence at the corner of Cherry Street and
				  Minor Avenue. The ballroom in the house was the only one in a Seattle private
				  residence at the time, and parties and gatherings were held weekly. Nugent had
				  great faith in Seattle and demonstrated it by investing heavily in property in
				  the city. In 1896 he retired from active service on the Sound in order to
				  manage his property interests. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NugentJ1</container><unittitle>Captain James Nugent</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nygreen, Glen Theodore "Ted" (August 11, 1918 - February
				  16, 2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Bellingham, WA, Glen Nygreen received his B.Sc., M.A.,
				  and Ph. D. degrees from the University of Washington. He worked at the
				  University of Washington in the 1940s and early 1950s as the Assistant Dean of
				  Men (1943), the Executive Officer of Student Affairs (1949) and the Director of
				  Student Affairs (1950). A life-long educator and volunteer who headed many
				  national organizations, he retired as Senior Vice President and Professor
				  emeritus of Lehman College, City University of New York. In addition to the UW,
				  he held earlier appointments with Kent State University, Hunter College, and
				  Columbia Teachers College. He served as President of the National Association
				  of Student Personnel Administrators, national President of the Sigma Alpha
				  Epsilon fraternity, and President of the Alpha Phi Omega co-ed service
				  organization. He was a former Chairman of many other service organizations,
				  including the World University Service, the Bronx Unit of the American Cancer
				  Society, the Bronx Chamber of Commerce, and the Boy Scouts. He was an active
				  Rotarian, and his work on behalf of the Rotary Foundation (International) was
				  recognized with Rotary's Certificate for Meritorious Service and the
				  Distinguished Service Award. He had a long affiliation with the YMCA, starting
				  as a student at the University of Washington, and a similarly long affiliation
				  with the United Way. In 1997, he was granted the honorary degree of Doctor of
				  Humane Letters (D.H.L.) by Lehman College. Among other honors he received are
				  the Lehman Leadership Award, the Susan A. Moskowitz Grand Award by the CUNY
				  Student Personnel Conference, and the R.A.I.N. Humanitarian Award. Nygreen
				  married Beverly Holiday in 1940; they were married for 63 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NygreenG1</container><unittitle>Glen Nygreen standing in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 13, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photo appears in the 1953<emph render="italic">
					 Tyee</emph>.</p></note><note><p>Missing July 2022</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NygreenG2</container><unittitle>Glen Nygreen standing in office, holding a
					 telephone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 15, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Paul Thomas, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Missing July 2022</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nylen, Andrew N. (November 8, 1863 - January 13,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew N. Nylen was born in Sweden and went to Nome, Alaska
				  Territory in 1904. He mined in the Nome Section until 1941 when he retired and
				  moved to Seattle. He served in the Alaska Territorial Legislature in 1925, 1927
				  and 1931 sessions. Nylen married Mabel Ranum in 1932. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NylenAN1</container><unittitle>Andrew N. Nylen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nylund, Ander Victor (January 12, 1854 - July 15,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ander Victor Nylund was born in Helsinki, Finland. He married
				  Britta Johanna Eriksdotter in 1889. They immigrated to America the same year
				  and settled in Seattle. In 1895, they moved to Lake Ozette in Clallam County
				  with their three children (Inga, Hulda and Annie), taking homestead tract near
				  the north end of the lake. Ander built a three room house and worked to clear
				  the land. To help support his family, he also worked at a mine at Port Blakely.
				  In 1904, he built a new, larger home for the family. Ander and Johanna had four
				  more children, including one who died at birth and another who lived only a few
				  months.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NylundAV1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Ander and Johanna Nylund and two of their
					 children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Puget Sound Gallery, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Two copies. Printed on front: Johanna and Ander Nylund. This
					 picture was taken in 1902 in Seattle, before they went to Lake Ozette. (The
					 baby held by Ander, died.) Mrs. Nylund holds Hulda.</p><p>Hulda was born in 1891 and would not have been a baby in 1902.
					 The Nylunds moved to Lake Ozette in 1895, so the baby was probably Annie
					 Elizabeth Nylund, born 1894. The Nylunds had an unnamed baby who was born in
					 1895 and died in 1896.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NylundAV1</container><unittitle>Photograph of house and barn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1925?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nylund, Britta Johanna (November 14, 1859 - February 1,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Britta Johanna Eriksdotter, the daughter of Erik Andersson and
				  Magdelena Hassinen, was born in Kourujarvi, Finland in 1859. She married Anders
				  Nylund in 1889, and the couple immigrated to Seattle the same year. In 1895,
				  they took up a small homestead at the north end of Lake Ozette in Clallam
				  County where they built a home and farmed. After Anders died in 1920, she sold
				  the timber and kept 40 acres. She grew hay and raised milk cows. She also
				  boarded the teacher, timber cruisers and miners at various times. School was
				  often held in the house. She remained in the home until 1932 when she married
				  Mauritz Evan Norby, a widower. The Norbys moved to Swan Bay, and the Nylund
				  home was left vacant except for occasional use by surveyors or timber cruisers.
				  All of the land is now within the Olympic National Forest. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NylundAV1</container><unittitle>Portrait of Ander and Johanna Nylund and two of their
					 children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Puget Sound Gallery, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Two copies. Printed on front: Johanna and Ander Nylund. This
					 picture was taken in 1902 in Seattle, before they went to Lake Ozette. (The
					 baby held by Ander, died.) Mrs. Nylund holds Hulda.</p><p>Hulda was born in 1891 and would not have been a baby in 1902.
					 The Nylunds moved to Lake Ozette in 1895, so the baby was probably Annie
					 Elizabeth Nylund, born 1894. The Nylunds had an unnamed baby who was born in
					 1895 and died in 1896.</p><p>Filed under Ander Victor Nylund subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Nyvall, David (January 19, 1863 – February 6,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Nyvall was born in Sweden and immigrated to Illinois in
				  1886 at age 23. His father was a leader of the Covenant Movement in Sweden, and
				  David became involved in the denomination in the States. Though his educational
				  background was pre-med, he accepted an offer from E. August Skogsbergh to teach
				  at his school in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 1888, he began teaching in the
				  Swedish department of the Chicago Theological Seminary, which at the time
				  provided the theological education for many Covenant pastors. Nyvall felt
				  strongly that the Covenant should have its own school. Acting on this
				  conviction, he resigned from the Chicago Theological Seminary and returned to
				  Skogsbergh's Minneapolis school, which the Covenant had recently accepted as
				  the denomination's school. Three years later, the school was moved to Chicago,
				  and North Park College was established. Nyvall served as president of North
				  Park and professor of New Testament in the Seminary until 1904. He then served
				  as the first president of Walden College in McPherson, Kansas. In 1907, he
				  returned to Sweden and the following year took up residence in Minneapolis
				  where he edited the early Covenant periodical <emph render="italic">Veckoblad</emph>. He also established the department of
				  Scandinavian Studies at the University of Washington and served as professor at
				  the UW from 1910 until 1912. In 1912, he returned to North Park as president of
				  the school, a position he held until 1923. After 1923, Nyvall continued as dean
				  of the Seminary and as a teacher until 1941.The main seminary building, Nyvall
				  Hall, bears his name, and the David Nyvall lecture series was inaugurated in
				  1951 in his memory.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">NyvallD1</container><unittitle>Dr. David Nyvall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>O</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oatman, Harrison Burdette (December 25, 1826 - May 19,
				  1883)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harrison B. Oatman was born in New York on February 25, 1826.
				  His father died when he was one year old. His mother moved the family first to
				  Ohio and then to Illinois where Oatman began farming. He married Lucena K. Ross
				  in 1847, and in 1852, the couple joined Harrison’s brother Harvey and his
				  family and crossed the plains. They arrived in the Rogue River Valley in the
				  fall of 1853, where the two brothers and their wives took up a claim of 640
				  acres under the Donation Land Act. The wagon, which had survived the journey of
				  more than 3,000 miles, was placed on the line dividing the respective claims
				  and served as a place of habitation until a log cabin could be erected. Oatman
				  remained in the Rogue River Valley farming, mining and merchandising. He was a
				  part owner of the mine of the “49” Mining Company in Southern Oregon and also
				  established the first store in Phoenix, Oregon. During the Civil War, Oatman
				  enlisted in the United States Army, serving in the First Regiment of Oregon
				  Infantry. The regiment was confined to the protection of the frontier and was
				  actively employed until mustered out on July 19, 1867; it was said to be the
				  last volunteer regiment discharged from service by the government. In October,
				  following his discharge from the army, Oatman and his family moved to Portland.
				  He started a grocery business and invested in real estate, eventually owning
				  acreage in and around Portland. He was one of the first subscribers to the
				  stock of the Metropolitan Savings Bank and owned mines in the Coeur d’Alene
				  area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OatmanHB1</container><unittitle>Harrison B. Oatman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oatman, Lucena Kinney Ross (August 24, 1831 - August 3,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucena Kinney Ross married Harrison B. Oatman on December 25,
				  1847. They had a farm in Illinois until 1852. when they crossed the plains to
				  Oregon in the company of Harrison's brother, Harvey. The families settled in
				  the Rogue River Valley until 1867, when they moved to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OatmanLKR1</container><unittitle>Lucena Kinney Oatman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ober, Caroline Haven (May 3, 1866 - June 2, 1929)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline Haven Ober, the daughter of Andrew Kimball Ober and
				  Sarah Hadlock Ober, was born in Beverly, Massachusetts. She attended Wheaton
				  Seminary and graduated from Massachusetts Normal School, Salem in 1884. She
				  taught at Wheaton Seminary from 1884 to 1886 and then in Palisade, Nevada,
				  Public Schools from 1886 to 1888. She was instructor in Modern Languages at
				  Bozeman Academy, Montana, from 1888 to 1889, and at Trinidad High School,
				  Colorado from 1894 to 1895. Ober also taught in Nebraska. She was instructor of
				  Spanish at San Diego High School, California, from 1896 to 1897. From 1897, she
				  was a professor of Romance Languages at the University of Washington and
				  founded the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Washington,
				  serving as the head of the department from 1897 until 1903. She retired in 1929
				  and was appointed professor emeritus, one of the first at the University. She
				  was Regent and Vice-Director of Government Normal Schools in Argentina from
				  1889 to 1893. She was a member of American Association of Teachers of Spanish,
				  Washington Education Association, National Education Association, China Club of
				  Seattle, Association of University Instructors, Modern Language Association,
				  Faculty Women's Club, American Philological Association, and the Alumnae
				  Association of Wheaton College. Ober investigated educational conditions in
				  China and Japan, and was a charter member and vice-president of the Association
				  for the Promotion of Education of the People of India. The Caroline Haven Ober
				  papers are preserved at University of Washington Libraries, Special
				  Collections. Her brother was Frederick Albion Ober.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OberCH1</container><unittitle>Caroline Haven Ober</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ober, Frederick Albion (February 13, 1849 - May 31,
				  1913) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Albion Ober was an American naturalist and writer. The
				  son of Andrew Kimball Ober and Sarah Hadlock Ober, he was born in Beverly,
				  Massachusetts. He showed an early fondness for natural history, collecting
				  nearly all the birds of New England and noting their habits. From 1862 to 1866,
				  he worked as shoemaker before attending Massachusetts Agricultural College, Due
				  to a lack of funds he was forced to leave the college and returned to work as a
				  shoemaker and in a drugstore. In 1872, he abandoned his business pursuits to
				  hunt in Florida. In 1874 he made a second trip, successfully explored Lake
				  Okeechobee, and published in periodicals a description of the lake and its
				  shores. From 1876 to 1878 he made ornithological surveys to the Lesser Antilles
				  where he discovered 22 bird taxa new to science. Two of them, the Lesser
				  Antillean flycatcher and the Montserrat oriole, were named in his honor by his
				  colleague George Newbold Lawrence. In 1881, he journeyed through Mexico, and
				  during that and two subsequent trips gathered the material for several books.
				  On his return from various explorations he prepared accounts of his travels at
				  the request of scientific societies, and later a series of popular lectures,
				  illustrated with photographic views, projected by the magic lantern. Ober was
				  elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1893 and was among the
				  founders of the Explorers Club in 1904. During his writing career, he wrote
				  more than 40 books, mostly travel books, but also bird books and biographies.
				  He was the brother of Caroline Haven Ober.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OberFA1</container><unittitle>Frederick Albion Ober</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OberFA2</container><unittitle>Frederick Albion Ober, standing with hands in his
					 pockets</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Brien, Ellen C. Horn (January 15, 1854 - December 20,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellen C. Horn, the daughter of Anthony Horn and Mary Holloran
				  Horn, was born in Ohio and came to Washington with her parents. She married
				  Terrence O'Brien in 1872; they had one daughter, Nora. The family initially
				  settled in White River, Washington and later moved to Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'BrienECH1</container><unittitle>Ellen O'Brien</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1908?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hamilton, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>O'Brien, Fred James (September 18, 1895 - September 8,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fred James O’Brien was born in Indianapolis. He saw action as an
				  Army lieutenant in France during World War I. After the war, he worked as a
				  salesman for a plumbing supply house. O’Brien moved to Seattle in 1926 and
				  worked for a real-estate firm until he became state manager of the Home Owners’
				  Loan Corporation. He resigned to join Henry Broderick, Inc. as vice president.
				  He was a former president of the Washington Association of Realtors, which
				  honored him with the Meritorious Service Award for continuing service in 1959.
				  He was president of the Seattle Real Estate Board and acted frequently as a
				  spokesman for the industry, especially in tax matters. For 15 year, he was
				  secretary-treasurer of the 40-Mill Tax Committee and was described as a fighter
				  for the rights of property owners.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Benjamin Joseph Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Brien, John Lawrence (November 22, 1911-April 22,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lawrence O'Brien was a Democratic state representative from
				  Seattle who once held the record as the nation's longest-serving legislator. He
				  was appointed to the state House in 1939 on the death of the incumbent and,
				  except for a hiatus in 1947-49, served until he lost his final election
				  campaign in 1992, when redistricting matched him in a race against another
				  sitting House member. O'Brien was speaker of the House from 1955 to 1963,
				  longer than anyone else in state history, and speaker pro tempore for 16 years
				  after that. An office building on the state Capitol campus is named for
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonHM3</container><unittitle>Henry Jackson with John L. O'Brien</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Henry M. Jackson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Brien, Robert Skuise (September 14, 1918 - June 1,
				  2006)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert S. O’Brien was born in Seattle, Washington and grew up
				  not far from the State Capitol. He served as treasurer in Grant County from
				  1951 until 1964, when he became state treasurer, a job he held until 1989. He
				  worked to modernize the office, helping shift the state's banking agency from
				  paper to electronic management of many money transactions, and made technical
				  changes to cash flow management. During his time in office, he oversaw the
				  elimination of millions of pages of paperwork. He also played a role in
				  providing short-term loans to local governments hit by the Mount St. Helens
				  eruption in 1980. O’Brien oversaw the formation of numerous programs, including
				  the Local Government Investment Pool. In 1975, the office was tasked with
				  carrying out the Viet Nam Veterans’ Bonus Act, which granted bonuses to Vietnam
				  War Veterans who were Washington residents and had earned a Vietnam Service
				  Medal or an Armed Services Expeditionary Medal. The State Treasurer’s Office
				  processed more than 80,000 applicants and granted bonuses to more than 70,000
				  Vietnam veterans and their families. O'Brien started the Western Conference of
				  State Treasurers, which preceded formation of the National Association of State
				  Treasurers. He was president of the Washington State Association of Elected
				  County Officials, president of the Western State Treasurers Conference, and
				  president of the National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and
				  Treasurers. He married Kathryn Arvan in 1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'BrienRS1</container><unittitle>Robert S. O’Brien</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Brien, Terrence (April 2, 1849 - July 8,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Terrence O'Brien was born in Ireland and came to Seattle in
				  1867. He originally settled in White River, Washington where he had a farm and
				  timber lands, and was one of the first to ship a load of lumber to Seattle. He
				  later moved to Seattle and was the chief jailor of the city in 1913-1914.
				  O'Brien married Ellen C. Horn in 1872. O'Brien, Washington, a former community
				  located north of Kent near the Green River Natural Resources Area, was named
				  for him, the original owner of the town site.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'BrienT1</container><unittitle>Terrence O'Brien</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Nordlund Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Connell, Jerry J. (June 14, 1909-January 16, 1956) -
				  See Florence Bean James Collection PH1208</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1950</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>A native of Butte, Montana, Jerry O’Connell graduated from
				  Carroll College in Helena and attended Columbus School of Law at Catholic
				  University of America and Georgetown University. Elected to the Montana House
				  of Representatives in 1930, he served from 1931 to 1934 and was one of the
				  youngest state legislators in Montana's history. He served on the state Public
				  Service Commission from 1934 to 1936. In 1936, he was elected to the United
				  States House of Representatives and served one term. He was an unsuccessful
				  candidate for reelection in 1938 and for election to Congress in 1940. In 1939,
				  he was appointed head trustee of the pro-conservation Robert Marshall
				  Wilderness Fund, which worked to improve political coordination between
				  organized labor, farm advocacy organizations, and advocates for the unemployed.
				  In the 1940s, he was active in the state of Washington as a leader of the
				  Democratic and Progressive parties and was a backer of Henry A. Wallace in the
				  1948 presidential election. He served as executive secretary of the Washington
				  State Democratic Central Committee, for the Roosevelt Democrats in 1947, and
				  for the Washington State Progressive Party in 1948 and 1949. He was also an
				  instructor at the Seattle Labor School from 1946 to 1949. O'Connell's political
				  leanings made him a target of the House Un-American Activities Committee
				  (HUAC). He appeared before HUAC, which questioned him about possible communist
				  ties, but during testimony, he successfully parried questions about whether he
				  was actually a communist. O'Connell created the appearance of being victimized
				  by overzealous committee members, and no action was taken after the hearing. In
				  1950, O'Connell returned to Montana from Washington State. He was admitted to
				  the bar and established a practice in Great Falls, Montana. He built a
				  reputation as a capable criminal defense attorney and practiced until his
				  sudden death from a heart attack in 1956.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Day, Colonel Ray Milton (September 8, 1893 - April 11,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Col. Ray Milton O’Day was a survivor of the Bataan Death March
				  and national commander of the Ex-Prisoners of War. He was born in Kansas City
				  and graduated from Washington State University in 1915. He served during World
				  War I and was stationed in Hawaii from 1922 to 1928. He was the commander of
				  W.S.U.’s R.O.T.C. program in 1929. He was the senior advisor to the Philippine
				  Army Division when he was captured in 1942 when Bataan fell, and was among the
				  first group of soldiers to travel on the death march to Camp O’Donnell in
				  Central Luzon. He was also imprisoned in Formosa and Manchuria, spending over
				  40 months in prisoner of war camps. In 1945 and 1946, he was a transportation
				  officer at Seattle’s Port of Embarkation, and in 1947 was named head of the
				  University of Arkansas’s R.O.T.C. program. He became head of the University of
				  Washington’s R.O.T.C. program in 1951 and retired in 1953. He was the national
				  honorary commander of the American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor and
				  received the Legion of Merit for the defense of the Philippines. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'DayRM1</container><unittitle> Ray Milton O'Day, seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the 1953 <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'DayRM2</container><unittitle>Ray Milton O'Day, seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate></did><note><p>The same photo as above, not cropped.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Dea, Edward John (November 23, 1856 – December 25,
				  1932) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward John O’Dea was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic
				  Church who served as Bishop of Seattle from 1896 until his death in 1932. O’Dea
				  was born in Boston. His parents were Irish immigrants, and his father traveled
				  westward during the California Gold Rush in 1849. The family later settled in
				  Portland, Oregon. He attended St. Ignatius College in San Francisco, California
				  and graduated from St. Michael's College in Portland in 1876. He continued his
				  studies at the Grand Seminary of Montreal in Canada and was ordained to the
				  priesthood in the Diocese of Oregon City in 1876. Following his return to
				  Portland, he served as a curate at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.
				  He was named the third bishop of the Diocese of Nesqually in 1896. During his
				  time as bishop, O'Dea moved the episcopal see of the diocese from Vancouver,
				  Washington to Seattle, and the diocese was renamed the Diocese of Seattle. He
				  was also responsible for the construction of the present-day St. James
				  Cathedral, which opened in 1907. He guided the diocese through World War I and
				  the anti-Catholic sentiment engendered by Initiative 49, a Ku Klux
				  Klan-sponsored initiative to make parochial schools illegal. His final
				  accomplishment was the establishment of St. Edward Seminary in Kenmore in
				  1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'DeaEJ1</container><unittitle>Edward John O’Dea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'DeaEJ2</container><unittitle>Edward John O’Dea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929? </unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'DeaEJ3</container><unittitle>Bishop Edward John O’Dea with a group of priests at
					 the laying of the cornerstone of Providence Hospital in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 24, 1911</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Farrell, James Robert (September 22, 1873 - December
				  25, 1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Robert O’Farrell was born and died in Orting. His parents,
				  Robert and Mary O’Farrell, were pioneers in the area, taking up a 120 acre
				  homestead in the Puyallup Valley in 1870. James was the youngest of their four
				  sons. He married Lena Bruce in 1898, and they set up housekeeping in Orting.
				  For many years, he was active in community and political affairs. He served at
				  various times as mayor, councilman, post master, and school director of Orting,
				  and from 1916 to 1922 was a county commissioner. He was the publisher and
				  editor of the <emph render="italic">Orting Oracle.</emph> O'Farrell worked for
				  the Caterpillar Tractor Company from 1924 to 1940, as manager of the Bureau of
				  Credit and Collections, and as assistant secretary for the Caterpillar Military
				  Engine Company. During World War II, he served with the War Production Board in
				  Washington D. C. After the war, he returned to Orting to become the manager of
				  the Orting Funeral Home, which he had owned for over fifty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O’FarrellJR1</container><unittitle>James Robert O’Farrell </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Jackson Studio, Tacoma</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on verso: Grand Chief Templar, I. O. G. T., Orting,
					 Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogawa, Elmer Sakaye (November 9, 1905 - July 1,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Photographer and civic leader Elmer Ogawa was born in Seattle,
				  Washington to Japanese and German-Irish parents. Ogawa attended Queen Anne High
				  School and graduated from the University of Washington in 1928. He enlisted in
				  the United States Army in 1942. After his military service, Ogawa worked as a
				  freelance photographer and journalist. He primarily worked as a photographer in
				  Seattle's International District but also worked as the Northwest
				  columnist-photographer for the <emph render="italic">Pacific Citizen</emph>, a
				  nationally circulating publication of the Japanese American Citizens League. In
				  addition to his professional life, Elmer Ogawa was an active community member.
				  He was a member of the Seattle chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League
				  from 1945 to 1970 and the Nisei Veterans Committee from 1949 to 1969. Ogawa
				  served as a board member and photographer for the Jackson Street Community
				  Council from 1952 to 1966. The Jackson Street Community Council was Seattle's
				  first neighborhood advocacy group, founded in 1946 by a coalition of African
				  American and Asian American community members. When he wasn’t on assignment
				  shooting photographs, he worked as a pipe fitter and boiler maker in Seattle’s
				  industrial yards. Many of Ogawa’s photographs document local Seattle history
				  and social scenes during the mid-twentieth century. His photographs and papers
				  are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaES1</container><unittitle>Graduation portrait of Elmer Ogawa in cap and
					 gown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ochi Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaES2</container><unittitle>Elmer Ogawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1923</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hartsook, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed: With best wishes, Elmer Ogawa.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaES3</container><unittitle>Elmer, Herbert and Ethel Ogawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Toyo Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogawa, Ethel F. (January 12, 1913 - December 21,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Ogawa, the daughter of Sohei and Susan Fox Ogawa,
				  graduated from Broadway High School and the University of Washington where she
				  was a member of the P. E. Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaES3</container><unittitle>Elmer, Herbert and Ethel Ogawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Toyo Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Elmer Ogawa subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogawa, Herbert Kenge (Kenzi) (November 1, 1909 -
				  December 19, 1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Ogawa, the son of Sohei and Susan Fox Ogawa, graduated
				  the University of Washington where he was a member of the Rifle Squad. He
				  served in World War II; after the war, he moved to Dallas, Texas where he
				  worked in sales and advertising.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaES3</container><unittitle>Elmer, Herbert and Ethel Ogawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1915?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Toyo Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Elmer Ogawa subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogawa, Sohei (Sehai) Solya (1873 - July 4, 1918
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sohei Ogawa was born in Japan and came to the United States in
				  1898. He owned and operated three Japanese art and curio stores in Seattle and
				  Spokane. He married Susie E. Fox in 1905; the couple had three children, Elmer,
				  Herbert and Ethel.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgawaS1</container><unittitle>Sohei Ogawa</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogden, Peter Skene (February 12, 1790 – September 27
				  1854)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Skene Ogden was a fur trader and a Canadian explorer of
				  what is now British Columbia and the American West. During his many
				  expeditions, he explored parts of Oregon, Washington, Nevada, California, Utah,
				  Idaho and Wyoming. Despite early confrontations with the Hudson's Bay Company
				  (HBC) during his time with the North West Company, he later became a senior
				  official in the operations of the HBC's Columbia Department, serving as manager
				  of Fort Simpson and similar posts. Between 1824 and 1830, Ogden led a series of
				  expeditions to explore and trap in the Snake River country and to expand HBC's
				  influence along the Snake River. Ogden's route following the Humboldt River
				  later became part of the California Trail. In 1830, Ogden was sent north to
				  establish a new HBC post named Fort Simpson near the mouth of the Nass River in
				  British Columbia. He also managed an outpost on the south coast of Alaska. In
				  1834 he was promoted to Chief Factor, HBC's highest field rank. He administered
				  Fort Vancouver in the late 1840s, fighting against American fur competition and
				  successfully negotiated with local native tribes. He wrote a memoir entitled 
				  <emph render="italic">Traits of American Indian Life and Character. By a Fur
				  Trader</emph>. The book was published posthumously in 1855. Ogden, Utah is
				  named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgdenPS1</container><unittitle>Peter Skene Ogden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ogilvie, William (April 7, 1846 – November 13,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Ogilvie was a Canadian Dominion land surveyor, explorer
				  and Commissioner of the Yukon Territory. He was born on a farm in Gloucester
				  Township, Canada West in an area now known as Glen Ogilvie to James Ogilvie and
				  Margaret Holliday Ogilvie. Ogilvie articled as a surveyor with Robert Sparks,
				  qualifying to practice as a Provincial Land Surveyor in 1869. He married
				  Sparks' daughter Mary, in 1872. He worked locally as a land surveyor, qualified
				  as a Dominion Land Surveyor in 1872 and was first hired by the Dominion
				  government in 1875. He was responsible for numerous surveys from the 1870s to
				  the 1890s, mainly in the Prairie Provinces. From 1887 to 1889, he was involved
				  in George Mercer Dawson's exploration and survey expedition in what later
				  became the Yukon Territory. He surveyed the Chilkoot Pass and the Yukon and
				  Porcupine Rivers. Ogilvie established the location of the boundary between the
				  Yukon and Alaska on the 141st meridian west. During the Klondike Gold Rush, he
				  surveyed the town site of Dawson City and was responsible for settling many
				  disputes between miners. He became the Yukon's second Commissioner in 1898 at
				  the height of the gold rush and resigned because of ill-health in 1901. He was
				  the author of <emph render="italic">Early Days on the Yukon.</emph> The Ogilvie
				  Mountains, Ogilvie River and Ogilvie Aerodrome in the Northern Yukon Territory
				  along with Ogilvie Valley in the Southern Yukon Territory are named after
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OgilvieW1</container><unittitle> William Ogilvie seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1898 and 1901</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Eric A. Hegg</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oliver, Simeon (Nutchuk) (July 23, 1902 - June 24,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simeon Oliver was born in Chignik on the Alaskan Peninsula to
				  James Oliver, a Norwegian fisherman and trapper, and his Eskimo wife, Kueuit.
				  He was given the Eskimo name of Nutchuk (Little Seal). His mother died when he
				  was two, and he was raised in the Methodist Missionary School in Unalaska.
				  Inspired by Dr. Albert Newall, a medical missionary, and Clara Goodwin Goss, a
				  music teacher, he worked on fishing boats, at a whaling station, and with the
				  Alaska Sulphur Mining Company to earn the money to attend school. He took
				  pre-medicine classes at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois, won a
				  music scholarship and attended the Chicago Musical College before he was hired
				  by Columbia Broadcasting as a staff pianist. He returned to Alaska as an
				  assistant on an anthropological expedition and began to make recordings of the
				  stories and music of the Eskimos. He lectured on Eskimo culture and wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Son of the Smoky Sea</emph>, an autobiography. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OliverS1</container><unittitle> Simeon Oliver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oliver, William Forest (August 8, 1859 - August 24,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Forest Oliver was born in Bloomington, Iowa and
				  graduated from the University of Illinois. He was one of the first physicians
				  in Arlington, Washington, arriving in the 1880s. Oliver was one of the founders
				  of the Stillaguamish Valley Association of Washington Pioneers and served as
				  its first president. He married Lillian Best in 1900.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OliverWF1</container><unittitle>William Forest Oliver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Olmstead, Hannah Jane (January 15, 1834 - March 18,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hannah Jane Olmstead, the daughter of Lewis and Eliza Keeler,
				  was born in South Salem, New York. In 1851 she married Daniel H. Olmstead, of
				  Port Huron. Soon after their marriage, he went to the California gold fields.
				  He expected to make his fortune in a few months; however, his company, the
				  Empire Flour Mills, was destroyed by the fire which devastated Sacramento in
				  1853. He worked with a dray in San Francisco two years, then for a short time
				  in Crescent City, and soon in Portland where he found employment sailing a
				  schooner. By 1859, he was able to return east and bring Hannah to the home he
				  had made in the Cascades. In 1864, the Olmsteads moved to Eastern Washington
				  and purchased a farm near the Oregon line. After twelve years of hard labor,
				  her husband died. Hannah was left with her four children and only an
				  unproductive farm. She undertook the management of the farm and was rewarded
				  with a large crop of oats and hay and with increased stock. She operated the
				  farm until 1880 when she moved to Walla Walla. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlmsteadHJ1</container><unittitle>Hannah Jane Olmstead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Olmstead, Roy (September 18, 1886 – April 30, 1966)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roy Olmstead was one of the most successful and best-known
				  bootleggers in the Pacific Northwest region during American Prohibition. A
				  former lieutenant in the Seattle Police Department, he began his bootlegging
				  operation while still on the force. Following his arrest for that crime, he
				  lost his job in law enforcement and turned to importing and distributing
				  alcohol from Canada as a full-time occupation. Eventually wiretaps of his
				  phones provided sufficient evidence for his arrest and prosecution, despite an
				  appeal that reached the Supreme Court regarding the legality of the wiretap.
				  While in prison, Olmstead became a Christian Science practitioner, later
				  working with prison inmates in the Puget Sound area on an anti-alcoholism
				  agenda. He was an active community member for his remaining years, teaching
				  Sunday school and visiting prisoners in the King County Jail every Monday
				  morning. In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt granted him a full
				  presidential pardon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlmsteadR1</container><unittitle>Roy Olmstead in police uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlmsteadR2</container><unittitle>Roy Olmstead</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Loughlin, James (April 9, 1844 - March 13,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James O’Loughlin was born in County Clare, Ireland; when he was
				  three, his parents immigrated to America, settling in Lyons, New York and later
				  Michigan. As a boy, James learned the tinsmith’s trade. After the completion of
				  his apprenticeship, he clerked in a hardware store for nine years. In 1870 he
				  moved to Yankton, Dakota and the following year he set forth with his family to
				  cross the continent to Washington State. O'Loughlin established a business in
				  La Conner and worked as a tinsmith until 1877. He then purchased one hundred
				  and sixty-four acres of land near the town, where he devoted himself to
				  farming. He was elected sheriff and assessor of Whatcom County in the fall of
				  1880and served three terms. In 1885 he was appointed inspector of customs at La
				  Conner. O’Loughlin married Lucy Adele Hough at Lapeer, Michigan on November 28,
				  1867; the couple had ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O’LoughlinJ1</container><unittitle>James O’Loughlin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Olson, Erick (January 7, 1839 -
				  February 20, 1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erick Olson, the son of Olaf Warberg and Margta Eriksdotter, was
				  born in Sweden and came to the United States in the 1880s. He had a dairy in
				  the Happy Valley area near Redmond, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BossardJ1</container><unittitle>John Bossard with group including Erick Olson and
					 Louis Hilliger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Bossard subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Olson, Gunner Theodore (December 21, 1884 - November 1,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gunner Theodore Olson, the son of Erick and Oliva Nilsdotter
				  Olson, was born in Sweden and came to the United States in 1889. He attended
				  the Union Hill School in what is now Redmond, Washington. Olson worked as a
				  logger and later had a farm in the Happy Valley area near Redmond. He married
				  Anna Margarita Isakson in 1912.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlsonGT1</container><unittitle>Gunner Olson with Ada Trimble and group of school
					 children at the Union Hill School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1900</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Olund, Bror</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlundB1</container><unittitle>Bror Olund in profile, seated in rocking
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Neil, Mary A. (April 21, 1844 - June 30,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary A. O’Neil, the daughter of James O’Neil and Elizabeth Burke
				  O’Neil, was born in Ireland. After her father’s death in 1848, she and her
				  mother immigrated to the United States and settled in Mineral Point, Wisconsin.
				  In 1868, she arrived in Olympia to begin teaching; she was one of the first
				  teachers in the common schools in Olympia. Her teacher’s register is in the
				  collection of the Thurston County Pioneer Association. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O’NeilMA1</container><unittitle>Mary A. O’Neil</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Miss Mary A. O'Neal (sic) stopping at Mrs.
					 Horton's on Plum and Third, Olympia.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>O'Neill, James (November 15, 1847 – August 10,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James O'Neill was an Irish-American theatre actor and the father
				  of the American playwright Eugene O'Neill. As early as 1875, O'Neill played the
				  title role in a stage adaptation of Dumas' <emph render="italic">The Count of
				  Monte Cristo.</emph>The play remained a popular favorite, and he went on to
				  play this role over 6000 times. According to his son, Eugene, the enormous
				  success of Monte Cristo kept his father from doing other roles. O'Neill's
				  celebrity and identification with Monte Cristo led Adolph Zukor to engage
				  O'Neill in 1912 to appear in a feature film version of the play as the first
				  production of his Famous Players Film Company. By that time O'Neill had been
				  continuously playing the part for nearly 40 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">O'NeillJ1</container><unittitle>James O'Neill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 1906</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: O'Neill as "The Count of Monte Cristo" at
					 the Grand. Famous stage star.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oppenheimer, Gerald Julius (August 5, 1922 – August 23,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gerald J. Oppenheimer, an American librarian and scholar, was
				  born Julius Oppenheimer in Frankfurt am Main, Germany on August 5, 1922. He
				  immigrated to the United States with his parents, Jacob and Bella (Spier)
				  Oppenheimer, in 1940 via the Soviet Union, Mongolia, Korea, and Japan. He
				  attended Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington for two years, after which
				  the family settled in Seattle, where Oppenheimer attended college. He served in
				  the U.S. Army from 1943-1944 and in the U.S. Coast Guard Voluntary Port
				  Security Force in 1945. He earned his bachelor's and master's degrees from the
				  University of Washington in 1946 and 1947, respectively, and attended graduate
				  school at Harvard University from 1947 to 1952. After earning a master's degree
				  in library science from Columbia University in 1953, Oppenheimer worked as a
				  librarian at the Seattle Public Library, as head of the Fisheries/Oceanography
				  Library at the University of Washington, and as a manager of information
				  services at Boeing Scientific Research Laboratories. In 1963, he became the
				  director of the Health Sciences Library, a position he held until his
				  retirement in 1987. Under his tenure, in 1968 the Health Sciences Library
				  became only the second regional medical library in the country. He was also the
				  founding president of the Association of Academic Health Sciences Library
				  Directors. Throughout his career, Oppenheimer held multiple offices in the
				  Medical Library Association, the National Library of Medicine, the National
				  Cancer Institute, the Special Libraries Association, and the University of
				  Washington. After retirement, Oppenheimer served as the vice president,
				  secretary, and archivist of the Puget Sound Association of Phi Beta Kappa and
				  the executive secretary of Phi Beta Kappa's Alpha of Washington Chapter at the
				  University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OppenheimerGJ1</container><unittitle>Gerald Julius Oppenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Oppenheimer, Julius Robert (April 22, 1904 – February
				  18, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Julius Robert Oppenheimer was an American theoretical physicist
				  and professor of physics at the University of California, Berkeley. Oppenheimer
				  was the wartime head of the Los Alamos Laboratory and is among those who are
				  credited with being the "father of the atomic bomb" for their role in the
				  Manhattan Project, the World War II undertaking that developed the first
				  nuclear weapons used in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. After
				  the war ended, Oppenheimer became chairman of the influential General Advisory
				  Committee of the newly created United States Atomic Energy Commission. He used
				  that position to lobby for international control of nuclear power to avert
				  nuclear proliferation and a nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union. After
				  provoking the ire of many politicians with his outspoken opinions during the
				  Second Red Scare, he suffered the revocation of his security clearance in a
				  much-publicized hearing in 1954 and was effectively stripped of his direct
				  political influence. Oppenheimer's achievements in physics included the
				  Born-Oppenheimer approximation for molecular wave functions, work on the theory
				  of electrons and positrons, the Oppenheimer-Phillips process in nuclear fusion,
				  and the first prediction of quantum tunneling. With his students he also made
				  important contributions to the modern theory of neutron stars and black holes,
				  as well as to quantum mechanics, quantum field theory, and the interactions of
				  cosmic rays. As a teacher and promoter of science, he is remembered as a
				  founding father of the American school of theoretical physics that gained world
				  prominence in the 1930s. After World War II, he became director of the
				  Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OppenheimerJR1</container><unittitle>Julius Robert Oppenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1965</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Information Services, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Oppenheimer was on the University of Washington campus for the
					 fall meeting of the National Academy of Sciences on October 11, 1965.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Orlob, Helen Virgina (October 28, 1908 - February 12,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Virginia Seaburg, the daughter of Edward A. and Nellie
				  (Rollins) Seaburg, was born in Seattle. After the death of her parents in 1913,
				  Helen and her brother were adopted by William and Lena (Rollins) Brownell.
				  Helen graduated from the University of Washington and taught English and
				  journalism. She wrote non-fiction books for young readers, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Mountain Rescues</emph> and <emph render="italic">Daring
				  Young Men in the Flying Machines.</emph>She married Glenn Orlob, a Boeing
				  engineer, in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OrlobHV1</container><unittitle>Helen Virginia Orlob</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Que Chin, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Best wishes to Mary Anne Gordon and The
					 Writing Shop.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ornes, Susan Lord - see Susan Lord Currier</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborn, Benjamin A. (October 31, 1839 - September 2,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin A. Osborn was a machinist in Seattle. His son,
				  Frederick Arthur Osborn (March 3, 1871 - December 26, 1942), taught physics at
				  the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornBA1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Osborn with Loren "Lote" Hastings and Dr.
					 Harry Doane, seated on bales of hay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1876?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. F. Dollarhide, Seattle, W. T.</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Ph Coll 334.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborn, Edward Thomas (October 4, 1865 - April 4,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Liverpool, England, Edward Thomas Osborn received his
				  formal education in England and was elected to the Royal Institute of British
				  Architects in 1892. He worked as an architect in England and China and taught
				  school in the Philippines become coming to Canada and the United States. He
				  joined the San Francisco chapter of the American Institute of Architects in
				  1912 and worked there for several years before moving to Seattle. By 1918, he
				  was working as an assistant for B. Marcus Priteca in Seattle and was associated
				  with the firm of Bebb &amp; Gould. He opened his own practice in 1920 and
				  worked actively in the Pacific Northwest during the 1920s and 1930s.. Known
				  projects include Trinity Episcopal Church, Everett (1921); the Charlesgate
				  Apartments (1922), the Lynnwood Apartments (1922-23), the Rowe Apartments
				  ©.1924) and the Commodore Apartments (1927) in Seattle. In the late 1930s, he
				  returned to England where he offered his services for the war effort. By 1939,
				  he was in Cambridge where he was working as an architect and draftsman. The
				  University of Washington holds several of his drawings in Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornET1</container><unittitle>Edward Thomas Osborn in front of large column, holding
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornET2</container><unittitle>Edward Thomas Osborn and unidentified man in front of
					 large column</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborn, Frederick Arthur (March 3, 1871 - December 26,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Arthur Osborn, the son of Benjamin A. Osborn, was born
				  in Tecumseh, Michigan and received his B. A. and Ph.D. from the University of
				  Michigan. Osborn came to the University of Washington as a professor of physics
				  in 1902, having taught at Olivet College in Olivet, Michigan for six years.
				  During the years that followed, he was only absent from the UW for a three
				  month period in the fall of 1918 when he served as the educational director of
				  the Student Army Training Corps. From 1902 until 1932 he was the head of the UW
				  physics department. He was a member of the American Physical Society, the
				  American Association of University Professors, the Illuminating Engineering
				  Society, the General Association of Physics and Mathematics Teachers, and the
				  Acoustical Society of America. In addition to writing several laboratory
				  manuals for college physics, he was the author of <emph render="italic">Physics
				  for the Home</emph>. He conducted a noise study of Seattle streets in 1938 and
				  was the official advisor on acoustics and lighting of the University buildings
				  for almost thirty years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornFA1</container><unittitle>Frederick Arthur Osborn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Prof. Frederick A. Osborne (sic).</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborn, Ruth (April 8, 1893 - December 14,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Possibly Ruth Osborn, the daughter of Theodore Osborn and Ida
				  Owen Osborn. Her father was an evangelist, and she went on stage with him when
				  she was four years old. She came to Seattle in 1913, where she played the
				  standard and Irish harp and gave lessons. She offered her services at churches,
				  schools and social clubs and gave so generously of her time that she became the
				  first woman to be given an honorary life membership by the Elks. She became
				  known as “the most adopted girl in American” because so many organizations
				  honored her with memberships. She toured the Orpheum Vaudeville and Pantages
				  Circuits for twenty years and was named the good will ambassador of Washington
				  State by Governor Clarence D. Martin. She married Gerard T. Mogan in 1913 and
				  Roy E. Boyer in 1918.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornR1</container><unittitle>Ruth Osborn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Nordlund, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborn, William T. (March 6, 1829 - November 18,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William T. Osborn, the son of Richard and Mary Osborn, was born
				  in Indiana. He married Nancy Harris in Illinois in 1855. The couple traveled to
				  Oregon, settling first in Eugene, Oregon before moving to Farmington,
				  Washington where they had a farm. Osborn ran for the State Legislature as an
				  independent in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsbornWT1</container><unittitle>William T. Osborn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osborne, Ebenezer Sumner (May 19, 1856 - May 7,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ebenezer "Eben" Sumner Osborne was born in Fall River,
				  Massachusetts. Members of his family first came to Massachusetts in the early
				  seventeenth century, settling near Plymouth. His mother was widowed when he was
				  two. Seven years later, she and her son traveled around Cape Horn with the
				  Mercer party, arriving in Seattle in 1866. His mother taught school for several
				  years before marrying Henry Atkins, Seattle’s first mayor. Osborne attended the
				  Territorial University and then studied law in the office of Judge Isaac Hall.
				  He was admitted to the bar in 1877 and became a partner of Judge Hall. In 1878
				  he was appointed city clerk in Seattle, holding that post for seven years. In
				  1885 Osborne began to compile a set of abstract books, doing most of the work
				  himself; he completed them in 1887. He started the firm of Osborne, Tremper and
				  Company and was an officer in Seattle Title Trust and Washington Title
				  Insurance Company. He married Carrie Meeker, the daughter of Ezra Meeker, in
				  1879 at the Meeker home in Puyallup.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsborneES1</container><unittitle>Ebenezer "Eben" Sumner Osborne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 19, 1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Sothrop Studios</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Eben S. Osborne, married to Ezra Meeker's
					 daughter.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsborneES2</container><unittitle>Ebenezer "Eben" Sumner Osborne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 19, 1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Sothrop Studios</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Eben Sumner Osborne, taken May 19, 1915,
					 59th birthday.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osburn, Eva St. Clair (March 22, 1857 - July 5,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eva St. Clair Huff Osburn was a physician, a lecturer and a
				  pastor. She married Albert Osburn, also a physician, in 1881 after he graduated
				  from Iowa College of Physicians and Surgeons. She graduated in 1886 from the
				  College of Physicians &amp; Surgeons at Keokuk, Iowa and was licensed to
				  practice medicine in Washington State the same year. She was an active member
				  of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) and was president of the
				  Tacoma chapter. In 1889, the WCTU founded the White Shield Home in Tacoma, a
				  residence for unwed mothers and their infants, and Dr. Osburn served on its
				  board for over 27 years. In 1915, she was ordained a minister of the
				  Congregational Church and was president of the Woman’s Relief Corps, the
				  official women's auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic. After Albert’s
				  death, she moved to Los Angeles where she married Milton C. Barber.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OsburnESC1</container><unittitle>Eva St. Clair Osburn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1, 1912</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oliver P. Scott, Tacoma</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front of photo: Dr. Eve St. Clair Osborne (sic),
					 Tacoma, Wa.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osler, William (July 12, 1849 – December 29,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir William Osler, 1st Baronet, was a Canadian physician and one
				  of the four founding professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital. Osler created the
				  first residency program for specialty training of physicians and was the first
				  to bring medical students out of the lecture hall for bedside clinical
				  training. Osler was, in addition to being a physician, a bibliophile,
				  historian, and author. His most famous work, <emph render="italic">The
				  Principles and Practice of Medicine</emph>, quickly became a key text for
				  students and clinicians alike. It continued to be published until 2001 and was
				  translated into many languages. He was the founder of the History of Medicine
				  Society (previously section) of the Royal Society of Medicine, London. He was
				  inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame in 1994.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OslerW1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of William Osler, seated sideways in
					 wooden chair with scroll on the side</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Gifford de Jersey Mesny, Baltimore</persname></origination></did><note><p> Signed "Sincerely yours Wm Osler" below image.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Osmun, Mary Coyle (August 28, 1913 - October 19,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Coyle Osmun was the daughter of William J. “Wee Willie”
				  Coyle, legendary University of Washington quarterback (1908 – 1912) and
				  Washington State Lieutenant Governor (1921-1925). Osmun graduated from the
				  University of Washington with a degree in journalism and headed an advertising
				  agency in New York before returning to Seattle in 1942. A member of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> staff, she was the society editor
				  and also edited the 1960 <emph render="italic">Seattle Blue Book,</emph> a list
				  of prominent city families. She was married to Paul Miller Osmun, a
				  physician.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH1</container><unittitle>Group photo. Left to right: Edwin Adams and H.P.
					 Everest, directors of the journalism school; Mrs. Esther Seering, public
					 relations counsel; Mrs. Mary Coyle Osmun, Seattle Times women's editor; Carroll
					 Foster, special events director at KIRO</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Many professional publicity workers turned
					 out for the recent conference on publicity methods, originally planned just for
					 amateur publicity chairmen. Due to scores of requests, the conference, first of
					 its kind on campus, will be followed next fall by an expanded series of
					 lectures.</p><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ostrander, Benjamin Russell (November 27, 1843 -
				  December 14, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Russell Ostrander was born in Ashtabula, Ohio and
				  served as a Union soldier in Company H, 83rd Illinois Infantry during the Civil
				  War. He came to Washington Territory in 1883, settling in St. John, Washington.
				  He represented Whitman County in the first Washington State Legislature. In
				  1894, he moved to Spokane where he served on the Spokane City Council and
				  assisted in drafting the city charter. He invested in real estate and worked in
				  banking and as a mining broker. He married Olive Hoisington in 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OstranderBR1</container><unittitle>Benjamin Russell Ostrander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on verso: Yours truly, B. R Ostrander, St. John, Wash.,
					 Whitman Co.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ota, Hajime (circa 1864 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hajime Ota graduated from the Law College of the Imperial
				  University of Tokyo in 1890 and was appointed secretary to the House of Peers
				  of the Imperial Japanese Diet. In 1893, he went to Germany to complete his
				  studies in international law and upon his return home, was promoted to various
				  positions in the Emperor’s service. After holding professorships in law and
				  political economics in the Peers’ College and the University of Waseda, he
				  became a judge in the Japanese Supreme Administrative Law Court. His
				  connections with international exhibitions date to 1900 when he was Imperial
				  Commissioner for the Paris Exhibition, serving as councilor to the Departments
				  of Agriculture and Commerce and as Commissioner General to the exhibition. The
				  Emperor conferred upon him the Order of the Rising sun for his work as Director
				  of Exhibits at the Osaka Exhibition. As Imperial Japanese Commissioner-General,
				  he represented the Japanese government at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
				  (1909), the Lewis and Clark Exposition in Portland (1905) and the Louisiana
				  Purchase Exposition in St. Louis (1904). His duties including hosting other
				  visiting Japanese delegations and participating in numerous diplomatic and
				  ceremonial occasions. During the A-Y-P, he presented a cloisonné vase, a
				  masterpiece of Ando Jubei, to President Taft. The enormous red and gold vase
				  took the artist eight years to make. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OtaH1</container><unittitle>Hajime Ota in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">T. Shibata, Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: To Mr. J. E. Chilberg with best compliments
					 of H. Ota, September 20, 1909.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Otis, James (February 5, 1725 – May 23,
				  1783)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Otis, Jr. was a lawyer, political activist, pamphleteer
				  and legislator in Boston, a member of the Massachusetts provincial assembly,
				  and an early advocate of the Patriot views against British policy that led to
				  the American Revolution. His well-known catchphrase "Taxation without
				  representation is tyranny" became a basic Patriot position.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OtisJ1</container><unittitle>James Otis, Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1760 and 1769?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Oliver Pelton</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ottenheimer, Albert M. (September 6, 1904 – January 25,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert M. Ottenheimer was an American stage actor who was
				  blacklisted in the 1950s. Born in Tacoma, he graduated magna cum laude, Phi
				  Beta Kappa from the University of Washington in 1927. He co-founded the Seattle
				  Repertory Playhouse with Florence and Burton James in 1928 and during his time
				  there acted in 150 plays and directed many others. He worked in radio as early
				  as 1922 and was a founding member of Seattle local of the American Federation
				  of Radio Artists and chairman of its Negotiating Committee. During the 1930s,
				  he wrote scripts for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was published in 
				  <emph render="italic">Colliers</emph>, <emph render="italic">the Saturday
				  Evening Post</emph> and <emph render="italic">the New Yorker.</emph> He was
				  blacklisted in Seattle during the McCarthy era when he refused to answer
				  questions based on his activities and beliefs. He then moved to New York where
				  he joined the Equity Union in 1951. Ottenheimer worked as an actor in New York
				  until the blacklist caught up with him; he was unable to resume acting until
				  the late 1950s when he began working in television serials, commercials, and on
				  the stage. He toured Europe in the role of Doc in <emph render="italic">West
				  Side Story.</emph> A role in <emph render="italic">Annie Hall </emph>was one of
				  his last screen parts. He also appeared in <emph render="italic">The
				  Front</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM1</container><unittitle>John Bunzel, Theodore Astley, Mr. Chinn and Albert
					 Ottenheimer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ouimette, Esdras Norbert (June 7, 1837 - June 17,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Esdras Norbert Ouimette was born in St. Eustache, a suburb of
				  Montreal, Quebec, Canada and graduated from St. Eustache College. He went to
				  Montreal in 1860 and found employment as clerk in a general merchandise store.
				  In 1865 he traveled west to Portland, Oregon and worked with the dry-goods
				  house of Jacob &amp; Meyer. He moved to Olympia, Washington Territory in 1869
				  where he had a store on the corner of 5th and Main (Capitol). Ouimette financed
				  the completion of the Olympia &amp; Tenino (Chehalis Valley) Railroad and
				  served as mayor of Olympia for two terms. In 1878 he purchased land on the
				  corner of Eleventh Street and Pacific Avenue in Tacoma and built three
				  two-story buildings. After a fire in 1883 destroyed the buildings, he built the
				  Ouimette Block, the first three-story brick building in Tacoma. He then sold
				  his dry-goods business to C.T. Harris &amp; Co., and engaged in the
				  real-estate, insurance, mortgage and loan business, ultimately owning large
				  tracts of land in Tacoma. He was vice-president of the Washington National
				  Bank, and held executive positions in the Pennsylvania Fire Company, the
				  California Fire and Marine Company, and the Tacoma Real Estate and Stock
				  Exchange. In 1896, he sold his real estate holdings and moved to New York where
				  he worked in the brokerage business. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OuimetteEN1</container><unittitle>Esdras Norbert Ouimette</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Overly, Fred John (July 30, 1907 - September 23,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Fred John Overly was born in Sumner County, Kansas in 1907 and
				  earned both undergraduate and master's degrees in Forestry at the University of
				  Washington. He worked for the National Park Service in a number of positions,
				  including Forester, Assistant Superintendent and Superintendent at Olympic
				  National Park. In 1963 Overly was appointed Regional Director of the U.S.
				  Bureau of Outdoor Recreation in Seattle, Washington. A career employee in the
				  National Park Service (1935-1963), Overly was superintendent of the Olympic
				  National Park (1952-1958) and of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
				  (1958-1963) and with the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, Pacific Northwest
				  Region, as Regional Director (1963-1971). He retired in 1971. His papers are
				  held in the University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OverlyFJ1</container><unittitle>Fred John Overly in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers Studio, Port Angeles, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OverlyFJ2</container><unittitle>Fred John Overly in uniform and hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Rogers Studio, Port Angeles, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owen, Chester (November 14, 1908 - August 20,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chester Owen, the son of Lawrence C. and Otillie Owen, worked in
				  a sawmill in Chattaroy, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwenLC1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Owen with wife Otillie and children Laura,
					 Myrtle and Chester Owen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lawrence C. Owen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owen, Laura Estelle (July 2, 1904 - January 13,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laura Estelle Owen, the daughter of Lawrence C. and Otillie
				  Owen, married Leonard Crosby in 1927.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwenLC1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Owen with wife Otillie and children Laura,
					 Myrtle and Chester Owen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lawrence C. Owen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owen, Lawrence Chester (December 3, 1880 - May 7,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lawrence Chester Owen was born in Kansas where his father,
				  Alexander Bell Owen, was a school teacher. The family moved west to Portland in
				  1886 and then traveled up the Columbia River to Spokane Falls the same year.
				  Lawrence Owen initially worked in a sawmill. He married Otillie Ott in 1903. By
				  1920, he had a store and post office which he operated for almost 50 years. He
				  started a collection documenting the history of the area; the collection
				  eventually became the Owen Museum in Denison. The museum was an old farm site,
				  and the buildings contained thousands of items from the 1800s and early 1900s.
				  In 2004, the museum was vandalized, and many of the items were stolen.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwenLC1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Owen with wife Otillie and children Laura,
					 Myrtle and Chester Owen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owen, Myrtle Augusta (June 14, 1906 - May 16,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Myrtle Augusta Owen, the daughter of Lawrence C. and Otillie
				  Owen, married Mickey Yarbrough in 1937 in Spokane.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwenLC1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Owen with wife Otillie and children Laura,
					 Myrtle and Chester Owen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lawrence C. Owen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owen, Otilla (Otillie) Bertha Ott (August 7,1878 -
				  August 20, 1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otilla (Otillie) Bertha Ott, the daughter of William and Augusta
				  Ott, was born in Wausau, Wisconsin, and married Lawrence Owen in 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwenLC1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Owen with wife Otillie and children Laura,
					 Myrtle and Chester Owen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1909 and 1910</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lawrence C. Owen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owens, James W. Fleming (February 22, 1843 - September
				  26, 1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James W. Fleming Owens, the eldest son of Thomas and Sarah
				  (Dacron) Owens, came with his parents to Oregon in 1843 in what is known at the
				  second Oregon immigration. The family arrived at The Dalles in November and
				  then continued by canoe to Astoria, where Thomas established a farm. In 1853,
				  the family moved to a farm near Roseburg, Oregon. James spent two years in the
				  mines of southern Oregon and then returned to Roseburg where he engaged in
				  farming and stock raising. He was elected to the Oregon legislature in 1874 on
				  the Independent ticket. Owena was also active in the Good Templar Lodge and was
				  elected state deputy in 1872. In 1877 he helped organize the State Grange and
				  was elected their manager. He was the principal originator of the Prohibition
				  Party in Oregon and was the founder of and a large contributor to the 
				  <emph render="italic">Prohibition Star</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Pacific Express</emph> newspapers. In 1886, he started a wool
				  business. When the market began falling, he took his own life, believing that
				  he had not only ruined himself but entangled his friends in the failure of the
				  business. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJWF1</container><unittitle>James W. Fleming Owens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1886?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owens, James Donald "Jim" (March 6, 1927 – June 6,
				  2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Donald “Jim” Owens was an American football player and
				  coach. He was the head coach at the University of Washington from 1957 to 1974,
				  compiling a record of 99–82–6 (.545) in 18 seasons. Owens played college
				  football at the University of Oklahoma from 1946 to 1949. He played a year of
				  professional football in 1950 and then was a college assistant coach for six
				  years under Bear Bryant at the University of Kentucky and Texas A&amp;M
				  University. In 1959 and 1960, he led Washington to back-to-back ten-win seasons
				  and consecutive Rose Bowl wins, as well as a national championship in 1960. He
				  also coached the Huskies to the 1964 Rose Bowl. Owens concurrently served as
				  the athletic director at Washington from 1960 to 1969, and was elected to the
				  College Football Hall of Fame as a player in 1982. Owens resigned as head coach
				  of the Huskies following the 1974 season at the end of his last contract and
				  was succeeded by Don James, who would also coach the Huskies for 18 seasons.
				  His later years at Washington were marred by accusations of racism and the
				  backlash that resulted from his actions and attitudes towards black players. He
				  would later apologize for his actions. A statue of Owens was erected on campus
				  in 2003, and he was inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame as part of the
				  inaugural class in 1979. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJD1</container><unittitle>Jim Owens kneeling with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1959</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJD2</container><unittitle>Jim Owens with Pat Hayes; Owens is holding a 1959
					 Sports Achievement award</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa1959</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJD3</container><unittitle>Jim Owens seated in office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 16, 1957</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensJD4</container><unittitle>Jim Owens at chalkboard with two students</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 16, 1957</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LeonRH1</container><unittitle>Richard Hayward Leon with UW Coach Jim Owens examining
					 a pair of boots, WSU student body president (unnamed), unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard Hayward Leon subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owens, Sarah Damron (January 8, 1818 - January 16,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Damron was born in Pikes County, Kentucky. She married
				  Thomas Owens in 1833, and ten years later, the couple with their three children
				  crossed the plains to Oregon. Initially settling in Astoria, they later moved
				  to a ranch near Roseburg, Oregon. The couple had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensSD1</container><unittitle>Sarah Damron Owens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owens, Thomas (January 18, 1808 - July 23,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Owens was born in Virginia in 1808. He married Sarah
				  Damron in 1833. In 1843 he, his wife and their children crossed the plains to
				  Oregon in 1843 in what is known at the second Oregon immigration, traveling
				  with the Jesse Applegate wagon train. The family arrived at The Dalles in
				  November and then continued by canoe to Astoria, where Thomas established a
				  farm. In 1853 the family moved to a farm near Roseburg, Oregon where he raised
				  cattle and horses.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OwensT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Owens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Owens-Adair, Bethenia Angelina (February 7, 1840 -
				  September 11, 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bethenia Angelina Owens, the second daughter of Thomas and Sarah
				  Owens, was born Missouri and came with her parents to Oregon in 1843 in what is
				  known at the second Oregon immigration. At age fourteen, barely able to read or
				  write, she married Legrand Henderson Hill and had a son at sixteen. At age
				  nineteen, she left Hill, took back her name, and secured an education. She
				  supported herself and her son, George, first as a domestic, then as a teacher
				  and milliner, and eventually as a physician, graduating in 1874 from the
				  Eclectic Medical College of Pennsylvania. She earned a second medical degree in
				  1880 from the University of Michigan and was one of Oregon’s first female
				  doctors with a medical degree. In Oregon, Owens-Adair practiced medicine in
				  Roseburg, Portland, and Clatsop County. Eventually, she had a practice in North
				  Yakima, Washington, where her son was also a physician. Her second marriage, in
				  1884, to Col. John Adair, ended in divorce in 1907. Convinced of the power of
				  heredity, Owens-Adair was a leader in the eugenics movement, which had emerged
				  in early twentieth-century America. She advocated and led campaigns for
				  sterilization of the "unfit." In 1923, the Oregon legislature passed a
				  sterilization law that was amended but continued as law until revisions in 1967
				  and abolishment of the State Board of Eugenics in 1983. After retiring from
				  medicine at age sixty-five, Dr. Owens-Adair wrote her autobiography and
				  continued her reform efforts, supporting the temperance movement, women’s
				  suffrage, and education, employment, and health for women.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">Owens-AdairBA1</container><unittitle>Bethenia Angelina Owens-Adair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ozment, George W. (May 16, 1828 - April 17,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Ozment was a veteran of the Indian wars and a pioneer
				  of 1852. Born at Greensboro, North Carolina, he became an orphan at the age of
				  ten, and at fifteen went to Western Virginia with an uncle. He saved his
				  earnings to go west, joining the train of William McCown in 1852. The first
				  months of Oregon life were spent in Clackamas County erecting buildings for
				  McCown. He was among the first to volunteer his services to suppress the Indian
				  outbreak in 1855. After being mustered out of the service, he returned to the
				  Siuslaw, took up a Donation land claim and raised sheep. In 1868 he returned to
				  North Carolina and persuaded three of his brothers to join him in Oregon,
				  conducting their train of wagons across the plains. He contributed to building
				  public schools and churches and was one of the signers of the railroad petition
				  in Lane County in 1864.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OzmentGW1</container><unittitle>George W. Ozment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>P</unittitle></did><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Padelford, Frederick Morgan (February 27, 1875 -
				  December 3, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Morgan Padelford was born in New England in 1875, son
				  of a Baptist minister. He attended Colby College in Maine, where he received a
				  B.A. in 1896 and an M.A. in 1899. He received a Ph.D. from Yale in 1899 and an
				  LL.D. from Mills College in 1936. After completing his studies at Yale, he was
				  a professor of English at the University of Idaho from 1899 until 1901. He then
				  joined the University of Washington as a professor of English. During his
				  career at the University, he served as Dean of the Graduate School (1920),
				  Assistant Dean of Faculties (1927-1931), and assistant vice president
				  (1931-1932). He was a trustee of the Seattle Public Library (1906-1913), vice
				  president of the American Shakespeare Society beginning in 1928, and president
				  of the Seattle Art Institute in 1933. Dr. Padelford was an English scholar of
				  note; his research into the writings of Edmund Spenser gave him recognition as
				  the outstanding authority on the writer in the English-speaking world. He died
				  in 1942 while on his way to give the Presidential address to the Modern
				  Language Association. Padelford Hall, a building on the University of
				  Washington Seattle campus, was named in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Padelford, Morgan (October 10, 1902 - June 17,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Morgan Padelford, the son of Frederick Morgan Padelford, studied
				  in Boston with Charles Hopkinson and received his M.A. degree at the University
				  of Washington in 1925. The next year he studied art in Paris under André Lhote
				  and others. He moved to Claremont, California in 1929, where he taught at
				  Scripps College. He was a color consultant for various movie studios from 1938
				  until 1958, and is known for his work on <emph>The Adventures of Robin
				  Hood</emph> (1938), <emph>20,000 Leagues Under the Sea</emph> (1954) and 
				  <emph>Incendiary Blonde</emph>(1945). Padelford died in Pasadena, California on
				  June 17, 1994.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pack, Charles Lathrop (May 7, 1857 – June 14,
				  1937),</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Lathrop Pack made his fortune by investing in southern
				  timber, banking, and real estate and by inheriting his father's Michigan timber
				  mills. Spurred on by Theodore Roosevelt's historic Conference of Governors in
				  1908 which brought together state and federal officials and timber men to
				  discuss forest conservation, Pack took up the cause of conservation and devoted
				  thirty years of his life and much of his fortune to the preservation of the
				  nation’s forests. Working closely with the Department of Agriculture's chief
				  forester, Gifford Pinchot, Pack learned to use the power of the press to
				  publicize environmental issues. He headed a major conservation congress and
				  helped fund several lobbying organizations instrumental in getting critical
				  forest-management legislation passed, becoming one of the most powerful people
				  in the American forest conservation movement. Pack bequeathed a cash gift to
				  the UW's College of Forest Resources (now the School of Environmental and
				  Forest Sciences (SEFS), enabling the purchase of an initial 334 acres of
				  forestland to be used for research and demonstration purposes; Charles L. Pack
				  Experimental Forest now encompasses 4,300 acres of working forestland. He also
				  donated land to the State University of New York to be used for research and
				  training in the field of environmental studies. During World War I, he was a
				  principal organizer and was heavily involved in the war garden movement in the
				  United States. He organized the US National War Garden Commission and launched
				  the war garden campaign. After the war, he documented the victory garden
				  movement in <emph render="italic">The War Garden Victorious</emph> . In
				  addition, he was a world-famous philatelist, recognized for his award-winning
				  collections of postage stamps.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PackCL1</container><unittitle>Charles Lathrop Pack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bachrach, New York</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front: To my friend Hugo Winkenwerder, Charles
					 Lathrop Pack.</p><p>Hugo Winkenwerder was Dean of the College of Forestry at the
					 University of Washington and served as president of the University,
					 1933-1934.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PackCL2</container><unittitle>Charles Lathrop Pack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Bachrach, New York</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed copy of original portrait.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Painter, Joseph Clark (September 14, 1840 – November 17,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Clark Painter was an American politician in the state of
				  Washington. He was born in Missouri and was only ten years only when he crossed
				  the plains by the side of his father’s ox-cart. He was in the first class at
				  Pacific University but did not graduate. He moved to the Walla Walla Valley in
				  1862 where wheat farming and stock raising made him an independent fortune.
				  Painter held several county offices and was the receiver of the land office
				  under President Harrison. He was a member of the first Washington State
				  Legislature, serving from 1889 to 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PainterJC1</container><unittitle>Joseph Clark Painter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PainterJC2</container><unittitle>Joseph Clark Painter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Maxwell, Walla Walla</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palliser, John (January 29, 1817 – August 18,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Palliser was an Irish-born geographer and explorer.
				  Following his service in the Waterford Militia and hunting excursions to the
				  North American prairies, he led the British North American Exploring Expedition
				  which investigated the geography, climate and ecology of what would later
				  become western Canada. Palliser was named a Companion of the Order of St.
				  Michael and St. George (CMG) in 1877. The Fairmont Palliser Hotel and the
				  neighborhood of Palliser in Calgary, Alberta, are named after him, as are the
				  Palliser Range and Palliser Formation of the Canadian Rockies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalliserJ1</container><unittitle>Captain John Palliser</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Royal Geographical Society Christmas card from Peter Eaton
					 (Library Supply) Ltd, signed by Heather Field. The card features a painting by
					 Palliser's sister Mary, after a watercolor by Miss Severn, 1852, from the
					 Society's collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palmer, Don Henry (November 21, 1877 - March 18,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Don Henry Palmer, who gave medical care to three generations of
				  University athletes, was a noted athlete in his student days, competing in
				  football, basketball, wrestling and track. He held the Pacific Northwest track
				  scoring record, having scored six “firsts” in one meet and was the holder of
				  other University and Northwest track records. He graduated from the University
				  in 1899 and received his medical degree from Rush Medical College in 1903. As
				  the unpaid athletic team physician from 1904-1947, Dr. Palmer founded the Big W
				  Alumni Club, the Homecoming Halftime Blanket Parade and the 101 Club. He was a
				  charter member of the Washington Athletic Club, a founder of the American Board
				  of Plastic Surgery, a member of the Washington State Medical Society and the
				  King County Medical Society, and chairman of the board of trustees of the
				  Pioneer Association of Washington. The Don H. Palmer award was established in
				  1994 to recognize those who have exemplified a special commitment to the UW
				  Athletic Department. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerDH1</container><unittitle>Don Henry Palmer in track uniform, wearing
					 medals</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerDH2</container><unittitle>Don Henry Palmer in tuxedo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Gibson Art Galleries, Chicago</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerDH3</container><unittitle>Don Henry Palmer at lathe, UW medals in
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palmer, Maude Gruwell (April 12, 1882 - October 1,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Gruwell was born in Kansas and came to the Willapa Harbor
				  area with her parents as a child. She attended the University of Washington and
				  married Don Henry Palmer in 1903. As a young woman, she was active in musical
				  circles and was a long time member of the Ladies Musical Club. She was a
				  charter member of the Women’s University Club, a founder of the Lake Washington
				  Garden Club, and a founder and former board member of the Arboretum Foundation.
				  She was the president of the Seattle Garden Club and a member of the Sunset
				  Club. She wrote <emph render="italic">An Herb Garden</emph>, a book of recipes
				  using herbs, that was sold at the Orthopedic Garden sales.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerMG1</container><unittitle>Maude Gruwell Palmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1903?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palmer, George Thomas</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Thomas Palmer attended Washington College and edited 
				  <emph render="italic">The Collegian</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorseEA1</container><unittitle>Professor Edward Morse with George Thomas
					 Palmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Scotford &amp; Co, Tacoma, Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>In January 1884 Washington College was a Seattle school with
					 45 students. After a brief name change to Yesver College, it reopened on
					 September 2, 1886 in Tacoma with its name restored and with a $50,000 endowment
					 by Charles B. Wright. Advertised as a boarding and day school for young men and
					 boys, it accepted pupils as young as ten. It started with 65 pupils, half of
					 them day students. The college was sponsored by the Episcopal Church; its
					 companion school in Tacoma was the Annie Wright Seminary for girls. Students at
					 Washington College published <emph render="italic">The Collegian</emph> twice
					 each month. A new president in August of 1892 determined that the school would
					 not reopen until the spring. It apparently never did, due at least in part to
					 the financial panic of 1892-93. Washington College officially closed in 1896
					 with its resources going to Annie Wright Seminary.</p><p>Original in Coll. 334 Alaska and Pacific Northwest Early
					 Photographers. Handwritten on verso of original: George Thomas Palmer and tutor
					 Professor Edward Morse, Washington College. Tacoma, Washington. 1890.</p><p>Filed under Edward Morse subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palmer, Joel (October 4, 1810 – June 9,
				  1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joel Palmer was an American pioneer of the Oregon Territory. He
				  was born in Canada and spent his early years in New York and Pennsylvania
				  before serving as a member of the Indiana House of Representatives. Palmer
				  traveled to the Oregon Country in 1845 and played a central role in blazingthe
				  Barlow Road, the last leg of the Oregon Trail, with Sam Barlow and others. He
				  is noted for climbing high on Mount Hood to observe the surrounding area when
				  the party ran into difficulty. This was Mount Hood's first recorded climb; the
				  Palmer Glacier on the mountain is named for him. He wrote a popular immigrant
				  guidebook, co-founded Dayton, Oregon, and served as an Indian Affairs
				  administrator. Palmer proved effective negotiating "Cessation of Hostility
				  treaties" with the native tribes in 1854 and 1855, brokering nine of fifteen
				  treaties. He joined Isaac Stevens, his counterpart for the Washington
				  Territory, in the successful Walla Walla Treaty Council of the Yakima Indian
				  War. After Oregon became a state, Palmer served in both branches of the Oregon
				  Legislative Assembly. He was selected as Speaker of the Oregon House of
				  Representatives for one session in 1862, and in 1870 lost a bid to become
				  Governor of Oregon. The Palmer House, his former home in Dayton, was added to
				  the National Register of Historic Places in 1987.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerJoel1</container><unittitle>Joel Palmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on verso: For personal use only/Do not reproduce.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Palmer, Sarah Ann Derbyshire (April 11, 1815 - December
				  14, 1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Ann Derbyshire was born in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and
				  married Joel Palmer there on June 21, 1836. The couple came to Oregon in 1845,
				  where they settled in Yamhill County, taking a land claim in Dayton. They had
				  six children: Melissa, Joeline, William, Emma, John, and Alice. Sarah died on
				  December 14, 1891 and was buried in Brookside Cemetery in Dayton.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PalmerSAD1</container><unittitle>Sarah Ann Palmer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>From a photograph by Frank G. Abell. Original carte-de-visite
					 is in the Oregon Historical Society Library.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pantages, Alexander (1867 - February 17,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Pantages was a Greek American vaudeville and early
				  motion picture producer and impresario who created a large and powerful circuit
				  of theatres across the western United States and Canada. He was born on the
				  Greek island of Andros and ran away from home when he was nine. He spent two
				  years working as a deck hand before arriving in the United States in the early
				  1880s. He worked in Seattle and San Francisco before making his way to the
				  Yukon Territory during the Klondike Gold Rush. In 1902, he returned to Seattle
				  where he opened the Crystal Theater, a vaudeville and motion picture house. By
				  1920, he owned more than 30 theaters and formed the Pantages Circuit, a chain
				  of theaters owned by others and managed by Pantages where he could book touring
				  vaudeville acts. He also entered into a partnership to distribute films.
				  Throughout the 1920s, he dominated the vaudeville and motion picture market in
				  the western U. S, owning or operating 84 theatres. In 1929 he was accused of
				  raping a 17-year-old dancer; the negative publicity led to the selling of his
				  operations, and he ceased to be a force in exhibition or vaudeville. In 1929,
				  he was convicted and sentenced to prison; he was acquitted in a second trial in
				  1931. Despite the acquittal, the trials and the stock market crash ruined him
				  financially. He died in 1936 worth only a fraction of his original net worth.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PantagesA1</container><unittitle>Alexander Pantages</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0124/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Paquet, Peter (January 13, 1839 - April 3,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Paquet, the son of Francis Xavier Paquet and Marie Louise
				  (Lanaudiere) Paquet, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. In the spring of 1852, he
				  and his parents traveled overland with an ox-team to Oregon. When they reached
				  the Snake River, some traders convinced them to trade their wagon for a
				  converted wagon-bed flatboat that could be used to float them to Oregon. When
				  they finally reached Fort Boise after a twelve day journey that would have
				  taken four days by land, they were informed that it was impossible to reach the
				  settlements in that way. After purchasing replacement ox-teams and wagons, they
				  finally reached Portland after six months of travel. In the spring of 1853, the
				  family took a donation land claim on the Clackamas Plains. Peter was in charge
				  of the farm while his father worked as a boat builder. In 1861, he joined his
				  father as a boat builder and then went into the sawmill business. He was
				  elected to the legislature in 1870, but was not re-elected. In 1888 he was
				  again nominated by the Republican party of Clackamas County for the House of
				  Representatives and won. He served nine terms on the city council of Oregon
				  City, three terms as president of the board of delegates of the Oregon City
				  Fire Department, and one term as mayor of Oregon City. He married Sarah
				  Hamilton in 1871; the couple had three children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PaquetP1</container><unittitle>Peter Paquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Pariseau, Esther - See Mother Joseph</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Adella (February 8, 1870 - April 8,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Adella May Parker was born in Whitehall, Michigan and came to
				  Seattle with her parents. Her father, William E. Parker, was a pioneer
				  lumberman who plated the Bryn Mawr area of Seattle. She received her B.A. from
				  the UW in 1893 and her law degree from the UW in 1903; she was the only woman
				  in her law school class. She also attended graduate school at the University of
				  West Virginia and the University of Wisconsin. In 1894, she gave the oration at
				  the laying of the cornerstone for Denny Hall, and her portrait was on the
				  murals in the Husky Union Building in the 1950s. In 1920, she traveled to
				  Russia to gather material for a book. While there, she worked as a
				  correspondent for the International News Service. She taught political
				  economics and civil government at Seattle’s Broadway High School and also
				  practiced law. Parker was active in suffrage movement, and was president of the
				  Equal Suffrage League. She married Charles Enoch Allen Bennett, a hydraulic
				  engineer, in the 1920s when both were working in the Soviet Union. Her sister
				  was Lina Maude Parker, one of the first female physicians in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB7</container><unittitle>Orson Johnson, holding butterfly net, with Adella
					 Parker and Lina Maude Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><origination><corpname>Warner &amp; Randolph, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. W. Denny photo, 1899.</p><p>Filed under Orson Bennett Johnson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Frank Josiah (April 28, 1843 - February 19,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Frank Josiah Parker was born in Somerset, England in 1843 and
				  immigrated to the United States in 1862. He was a miner in California and a
				  scout for General Oliver Otis Howard during the Bannock War of 1878. In 1879,
				  he married Martha Jane Newell, the daughter of William H. Newell, publisher of
				  the <emph render="italic">Evening Statesman.</emph> When his father-in-law
				  died, Frank took over the paper and began publishing a daily edition. He was a
				  U. S. Marshall under President Cleveland and chair of the Washington Board of
				  Penitentiary Commissions. In 1887, he served as the European Immigration agent
				  for the Northern Pacific Railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerFJ1</container><unittitle>Frank Josiah Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Felix Fortin, Walla Walla, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Isaac Curtiss (April 5, 1879 - November 8,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isaac Curtiss Parker, the son of Isaac Parker and Lydia
				  Greenlief Parker, was born in Seattle. His father, who arrived in Seattle in
				  1853, was Seattle’s first boiler inspector and built the first brick building
				  in the city. Parker graduated from Seattle Central High School in 1898 and was
				  a member of the High School Cadets. At the University of Washington, he was the
				  first manager of the rowing crew and captain of Company A of the University
				  Cadets. He served in the Washington State National Guard and was a state rifle
				  champion. After graduating from the University in 1904, he began working for
				  the Seattle Engineering Department. Three years later, Parker went into private
				  practice as a consulting engineer. He was senior partner in Parker and Hill for
				  41 years; during that time, the firm did engineering work in 48 cities, 46
				  water districts and 14 sewer districts. A registered professional engineer in
				  both Washington and Oregon, Parker spent years lobbying and promoting sewer and
				  water legislation and developed the Sewer District Laws of 1941 which made
				  possible construction of sewer systems in suburban areas. He served on the
				  State Board of Surveys and Maps and published digests of water and sewer laws
				  for the State. He married Neita Jorgine Garthune in 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerIC1</container><unittitle>Isaac Curtiss Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>Isaac Parker is sitting on the steps of a building, possibly
					 at the University of Washington, with a book and a shovel. A similar shovel
					 appears in a June 11, 1954 photo of Parker and Dr. Henry Schmitz planting ivy,
					 PH Coll 700.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, John G. &amp; Mrs. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Lina Maude (April 24, 1871 - January 16,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lina Maude Parker, physician and surgeon, was born in Whitehall,
				  Michigan, and educated at the University of Washington and Stanford University.
				  She did post-graduate work at the University of Michigan and earned her medical
				  degree at Cornell University Medical College where she graduated with honors.
				  She lectured on social hygiene and medical and political subjects to girls at
				  local high schools and the University of Washington. Parker was a member of the
				  American Medical Association, King County Medical Society, and the Medical
				  Women’s Association of Seattle. She was an honorary member of the Mothers'
				  Congress, State Chairman of the Child Welfare Committee, State Chairman to the
				  National Committee on Health, and a member of the General Federation of Women's
				  Clubs. She worked for women's suffrage and, in 1910 and early 1911, was active
				  in the successful move to recall Seattle's Mayor Hiram Gill. She later worked
				  to prevent his re-election and for the establishment of a "closed" town in
				  Seattle-"closed" to saloons, red light establishments, gambling houses and
				  lotteries. She was a charter member of The Mountaineers. Her sister was Adella
				  May Parker, and her father, William Parker, was a pioneer lumberman in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerLM1</container><unittitle>Lina Maude Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonOB7</container><unittitle>Orson Johnson, holding butterfly net, with Adella
					 Parker and Lina Maude Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Warner &amp; Randolph, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: A. W. Denny photo, 1899.</p><p>Filed under Orson Bennett Johnson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Samuel (April 23, 1779 - March 21,
				  1866)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Parker, the first Presbyterian minister in Oregon, was
				  born in Ashfield, Massachusetts to Thankful Merchant Parker and Elisha Parker.
				  He graduated from Williams College in 1806 and from Andover Theological
				  Seminary in 1810. He was ordained as a minister in 1812 and taught and preached
				  in New York until 1833 when he answered the call for missionaries to move to
				  west. In May 1834, Parker started west with two missionary companions, reaching
				  St. Louis too late in the year to continue their journey. The following year,
				  he traveled with Marcus Whitman to the American Fur Company Green River
				  rendezvous. Whitman returned east to recruit additional missionaries, while
				  Parker continues west to explore the area and select potential sites for
				  missions. During the winter of 1835, Parker stayed at Fort Vancouver, the
				  Hudson’s Bay Company outpost on the Columbia River. He spent the next several
				  months traveling through the Willamette Valley and Lower Columbia Valley before
				  returning east by ship. Although he was rejected for missionary work by the
				  American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions because of his age, he
				  worked to sustain interest in the Oregon missions. He published<emph> Parker’s
				  Exploring Tour beyond the Rocky Mountains</emph>, providing a description of
				  the journey, the Indians, the plants, animals, geology, meteorology and
				  geography of the country. He continued to preach in various pulpits until
				  1847.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerS1</container><unittitle>Samuel Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850-1859</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, William Edmund (February 12, 1886 - October 2,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Edmund Parker was born in Kansas and attended the
				  University of Washington where he was a member of the debate team. He received
				  his law degree from the University in 1907 and was in private practice until
				  his death in 1911 from surgical complications. During his time at the
				  University, he was in charge of editing the <emph>University Song Book</emph>,
				  which was published in 1908. His father, Alfred Elwood Parker, was also an
				  attorney.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerWE1</container><unittitle>William Edmund Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Member of "U" debating team for contest with
					 U of Oregon.</p><p>The photograph appeared in the <emph render="italic">Seattle
					 Daily Times</emph> on December 20, 1904.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parker, Wilder Webster (October 19, 1824 - January 9,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilder W. Parker was born in Vermont and graduated from Norwich
				  University. In April 1847, he accepted a position as engineer at the copper
				  mines of Lake Superior. After fifteen months, he decided to prospect the copper
				  mines of Baja California and set sail for California by way of Panama. While he
				  was crossing the Isthmus, reports of gold mines in California began to arrive.
				  When he arrived in San Francisco, he and three partners went to the gold
				  fields. He soon found that there were greater advantages in business and
				  started a restaurant and bakery; he was also elected to the San Francisco city
				  council. After he lost his business in a fire, he decided to seek a location
				  for lumbering in Oregon. He arrived in Astoria in 1852 where he first leased a
				  saw mill and later bought one. In 1861 he received an appointment as deputy
				  collector of the port; he held that position eleven years. After his retirement
				  from that office, he was active in the real-estate and insurance business and
				  was editor of the <emph render="italic">Astoria Marine Gazette.</emph> In 1859,
				  he was elected the Clatsop County representative to the territorial
				  legislature. He was the first in his city to urge the school district to
				  provide a free school, and was a stockholder in the Astoria &amp; South Coast
				  Railway Company. In 1878 he was elected mayor of Astoria, serving two years. He
				  married Inez Eugenia Adams in 1863.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkerWW1</container><unittitle>Wilder Webster Parker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parkhurst, Harriet Emeline Shoudy (October 22, 1833 -
				  February 18, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harriet Emeline Shoudy was born in Rock Island, Illinois. In
				  1861, she married Henry Parkhurst, a soldier in the Union Army and later a
				  Methodist Episcopal minister. The family moved to Hood River, Oregon in 1875;
				  her husband died during the trip. After one year, she and her four children
				  moved to Seattle, joining her brother, William Shoudy, and her brother-in-law,
				  Dexter Horton. Parkhurst was active in the early development of Seattle. She
				  helped organize the first Y.M.C.A., the first Y.W.C.A. and the first Women’s
				  Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) in the city. She served as president of
				  the W.C.T.U. in 1888 and one of the charter members of the Women’s Century
				  Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParkhurstHE1</container><unittitle>Harriet Emeline Parkhurst</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parks, George Alexander (May 29, 1883 – May 11,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Alexander Parks was an engineer who worked in Alaska
				  Territory for most of his career. He was born in Denver, Colorado and graduated
				  from the Colorado School of Mining in 1906. He arrived in Alaska in 1907 to
				  work as a mineral examiner for the U.S. General Land Office. Following his
				  World War I military service, Parks returned to Alaska as chief of the field
				  division of the General Land Office. In 1924 he became Assistant Superintendent
				  of Surveys and Public Lands. While President Warren G. Harding, Hubert Work,
				  and Herbert Hoover were visiting Alaska, Parks was assigned as their tour
				  guide, and the group was impressed by his detailed knowledge. When President
				  Calvin Coolidge was later looking for a new territorial governor, Work and
				  Hoover, who by then were both members of the Presidential Cabinet, recommended
				  Parks, and in 1925 Coolidge appointed Parks governor of Alaska. Parks was
				  reappointed for a second term by President Herbert Hoover. After leaving the
				  governor's office, Parks settled in Juneau and became District Cadastral
				  Engineer of Alaska. He remained there until his retirement from the Bureau of
				  Land Management in July 1948. After leaving government service, he worked for
				  the R.J. Sommers Construction Company and became Vice-President of the First
				  National Bank of Juneau. In 1975, the Parks Highway (Alaska Route 3) between
				  Anchorage and Fairbanks, Alaska was named in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParksGA1</container><unittitle>George Alexander Parks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Lomen Brothers, Nome, Alaska</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on front: To Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ralph Lomen, with
						sincere regards, Geo. A. Parks, Nome, Alaska, 6/25/26.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parrington, Vernon Louis (August 3, 1871 – June 16,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vernon Louis Parrington was an American literary historian and
				  scholar. His three-volume history of American letters, <emph render="italic">Main Currents in American Thought</emph>, won the Pulitzer
				  Prize for History in 1928 and was one of the most influential books for
				  American historians of its time. After teaching English at College of Emporia
				  he moved to the University of Oklahoma in 1897, where he taught British
				  literature, organized the department of English, coached the football team,
				  played on the baseball team, edited the campus newspaper, and tried to beautify
				  the campus. Parrington moved to the University of Washington in Seattle in
				  1908. The Parrington Oval at the University of Oklahoma and Parrington Hall at
				  the University of Washington are named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParringtonVL1</container><unittitle>Vernon Louis Parrington on the University of
					 Washington campus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parrish, Josiah Lamberson (January 14, 1806 - May 31,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josiah Lamberson Parrish, a native of New York, was an American
				  missionary in Pacific Northwest and trustee of the Oregon Institute at its
				  founding. In 1839, Parrish, a trained blacksmith, volunteered to join Jason
				  Lee's mission in the Willamette Valley. He sailed on the ship Lausanne around
				  Cape Horn to the Columbia River and on to Oregon City, arriving in May 1840.
				  Beginning in February 1841 Parrish participated in the Champoeg Meetings that
				  led to the formation of the Provisional Government of Oregon. In 1842, Parrish
				  was selected as a trustee to the new Oregon Institute, a school established to
				  teach the children of the missionaries that would later become Willamette
				  University. That same year, he moved to the Clatsop Plains and took over the
				  Clatsop Mission; when the mission was dissolved, Parrish purchased it. From
				  1849 until 1854 he worked as an Indian agent and rancher; he was the first
				  breeder in Oregon of pure-breed sheep and brought the first white clover seed
				  to Oregon. In 1868, Parrish drove the first spike in Portland, Oregon, for the
				  Oregon and California Railroad. In 1869, his wife, Elizabeth Parrish, donated
				  land to help create the Lee Mission Cemetery in Salem, Oregon, and Josiah was
				  one of the incorporators. Later that year, Elizabeth died, and Josiah married
				  Jane (Jennie) Lichtenthaler Pickett in 1870. After Jane’s death in 1887, Josiah
				  married Martha A. Pierce in 1888. Parrish Middle School in Salem was built on
				  his old Donation Land Claim and is named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParrishJL1</container><unittitle>Josiah Lamberson Parrish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parry, Will H. (June 29, 1864 - April 21, 1917)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Will H. Parry was born in New York City. After graduating from
				  Columbia University, he went west and worked in the newspaper business in
				  Oregon and Washington. He was editor of the <emph render="italic">Corvallis
				  Independent</emph> and worked on the <emph render="italic">Salem
				  Statesman</emph> as a reporter. He came to Seattle in 1889 where he worked as a
				  reporter for the <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph>; he
				  remained with the paper for several years, eventually becoming city editor. He
				  was appointed City Controller by his father-in-law, Mayor Byron Phelps; during
				  his term, he revised the city’s finances, started municipal improvements and
				  was influential in the establishment of the Cedar River water system. He was an
				  executive at Moran Shipbuilding Company when it built the battleship 
				  <emph render="italic">Nebraska,</emph>and was chairman of the committee that
				  raised $500,000 of capital stock in the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in one
				  day. As a representative of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, he directed the
				  campaign for the passage of the Alaska Railroad bill through Congress. When
				  Congress created the Federal Trade Commission, President Theodore Roosevelt
				  asked him to join it. At the time of his death, he was the vice chair of the
				  commission. Lake Parry, on the southern part of Baranof Island, was named in
				  his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH2</container><unittitle>Will H. Parry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle &amp; Tacoma</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Will H. Parry, Chairman, Ways and Means
					 Committee, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Parsons, Harry Thompson (November 23, 1865 - March 1,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry Thompson Parsons, the son of Thompson M. and Mary Hale
				  Parsons, was born in Louisa, Iowa. He taught school and had a farm in Winfield,
				  Kansas. He married Zilpha Ellen Herrick in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParsonsHT1</container><unittitle>Harry Thompson Parsons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Charles E. Smith, Evanston, Illinois</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patterson, Andrew Wilson (October 4, 1814 - December 20,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Wilson Patterson was born in Pennsylvania and graduated
				  from the Pennsylvania College of Medicine in 1841. He practiced in Greenfield,
				  Indiana and Pittsburgh before became a traveling representative for a
				  manufacturer of surgical instruments. In April, 1852, he was one of a party of
				  five who started on horseback for Oregon, arriving at The Dalles in August of
				  that year. He worked as a surveyor for two years in Washington and Oregon, and
				  had the contract to survey the original Eugene town site where he had a
				  donation land claim. When the Rogue River Indian war broke out, he served as
				  first lieutenant of Captain Buoy's Company and later as a surgeon. In the
				  spring of 1857, Patterson had a contract to survey six townships in Lane County
				  while continuing to practice medicine, since he was one of the few doctors in
				  the area. In the spring of 1862 he started a medical practice in Eugene which
				  he continued until his retirement in 1897. He served as school director and for
				  three terms was county superintendent of schools. He also represented his
				  district in the state legislature in 1855, and from 1870 until 1874 was a
				  member of the state senate. Patterson acted as chairman of the committee on
				  public buildings in the senate when the bill for establishing the university at
				  Eugene was introduced.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattersonAW1</container><unittitle>Andrew Wilson Patterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patterson, Ambrose McCarthy (June 29, 1877 – December
				  26, 1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ambrose McCarthy Patterson was born in Daylesford, Victoria,
				  Australia and studied painting in Australia and Europe. In Paris he became a
				  friend of Nellie Melba, whose sister was married to Patterson’s brother.
				  Through Melba's influence, he was able to continue his studies with John Singer
				  Sargent, Lucien Simon and Alphonse Mucha. He left Europe in 1916, arriving in
				  Hawaii on a stopover from Sidney to New York. During the next 18 months,
				  Patterson made block prints and paintings with particular interest in Kilauea.
				  He left for California in 1918 and was given a one-man exhibition at the SFAA
				  galleries. By September 1918 Patterson had moved to Seattle to work as a
				  freelance artist. He was given a solo show at the Seattle Fine Arts Society
				  that fall. In 1919 he established the University of Washington School of
				  Painting and Design. Patterson married painter and former student Viola Hansen
				  in 1922, and the two became major figures of the arts in the Pacific Northwest
				  region. Patterson taught until his retirement in 1947. He had exhibitions
				  across the United States, including the: Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of
				  Modern Art in New York City, National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and
				  the World's Fairs in San Francisco and New York City. The Art Gallery of New
				  South Wales (Sydney, Australia), the Honolulu Museum of Art, the National
				  Portrait Gallery (Australia) (Canberra), the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the
				  Seattle Art Museum and the Tacoma Art Museum are among the public collections
				  holding his works. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattersonAM1</container><unittitle>Ambrose McCarthy Patterson with painting on
					 easel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patterson, Lillian Beatrice (November 29, 1900 -
				  September 8, 1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lillian Beatrice Patterson graduated from the University of
				  Washington with B.A. and M.A. degrees in nursing. She had experience in private
				  duty, general duty and public health nursing. From 1930 until 1940 she was a
				  school nurse in Sumner, Washington. For the next two years, she was the county
				  nurse with the Pierce County Health Department in Tacoma, becoming supervisor
				  in 1942. In 1945, she joined the University of Washington faculty as assistant
				  professor, later becoming associate professor and director of public nursing
				  field work. As Dean of the University of Washington School of Nursing, she
				  directed undergraduate and post-graduate programs and developed a new program
				  in the field of Nursing Service Administration. Active in nursing
				  organizations, she served as president, board member and chair of the
				  counseling and placement committee of the Washington State Nurses Association,
				  was a leader of the WSNA Economic Security Program and served as president of
				  the WSNA from 1948 to 1950. She was appointed by President Truman as Special
				  Advisor to the World Health Organization in 1950 and the same year became a
				  member of the American Nurses’ Association Board of Directors. In 1953, she was
				  one of the ANA delegates to the congress of the International Council of Nurses
				  in Brazil. She also served as chair of the Nursing World General Advisory
				  Board. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattersonLB1</container><unittitle>Lillian Beatrice Patterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 15, 1952</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University of Washington Tyee, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1952 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pattison, John (1859 - March 28, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Pattison, the son of John and Elizabeth Stormont Pattison,
				  was born in Albany, New York, in 1859. In 1873, he went to Silverton, Colorado
				  and worked in mining for six years. From there he traveled through Arizona and
				  New Mexico, looking for a better mining location. He arrived in Colfax,
				  Washington Territory, in April 1882 where he worked in the position of
				  commissary with the construction party building the Palouse branch of the
				  Oregon Railway &amp; Navigation Company. He secured an interest in the Colfax
				  Hotel and was one of the proprietors for two and a half years, selling his
				  interest in 1886. Pattison was elected Justice of the Peace for Colfax in 1885
				  and read law. He was admitted to the bar in 1890 and worked in the real-estate,
				  loan and insurance business. He was a Democratic National Committeeman for
				  several years and was the Democratic nominee for governor of Washington in
				  1908. He served on the Industrial Code Commission for Washington in the 1920s.
				  In 1885, he married Mary C. Cairns, daughter of Reverend James Cairns, pastor
				  of the Colfax Baptist church, and financial agent of Colfax College. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattisonJ1</container><unittitle>John Pattison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patton, Mathew (November 15, 1805 - September 17,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mathew (or Matthew) Patton, the son of Robert Jesse and Eleanor
				  Evans Patton, was born in Virginia. As a child, he moved with his parents to
				  Ohio where he was an apprentice in a cabinet business. After finishing his
				  apprenticeship, he traveled to Indiana where he established a furniture
				  business in La Fayette. He also founded the town of Pattonsburg, Missouri,
				  where he built a saw and grist mill. He married Polly Grimes in 1830. In 1847,
				  he and Polly and five of their children crossed the plains in a prairie
				  schooner reaching the Chehalem Valley in Oregon where they selected a home
				  site. Shortly afterwards, Patton traveled south to mine for gold, returning
				  with five thousand dollars in gold dust. He invested the funds in town property
				  and land, including extensive property in the Portland area. He purchased a
				  half-section in the town of Albina and platted Patton’s Addition in 1885. In
				  1888 he gave land to create Patton Home, a home for the elderly. After Polly’s
				  death in 1868, he married Catherine McBurney.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattonM1</container><unittitle>Mathew Patton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patton, Polly Ann Grimes (September 23, 1810 - January
				  7, 1868)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Polly Grimes, the daughter of Joshua and Ellen Pittenger Grimes,
				  was born in Frederick County, Maryland. She married Mathew Patton in 1830; the
				  couple had eight children, five of whom accompanied them across the plains to
				  Oregon in 1847. The Pattons settled in the Chehalem Valley in Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattonPG1</container><unittitle>Polly Grimes Patton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1868?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patton, Robert W. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Patton, Thomas McFadden (March 19, 1829 - November 29,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas McFadden Patton was born in Carrollton, Ohio on March 19,
				  1829. He received his education at Martinsburg Academy and at Ohio Wesleyan
				  University, Delaware. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1850. In
				  1851 Patton joined a party of overland emigrants at Council Bluffs, arriving in
				  Oregon in October of that year. He stopped first in Yamhill County and in the
				  following December moved to Salem. In the spring of 1853 Patton went to Jackson
				  County where he was elected county judge. During the Indian War of 1853 he
				  served as orderly sergeant in Co. A. He returned to Salem and on August 3,
				  1854, married to Frances M. Cooke, who was in one of the parties that came
				  overland with Patton a few years before. Patton served as chief clerk of the
				  House of Representatives in 1860, and in 1861 was appointed chief clerk in the
				  office of Indian affairs. He was for several years secretary of the People's
				  Transportation Company and again in 1866 was elected chief clerk of the house.
				  In 1872 he was elected representative to the legislature from Marion County and
				  in 1876 was appointed appraiser of merchandise for the Willamette district, in
				  which capacity he served for seven years. In 1884 he was appointed Untied
				  States consul at Hyogo, Japan, and held that position until 1887, when he
				  returned to Salem and engaged in the book and stationery business. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PattonTM1</container><unittitle>Thomas McFadden Patton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Patzer, Otto (January 14, 1877 - July 23,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otto Patzer was a professor of French at the University of
				  Washington, starting in 1907, and was the author of several French textbooks.
				  Born in Wausau, Wisconsin, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin in
				  1898. He was a member of the Modern Language Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Paulhamus, William Hall (March 4, 1865 – April 15,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Hall Paulhamus was an American politician in Washington
				  State. He served in the Washington State Senate from 1907 to 1913, and from
				  1911 to 1913, he was President pro tempore of the Senate. Born in Pennsylvania,
				  he was eighteen when he moved to Aberdeen, South Dakota and entered the banking
				  business. He later moved to Sumner, Washington and continued in banking until
				  1894. He was one of the largest raspberry growers in the Sumner area and was
				  manager of the Puyallup and Sumner Fruit Growers Association. He established
				  the Fruit Growers Council, a growers’ cooperative which allowed the fruit
				  growers to control the marketing of their produce and obtain better prices. He
				  also helped organize the Washington Cooperative Egg and Poultry Association.
				  Paulhamus served as president of the Western Washington Fair from 1906 until
				  his death in 1925. It was during his administration that the first grandstand
				  was built. He was active in the development of the Puyallup and White River
				  Valleys, and it was his interest in lower transportation charges on farm
				  products that prompted him to enter politics.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PaulhamusWH1</container><unittitle>William Hall Paulhamus</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pavlova, Anna (February 12, 1881-January 23,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Pavlova was a Russian ballerina of the late 19th and the
				  early 20th centuries. She was a principal artist of the Imperial Russian Ballet
				  and the Ballets Russes of Sergei Diaghilev. Pavlova is most recognized for the
				  creation of the role of <emph render="italic">The Dying Swan</emph> a solo
				  ballet choreographed for her by Michel Fokine. With her own company, she became
				  the first ballerina to tour ballet around the world.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PavlovaA1</container><unittitle>Anna Pavlova</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1917</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Alexander Koiransky</persname></origination></did><note><p>Transferred to vault.</p><p>Note included with drawing: Meanwhile permit me to add to your
					 collection a small item I have just found in an old worn out billfold. It is a
					 little pen-and-ink sketch of Anna Pavlova, the dancer, drawn by myself at a
					 Christmas dinner in New York and signed by her. I put it in the billfold and
					 forgot about it and that is the cause of its poor condition. I do not remember
					 whose is the writing on the back. Give my regards to Mrs. Beals. Very sincerely
					 yours, Alexander Koiransky.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Payne, Ancil Horace (September 5, 1921
				  - October 2, 2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ancil H. Payne was born in Mitchell, Oregon on September 5,
				  1921. He was raised in The Dalles and attended Willamette University before
				  transferring to the University of Oregon. During World War II, he joined the
				  U.S. Navy and served more than three years in the South Pacific theater. He
				  attended the University of Washington after the war, majoring in political
				  science and graduating in 1946, Phi Beta Kappa. He had expected to teach, but
				  accepted an offer to be regional director for the Americans for Democratic
				  Action (ADA). He then served as a top aide to Congressman Hugh B. Mitchell for
				  four years. After Mitchell ran unsuccessfully for governor, he asked Payne to
				  help launch a container shipping program in Anchorage, Alaska. Payne spent
				  three years in Alaska and while there, kept his hand in politics by working on
				  the campaign to gain statehood for the territory. He later worked in land
				  development in the Portland, Oregon area. Payne joined the KING Broadcasting
				  Company in 1959, becoming president and chief executive officer in 1971; he
				  retired in 1987. During his tenure at KING, Payne became well known in the
				  Seattle community for his editorials and commitment to investigative
				  journalism. He guided the company through turbulent times and was recognized
				  nationally by his appointment as Chairman of the NBC Board of Affiliates. Payne
				  endowed the Ancil Payne Awards for Ethics in Journalism at the University of
				  Oregon, a scholarship at Willamette University, and scholarships at The Dalles
				  High School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PayneAH1</container><unittitle>Ancil H. Payne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Payne, Blanche (October 2, 1896 - July 31,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Blanche Payne was born in 1897 in Thayer, Kansas. She earned a
				  bachelor’s degree in home economics from Kansas State Teacher’s College in 1916
				  and a Master of Arts degree in clothing from Columbia University in 1924. Payne
				  taught English and home economics classes in Kiowa, Kansas and Lewiston, Idaho
				  before serving as a student nurse at Camp Lewis, Washington in 1918. In 1919,
				  she joined the faculty at Arizona State Teachers College, where she taught
				  textiles and clothing. From 1924 to 1926, she taught in New York City. Payne
				  joined the University of Washington faculty in 1927, where she taught costume
				  and apparel design in the School of Home Economics. In 1929, she took a leave
				  of absence to study at the Mitchell School of Design in New York City, then
				  extended her leave until 1930 to travel through Central Europe and the Balkans
				  surveying folk costumes. Payne resumed her duties at the UW in 1931, but
				  returned to Yugoslavia in 1936 to 1937 for additional study. In 1965, she
				  published <emph render="italic">History of Costume</emph>, which described the
				  evolution of fashion from 3000 B.C. to 1900 A.D. In addition to her intensive
				  research on clothing and historic costume, Payne supervised work on the Textile
				  and Costume Study Collection housed in the Drama Department. During the 1960s,
				  she consulted for the Brooklyn Museum, which included a research trip to Europe
				  to find costumes from the House of Worth for an exhibition. She donated an
				  extensive collection of costumes to the Museum of History and Industry in
				  Seattle. Payne retired from the University of Washington in 1966 and died in
				  1972.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PayneB1</container><unittitle>Blanche Payne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Payne, Martin (September 14, 1838 - December 2,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Payne, the son of Clayburne and Miriam Sumner Payne, was
				  born September 14, 1838, in Crawford County, Arkansas. On April 17, 1843, the
				  family set out for Oregon joining the emigration of that year under Applegate
				  and Burnett and with the guidance of Dr. Marcus Whitman. Clayburne Payne died
				  in the Rocky Mountains, and Miriam cared for her family by herself the rest of
				  the journey. The family settled in Oregon City until a journey to California by
				  land in 1845. They returned to Oregon the following year. In 1855-56, Martin
				  Payne served as volunteer in the Indian War, belonging to Company E. under the
				  command of Captain A. Hembree. After the war, he returned to the Willamette
				  Valley and made his residence in Yamhill County. In later years, he practiced
				  medicine in Portland, Oregon. In 1859, he married Melissa Ellen Drury, who had
				  arrived in Oregon in 1852 from Illinois. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PayneM1</container><unittitle>Martin Payne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peabody, Francis (Frank) Willis (March 14, 1854 - July
				  22, 1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis (Frank) Willis Peabody and his partner, Joseph Pearsall,
				  discovered promising galena deposits in the foothills of the North Cascade
				  Mountains in 1889. They also discovered gold and silver ore, but did not have
				  funds to pursue a claim. Peabody went to Seattle to assay the ore and find
				  someone to back them. He found the Wilmans brothers who put up the money and
				  gave the camp the name of Monte Cristo. In the 1890s, the Wilmans made a trail
				  and erected the first buildings. The following year, they built more roads and
				  an aerial tram way, spanning 1,100 feet across Glacier Basin to Mystery Hill;
				  it was one of the longest aerial tram spans in the world at the time. By 1896,
				  most of the ore had been mined, and by the early 1900s, Monte Cristo was a
				  ghost town, with the remaining ore insufficient to sustain large scale mining
				  operations. Peabody invested in land and platted the original town sites for
				  Everett and Edmonds. He married Catherine Ann Mackay in 1905. Their ashes were
				  buried under what has been called Peabody Rock, east of the town of Monte
				  Cristo.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PeabodyFW1</container><unittitle>Frank Peabody in Monte Cristo, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Peabody, George (February 18, 1795 – November 4, 1869)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Peabody was an American financier and philanthropist who
				  is regarded as the father of modern philanthropy. Born into a poor family in
				  Massachusetts, Peabody went into business in dry goods and later into banking.
				  In 1837 he moved to London, then the capital of world finance, where he became
				  a noted banker and helped to establish America's international credit. Having
				  no son of his own to whom he could pass on his business, Peabody took on Junius
				  Spencer Morgan as a partner in 1854 and their joint business would go on to
				  become J.P. Morgan &amp; Co. after Peabody's 1864 retirement. Peabody won
				  worldwide acclaim for his philanthropy. He founded the Peabody Trust in Britain
				  and the Peabody Institute and George Peabody Library in Baltimore, and was
				  responsible for many other charitable initiatives. For his generosity, he was
				  awarded the Congressional Gold Medal and made a Freeman of the City of London,
				  among many other honors.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">28</container><container type="item">PeabodyG1</container><unittitle>George Peabody</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Jeremiah
					 Gurney from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pearson, Daniel Orlando (April 11, 1846 - January 9,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Orlando Pearson, the son of Daniel and Susan Brown
				  Pearson, was born and educated in Lowell, Massachusetts. When the Civil War
				  started, he enlisted in Company G, Sixth Massachusetts Infantry. At the
				  expiration of his term of service, he returned home and worked as a painter.
				  Soon after the close of the war, Pearson, with his mother and sister, traveled
				  to Whidbey Island to join his father and two other sisters who had gone west
				  the previous year. Daniel married Clara Stanwood in 1868 and farmed on the
				  island until 1877 when he selected the site of the present town of Stanwood as
				  his home. The town had originally been named Centreville, but since there was
				  no post office, it was possible to change the name. Pearson renamed it Stanwood
				  in honor of his wife’s maiden name. He then started a merchandising business
				  and operated a farm near La Conner. He served as the town’s first mayor and was
				  an early postmaster. Their home in Stanwood was placed on the National Register
				  of Historic Places in 1973 and is now a museum operated by the Stanwood Area
				  Historical Society. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PearsonDO1</container><unittitle>Daniel Orlando Pearson as a young man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PearsonDO2</container><unittitle>Daniel Orlando Pearson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pearson, Joseph Upham (October 2, 1885 - November 24,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Upham Pearson was born in Starbuck, Columbia County,
				  Washington. He and his brother, Robert Garfield Pearson, attended the
				  University of Washington where they both were on the track team. Joseph won
				  many honors for the University and set Pacific Coast records in the 100 and 220
				  yard dashes. He left the University before graduating and moved to Spokane
				  where he was captain of the team representing the Spokane Athletic Club. He
				  later moved to Sacramento where he worked in real estate and ranching.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PearsonJU1</container><unittitle>Joseph Pearson in track uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1903</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Yours in Phi Gamma Delta, Joe Pearson," as
					 well as his track records for 1904.</p><p>The photo appeared in the March 1, 1903 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> as well as the 1905 and 1906
					 editions of <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pearson, Robert Garfield (August 14, 1882 - April 27,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Garfield Pearson graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1904 and was captain of the track team in his junior year. He
				  attended the University of California San Francisco medical school and
				  practiced medicine in Sacramento.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PearsonRG1</container><unittitle>Robert Pearson in track uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 22, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Sincerely yours, Robert G. Pearson."</p><p> The photo of Pearson in his track uniform appeared in the
					 1904 edition of <emph render="italic">The Tyee</emph>.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PearsonRG1</container><unittitle>Robert Pearson in track uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1903</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Yours in Phi Delta Gamma, R. G.
					 Pearson."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Peary, Robert Edwin (May 6, 1856 –
				  February 20, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Peary was an American explorer who claimed to have
				  reached the geographic North Pole with his expedition on April 6, 1909. Peary's
				  claim was widely credited for most of the 20th century, rather than the
				  competing claim by Frederick Cook, who said he got there a year earlier. Both
				  claims were widely debated in newspapers. Modern historians generally think
				  Cook did not reach the pole. Based on an evaluation of Peary's records, Wally
				  Herbert, also a polar explorer, concluded in a 1989 book that Peary did not
				  reach the pole, although he may have been as close as 60 miles.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CookFA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick Albert Cook and Robert
					 Peary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1906 and 1908</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Handwritten text on verso refers to the controversy about who
					 reached the North Pole first. "Which of these two gentlemen do you favor? I
					 think both got to the Pole."</p></note><note><p>Filed under Frederick A. Cook subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Pease, Mina Beth (February 3, 1935 - January 27,
				  2023)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mina Beth Pease graduated from the University of Washington with
				  a B.A. in history (1957) and a M.A. in Librarianship (1960).</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container>31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD6</container><unittitle>Governor Albert D. Rosellini with the Washington State
					 Commission on the Status of Women; Mina Pease is second from the
					 left.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 24, 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>The Governor’s Commission on the Status of Women under the
					 direction of Mildred Dunn met with Governor Rosellini on January 24, 1964 to
					 recommend that a state agency be delegated to make a state-wide survey of
					 available positions for men and women, and provide information to state
					 employment offices regarding pay, pensions, and employment and promotional
					 opportunities. Included with the photo is a letter from Mildred Dunn to Mina
					 Pease commemorating the occasion. Mina Pease may have been a member of the
					 commission. The photo is signed by Governor Rosellini.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pease, Hiram Henry (July 2, 1834 - February 14,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Henry Pease, the son of Hiram and Lucy (Valentine) Pease,
				  was born in Glastonbury, Connecticut. He was educated in the public schools and
				  worked as a painter. He married Mercie Griffiths in 1869; they moved to Seattle
				  in 1871. He worked as a painter and a minister and invested in real estate.
				  With Nils B. Peterson, another Seattle pioneer and a member of the Free
				  Methodist Church, he was instrumental in helping found and develop Seattle
				  Pacific College (now Seattle Pacific University) where he served as a
				  trustee.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PeaseHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Henry Pease with Mercie
					 Griffiths Pease</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pease, Mercie Griffiths (January 5, 1841 - July 2,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mercie (Mercy) Griffiths was born in England in 1841 and came to
				  the United States with her parents in 1844. She married Hiram Henry Pease in
				  1869, and the couple moved to Seattle two years later. She was prominent in
				  early church activities in Seattle and with her husband, helped found and
				  develop Seattle Pacific College.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PeaseHH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hiram Henry Pease with Mercie
					 Griffiths Pease</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Hiram Henry Pease subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pederson, Hans (September 2, 1864 - September 6,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hans Pederson was the one of the most prominent builders in the
				  Seattle area during the early part of the 20th century. He was born in Denmark
				  on September 2, 1864 and received a common school education. After completing
				  the required term of military service, he immigrated to the United States in
				  1884, first settling in Minnesota where he worked as a farm hand. He then
				  worked on the construction of the Northern Pacific tunnels through the Cascade
				  Mountains. He arrived in Seattle in 1886 and worked on the railroad
				  construction along Lake Union. After the 1889 fire in Seattle, he helped
				  rebuild the city's business district. Pederson was one of the first Seattleites
				  to go to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush in 1898. Upon his return, he went
				  into the building and construction where he soon became one of Seattle's most
				  prominent and prolific contractors. His projects numbered in the hundreds over
				  his career and included apartment houses, individual homes and commercial
				  buildings. Among Pederson's most notable projects are the Arctic Building
				  (1916); Seaboard Building (1909); Milwaukee Hotel (1911); St. Regis Hotel
				  (1909); Alhambra Theatre (1909, extensively altered); King County Courthouse
				  (1916); the 15th Avenue NW (Ballard) Bridge and viaduct (1917); Ford Assembly
				  Plant in Seattle (1913); Washington Hall (1908); and the Terminal Sales
				  Building (1925). A March 27, 1931 article in the Christian Science Monitor
				  noted Pederson's motto was to take any job to keep his men at work during the
				  Great Depression. A biography, <emph render="italic">Kong Hans ved
				  Stillehavet</emph> , or <emph render="italic">King Hans of the Pacific
				  Ocean</emph>, was published in Denmark.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PedersonH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hans Pederson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a Curtis Studio Arctic Club portrait photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Pedro II (December 2, 1825 – December 5,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dom Pedro II was the second and last monarch of the Empire of
				  Brazil, reigning for over 58 years. He was born in Rio de Janeiro, the seventh
				  child of Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil and Empress Dona Maria Leopoldina. His
				  father's abrupt abdication and departure to Europe in 1831 left the
				  five-year-old as emperor, and for nine years Brazil was governed by a turbulent
				  regency. To restore political stability, Pedro was declared of age on July 23,
				  1840, and crowned emperor on July 18, 1841. Although Pedro II inherited an
				  empire on the verge of disintegration, he turned Brazil into an emerging power
				  in the international arena. The nation had political stability, freedom of
				  speech, civil rights, vibrant economic growth, and a functional representative
				  parliamentary monarchy. Brazil was also victorious in the Platine War, the
				  Uruguayan War, and the Paraguayan War, as well as prevailing in several other
				  international disputes and domestic tensions. Pedro II steadfastly pushed
				  through the abolition of slavery despite opposition from powerful political and
				  economic interests. He was overthrown in a sudden coup d'état led by a clique
				  of military leaders who desired a form of republic headed by a dictator. Pedro
				  II had become weary of emperorship and despaired over the monarchy's future
				  prospects. He did not allow his ouster to be opposed and did not support any
				  attempt to restore the monarchy. He spent the last two years of his life in
				  exile in Europe.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">28</container><container type="item">Pedro1</container><unittitle>Pedro II</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Margaret Mary
					 Bogardus from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pegelow, Eugene Fred (January 24, 1884 - November 20,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Possibly Eugene Fred Pegelow, alternatively known as Fred Eugene
				  Pegelow, the son of Christian (Carl) and Katherine Pegelow. Born in Wisconsin,
				  he worked in Seattle and Spokane as a salesman. He married Alma Lyon in 1912 in
				  Couer d'Alene, Idaho; after their divorce in 1919, he married Vivian Whits in
				  1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PegelowEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eugene Fred Pegelow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Portland Studio, Portland, Oregon</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: E. F. Peglow, Eastern Washington.</p></note><note><p> His last name is spelled Peglow and Pegelow in the records,
					 and his first name is listed as both Fred and Eugene.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peiser, Theodore Edwin (October 5, 1853 - February 11,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore E. Peiser, an early pioneer photographer, was active in
				  Washington State from the 1880s to 1907. He was born in California in 1853.
				  Arriving in Washington State in the early 1880s, he was actively involved in
				  the photography business in Seattle until about 1907. During his time in
				  Washington, he photographed significant scenes of the early history of Seattle
				  and the outlying region. Among his photographs are the faculty and students of
				  the Territorial University, the National Guard after six days service under
				  martial law during the Chinese riots in Seattle, the Seattle Base Ball Club in
				  1886, and the Camp Lawton corrals and stables for military troops departing for
				  the 1900 Boxer Rebellion in China. He also frequently photographed scenes in
				  King County and the surrounding region. His original studio on 2nd Avenue
				  between Marion and Columbia Streets was destroyed along with his equipment and
				  negatives in the fire of 1889 that swept the city's downtown district. In 1907,
				  Peiser sold his photography gallery and his equipment, including many valuable
				  plates, views and portraits, and moved to the Lake County of California in
				  hopes of improving his health. He married Elia Doyea in 1910; she predeceased
				  him. Some of his photographic images did survive, and are preserved in
				  University of Washington Special Collections as the Theodore E. Peiser
				  Photograph Collection.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PeiserTE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Theodore E. Peiser</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: When employed at the Grand Art Studio,
					 corner of 3rd &amp; Jessie (!), as printer, in 1874.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pellegrini, Angelo Mario (April 20, 1903 - November 11,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Angelo Mario Pellegrini was an author of books about the
				  pleasures of growing and making your own food and wine, and about the Italian
				  immigrant experience. In 1913, Angelo Pellegrini’s family emigrated from
				  Tuscany to McCleary, Washington where his father worked for the railroad. He
				  worked on the family farm while attending school. He entered the University of
				  Washington as a history major, working summers in the McCleary mill. He earned
				  undergraduate and graduate degrees, with honors, and finished two years of law
				  school before being hired by Whitman College as an English teacher. Pellegrini
				  returned to the UW as a professor of English while earning his Ph.D. He also
				  wrote books, made wine in the cellar of his home, became a gourmet cook and was
				  widely known for his flower, fruit and vegetable gardens. He was the subject of
				  a long profile in <emph render="italic">The New York Times</emph> , named "an
				  Outstanding Citizen of Washington State" by the state House of Representatives,
				  cited by the Daughters of the American Revolution as "a naturalized citizen who
				  has distinguished himself" and honored by the Freedom Foundation "for bringing
				  about better understanding of the American way of life." In 2001, he was
				  included by the <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph> in the 150 people
				  who shaped Seattle. Pellegrini's first book, <emph render="italic">The
				  Unprejudiced Palate,</emph> (1948) was hailed as a minor classic in the annals
				  of gastronomy. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PellegriniAM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Angelo Pellegrini</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Part of Northern Pacific extra gang crew,
					 Moclips, Wash. 1919. Angelo Pellegrini, 2nd from left in back row, age 15.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pelly, Thomas Minor (August 22, 1902 – November 21,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Minor Pelly was a U.S. Representative from Washington.
				  Pelly was born in Seattle to Elizabeth Montgomery (née Minor), daughter of
				  early Seattle mayor Thomas T. Minor, and Bernard Pelly. He attended public
				  schools, the University School in Victoria, British Columbia, and the Hoosac
				  School in Hoosick, New York. He was employed in real estate and the banking
				  industry from 1921 to 1930, after which he was an officer of a printing and
				  stationery company until 1955. A Republican, Pelly was elected to the U.S.
				  House of Representatives from the Seattle-based first district. He served in
				  Congress for twenty years and did not run for re-election in 1972.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PellyTM1</container><unittitle>Thomas Minor Pelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1972</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Chase, Washington D.C</persname></origination></did><note><p>Color photograph with a letter to Merle (no last name): As you
					 know I am retiring as a Member of congress at the end of this year. In
					 preparing for the disposal of my files for the past twenty years I have come
					 across the names of many friends to whom I am deeply grateful for their
					 assistance over these years. Therefore, as a memento of my appreciation for
					 your help in so many ways I want you to have the enclosed autographed picture.
					 With kindest regards. Sincerely, Tom.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PellyTM2</container><unittitle>Thomas Minor Pelly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1972</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Chase, Washington D.C</persname></origination></did><note><p>B&amp;W photograph, slightly different pose </p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PellyTM3</container><unittitle>Thomas Pelly seated on desk in his Washington D. C.
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>The postcard was addressed to Robert D. Monroe, who was head
						of UW Special Collections.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Pelz, Dwight R. (April 1, 1951 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dwight Pelz was born in Seattle and graduated from the
				  University of Michigan. He worked on initiatives dealing with school funding
				  and nuclear power, as an aide in the state Senate, and on the successful
				  initiative to repeal the sales tax on food. Pelz was elected to the state
				  senate from the 37th District in 1990 and served six years before being elected
				  to the Metropolitan King County Council, where he served nine years. He took
				  over as Washington State Democratic State Chair, serving from 2006 until
				  2013.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PelzDR1</container><unittitle>Dwight Pelz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1990</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Candidate for Washington state senator.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pennington, Ruth Esther (June 4, 1905 - March 10,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth Esther Pennington worked in a variety of media, including
				  painting and printmaking, but was best known for her metalwork and jewelry.
				  Born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, her family moved to Seattle, Washington in
				  1907. She studied art at the University of Washington, receiving a B.F.A. in
				  1927 and an M.F.A. in 1929. Pennington continued her studies in summer sessions
				  at Teachers College in New York City, Carnegie Summer School at the University
				  of Oregon, and the California College of Arts and Crafts. Later a faculty
				  member of the University of Washington School of Art (1929 -1969), Pennington
				  also served as director of the University's Henry Art Gallery and created her
				  own summer art program, the Fidalgo Summer School of the Allied Arts (located
				  in La Conner, Washington). She also was involved with groups that promoted the
				  arts in the Pacific Northwest. She helped found the Northwest Designer
				  Craftsman and Friends of the Crafts in Seattle, and the World Craft Council in
				  New York City. She also helped establish the Northwest Crafts exhibition at the
				  UW in 1950, belonged to the American Craftsman Educational Council, and was a
				  trustee emeritus and fellow of the American Crafts Council. She received the
				  1972 Award of Special Commendation in recognition of her distinguished career
				  as a teacher, artist and craftsman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PenningtonRE1</container><unittitle>Ruth Esther Pennington at work, crafting metal
					 object</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Penn, William (October 14, 1644 – July 30, 1718)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Penn was an English writer and religious thinker
				  belonging to the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), and founder of the
				  Province of Pennsylvania, a North American colony of England. He was an early
				  advocate of democracy and religious freedom, notable for his good relations and
				  successful treaties with the Lenape Native Americans. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">28</container><container type="item">PennW1</container><unittitle>William Penn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1700 and 1709?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Godfrey
					 Kneller from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pennock, William Jonathan (March 10, 1915 - August 2,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William J. Pennock was born in Jamestown, New York as William
				  Pennock Hagelin. His name was changed legally to William Jonathan Pennock when
				  he was sixteen. Pennock was a graduate of Broadway High School and graduated
				  from the University of Washington in 1936 with a B. A. degree in English
				  Literature. In both high school and at the University, he was active in debate,
				  winning the City High School Speaking Championship in 1932 and managing the
				  men’s varsity debate team in his senior year. After graduation, he was
				  executive secretary of the Washington Commonwealth Federation, an organization
				  that held political influence in the 1930s and 1940s, and was chair of the
				  Emergency Youth Commission, seeking to provide employment for youth in the
				  state. Pennock served as state representative from the 35th District from 1939
				  to 1946 and helped to found the Washington State's Progressive Party in 1948.
				  He became executive secretary of the Washington Old Age Pension Union in 1938
				  and president of the organization in 1944. The Washington Pension Union, as it
				  was later known, sought to provide a pension to Washington senior citizens. In
				  the 1950s, the F. B. I. accused him of being associated with the Young
				  Communist League in 1934 and 1935 and a member of the Communist Party in 1936.
				  He was arrested as a Communist Party leader in 1953 and tried for conspiracy
				  under the Smith Act. He died in 1953 of an apparent suicide. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PennockWJ1</container><unittitle>William J. Pennock in front of microphone reading from
					 a script</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pennoyer, Sylvester (July 6, 1831 – May 30,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sylvester Pennoyer was an American educator, attorney, and
				  politician in Oregon. He was born in Groton, New York, attended Harvard Law
				  School, and moved to Oregon at age 25. A Democrat, he served two terms as the
				  eighth Governor of Oregon from 1886 to 1895. He joined the Populist cause in
				  the early 1890s and became the second Populist Party state governor in history.
				  He was noted for his political radicalism, his opposition to the conservative
				  politics of President Grover Cleveland, his support for labor unions, and his
				  opposition to the Chinese in Oregon. He later served as mayor of Portland from
				  1896 to 1898. Pennoyer donated land to Portland to serve as a park, originally
				  known as Pennoyer Park.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PennoyerS1</container><unittitle>Sylvester Pennoyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pentz, Deborah B. (October 27, 1902 - August 12,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Deborah B. Pentz was a child welfare consultant and teacher. In
				  the 1930s, she worked for the Red Cross providing training to volunteers. In
				  1941, she was a USO and Travelers Aid field representative. She became an
				  acting assistant professor of social work at the University of Washington in
				  1942 before joining the United Nations Relief Rehabilitation Administration. In
				  the 1960s, she was acting director of the San Francisco Homemakers Service,
				  providing training to women. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PentzDB1</container><unittitle>Deborah B. Pentz with unidentified UNRRA
					 personnel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 19, 1945</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: UNRRA Welfare Officers in Cairo: This
					 picture of Miss Deborah B. Pentz, a child welfare consultant and former
					 assistant professor at the University of Washington, is working with other
					 UNRRA personnel in one of UNRRA’s five Middle East refugee centers near Cairo.
					 Miss Pentz left the University of Washington in 1942 to become a consultant in
					 the U. S. Children’s Bureau, Washington D. C. She was recruited as a camp
					 welfare officer of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration
					 last year. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Percival, Daniel Francis (November 16, 1839 - January
				  11, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel F. Percival, the son of Gordon and Emmeline Beale
				  Percival., was born in Bangor, Maine. Percival enlisted in the Union Army in
				  1864 and was present at the fall of Richmond and the surrender of General Lee.
				  He was honorably discharged in 1865. On May 1, 1866, he started across the
				  plains with an ox team, arriving in Bozeman, Montana on September 1, 1866. He
				  engaged in business there for two years and then went to California on
				  horseback. After spending two years in San Diego, he moved to Portland. Oregon
				  and worked in the lumber business. In 1872 he went to Rock Creek, Washington,
				  and was successfully engaged in stock raising. He served Stevens County as a
				  county commissioner in 1874 and in 1875 as a member of the legislature for two
				  terms. In 1881 he moved to Cheney, Washington Territory and worked in the real
				  estate and brokerage business. Percival established a private bank and in 1889
				  organized the First National Bank of Cheney, serving as its president. He was
				  served five consecutive terms as mayor of Cheney. It was during his
				  administration that the water works and electric light systems were constructed
				  and numerous public improvements completed. He was president of the board of
				  trustees of the Eastern Washington Asylum at Medical Lake for eight years.
				  While a member of the 1879 legislature he introduced the bill organizing
				  Spokane County and was the principal originator of the State Normal School. He
				  was married in Portland, Oregon in 1873 to Elizabeth Blythe, who died in 1896.
				  He married Fannie Kinsler Osterman in 1897. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PercivalDF1</container><unittitle>Daniel F. Percival</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Percival, Lurana Ware Cleale (February 22, 1830 -
				  November 29, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lurana Ware Cleale made the trip from her home in Plymouth,
				  Massachusetts around Cape Horn, arriving in San Francisco in May, 1850. In
				  November of that year, she went to Portland, Oregon. The ship anchored in
				  Astoria, and it took more than a week to get to Portland. She met Captain
				  Samuel Wing Percival in December 1850 and married him in San Francisco the
				  following year. After their marriage, the couple purchased a large store with
				  living quarters above it. They opened the store in May and lost everything in a
				  fire in June 1851 which destroyed much of the city. They started a new store a
				  few blocks away. In 1852, they went to Parks Bar, a mining community on the
				  Yuba River. After the death of their first child and the failure of the mines,
				  they decided to move to Olympia, Washington Territory, arriving in 1853. In
				  1855, Lurana sailed to Massachusetts by way of the Isthmus of Panama and
				  returned by the Nicaragua Route; her adopted daughter died along the way. She
				  arrived in San Francisco in October 1855 and was advised by her husband to stay
				  there until the end of the Indian Wars. She returned to Olympia in 1856, where
				  Samuel had opened a store, a saw mill and a steamship operation. He built a
				  dock at the foot of Water Street and became the town’s first harbor master.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PercivalLWC1</container><unittitle>Lurana Ware Percival sitting in a chair, holding a
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 22, 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: 75th birthday anniversary.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Percival, Samuel Merritt (June 21, 1859 - February 5,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Merritt Percival, the son of Samuel Wing Percival and
				  Lurana Ware Percival, was born in Olympia. He worked as a mate on a steamboat
				  in the 1880s. In1900 he was an agent for the Northern Pacific Railroad and
				  later worked as a clerk for the State Highway Commission. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PercivalSM1</container><unittitle>Samuel Merritt Percival</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Perkins, Charles Marion (March 8, 1871 - June 25,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Marion Perkins was in the postal service for fifty
				  years. He was born in Grayson County, Texas, and his parents crossed the plains
				  from Texas to Boise, Idaho in a covered wagon when he was a child. He entered
				  the service as a railway mail clerk in Spokane in 1890, became a postal
				  inspector in 1899 and was assigned to Seattle in 1914. In 1918 he became the
				  superintendent of mails for Seattle. He became assistant postmaster in 1920 and
				  was appointed postmaster in 1923. Perkins served until 1934 when he again
				  became superintendent of mails. Perkins was a life member of the National
				  Association of Postal Supervisors and the National Association of Retired Civil
				  Employees.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardEW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eddie Hubbard standing in front of
					 U.S. Mail airplane with postmaster Charles M. Perkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edward W. Hubbard subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HubbardEW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Eddie Hubbard in U.S. Mail airplane
					 with postmaster Charles M. Perkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edward W. Hubbard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Perkins, William Thomas (November 2, 1858 - November 23,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Thomas Perkins was born in Buffalo, graduated from Bates
				  University and received a law degree from the University of Michigan in 1884.
				  He married Katherine Laub in 1884; she had graduated from the University of
				  Michigan Medical School the same year. He began his law practice in Bismarck,
				  North Dakota. From 1892 until 1896 he was Vice-President of the First National
				  Bank of Bismarck, North Dakota. In 1888 he was elected as one of the first
				  aldermen of Bismarck, North Dakota and was a member of the Board of Education
				  and its secretary at Bismarck for a period of twelve years. He was president of
				  the North Dakota Educational Association in 1895. He took an active interest in
				  both local and state politics in Dakota. He was selected as a delegate to the
				  Republican national Convention in Chicago in June 1904 and was one of the first
				  delegates to represent Alaska in a Republican National Convention. Perkins was
				  commissioned Colonel in the National Guards of North Dakota in 1892. For a
				  period of two years after 1896 he engaged in mining in Colorado before going to
				  Alaska in 1898. In 1900 he arrived in Nome and became the General Auditor of
				  the Northwestern Commercial Company. He was also attorney in fact in Alaska for
				  the managing director of the Northwestern Siberian Company Limited. In 1908, he
				  moved to Seattle where he organized banks in Roy, Oakville, West Seattle and
				  Kirkland, and traveled in Siberia and South America to develop trade, mining
				  and timber ventures. He was active in the Masons, Shriners and Knights Templar
				  and was a member of the Arctic Brotherhood, Camp Nome No. 9.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PerkinsWT1</container><unittitle>William Thomas Perkins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Perrigo, William Pulcifer (March 28, 1848 - April 10,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William P. Perrigo was born in Canada and came to Seattle in
				  1877. He established trading posts in Western Washington before taking a timber
				  claim. He owned one of the leading logging operations in the area and was one
				  of the founders of the Washington State Good Roads Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Perry, Matthew Calbraith (April 10, 1794 – March 4,
				  1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew Calbraith Perry was a Commodore of the United States
				  Navy who commanded ships in several wars, including the War of 1812 and the
				  Mexican–American War (1846–48). He played a leading role in the opening of
				  Japan to the West with the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854. Perry was interested
				  in the education of naval officers and assisted in the development of an
				  apprentice system that helped establish the curriculum at the United States
				  Naval Academy. With the advent of the steam engine, he became a leading
				  advocate of modernizing the U.S. Navy and came to be considered "The Father of
				  the Steam Navy" in the United States. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PerryMC1</container><unittitle>Matthew Perry monument in Touro Park, Newport, Rhode
					 Island, front view</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The statue, a standing figure of Perry wearing his Naval
					 uniform, was designed by John Quincy Adams Ward in 1869, with a pedestal
					 designed by Richard Morris Hunt. The circular base has four bronze bas-reliefs
					 that represent events in Perry's life.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PerryMC2</container><unittitle>Photograph of the Matthew Perry monument in Touro
					 Park, Newport, Rhode Island, side view</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The statue, a standing figure of Perry wearing his Naval
					 uniform, was designed by John Quincy Adams Ward in 1869, with a pedestal
					 designed by Richard Morris Hunt. The circular base has four bronze bas-reliefs
					 that represent events in Perry's life.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PerryMC3</container><unittitle>Photograph of a marble bust of Matthew Perry, front
					 view</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The marble bust, designed by Erasmus D. Palmer in 1859, is in
					 the Memorial Museum of the U. S. Navy, Washington Naval Yard, Washington, D.
					 C.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PerryMC4</container><unittitle>Photograph of a marble bust of Matthew Perry, side
					 view</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>The marble bust, designed by Erasmus D. Palmer in 1859, is in
					 the Memorial Museum of the U. S. Navy, Washington Naval Yard, Washington, D.
					 C.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Perskie, Leon Arasaphus (April 10, 1899 - August 21,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leon A. Perskie, an official photographer for four Democratic
				  Presidents, was born in Atlantic City. His father, Jacob H. Perskie, a
				  photographer, oil painter and etcher, had done campaign portraits of President
				  Roosevelt in 1932 and 1936. Leon Perskie joined his father's business after he
				  worked as a motion-picture photographer and projectionist and as a newspaper
				  photographer. Their business had studios in Philadelphia, Atlantic City and
				  Baltimore. Leon made portraits of Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Truman,
				  Kennedy and Johnson. He prepared picture albums of their inaugurations and did
				  etchings from other Presidential portraits.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">PerskieLA1</container><unittitle>Leon A. Perskie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peters, Charles J. (May 21, 1853 - April 26,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles J. Peters was born in Zurich, Switzerland, and
				  immigrated to the United States in 1871. He joined the Puget Sound Co-operative
				  Colony in Port Angeles in 1887. The Colony, a utopian community, was founded by
				  George Venable Smith. Peters said that Smith had asked him to assist with the
				  colony’s paper, <emph render="italic">The Model Commonwealth,</emph> and he
				  wrote at least one article for the newspaper. Peters became disillusioned by
				  the bickering within the colony and left to purchase farmland in the Port
				  Angeles area. In 1888 he married Laura Etta Crane Hall, a well-known advocate
				  for equal rights for women, labor reform, communitarianism, spiritualism,
				  populism and anti-Chinese activism, who was the corresponding secretary for the
				  Colony and the editor of <emph render="italic">The Model Commonwealth.</emph>
				  They were said to be the first couple to be married in Port Angeles. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersCJ1</container><unittitle>Charles J. Peters</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1887 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">David Roby Judkins, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Original in PH0280 D. R. Judkins
					 Photographs.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peters, Robert Louis (October 20, 1924 – June 13, 2014)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Louis Peters, an American poet, critic, scholar,
				  playwright, editor, and actor, was born in northern Wisconsin in 1924. He
				  earned a scholarship to the University of Wisconsin but postponed his education
				  to spend three years in Europe for the Army during World War II. He returned to
				  the university for a bachelor's degree in English in 1948, a master's in 1949
				  and a doctorate in 1952. He moved to California to teach at UC Riverside from
				  1963 until 1968, when he accepted a post at UC Irvine. He retired in 1992.
				  Compelled to write poetry after the death of a young son, Peters produced more
				  than 30 collections, beginning in 1967 with <emph render="italic">Songs for a
				  Son.</emph>Peters was a prolific poet, publishing over 30 books of poems, and
				  an important critic of contemporary American poetry. Peters judged competitions
				  for fellowships and prizes for small presses and for the Poetry Society of
				  America and PEN International. He had Guggenheim and National Endowment for the
				  Arts fellowships, a Fulbright Scholarship, and won the Alice Fay di Castagnola
				  Award of the Poetry Society of America. His acting career developed after
				  countless poetry readings when Peters wanted to reach a larger audience with
				  his poetry by transforming it into theatrical monologues replete with scripts,
				  lighting, settings and sound tracks. He was married to Jean Louise Powell.
				  Shortly after his divorce from Jean, Peters met poet Paul Trachtenberg and
				  established a relationship lasting more than 36 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersRL1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Robert Peters in black shirt, arms
					 crossed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1979</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Paul Trachtenberg, California</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersRL2</container><unittitle>Photograph of Robert Peters standing in front of a red
					 Toyota Corolla SR5 liftback</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peterson, Annie Miner (May 1, 1860 - May 19,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Miner Peterson, a member of the Coos Native American Tribe
				  of Oregon, was a cultural and linguistic consultant to Melville Jacobs, an
				  anthropologist at the University of Washington. She was born in 1860 in the
				  village of Willanch (Wu’læ'ænch) at the present-day Cooston, on the east shore
				  of upper Coos Bay on the southern Oregon Coast and was one of the last Coos
				  Indians to grow up in the traditional Coos culture. She was an accomplished
				  basket maker, storyteller, and a repository of indigenous Coos languages and
				  traditional culture. In 1933 while searching for a suitable consultant in the
				  Hanis Coos language, Jacobs discovered that Peterson was fluent not only in
				  Hanis, but also in Miluk Coos, a Penutian language thought to have been extinct
				  for at least fifteen years. Through the summers of 1933 and 1934, Jacobs
				  interviewed Peterson in those two languages, collecting 32 Coos myth texts in
				  Miluk, eight in Hanis, and two in both Hanis and Miluk for comparison of the
				  two languages. Wax-cylinder phonograph recordings were also taken of the myths
				  and songs during both years. In addition, Jacobs collected from Peterson a
				  large number of narrative and ethnologic texts in Miluk, a smaller number in
				  Hanis, and eight texts in both Hanis and Miluk. The narrative and ethnologic
				  texts were published in 1939; the myth texts in 1940. Her biography, 
				  <emph render="italic">She's Tricky Like Coyote: Annie Miner Peterson, an Oregon
				  Coast Indian Woman, </emph>was published in 1997.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsM1</container><unittitle>Melville Jacobs and Annie Peterson with
					 battery-operated disc recorder</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1934</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Melville Jacobs and Mrs. Annie Peterson with
					 battery-operated disc recorder. Charleston, Oregon.</p><p>Filed under Melville Jacobs subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Peterson, Arthur (August 6, 1876 - April 4,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Peterson was the son of Arthur and Caroline Peterson,
				  early pioneers in the Hollywood district of Woodinville. He was born and lived
				  all of his life on the family homestead and was said to be the first
				  non-indigenous baby born in the area. He worked as a logger. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box:oversize">PorXD1</container><unittitle>Arthur Peterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1895-1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peterson, Howard W. "Pete" (1892 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard W. "Pete" Peterson married Hazel Cooper in Seattle in
				  1913. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard W. Peterson with Sadie Michael, Martin
					 Deggeller, Marjorie Bloyd and Frank Michael</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peterson, Lewis (October 25, 1846 - October 20,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Peterson, pioneer Seattle photographer, was born in Lom,
				  Norway and came to the United States in 1857 and to Seattle in 1876 with Henry,
				  his older brother. He and his brother operated The Seattle Photograph Gallery,
				  also briefly called the Seattle Art Gallery. Peterson &amp; Brother offered
				  photographs of the Puget Sound and had an established portrait business. The
				  brothers also traveled up to Alaska to photograph the area. Peterson &amp;
				  Brother remained a modestly successful business until it was wiped out in the
				  great fire of 1889. Following the fire, Henry retired from photography. Many
				  Peterson &amp; Brother photographs were later copied and reused by Asahel
				  Curtis, Thomas W. Prosch, Thomas Peiser and other photographers. Lewis also
				  owned the Elite Gallery in New Tacoma, W. T. in 1883.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonL1</container><unittitle>Lewis Peterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1883?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peterson, New Tacoma, W. T.</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of cabinet card.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonL2</container><unittitle>Lewis Peterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1908 -1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank G. Abell, Tacoma</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of cabinet card.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Peterson, William Henry (August 31, 1836 - February 24,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Peterson was born in Lewis, West Virginia on
				  August 31, 1836 and moved to Missouri in 1868. He became a teacher and tax
				  collector; he was so efficient in the latter position that he was elected to
				  three terms. In 1876, he went to California for three years before moving to
				  Kittitas (then Yakima) County in Washington Territory. During his twenty years
				  of residence, he was elected county school superintendent, county auditor,
				  clerk of the district court, Ellensburg postmaster, and representative in the
				  State Legislature. Peterson and his family moved to Fern Hill in Tacoma in 1899
				  and later moved to Puyallup. He married Anne E. Roach in 1863; the couple had
				  two children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PetersonWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Peterson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>His name is misspelled on the engraving as "W. H. Petterson,
					 auditor, Kittitas Co. , W. T." rather than Peterson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pettus, Terry (August 15, 1904 – October 6,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Terry Pettus was a newspaper reporter and activist in Seattle,
				  Washington. Originally from Terre Haute, Indiana, Pettus worked briefly as a
				  reporter in Minneapolis and in Grand Forks, North Dakota, before moving to
				  Seattle with his wife Berta in 1927 where Pettus went to work for the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Star</emph> . In 1935, as a reporter for the 
				  <emph render="italic">Tacoma Tribune</emph>, he became Washington State's first
				  member of the American Newspaper Guild and was instrumental in the formation of
				  the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Guild in Tacoma where he served as its first
				  president. The Guild later spread to Seattle, leading to the first successful
				  strike to gain union recognition for workers at a Hearst newspaper. After the 
				  <emph render="italic">Tacoma Tribune</emph> folded, Pettus worked in South
				  Bend, Washington, editing the <emph render="italic">Willapa Harbor Pilot</emph>
				  and becoming involved with the Washington Commonwealth Federation, initially in
				  a drive for public power. Increasingly radicalized by the Great Depression, in
				  1938 Pettus joined the Communist Party USA (CPUSA). He became editor of the
				  Commonwealth Federation's <emph render="italic">Washington New Dealer</emph>
				  which later became<emph render="italic">New World</emph>in 1943. Pettus ran
				  unsuccessfully for Seattle City Council in 1946. He was named as a member of
				  the Communist Party by the former head of the Washington Commonwealth
				  Federation in testimony before the Canwell Committee of the Washington State
				  Legislature. Blacklisted during the McCarthy Era, Pettus became editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">People's World</emph>, a newspaper associated with the
				  CPUSA. He was charged in 1952 with conspiracy to overthrow the U.S. government,
				  and convicted and sentenced to five years, plus an additional three on contempt
				  charges for refusing to name names. He served 60 days, and his conviction was
				  eventually overturned by the United States Supreme Court. Pettus left the CPUSA
				  in 1958. Back in Seattle, he moved onto a houseboat that same year and played a
				  crucial role in saving Lake Union's houseboats and in preventing the city from
				  dumping sewage directly into the lake. Seattle Mayor Charles Royer honored him
				  in 1982 with an official Terry Pettus Day, and in 1985, the year after his
				  death, the city dedicated the small Terry Pettus Park on the shore of Lake
				  Union near one of the houseboat neighborhoods. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PettusT1</container><unittitle>Terry Pettus with telephone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">M. W. Kirkwood</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pettygrove, Francis William (October 12, 1812 – October
				  5, 1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis William Pettygrove was a pioneer and one of the founders
				  of the cities of Portland, Oregon, and Port Townsend, Washington. Born in
				  Calais, Maine and educated in Maine schools, he worked as a merchant's clerk in
				  New York City before a company there sent him by ship in 1842 to Oregon City to
				  open a store. Later that year he paid $50 for half of a land claim on which he
				  and Asa Lovejoy laid out a town named Portland after the port city in
				  Pettygrove's home state. Pettygrove engaged in a highly profitable
				  three-cornered trade between Portland, San Francisco, and Hawaii. Making money
				  in his stores and warehouses, in trades of lumber, grain, and salted fish, and
				  in real-estate deals, Pettygrove by 1848 was one of the richest men in the
				  Oregon Territory. When the California Gold Rush drew potential laborers from
				  Oregon and threatened Pettygrove's short-term prospects, he sold his assets in
				  Portland and vicinity. In 1851 he joined with others to start a new town, Port
				  Townsend, on Puget Sound in what became the state of Washington. He died at the
				  age of 75 and was buried in Port Townsend. Pettygrove Park in southwest
				  Portland and Pettygrove Street in northwest Portland are named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">PettygroveFW1</container><unittitle>Francis William Pettygrove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phelan, James Michael (December 5, 1892 – November 14,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Michael Phelan was an American football player and coach
				  of football and basketball. He graduated from Notre Dame in 1919, where he was
				  the starting quarterback for the Irish from 1915-1917. Following graduation
				  Phelan served in the US Army as a First Lieutenant. In 1920 he was hired at the
				  University of Missouri as head coach (1920–1921) before moving to Purdue
				  University (1922–1929), the University of Washington (1930–1941), and Saint
				  Mary's College of California (1942–1947), compiling a career college football
				  record of 137–87–14. In 12 years as head coach at Washington, he guided the
				  Huskies to a 65-37-8 record. Phelan also coached the Los Angeles Dons of the
				  All-America Football Conference (AAFC) from 1948 to 1949, the New York Titans,
				  the N.Y Yanks, the Baltimore Colts and Dallas Texans of the National Football
				  League (NFL) in 1951 and 1952, tallying a professional football coaching record
				  of 13-35-2. In addition, he was the head basketball coach at Saint Mary's for
				  two seasons during World War II (1943–1945), where he had a record 10–11. He
				  later was involved in politics and served three terms as County Commissioner
				  for Sacramento County in California. He was inducted into the College Football
				  Hall of Fame as a coach in 1973 and into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1986.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhelanJM1</container><unittitle>James Phelan kneeling on football field</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhelanJM2</container><unittitle>James Phelan in uniform and cap, kneeling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phelps, Edward Douglas (August 19,1837 - December 20,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Douglas Phelps was born in New Hampshire and came to
				  Seattle in the 1870s. He invested in mining and real estate and was a member of
				  the South Seattle Improvement Club in the early 1900s. The club advocated for
				  improvement in transportation and street car service. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhelpsED1</container><unittitle>Edward Douglas Phelps</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Andrew Nilson, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phelps, Thomas Stowell (November 7, 1848 - November 3,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Stowell Phelps, Jr. served in the U. S. Navy, He was in
				  command of the Mare Island Navy Yard in Vallejo, California during the
				  construction of the new dock and when the dock formally opened. His father,
				  also a rear admiral, was in command when the dry dock opened in 1886. Admiral
				  Phelps Sr. served in the Mediterranean, the Atlantic and the Pacific and
				  commanded the <emph render="italic">USS Juniata</emph> during the capture of
				  Fort Fisher in January 1865 and was aboard the gunboat<emph render="italic">
				  Decatur</emph> during the “Battle of Seattle” in 1855. Phelps Park in Seattle
				  was named in honor of Admiral Phelps, Sr.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhelpsTS1</container><unittitle>Thomas Stowell Phelps, Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the October 13, 1907 edition of 
					 <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> when he assumed command of the
					 Mare Island Navy Yard.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phillips, Herbert Joseph (November 14, 1891- October 19,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert J. Phillips was born in Rapid City, South Dakota and
				  attended the University of Washington where he received his undergraduate and
				  doctorate degrees. He studied philosophy at Columbia University and Cambridge
				  University before being appointed to the UW Faculty in 1930. Phillips was a
				  target of the Washington State Legislature’s Canwell Committee on un-American
				  activities in 1949. The Board of Regents dismissed him despite a recommendation
				  by a U. W. faculty-tenure committee that he be retained. In later years,
				  Phillips spoke at many college campuses on academic freedom. He appeared as an
				  expert defense witness at Smith Act trials in Washington State and New York. In
				  the Seattle trial in 1953, although not a defendant, he was jailed for 80 days
				  for refusing to name past associates. After being fired in 1949, he
				  occasionally was allowed to guest lecture but never had another job at any
				  university. He became a laborer and retired to San Francisco, where he died in
				  1978.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ1</container><unittitle>Herbert Joseph Phillips</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ2</container><unittitle>Herbert Joseph Phillips</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1966?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the University of Washington Philosophy
					 Department faculty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (L-R): Melvin Rader, Everett J. Nelson, Herbert
					 Phillips; back row (L-R): Herbert Wallace Schneider, others unidentified</p><p>The two unidentified men in the back row may be Abraham Irving
					 Melden (1910-1991) and John Herman Randall Jr. (1899-1880)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phillips, Marion H. (April 11, 1833 - July 11,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marion H. Phillips was born in Illinois and traveled with his
				  parents, brothers and sisters to Oregon in 1846, crossing the plains by ox
				  cart. In 1849, with his father and two brothers, he went to California in quest
				  of gold. After a fairly successful venture, they returned to Portland on the
				  bark <emph>Toulon</emph>, his father dying soon after the journey. Marion took
				  up a homestead near Oregon City where he farmed for more than fifty years. In
				  1856 he took part in the Indian War near Walla Walla where he was attached to
				  Captain L. B. Munson’s Company 1, 1st Regiment, Oregon mounted volunteers. He
				  married Eliza McNary, the aunt of Senator Charles L. McNary in 1858; they had
				  three daughters. In 1904, he retired from farming and moved to Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsMH1</container><unittitle>Marion H. Phillips</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William A. Pinney, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Phillips, Mary Elizabeth McGroaty (January 17, 1865 -
				  July 13, 1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Elizabeth McGroatry, a native of Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, was
				  a pioneer who came to Seattle in 1874. She married Joseph W. Phillips in
				  1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SackmanDJ1</container><unittitle>Daniel J. Sackman with Elizabeth W. Sackman, Mrs.
					 Joseph W. (Mary Elizabeth) Phillips, and Rev. John F. Damon sitting in the
					 Sackman yard at Port Blakely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1885</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daniel Jacob Sackman subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Phillips, Viola Bella Baird (October
				  21, 1876 - August 17, 1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Viola Bella Baird, the daughter of Elijah Baird and Martha
				  Spangler Baird, was born in Kansas and moved to Lewis County in Washington
				  State with her parents as a child. She married Vernon Daniel Phillips in
				  1895.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsVBB1</container><unittitle>Viola Phillips</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Viola Phillips, Mom's chum. 1906</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phinney, Guy Carleton (May 30, 1851 - September 13,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Guy Carleton Phinney was born in Nova Scotia, attended Phillips
				  Exeter Academy and graduated Bishops College in Quebec, where he won the
				  Nicholis mathematical scholarship. He went on to study law at McGill College,
				  entering in the second year. After a year, he was attracted by the gold rush in
				  British Columbia and went to Caribou, where he engaged in mining for several
				  years. At one time, he owned a large amount of mining property, but a collapse
				  came, and he left there poor in the fall of 1880. He spent a few months in San
				  Francisco before heading to Seattle. Phinney went into partnership with a man
				  named Nelson in the real estate, insurance and collection business. He built
				  the first brick block begun and finished after the fire of 1889. He also
				  erected the Butler Block, at Second and James Streets and the Carlton Block, on
				  Front Street. He bought 200 acres on the west shore of Green Lake, where he
				  built an English-style manor with a formal rose garden, a pump house and a
				  menagerie populated with deer and other animals. He built an electric trolley
				  line to Fremont Avenue and paid for a private streetcar, which provided easy
				  access to city encouraged settlement north of the city. Phinney died in 1893 at
				  the age of 41. His widow, Nellie Wright Phinney, would later sell the private
				  park to the Seattle for $100,000.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhinneyGC1</container><unittitle>Copy of a drawing of the proposed Guy Phinney
					 residence, Carleton Place (not built)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1892</unitdate><origination><persname role="architect">John Parkinson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: From the Feb. 6, 1892<emph render="italic">The American Architect</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Phinney, Mrs. (?)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">Phinney1</container><unittitle>Mrs. Phinney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Shichigo Mishi, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Nellie Wright (Mrs. Guy C. ) This is Mrs.
					 Phinney for whom Phinney Ave. was named. Her husband had been a Dr. of
					 Dentistry. Maybe the U of W would like to have this. JAK</p><p>This is not a photograph of Nellie Wright Phinney (1867-
					 November 25, 1909), whose husband was in real estate. The photograph is of an
					 older woman, circa 1920s.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pickering, J. </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PickeringJ1</container><unittitle>J. Pickering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of photograph with illegible signature</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pickering, William Thomas (March 15, 1798 – April 22,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Thomas Pickering was a Republican and the fifth governor
				  of Washington territory, serving from 1862 to 1866. He was born in Yorkshire,
				  England and graduated from Oxford University in 1820. The following year, he
				  moved to Illinois where he acquired property. He married Martha Flower in 1824;
				  they had five children before she died in 1838. He never remarried. Pickering
				  served in the Illinois House of Representatives from 1842 to 1852 and was a
				  delegate to Republican National Convention from Illinois in 1860. In 1862
				  President Lincoln offered him the choice of being either part of the United
				  States Ministry in England or Governor of the Washington territory, known at
				  the time as the territory of Columbia. Pickering chose the governorship, and he
				  moved to Olympia, the territorial capital, in June 1862. Under his leadership,
				  state government took responsibility for the care of the mentally ill,
				  contracting for their care with the Sisters of Charity (now the Sisters of
				  Providence). He sent the first message over a transcontinental telephone line
				  on September 4, 1864. After his term of office, he moved back to Illinois.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PickeringWT1</container><unittitle>William Thomas Pickering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a painting.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pickford, Stewart Gerald (May 10, 1937 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stewart Pickford was a professor at the University of
				  Washington’s School of Forestry, now the School of Environmental and Forest
				  Sciences. He received his BA from the University of Colorado in 1956, his MSF
				  in Entomology and Forest Health from the University of Washington in 1966, and
				  his PhD in Forest Fire Science from the University of Washington in 1972. He
				  started his graduate work in forest entomology, but after obtaining his MSF, he
				  switched to forest fire science and became an expert in fire physics. He worked
				  as a research forester for the USDA Forest Service (1967-1972) and taught at
				  the University of Washington from 1976 until his retirement in 1999. He studied
				  the influence of fuel moisture on prescribed fires and relationships between
				  drought and fire; fire severity and topography; and fuel consumption in high
				  and low intensity fire in logging slash. He studied prescribed fire in Parana,
				  Brazil and participated in many courses on forest fire. His father, Gerald D.
				  Pickford, worked for the Pacific Northwest Research Station in the 1930s and
				  was head of Oregon Forestry and Hawaii’s Forestry programs. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PickfordSG1</container><unittitle>Stewart Pickford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pickrell, Eugene Reason (February 18, 1858 - February 5,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eugene Reason Pickrell, the son of Daniel and Margaret Pickrell,
				  was born in Indiana and moved to Palouse City, Washington in the 1880s where he
				  taught school. He married Rose Moulton in 1881; the couple had two
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PickrellER1</container><unittitle>Eugene Reason Pickrell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1894?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Presented to Edmond S. Meany by W. M.
					 Chandler, Lewiston, Ida. March 1933.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pierce, Doald Joseph (June 3, 1918 - November 22,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald Joseph "Donn" Pierce and John Manchester owned and
				  operated Manchester Pierce in Bellevue, Washington in the 1950s where they did
				  landscape architecture, design consulting and had an art gallery. They also
				  designed the Manchester Pierce free-standing fireplace. Pierce taught landscape
				  architecture classes at the University of Washington as part of their adult
				  evening learning programs and wrote an article for the<emph render="italic">
				  Seattle Times</emph>on the importance of landscaping for the home in 1952. He
				  was a lieutenant commander in the Navy during World War II. He was killed in a
				  car accident in 1967 in Eugene, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">ManchesterJA1-8</container><unittitle>John Alan Manchester with Donn Pierce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Eight photographs of John Manchester (with glasses) and Donn
					 Pierce. Photographs were probably made by Dearborn Massar since they were
					 donated with the Dearborn Massar photograph collection; however, images do not
					 have any identifying information on them.</p><p>Filed under John Alan Manchester subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pierce, Franklin (November 23, 1804 – October 8,
				  1869)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Franklin Pierce was the 14th president of the United States
				  (1853–1857), a northern Democrat who saw the abolitionist movement as a
				  fundamental threat to the unity of the nation. He alienated anti-slavery groups
				  by championing and signing the Kansas–Nebraska Act and enforcing the Fugitive
				  Slave Act, yet he failed to stem conflict between North and South, setting the
				  stage for Southern secession and the American Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PierceF1</container><unittitle>Franklin Pierce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting of Pierce.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><container type="item">PierceF2</container><unittitle>Franklin Pierce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a portrait by Healy from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pierce, Gene (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pierce, Walter Marcus (May 30, 1861 – March 27,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Marcus Pierce was an American politician, a Democrat, who
				  served as the 17th Governor of Oregon and a member of the United States House
				  of Representatives from Oregon's 2nd congressional district. A native of
				  Illinois, he served in the Oregon State Senate before the governorship, and
				  again after leaving the U.S. House. While out of politics, Pierce continued
				  local and statewide activities. He was a founder of the Oregon Farmer's Union
				  and the Public Power League, headed the State Taxpayers League, and took a seat
				  on the board of Regents of Oregon Agricultural College from 1905 to 1927. He
				  began advocating for using the Columbia River for hydroelectric power during
				  this time. Although his 1922 run for governor was rooted in issues of public
				  power, passing a state income tax, and reforestation, Pierce revealed his
				  life-long nativism, tacitly supporting the Klan and backing the anti-Catholic
				  Compulsory School Bill, a measure aimed directly at parochial schools. Oregon's
				  voters approved the measure, but the Oregon Supreme Court declared the it
				  unconstitutional, a decision upheld by the U. S. Supreme Court (Pierce vs.
				  Society of Sisters, 1925). Pierce also supported the Alien Property Act, a 1923
				  law directed at immigrant Japanese in Portland and the Hood River Valley,
				  prohibiting aliens from owning or leasing land.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PierceWM1</container><unittitle>Walter Marcus Pierce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pietrzycki, Marcel M. (April 25, 1843 - September 13,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Galicia, Marcel (or Marcellus) M. Pietrzycki immigrated
				  to the United States in 1866 just before the outbreak of the Austro-Prussian
				  War. He had studied apothecary and chemistry in his native country and lived
				  briefly to Pennsylvania before settling in California, where he was appointed
				  as an apothecary at the German Hospital in San Francisco. He attended Toland
				  Medical College and was among its earliest graduates in 1872. Pietrzycki set up
				  his first practice in Stockton, California and later moved to Rio Vista in
				  Solano County, California where he was active in the community, serving two
				  terms as a school trustee and working to help establish a telegraph line. He
				  then moved to Portland, Oregon, and the following year settled in Dayton,
				  Washington in 1880. In 1881 he diagnosed a patient with smallpox and warned the
				  community that they must take immediate measures to prevent the spread of the
				  disease. The Dayton sheriff appointed Pietrzycki the city’s first health
				  officer, and the board of health, under his guidance, issued an order to
				  quarantine the town. The measures worked to stall the spread of the disease.
				  Pietrzycki later served as the president of the Eastern Washington Medical
				  Society and as vice-president of the Washington State Medical Society. By the
				  late 1890s he was serving as mayor of Dayton. He married Mary Stuart Warren in
				  1876; they had two children, both of whom died as infants. The loss of their
				  own children motivated the Pietrzyckis to try to help others. They twice tried
				  to turn the ranch into a collective farming cooperative and hoped to bring
				  people from Austria to settle there. Pietrzycki left half of his ranch to the
				  city of Dayton to help establish an industrial department or trade school.
				  Money from the Pietrzycki estate and general bond monies were used to build
				  Pietrzycki Memorial High School, later Dayton High School, in 1923. After Mary
				  Pietrzycki died in 1920, the family home in Dayton was given to the schools,
				  and Pietrzycki donated 30 acres of land to the City of Dayton for a park.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PietrzyckiMM1</container><unittitle>Marcel M. Pietrzycki</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pifer, Drury Augustus (March 18, 1905 - October 18,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Drury Pifer was a member of the University of Washington faculty
				  from 1945 until his retirement in 1971. He was director of the School of
				  Mineral Engineering from 1948 until 1968 when the Department of Mining,
				  Metallurgical and Ceramic Engineering was organized; he served as department
				  chair for one year. Born in Charleston, S. C., he came to Seattle with his
				  mother as a child. A 1930 graduate of the University of Washington, he received
				  a master-of-science degree from the University in 1931. Before joining the
				  faculty, he was manager of mines for the DeBeers Consolidated Mines in South
				  Africa and also had mining experience in Canada and Alaska. He was a member of
				  the State Board of Examiners for professional engineering registration, the
				  Washington Committee on Mineral Land Leasing Regulations, and the Governor’s
				  Council on Forest Use. Pifer held offices in the American Institute of Mineral,
				  Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers and the American Mining Congress. He was
				  a member of Sigma Xi science honorary, the American Society for Engineering
				  Education, the South African Mine Managers Association, the Northwest Mining
				  Association, and the West Coast Mineral Association. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiferDA1</container><unittitle>Drury Pifer in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1953</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1953 edition of <emph>The
						Tyee</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pigott, William (June 27, 1860 - July 19,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Pigott founded two of Seattle's major industrial
				  enterprises, Seattle Steel Company (later Bethlehem Steel Company and
				  Birmingham Steel Company) and Seattle Car Manufacturing Co. (later Pacific Car
				  and Foundry Company or PACCAR). He was also active in a variety of other
				  Northwest businesses, a strong proponent of foreign trade, and an advocate in
				  charitable and educational efforts. He was born in New York City in 1860 to
				  Irish immigrant parents. They moved to Hubbard, Ohio, where he grew up
				  surrounded by the steel business. Pigott went to work for the local mill as a
				  salesman. After years of traveling and learning the business, he partnered with
				  William D. Hofius in purchasing a blast furnace in Syracuse, New York. That
				  venture failed, but in 1892 another mill in Trinidad, Colorado, succeeded.
				  Pigott's partner Hofius found opportunities in the Pacific Northwest, and
				  Pigott joined him in 1895 Pigott left the partnership in 1901 and formed his
				  own firm, Railway and Steel Supply Co. In 1903, Pigott formed Seattle Steel
				  Company, which became Pacific Coast Steel in 1913. He also started North Coast
				  Dry Kiln and Truck Company to build and supply kilns for the drying of shakes
				  and lumber. To answer the need for rolling stock, Pigott started the Seattle
				  Car Company, later Seattle Car and Foundry; the company merged with its
				  Portland competitor Twohy Brothers in 1917 to become Pacific Car and Foundry.
				  Pigott stepped down as president of Pacific Car and Foundry in January 1921.
				  American Car and Foundry offered to buy Pacific Car and Foundry in 1924. Pigott
				  was a director in the new company, but played a decreasing roll. His interest
				  in foreign trade, in community activities, and in the steel business kept him
				  busy. While in Vancouver, B.C., serving as chair of the Pacific Foreign Trade
				  Council, he suffered a heart attack and died a week later. Pigott was active in
				  community affairs and served on the Seattle School Board beginning in 1908; he
				  was elected president of the board in 1914. He supported many charities
				  including the Sacred Heart Orphanage and a program to assist newly released
				  convicts. Pope Pius XI made Pigott a Knight Commander of the Order of the
				  Knights of St. Gregory, and he is remembered through the William Pigott
				  Building at Seattle University, which houses the Albers School of Business and
				  Economics, the Pigott Auditorium, and computer labs. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PigottW1</container><unittitle>William Pigott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pike, John Henry (December 25, 1815 - November 6,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Pike was born in Massachusetts and crossed the plains to
				  Oregon in 1852 with the Bethel Party, which included Dexter Horton, Asa Mercer
				  and Arthur Denny. He settled first in Corvallis, Oregon before moving to
				  Seattle in 1858. He lived for a time on the corner of Second Avenue and James
				  Street. Pike put his design and carpentry skill to work immediately after
				  relocating here, and was the architect and builder of the Washington
				  Territorial University, which later became the public library. After the
				  university was completed, the Pike family moved to Astoria, where his nephews
				  had found success. They returned to Seattle and lived near what is now Pike
				  Street prior to its official plat in 1869. He continued to work as a mechanic
				  and builder, and with his son Harvey, began the first canal between Lake Union
				  and Lake Washington. In the 1870s the family moved to Tacoma, then to Point
				  Roberts where he fished for salmon, and finally to Orcas Island where he died
				  in 1903. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PikeJH1</container><unittitle>John Henry Pike</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1879?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: John Pike, after whom Pike St. was
					 named.</p><p>Copy of original photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Piles, Samuel Henry (December 28, 1858 – March 11,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Henry Piles was an American politician, attorney, and
				  diplomat who served as a United States senator from Washington. Piles was born
				  near Smithland, Kentucky and attended private schools in Kentucky before
				  studying law. He was admitted to the bar in 1883, and started a law practice in
				  Snohomish, Washington Territory. He moved to Spokane in 1886 and later in the
				  same year to Seattle. He was assistant prosecuting attorney for the third
				  judicial district of Washington Territory from 1887 to 1889 and city attorney
				  of Seattle from 1888 to 1889. He was also general counsel of the Pacific Coast
				  Company from 1895 to 1905. Piles was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1905,
				  serving one term. After leaving the Senate, he resumed his law practice in
				  Seattle. In 1922, Piles was appointed by President Warren G. Harding as
				  Minister to Colombia, an office he held until 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note><note><p>Filed under John Coit Spooner subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ping, Elisha (March 13, 1819 - August 16,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elisha Ping was born in Pulaski County, Kentucky, and his early
				  years were spent in Illinois and Indiana. He married Lucretia Kuykendall in
				  1840. In 1851, the family moved to Wisconsin, and the next year set out across
				  the plains for Oregon with the Kuykendall Company. They first settled in St.
				  Helens, Oregon and then in Douglas and Linn Counties before moving to Dayton,
				  Washington Territory in 1860. He claimed land along Patit Creek and grew wheat
				  and oats. Ping served two terms as County Commissioner (beginning 1864), three
				  terms on the Territorial Legislature (1867, 1871, and 1873) and three terms on
				  the Dayton City Council (1875, 1877, and 1883). He was a member of the first
				  Republican convention of Washington Territory. He was a prominent landowner in
				  Dayton and was a financial backer of the <emph>Dayton News</emph>. After
				  Lucretia’s death in 1863, he married Malinda Auxer (1823-1873) in 1864 and
				  Sarah Alley Tarbox (1842 – 1915) in 1882.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PingE1</container><unittitle>Elisha Ping</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pinkham, Albert Smith (August 14, 1838 - March 16, 1918)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Smith Pinkham was born in Bangor, Maine to Thomas and
				  Sarah Lewis Pinkham. He went to San Francisco by way of the Isthmus of Panama
				  when he was about 20 years old. From San Francisco he traveled to Port Townsend
				  by boat in 1858 or 1859 and worked in the customs service. A few years later,
				  he moved to Seattle where he helped clear the grounds for the site of the
				  university, now the heart of the Seattle business district; when it was
				  completed, he took classes there. He ran a general merchandise store at First
				  Avenue South and Washington Street for sixteen years and then went into the
				  contracting business. Pinkham retired to his ranch on Vashon Island. He married
				  Ida Barlow, one of the Mercer Girls; the couple had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PinkhamAS1</container><unittitle>Albert Smith Pinkham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1918?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaPine, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pinkham, Ida Mae Barlow (March 14,1846 - October 8,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida Mae Barlow, the daughter of Joel and Sarah Lott Barlow, was
				  born in New York and came to Seattle in 1866 as a member of the Mercer Girls.
				  She came to Seattle to teach and had to open a school in order to do so. When
				  she arrived, she stayed at the Occidental Hotel, the only hotel in town at the
				  time. Albert Pinkham helped her off the ship; she married him later that year
				  at the Occidental Hotel. The couple had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PinkhamIMB1</container><unittitle>Ida Mae Pinkham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaPine, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Piper, Charles Vancouver (June 16, 1867 – February 11,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Vancouver Piper was an American botanist and
				  agriculturalist. Born in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, he spent his youth
				  in Seattle, Washington Territory and graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1885. He taught botany and zoology in 1892 at the Washington
				  Agricultural College (now Washington State University) in Pullman before
				  earning a master's degree in botany in 1900 from Harvard University. Piper
				  compiled the first authoritative guides to flora in the northwestern United
				  States. With his collaborator, R. Kent Beattie, he surveyed the Palouse area of
				  southeastern Washington and expanded the study to the entire state in 1906.
				  That year, The Smithsonian Institution published his catalog 
				  <emph render="italic">Flora of the State of Washington</emph>. He also
				  published<emph render="italic"> Flora of Southeast Washington and Adjacent
				  Idaho </emph>(1914) and <emph render="italic">Flora of the Northwest
				  Coast</emph> (1915). These works established him as an authority on the plants
				  of the northwestern U.S. In 1903, Piper began a career at the U.S. Department
				  of Agriculture in Washington, D.C. He worked on the domestication and
				  introduction of grasses. On a trip to Africa, he found Sudan grass and
				  introduced it to North America as a forage plant. The soybean was another
				  subject of Piper's studies, and he was instrumental in establishing this plant
				  as a successful crop in the U.S. In 1923, he wrote, with William J. Morse, 
				  <emph render="italic">The Soybean</emph>, a classic monograph of the species.
				  Since the 1970s, soybeans have been the second largest and most valuable crop
				  in the United States after corn. He was a founding member of the American
				  Society of Agronomy in 1907 and served later as its president. Piper's
				  knowledge of grasses led him to become Chairman of the United States Golf
				  Association's Green Section from 1920 until his death. The orchid genus
				  Piperia, containing eight species, is named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperCV1</container><unittitle>Charles Vancouver Piper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">M. S. McClaire, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperCV2</container><unittitle>Charles Vancouver Piper in suit and tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">M. S. McClaire, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperCV3</container><unittitle>Charles Vancouver Piper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McClaire, Seattle, W. T.</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperCV4</container><unittitle>Charles Vancouver Piper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Harris &amp; Ewing, Washington D. C.</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperCV5</container><unittitle>Charles Piper with hat, standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph; original in Meany Collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Piper, G.N.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PiperGN1</container><unittitle>G. N. Piper</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pirkey, Phoebe Jane McCarty (July 27, 1844 - February
				  19, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phoebe J. McCarty, the daughter of Robert and Johanna Reames
				  McCarty, was born in Indiana and came to the Pacific Coast in 1862. She married
				  Turner A. Pirkey, a carpenter, in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PirkeyPJM1</container><unittitle>Phoebe Pirkey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: This is a very good picture of mother.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pitt, John, 2nd Earl of Chatham (October 9, 1756 –
				  September 24, 1835) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>General John Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham, KG, was a British
				  soldier and politician who is best known for commanding the disastrous
				  Walcheren Campaign of 1809. Chatham was the eldest son of William Pitt, 1st
				  Earl of Chatham, and was two and a half years older than his brother William
				  Pitt the Younger, the future prime minister.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PittJ1</container><unittitle> John Pitt,2nd Earl of Chatham, in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1799?</unitdate></did><note><p>Halftone reproduction of a mezzotint by Charles Turner after a
					 painting by John Hoppner, circa 1799</p><p>Written on front: Second Earl of Chatham for whom H.M.S.
					 Chatham and various geographical features were directly or indirectly
					 named.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pitt, Penelope (December 19, 1724 - February 8,
				  1795)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Penelope Atkins, Lady Rivers, was the daughter of Sir Henry
				  Atkins and Penelope Leveson-Gower Atkins. She married George Pitt, 1st Baron
				  Rivers, on January 4, 1746; the couple had four children. They separated in
				  1771, and she lived mostly in France and Italy until her death in Milan. She
				  was buried in the Protestant Cemetery in Livorno, Italy.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PittP1</container><unittitle> Penelope Pitt, Lady Rivers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1746?</unitdate><note><p>Reproduction of a mezzotint after a painting by Richard
						Houston.</p><p>Written on front: Penelope Pitt, Lady Rivers. More famous
						than her husband for whom Rivers Channel was named.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plamondon, Simon Bonaparte (March 28, 1801 - September
				  11, 1881)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simon Plamondon, the son of Jean-Baptiste and Catherine Gill
				  Plamondon, was born at Francois Du Lac, District of 3-Rivers Province of
				  Quebec, Canada. He left home at a young age, crossing the Rocky Mountains with
				  two companions and then continuing down the Columbia River as far as the
				  portage of The Dalles. From there, he went on to Fort George (Astoria), where
				  he was hired as a fur trapper at the age of sixteen. In 1818 while making his
				  first trip up the Cowlitz River, he was captured by Chief Scanewea, of lower
				  Cowlitz. Plamondon gained his freedom by promising that he would bring back
				  trade goods to exchange for furs. He subsequently married Thas-e-muth, a
				  daughter of Scanewea, in 1821. When the chief died in 1826, Plamondon inherited
				  the bulk of his property and made his permanent home on Cowlitz Prairie,
				  staking a 640 acre claim on the Cowlitz River near the present site of Toledo,
				  Washington. Thas-e-muth died in childbirth in 1828. In 1837, he married Emilie
				  Fenlay; there were five children from this marriage. In 1848, he married Louise
				  Henrietta Pelletier, a niece of Father Blanchet; there were two children from
				  this marriage before they separated. He also lived with Kitty Tillakish in a
				  common-law marriage; they had one child. He remained on the Hudson’s Bay
				  payroll until 1837. In 1838, the Hudson Bay Company established the Puget Sound
				  Agricultural Company as an agricultural subsidiary and opened a 4,000 acre farm
				  at Cowlitz Landing under his supervision. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlamondonSB1</container><unittitle>Simon Bonaparte Plamondon </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plante, Antoine (circa 1812 - February 1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Antoine Plante was a voyageur, trapper, mountaineer, and ferry
				  keeper whose life spanned the period from the fur trade era to the white
				  settlement of the Inland Northwest and the resulting tribal displacement. He
				  worked for the Hudson's Bay Company in the Columbia, Snake, and Fraser river
				  drainages before settling on the Spokane River, where he established the first
				  commercial ferry service in Eastern Washington. Plante's Ferry became an
				  important landmark for fur traders, miners, Army officers, and other travelers
				  moving through the Spokane region. Renowned for his keen knowledge of the
				  geography of the Intermountain West, Plante guided several parties of surveyors
				  seeking routes for wagon roads and railroads between the Missouri and Snake
				  Rivers. Antoine Plante’s role in the early history of Eastern Washington is
				  commemorated by a granite obelisk above the gravel shoal of his ferry landing
				  at Plante’s Ferry State Park. A statue of Plante by David Govedare and Keith
				  Powell looks down on the ferry’s route.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlanteA1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Antoine Plante's cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 25, 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>The cabin in the Spokane Valley was built in the early 1850s
					 and was the meeting place of Governor Isaac Stevens and Spokane Garry on
					 December 3-6, 1855.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlanteA2</container><unittitle>Photograph of a group of people by Antoine Plante's
					 cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1923?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Plaskett, John Stanley (November 17, 1865 – October 17,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Stanley Plaskett CBE FRS was a Canadian astronomer. He
				  worked as a machinist, and was offered a job as a mechanic at the Department of
				  Physics at the University of Toronto, constructing apparatus and assisting with
				  demonstrations during lectures. He found this so interesting that at the age of
				  30 he enrolled as an undergraduate in mathematics and physics. He stayed at the
				  university until 1903, doing research on color photography. His formal
				  astronomical career did not start until 1903, when he was appointed to the
				  staff at Dominion Observatory in Ottawa, Ontario. He measured radial velocities
				  and studied spectroscopic binaries, and performed the first detailed analysis
				  of galactic structure.. Plaskett's mechanical background was very useful for
				  constructing various instruments. He became first director of the Dominion
				  Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria, British Columbia in 1917. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plein, Professor (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Plenge, Mary Barbara Swanson (May 12, 1912 - September
				  19, 1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Barbara Swanson was born in New York and graduated from
				  Fort Dodge High School in Fort Dodge, Iowa in 1931. She married Harry Plenge in
				  1933, and the couple moved to Seattle in 1942. Mary worked at Sportscaster
				  Manufacturing Company where she sewed jackets and was paid by the piece.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><container type="item">PlengeMB1</container><unittitle>Mary Plenge with co-workers at Sportscaster
					 Manufacturing Company</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1955?</unitdate></did><note><p>Mary Plenge is wearing a dark dress and is on the far right in
					 the back row in front of a pillar.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><container type="item">PlengeMB2</container><unittitle>Mary Plenge with co-workers at Sportscaster
					 Manufacturing Company</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1955?</unitdate></did><note><p>Mary Plenge is wearing a dark dress and is second from the
					 right in the back row in front of a pillar.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><container type="item">PlengeMB3</container><unittitle>Mary Plenge with co-worker at the factory entrance of
					 Sportscaster Manufacturing Company</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1955?</unitdate></did><note><p>Mary Plenge is on the right; co-worker is unidentified.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plowendon, J. B.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plummer, Alfred Augustus (March 3, 1822 - May 9,
				  1883)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Augustus Plummer was a harness maker from Maine. He went
				  to San Francisco in 1849 where he worked in the hotel business. In the spring
				  of 1851 he and Charles Bacheller sailed from San Francisco aboard the brig 
				  <emph render="italic">George Emery.</emph> They landed at Steilacoom and from
				  there canoed to Discovery Bay. On April 24, 1851 they landed on a beach beneath
				  high bluffs, the site of present-day Port Townsend and decided to settle there.
				  The two men were soon joined by Loren B. Hastings and Francis W. Pettygrove,
				  the founder of Portland, Oregon. Plummer joined Hastings and Pettygrove in
				  merchandising. He was captain of the Port Townsend Guards during the Indian War
				  of 1856, and was a member of the first Republican convention of Washington
				  Territory. He married Anna Hill in 1853; the couple had nine children</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlummerAA1</container><unittitle>Alfred Augustus Plummer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1879?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Plummer, Alfred Augustus Jr. (September 7, 1856 -
				  September 15, 1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred A. Plummer, Jr. was the son of Washington pioneer Alfred
				  A. Plummer. He was born in Port Townsend and married Katie Davis Hill there in
				  1881. The couple had five children, three of whom survived him. After his
				  wife’s death in 1889, he married Rosella Levitt in 1893. Plummer was elected to
				  the first state legislature as a representative for Jefferson County and
				  re-elected for the following session. He served two terms as county
				  commissioner and several terms as a member of the Port Townsend city council.
				  He was special deputy collector of customs and was assistant manager for the
				  Hastings Steamboat Company. He was a prominent Mason and a grand master for the
				  order for the state of Washington. He was a charter member of the Jefferson
				  County Native Sons of Washington. He died of an accidental gun shot while
				  hunting.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlummerJrAA1</container><unittitle>Alfred A. Plummer, Jr. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PlummerJrAA2</container><unittitle>Alfred A. Plummer, Jr. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1887 and 1897?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McMurry, Port Townsend, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of cabinet card. Original is in Coll. 334.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pocker, Dr. Yeshayau (October 10, 1928 - March 14,
				  2010)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Yeshayau Pocker was a mechanistic organic chemist who obtained
				  his PhD in organic chemistry in 1953 from University College London and spent
				  eight years as a lecturer there. He was awarded a Doctor of Science by the
				  University of London in 1960. Pocker was a research associate, Weizmann
				  Institute Science, Rehovot, Israel., 1949-1950; humanitarian trust fellow,
				  University College, 1951-1952; assistant lecturer, University College,
				  1952-1954; lecturer, University College, 1954-1961; visiting associate
				  professor, Indiana University, Bloomington, 1960-1961; and professor,
				  University of Washington starting in 1961. Although he carried out many
				  physical organic chemistry studies in reaction mechanisms and catalysis, he is
				  best known for his work on carbonic anhydrase, a crucial metalloenzyme involved
				  in interconverting CO2 and carbonic acid. In particular he reported in the
				  early 1960's that carbonic anhydrase II is 'promiscuous', as it also has weak
				  esterase activity. This work was done in the early 1960's, and he remained
				  interested in this for the rest of his career. He retired in 1999. Pocker was a
				  consultant for the National Institutes of Health, 1984 -1988 and was, for
				  several years, a reviewing editor of <emph render="italic">Science
				  </emph>magazine. A symposium in his honour was held at the ACS Regional Meeting
				  in Seattle WA in November 2001.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PockerY1-8</container><unittitle>Yeshayau Pocker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November, 1961</unitdate></did><note><p>A series of eight photographic images.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pocock, George Yeoman (March 23, 1891 – March 19,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Yeoman Pocock was a leading designer and builder of
				  racing shells in the 20th Century. Pocock-built shells began to win U.S.
				  Intercollegiate Rowing Association championships in 1923. He achieved
				  international recognition by providing the eight-oared racing shells which won
				  gold medals in the 1936 Summer Olympics with a crew from the University of
				  Washington, and again in 1948 and 1952. In this era, nearly every collegiate
				  and sport rowing program in America used wooden shells and oars built by
				  Pocock. Beyond his achievements as a boatbuilder, his influence, promotion and
				  philosophy of rowing have inspired countless oarsmen and coaches. A native of
				  Kingston upon Thames, England, Pocock learned the craft of boat-building as an
				  apprentice to his father, Aaron Frederick Pocock, a boat-builder for Eton
				  College. A champion sculler himself, Pocock (along with his brother, Dick) used
				  prize money earned from racing to emigrate from England to Vancouver, British
				  Columbia, Canada, in 1911, in search of better employment prospects. The
				  brothers established an independent boat-building business, initially supplying
				  rowers affiliated with organizations such as the Vancouver Rowing Club, and the
				  Prince Rupert Rowing Club. In 1912, Hiram Boardman Conibear, rowing coach at
				  the University of Washington, visited the Pocock brothers at their Vancouver
				  Harbour shop and convinced them to move to Seattle to build boats for the
				  Washington crews. When rowing at UW was shut down during World War I, and there
				  were no boats to be built, the Pocock brothers hired on as pontoon builders for
				  a fledgling Seattle aircraft manufacturer, Pacific Aero Products, which was the
				  forerunner to Boeing. In 1922 as the use of wooden components in the
				  manufacture of airplanes began to decline in favor of metal, George left Boeing
				  to return to boatbuilding for Pocock Racing Shells on the campus of the
				  University of Washington. Over the next half-century, Pocock perfected the
				  craft of building fast and efficient wooden shells, introducing many
				  innovations including the use of western red cedar for the outer skin of the
				  shells. He was appointed Boatman to U.S. Olympic Rowing Teams in 1936, 1948,
				  1952, and 1956 and was inducted into U. S. Rowing’s Hall of Fame in 1966 as
				  “Premier boat-builder."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY1</container><unittitle>George Pocock and Russell "Rusty" Callow at the Long
					 Beach Marine Stadium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY2</container><unittitle>George Pocock and unidentified man building a racing
					 shell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on verso: Courtesy of News Bureau Boeing Aircraft
					 Company, designers and builders of the Flying Fortress, Boeing Stratoliner and
					 Pan American Clipper.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY3</container><unittitle>George Pocock working on racing shell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY4</container><unittitle>George Pocock in the UW shellhouse with racing
					 shell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: George Pocock, builder of racing shells.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY5</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Alvin Ulbrickson, Elmer Leader and
					 Russell Callow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY6</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Russell Callow, Carroll M. Ebright
					 and Alvin Ulbrickson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pocock, Stanley Richard (October 11, 1923 - December 15,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born and raised in Seattle, Stanley Pocock had an early
				  connection with rowing as both an oarsman at UW and as a boatbuilding
				  apprentice with his father, George, a legendary pioneer in the world of
				  building racing shells. Stan Pocock was a rower for the University of
				  Washington, where he graduated with a degree in engineering in 1947. He coached
				  at the UW from 1948 through 1955, was the first coach for Lake Washington
				  Rowing Club in 1958 and coached eight different crews to the Olympics between
				  1956 and 1964. Seven of the eight crews made it to the finals, four won gold
				  medals, and two won bronze. No coach in U.S. Olympic history has come close to
				  matching this record in men’s rowing. He ran the boatbuilding shop for almost
				  20 years, overseeing its transition from building wooden boats to using
				  synthetic materials, and is credited with creating the first fiberglass rowing
				  shell in 1961. Under his stewardship, the Pocock Racing Shells transitioned to
				  these new, technologically superior materials and pioneered a new breed of
				  racing shells that were stronger, lighter, and faster. He continued with the
				  company until 1985. With his sister, Patricia, the George Pocock Memorial
				  Rowing Center (PRC) opened in 1984. In 2012, he was presented with the Medal of
				  Honor Award from U. S. Rowing, the organization’s lifetime achievement award,
				  and in 2014 he was presented with the Dr. Don H. Palmer award during the UW’s
				  Hall of Fame Banquet. He wrote an autobiography, <emph render="italic">Way
				  Enough! Recollections of a Life in Rowing.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockSR1</container><unittitle>Stanley Pocock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 8, 1952</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Poetz, John C. (June 23,1859 - August 8,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John C. Poetz was born in Minnesota and relocated to California
				  before 1888. He then went to Spokane Falls, Washington, when he formed an
				  architectural partnership with Kirtland Kelsey Cutter. In 1889, a fire
				  destroyed most of downtown Spokane, and Cutter and Poetz helped to rebuild the
				  city. Notable buildings from this period include First National Bank, Rookery
				  Building, White House Store, Sherwood Building, and the Spokane Club. At the
				  1890 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, the firm gained national
				  recognition for the Idaho Building, a structure built of massive logs on a base
				  of rough basalt, symbolizing the mountains and forests of the state. A shortage
				  of work following the Panic of 1893 probably hastened the end of the Cutter and
				  Poetz partnership in 1894. In later years, Poetz had several patents, including
				  one for a step ladder, a molding core, and a faucet. He started the Poetz
				  Automatic Faucet Company in Spokane in 1901. He married Amanda C. Parmen in
				  1887; the couple had six children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PoetzJC1</container><unittitle>John C. Poetz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Poindexter, Miles (April 22, 1868 – September 21,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Miles Poindexter was an American politician and author. As a
				  Republican and later a Progressive, he served as a United States Representative
				  and United States Senator from the state of Washington. Poindexter also served
				  as United States Ambassador to Peru during the presidential administrations of
				  Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge. A native of Memphis, Tennessee, Poindexter
				  was raised in Virginia, received a law degree from Washington and Lee
				  University in 1891 and moved to Walla Walla, Washington, where he practiced law
				  and entered politics as a Republican. He served as prosecuting attorney in
				  Walla Walla, and then moved to Spokane, where he was assistant prosecuting
				  attorney and a superior court judge. In 1908, Poindexter was elected to the
				  U.S. House. He served one term (1909-1911), and was reelected in 1910. He
				  resigned before his new term began in March 1911 because the state legislature
				  elected him to the U.S. Senate. He was reelected in 1916, and served from 1911
				  to 1923. Poindexter became a Progressive Party member in 1913, but returned to
				  the Republicans in 1915. Poindexter was an unsuccessful candidate for the
				  Republican nomination for president in 1920, and for reelection to the Senate
				  in 1922. In 1923, Poindexter was appointed Ambassador to Peru. He served until
				  1928, when he returned to Washington and waged an unsuccessful campaign for the
				  Senate. After losing the 1928 election, Poindexter moved to Natural Bridge
				  Station, Virginia. He died there in 1946, and was buried at Fairmount Memorial
				  Park in Spokane. Poindexter married Elizabeth Gale Page, the granddaughter of
				  Joseph Gale, the first governor of Oregon, in 1892. His papers are held in UW
				  Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PoindexterM1</container><unittitle>Miles Poindexter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1911 and 1923?</unitdate><note><p>Printed on front: United States Senator Miles Poindexter</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PoindexterM2</container><unittitle> Miles Poindexter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912</unitdate><note><p>Printed on front: Miles Poindexter, Senator 1912</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Polk, James Knox (November 2, 1795 – June 15,
				  1849)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Knox Polk was the 11th president of the United States,
				  serving from 1845 to 1849. He previously was Speaker of the House of
				  Representatives (1835–1839) and governor of Tennessee (1839–1841). A protégé of
				  Andrew Jackson, he was a member of the Democratic Party and an advocate of
				  Jacksonian democracy. Polk is chiefly known for extending the territory of the
				  United States during the Mexican–American War; during his presidency, the
				  United States expanded significantly with the annexation of the Republic of
				  Texas, the Oregon Territory, and the Mexican Cession following the American
				  victory in the Mexican–American War. After building a successful law practice
				  in Tennessee, Polk was elected to the state legislature (1823) and then to the
				  United States House of Representatives in 1825, becoming a strong supporter of
				  Andrew Jackson. After serving as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, he
				  became Speaker in 1835, the only president to have been Speaker. Polk left
				  Congress to run for governor; he won in 1839, but lost in 1841 and 1843. He was
				  a dark horse candidate for the Democratic nomination for president in 1844; he
				  entered his party's convention as a potential nominee for vice president, but
				  emerged as a compromise to head the ticket when no presidential candidate could
				  secure the necessary two-thirds majority. In the general election, Polk
				  defeated Henry Clay of the rival Whig Party. Honoring his pledge to serve only
				  one term, Polk declined to seek re-election. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PolkJK1</container><unittitle>James Knox Polk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><note><p>Photograph of a painting</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><container type="item">PolkJK2</container><unittitle>James Knox Polk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849? </unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Reich after a portrait by Poole from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pollard, Daphne (October 19, 1891 - February 22,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daphne Pollard was an Australian-born vaudeville performer and
				  dancer, active on stage and later in US films, mostly short comedies. Born
				  Daphne Trott, she joined the Pollard Lilliputian Opera Company at the age of
				  six. Like many of its performers, she took her stage name from the company. She
				  first arrived in Los Angeles during a company tour in September 1901 and was
				  singled out in enthusiastic reviews. By 1907, she was confident and popular
				  enough to strike out on her own, making her Broadway debut in 1908. Pollard
				  appeared with the Ziegfeld Follies and in Winter Garden Theatre shows and on
				  the London stage. Mack Sennett signed her with great fanfare in June 1927; she
				  was cast in several two-reel productions. Pollard went on to work for
				  Vitaphone, RKO Pictures and Universal Pictures. Although she traveled the world
				  during her acting career, she made her home in Seattle and started a theater
				  company in the city. In July 1911 she married Ellington Strother Bunch, a
				  journalist and the assistant editor of <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Times</emph>. Pollard was the queen of the 1911 Golden Potlatch ceremonies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PollardD1</container><unittitle>Queen Daphne Pollard in her coach during the 1911
					 Golden Potlatch ceremony</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between July 17, 1911 and July 22, 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>The coach was driven by Harry Treat, named Duke of Seattle for
					 the Golden Potlatch ceremony.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pollock, Henry B. (September 19, 1849 - July 23,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry B. Pollock served in the Methodist ministry for almost 40
				  years and was widely known throughout Central Illinois. He was born in
				  McConnelsville, Ohio on Sept. 19, 1849. His early life was devoted to farming,
				  but he felt a call to the ministry. Although he was active as a layman and
				  taught Bible classes, he did not enter the ministry until 1895. He moved to
				  Decatur, Illinois in 1895 and during that time was not without pastorate until
				  he retired. Pollock married Kesiah Buchanan on February 25, 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PollockHB1</container><unittitle> Reverend Henry Pollock and Kesiah Pollock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">East End Gallery, Decatur, Illinois</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Rev. &amp; Mrs. Pollock. Preached at
					 Pleasant View.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pollock, Kesiah Buchanan (January 10, 1852 - June 22,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kesiah Buchanan married Henry B. Pollock in 1870; the couple had
				  ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PollockHB1</container><unittitle> Reverend Henry Pollock and Kesiah Pollock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">East End Gallery, Decatur, Illinois</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Rev. &amp; Mrs. Pollock. Preached at
					 Pleasant View.</p><p>Filed under Henry B. Pollock subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Polson, Alexander (May 24, 1858 - September 7,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Polson was born in Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada and
				  immigrated to the United States in 1869. Polson settled permanently in Hoquiam
				  in 1882, his pursuits taking him from real estate, to county accessing, to
				  logging. In 1891 Alex and his brother Robert combined their logging interests
				  into the Polson Brothers Logging Company, which, 12 years later, after
				  affiliating with the Merrill and Ring Corporation, was renamed the Polson
				  Logging Company. The Polson holdings included two sawmills, a shingle mill, two
				  mansions, 12 logging and construction camps, 100 miles of logging railroad, and
				  produced 300 million feet of logs annually. The company sold its holdings to
				  Rayonier in 1950.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PolsonA1</container><unittitle> Alexander Polson with unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Original in combined negative box XNB1.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pomeroy, Merritt Allan (September 10, 1906 -July 7,
				  1966) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Merritt Allan Pomeroy was the forty-third mayor of Seattle,
				  Washington, serving from June 1, 1952 until June 4, 1956. He received his
				  Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Washington in 1927, where he
				  was a founding member of the Sigma Pi fraternity chapter. He earned his law
				  degree from the University of Washington School of Law in 1931. After law
				  school, Pomeroy became a practicing lawyer and eventually a judge, serving as
				  Justice of the Peace in Kitsap County (1934-1936), acting Seattle municipal
				  judge (1942), assistant United States Attorney for Western Washington
				  (1942-1948), and King County Superior Court judge (1948). In 1948, Pomeroy was
				  defeated by a slim margin in his first bid for the mayor's office by incumbent
				  Mayor William F. Devin. The defining issue of the election had been Devin's
				  Tolerance Policy where small time gambling was tolerated. Devin (and Police
				  Chief Eastman) said this was the best deterrent to major vice and police
				  corruption. Pomeroy promised to end the practice and get rid of Eastman,
				  leading enough voters to switch sides for Pomeroy, who won the 1952 election by
				  a small margin. He named H. J. Lawrence as Police Chief and said that card
				  rooms would no longer be permitted. In 1956 Pomeroy lost his re-election bid to
				  Gordon S. Clinton. Pomeroy and Police Chief Lawrence's inability to close down
				  the card rooms were seen as a major reason for Clinton's victory. Pomeroy went
				  back to practicing law, becoming a senior partner in the law firm of Pomeroy,
				  Zelensky, Furnia, and Munro. Pomeroy helped bring the World's Fair to the city
				  in 1962 by bringing together community and business leaders, and convincing the
				  city council to approve a bond issue to build the opera house and sports center
				  needed to attract the fair.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PomeroyMA1</container><unittitle>Merritt Allan Pomeroy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">S. Walter, Walters Studio, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PomeroyMA2</container><unittitle>Merritt Allan Pomeroy seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>The postcard was addressed to Ralph Lomen. Written on verso:
					 Dear Friend, I firmly believe that Mayor Allan Pomeroy has sincerely
					 represented all the people of Seattle. His first term proves that he is a mayor
					 who gets results that benefit everybody. When you study his record in detail,
					 I'm sure you will join me in voting for Allan Pomeroy, one of the best mayors
					 Seattle has ever had. He's done a real job for all of us. Sincerely, A real
					 friend of Alaska, Ben Wilson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Poole, W.W. See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pope, Albert Augustus (May 20, 1843 – August 10, 1909)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Augustus Pope was an importer, promoter, and manufacturer
				  of bicycles, and a manufacturer of automobiles. He was already the family
				  breadwinner at age nine, plowing fields, selling produce, and at the age of
				  fifteen, working at the Quincy Market in Boston. In 1862, at the age of
				  nineteen, he joined the Union Army, attached to the 35th Massachusetts
				  Volunteer Regiment, commissioned as a Second Lieutenant. The unit fought at the
				  battles of Antietam, Fredericksburg, Vicksburg, and Knoxville. He mustered out
				  as a Captain, though he received the honorary title of Brevet
				  Lieutenant-Colonel for distinguished service. He used savings from his military
				  salary to invest in a shoemakers' supply business at Dock Square in Boston.
				  After just year, an investment of $900 had returned $9,600, worth more than
				  $100,000 in 2000 U.S. dollars. He was successful in expanding his business
				  interests to air pistols, cigarette rollers, and shoe findings. Pope was
				  elected to Newton Common Council in 1875. The following summer, he attended the
				  Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in his capacity as Newton Alderman, where he
				  saw a display of English bicycles. In 1877, Pope made arrangements to import
				  eight model Excelsior Duplexes. The following year, he started manufacturing
				  and marketing bicycles under the Columbia brand. Pope continued importing
				  bicycles from Europe and taking out U.S. patents on these models. By the early
				  1890s, he had established a bicycle trust which controlled the central bicycle
				  patents in the United States. Nearly every US bicycle manufacturer paid Pope
				  around $10 per bicycle. By the mid-1890s, at the height of the bicycle craze,
				  Pope was manufacturing about a quarter million bicycles annually. From 1896, he
				  began to diversify into automobile production. In 1897, Pope Manufacturing
				  began production of an electric automobile in Hartford, Connecticut. By 1899,
				  the company had produced over 500 vehicles. Between the years 1903 and 1915,
				  the company operated a number of automobile companies including Pope-Hartford,
				  Pope-Robinson, Pope-Toledo, Pope-Tribune and Pope-Waverly. Pope declared
				  bankruptcy in 1907 and abandoned the automobile industry in 1915. He is
				  credited with being the first auto manufacturer to use mass production
				  practices, and in 1900 his Hartford factories produced more motor vehicles than
				  any other factory in the world.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PopeAA1</container><unittitle>Albert Augustus Pope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Notman Photographic Company, Boston</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Porter, David Dixon (June 8, 1813 – February 13,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Dixon Porter was a United States Navy admiral and a member
				  of one of the most distinguished families in the history of the U.S. Navy. The
				  son of Commodore David Porter, David Dixon Porter served in the Mexican War
				  (1846–48). Promoted to commander early in the American Civil War, he
				  participated in Union expeditions against New Orleans, Louisiana and Vicksburg,
				  Mississippi (April to June 1862), under his foster brother, Commander David
				  Farragut. After the war, from 1865 to 1869, Porter served as superintendent of
				  the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, and was instrumental in
				  instituting changes in its curriculum and teaching methods. President Grant
				  appointed him as an advisor to the Secretary of the Navy in 1869. By organizing
				  boards of inspection for the fleet, beginning the repair of many vessels, and
				  insisting that steam-powered ships also be equipped with sail, he demonstrated
				  his effective control of the Navy Department. In 1870, after the death of
				  Farragut, Porter was given the rank of admiral. From 1877 until his death he
				  was head of the Naval Board of Inspection.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">29</container><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">PorterDD1</unitdate><unittitle>David Dixon Porter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Bell after a portrait by Frederick Girsch from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Porter, Nathan Smith (May 24, 1834 - December 25,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan Smith Porter was born near Ithaca, New York and when very
				  young, moved with his family to Ohio. When he was 19 years old, he left Ohio
				  for the Pacific Coast, settling in Placerville, California. He later moved to
				  San Francisco, where he worked as a photographer with H. W. Bradley and studied
				  law in the evenings. In 1859 he became a school teacher for two years. In the
				  1860s, he moved to Olympia, Washington. He was elected chief clerk pro tem in
				  1871 and in October of that year, the legislature in joint session elected him
				  territorial auditor for a two-year term. While serving in that capacity, he
				  continued his law studies in the office of Governor Elisha P. Ferry. He was
				  admitted to the bar and practiced law in Olympia, serving as prosecuting
				  attorney in 1884. He was Grand Master of the Masonic Lodges of the State of
				  Washington in 1888 and served for more than a quarter of a century as the
				  treasurer of that organization.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PorterNS1</container><unittitle>Nathan Smith Porter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">T. W. Patterson, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on verso.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Post, Guy Bates (September 22, 1875 – January 16,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Guy Bates Post was an American character actor who appeared in
				  at least twenty-one Broadway plays and twenty-five Hollywood films over a
				  career that spanned more than fifty years. He was perhaps best remembered in
				  the role of Omar Khayyám in the 1914 stage and 1922 film productions of Richard
				  Walton Tully's <emph render="italic">Omar the Tentmaker</emph> and for his over
				  fifteen hundred performances in John Hunter Booth's 1917 play 
				  <emph render="italic">The Masquerader.</emph>Post was born in Seattle,
				  Washington and received his education at schools in Seattle and later San
				  Francisco before dropping out of college to embark on a career in theater. He
				  made his professional debut in November 1894 at Chicago's Schiller Theater
				  playing a minor role; by May 1898, he was a member of Otis Skinner's Company
				  and married to Sarah Truax, the troupe's leading lady. He remained active on
				  Broadway until the mid-1930s. Post had a 25-year career in cinema beginning in
				  1922 with silent film adaptations of <emph render="italic">Omar the
				  Tentmaker</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Masquerader.</emph> His last
				  film role was in 1947's <emph render="italic">A Double Life</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PostGB1</container><unittitle>Guy Bates Post</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920</unitdate></did><note><p>A photograph of Charles Alonzo Taylor is on the reverse of Guy
					 Bates Post's photograph. See also: Charles Alonzo Taylor.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Post, Wiley Hardeman (November 22, 1898 – August 15,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wiley Hardeman Post was a famed American aviator during the
				  interwar period and the first pilot to fly solo around the world. Also known
				  for his work in high-altitude flying, Post helped develop one of the first
				  pressure suits and discovered the jet stream. On August 15, 1935, Post and
				  American humorist Will Rogers were killed when Post's aircraft crashed on
				  takeoff from a lagoon near Point Barrow in the Territory of Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW2</container><unittitle>Will Rogers with Isadore Goldstein, Wiley Post, Rex
					 Beach and Joe Crosson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under William "Will" Rogers subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Potts, Ralph Bushnell (October 1, 1897 - April 12,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Bushnell Potts was a Depression-era political reformer, an
				  author of fiction and nonfiction, a lawyer for 54 years, and a promoter of the
				  arts. He was born in Appleton, Wisconsin When he was 5, he and his brother were
				  orphaned and were taken by grandparents to Condon, Oregon. He attended Pacific
				  University in Forest Grove, Oregon and the University of Oregon Law School. He
				  came to Seattle in 1925 and began his law practice, first with a partner but
				  soon on his own. In 1933, Potts was a founder of the New Order of Cincinnatus,
				  a nonpartisan political organization of young men with a progressive agenda of
				  rooting out corruption and reining in the escalating costs of local government.
				  The group fielded candidates and within two years had three candidates it had
				  endorsed on the Seattle City Council. One was Arthur Langlie, who went on to
				  become mayor and a three-term governor of Washington. The group eventually
				  spread statewide and into the San Francisco area. While the Cincinnatus
				  movement was regarded as nonpartisan and progressive, Potts was a Republican,
				  and in the 1970s he was in the ironic position of challenging the progressive
				  nature of the Seattle City Council as head of the Civic Builders Committee.
				  Potts retired from his law practice in 1979 but remained active with the arts
				  organizations. He was a founder of Allied Arts of Seattle, the Northwest
				  Writers Conference and the Seattle Repertory Theater. His involvement in the
				  writers’ conference stemmed from his own prolific work. He was the co-author of
				  <emph render="italic">Counsel for the Damned</emph> , the story of Industrial
				  Workers of the World counsel George Vanderveer. He also wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">Come Now the Lawyers</emph> , the history of Washington's
				  early courts, which was made into the motion picture <emph render="italic">The
				  Specialist</emph>; <emph render="italic">Sir Boss</emph>, a fictional account
				  of a labor leader that was based on Teamsters boss and Seattleite Dave Beck; 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Heritage</emph>; and numerous plays. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PottsRB1</container><unittitle>Ralph Bushnell Potts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powell, Joab (July 16, 1799 - January 25,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joab Powell was born July 16, 1799 in Claiborne Co., Tennessee,
				  the fourth child of Joseph and Hannah Jewson Powell. Joab moved to a homestead
				  near Independence, Missouri in 1830. He preached in Missouri for 20 years while
				  working a 640 acre farm at the same time. In 1852 he crossed the plains to
				  Oregon and settled a claim at the forks of the Santiam River in Linn County.
				  Although he could barely read and write, he was reported to be a powerful
				  preacher who memorized most of the bible and the hymns he sang. Powell preached
				  to all who would listen and was famous for riding the circuit throughout Linn
				  County and was one of the originators of the Providence Baptist Church, located
				  midway between Scio and Lacomb.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellJ1</container><unittitle>Joab Powell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powell, John Harvard (April 20, 1866 - March 10,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Harvard Powell was born in Poloma, Illinois on April 20,
				  1866, the son of Curtis and Mary Welch Powell. He graduated from the University
				  of Michigan in 1888 and came to Washington in 1890. He was a member and one of
				  the founders of the law firm of Peters and Powel, a member of the State
				  Legislature in 1897 and a member of the University of Washington Board of
				  Regents from 1902 to 1907. Powell served as president of the University Club
				  and was a member of the Rainier Club and the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. He
				  married Elizabeth Gastman in 1892.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellJH1</container><unittitle>John Harvard Powell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George V. Powell</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powell, John Wesley (March 24, 1834 – September 23,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Wesley Powell was a U.S. soldier, geologist, explorer of
				  the American West, professor at Illinois Wesleyan University, and director of
				  major scientific and cultural institutions. He is famous for the 1869 Powell
				  Geographic Expedition, a three-month river trip down the Green and Colorado
				  rivers, including the first official U.S. government-sponsored passage through
				  the Grand Canyon. Powell served as second director of the U.S. Geological
				  Survey (1881–1894) and proposed, for development of the arid West, policies
				  that were prescient for his accurate evaluation of conditions. He became the
				  first director of the Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian Institution during
				  his service as director of the U.S. Geological Survey, where he supported
				  linguistic and sociological research and publications. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellJW1</container><unittitle>John Wesley Powell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1898?</unitdate></did><note><p>Prospectus for <emph render="italic">Selected Prose of John
					 Wesley Powell</emph> David R. Godine Publisher, Brookline, Massachussets. The
					 prospectus contains two photographs.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellJW2</container><unittitle>John Wesley Powell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860-1869?</unitdate></did><note><p>Prospectus for <emph render="italic">Selected Prose of John
					 Wesley Powell</emph> David R. Godine Publisher, Brookline, Massachussets. The
					 prospectus contains two photographs.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powell, Leonard Jackson (May 19, 1834 - August 17,
				  1887)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leonard Jackson Powell was born in Kentucky in 1834 and crossed
				  the plains to Oregon with his family in 1847. The family settled in Clackamas
				  and Multnomah Counties. He was educated at the Wesleyan University of Delaware,
				  Ohio and graduated in 1861. Before his service as President of the University
				  of Washington, Powell served fourteen years as a mathematics instructor at
				  Willamette University of Salem, served as President of the Albany Collegiate
				  Institute, and spent four years as Superintendent of Public Instruction in
				  Oregon. Apart from academics, he was an ordained minister of the Methodist
				  Episcopal Church. Powell was chosen as President of the University of
				  Washington in 1882 and served in the capacity until his death on August 17,
				  1887 in Seattle at the age of 53 years. During his presidency, the University
				  added courses, and standards for entrance and graduation were raised.
				  Laboratories were equipped, a course in astronomy was established, and a
				  program for training teachers was established.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellLJ1</container><unittitle>Leonard Jackson Powell </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McClaire &amp; Quirk, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellLJ2</container><unittitle>Leonard Jackson Powell </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1887?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Moore, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Five copies, different sizes.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powell, Mary Ruth (November 23, 1863 - December 3,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Powell, the eldest daughter of Leonard Powell, was born in
				  Oregon and graduated from the University of Oregon Medical School in 1896. She
				  married Everett Gill Johnson, a fellow physician, in 1881 in Polk County,
				  Oregon; she later married Norton B. Jordan in California in 1906. She practiced
				  medicine in both Oregon and California. Powell was interested in education and
				  went to Rome to study with Maria Montessori in 1913. After her return, she gave
				  lectures at the University of Washington about the educational methods she had
				  learned. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowellM1</container><unittitle>Mary Powell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1910</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: 1st d(aughter) of L. Powell, one of 1st Dr.
					 in U. S., probably 1st Dr in Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powers, E.F. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powers, Leland C., Dr. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powers, Michael Thomas (April 23, 1863 - June 14,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Thomas Powers came to Seattle in 1886 when he was
				  twenty-three. He had apprenticed as an iron monger when he was twelve and soon
				  found work at the Washington Iron Works. After four years, he joined the
				  Seattle Police Department. He became a detective in 1897, a sergeant in 1901,
				  and a captain in 1908. He was in command of the Ballard Precinct, and finally
				  became an inspector. After retiring from the police force in 1923, he worked
				  for <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph>, but left because of ill
				  health. His collection of papers and scrapbooks are held in University of
				  Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowersMT1</container><unittitle>Michael Thomas Powers in police captain's
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1908?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Powers, Truman Pleasance (April 21, 1803 - July 11,
				  1883)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Truman Pleasance Powers was born in Vermont and went south as a
				  young man, working for many years on steamboats on the Mississippi. He left for
				  Oregon on May 10, 1846 and arrived in November of that year, settling on the
				  Clatsop plains in 1847 where he had a farm. He was twice elected a member of
				  the legislature of the provisional government and was treasurer of the Oregon
				  City mint. He was the prime mover in the establishment of the Upper Astoria
				  public school; when he was over seventy years of age, he taught a term of three
				  months in the district in order that the right to draw school money should not
				  be forfeited. Powers was postmaster in 1858 and moved the post office from
				  Astoria to the Upper Town, a rival section of Astoria. Three years later, with
				  a change in administration, the next postmaster moved it back to Astoria. He
				  and his wife, Mary, were charter members of the first Presbyterian Church
				  organized on the Pacific Coast. He was the first ordained Presbyterian elder on
				  the Pacific Coast and was elected a lay commissioner of the Presbyterian
				  General Assembly in 1876.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PowersTP1</container><unittitle>Truman Pleasance Powers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870-1880?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prather, Thomas R. (July 2, 1832 - May 8,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas R. Prather was born in Boone County, Missouri. When news
				  of the California gold strike came in 1849, his brother James left for the
				  West, and Thomas followed him the next year. It took him over seven months to
				  reach California on the overland route; after two years, he returned to
				  Missouri by way of Panama. In the spring of 1852, he joined a wagon train
				  headed for Oregon. He moved to Olympia, Washington Territory in 1853 where he
				  worked in on steamboats, as a logger and as a surveyor. He fought in the Indian
				  Wars of 1856. In the early 1870s, he became a guard at the asylum in
				  Steilacoom. It was there that he met Agnes Winsor, who was an attendant at the
				  asylum; they married in 1876 and had three children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PratherTR1</container><unittitle>Thomas Prather, sitting in chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 2, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Victor J. Farrar, Olympia</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PratherTR2</container><unittitle>Portrait of Thomas Prather in cardboard
					 frame</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jeffers, Olympia</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PratherTR3</container><unittitle> Thomas Prather</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1905 and 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jeffers, Olympia</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Thomas Prather, Olympia, Washington. Born
					 1832 Boone Co., MO. Came to Olympia in 1853.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pratt, Edwin Thomas (December 6, 1930 – January 26,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin Thomas Pratt had been a leader in Seattle’s civil rights
				  movement for a decade when he was assassinated at the front door of his home on
				  January 26, 1969. Born in Miami, Florida, Pratt received his bachelor's degree
				  from Clark College (Atlanta, Georgia) and his master's in social work from
				  Atlanta University. He worked for the Urban League in Cleveland, Ohio, and
				  Kansas City, Missouri, before arriving in Seattle in 1956 to be the Seattle
				  Urban League's Community Relations Secretary. In 1961, he became the Executive
				  Director of the Seattle Urban League. As director, Pratt soon became a key
				  participant in the then evolving local civil rights campaigns against housing
				  discrimination, school segregation, employment bias, and police brutality.
				  Pratt and his family integrated the previously all-white Seattle suburb of
				  Shoreline in 1959, partly to bring attention to residential segregation in the
				  metropolitan area. When the Congress passed the 1964 Equal Opportunity Act
				  which initiated the War on Poverty, the Seattle Urban League was one of the
				  first agencies in the nation to be awarded Office of Economic Opportunity funds
				  to administer the Central Area Motivation Program (CAMP). Pratt was a founding
				  member of the Central Area Civil Rights Committee (CACRC) which was formed by
				  the leaders of the NAACP, CORE and other groups to provide strategic
				  coordination of Seattle’s civil rights movement during the 1960s, and he was
				  the negotiator for CACRC with Seattle’s political and corporate leaders. He is
				  commemorated today by Seattle's Pratt Park, the Pratt Fine Arts Center, and the
				  Shoreline School District's Early Learning Center. His murder remains
				  unsolved.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrattET1</container><unittitle>Edwin Thomas Pratt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Pratt, Eloise (February 5, 1907 -
				  February 3, 1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eloise Pratt was the manager of International Ladies Garment
				  Workers Union, Local 184, and secretary and vice president of the Seattle Union
				  Card and Labor Council in the 1950s and 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gordon Clinton at desk signing papers
					 with Eloise Pratt and Governor Albert Rosellini looking on.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pratt, John Francis (June 18, 1848 - December 5,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Francis Pratt joined the Coast and Geodetic Survey just
				  after receiving a degree in engineering from Dartmouth College in 1871. His
				  early assignments were as an astronomer. He arrived in Seattle in 1884 to take
				  surveys on Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. In 1885 he served as
				  engineer of the U. S. Navy Yard Commission which selected Bremerton for the
				  Navy Yard. Pratt served as the American representative on survey parties
				  marking the Alaska boundary in 1891, 1892 and 1893, and in 1894 he was a member
				  of the National Geographic Conference. From 1895 to 1897, he served as chief of
				  the instrument division of the Coast Survey office in Washington, D. C. where
				  he was responsible for the development of many of the instruments used by the
				  service. In 1905 he made one of the first intensive magnetic surveys of the
				  Pacific Coast while in command of the schooner <emph render="italic">Galilee</emph>. In 1906 and 1907 he made observations of
				  earthquake movements in California, and from 1908 to 1911 he was in command of
				  the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey steamship Pathfinder, making coastal
				  surveys in the Philippine Islands. From 1911 until his retirement in 1920, he
				  was in charge of the Seattle office of the Coast and Geodetic Survey.
				  Photographs of Alaska and other locations, related to his work for the U.S.
				  Coast and Geodetic Survey, are held in University of Washington Special
				  Collections. His access to remote locations gave him the opportunity to
				  photograph scenes and people that casual visitors seldom saw. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrattJF1</container><unittitle>John Francis Pratt in Coast Guard uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward S. Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Coll. 484, Edward S. Curtis.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prefontaine, Francis Xavier (September 20, 1838 - March
				  4, 1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Xavier Prefontaine, a French Canadian priest and
				  missionary, was the first Roman Catholic priest in Seattle and built Seattle’s
				  first Catholic Church. Born in Quebec, his early education took place at
				  parochial schools and Nicolet College; he went on to study for the priesthood
				  at the Grand Seminary of Montreal in 1859. Three weeks after his graduation and
				  ordination on November 20, 1863, he departed on a sea voyage for Washington
				  Territory via the Isthmus of Panama. He arrived in Vancouver, Washington, in
				  February 1864 where he served under Bishop Blanchet. He was assigned first to a
				  ministry at Fort Stevens on the Oregon side of the mouth of the Columbia River
				  and then to Steilacoom, Washington. While he was in Steilacoom, he met and
				  worked with Mother Joseph of the Sisters of Providence, a fellow French
				  Canadian missionary whose mission was also to build churches and schools. In
				  1869 Fr. Prefontaine arrived in Seattle at what is now Pioneer Square and
				  decided to set up a ministry there. Bishop Blanchet warned Prefontaine that
				  Seattle had little potential as a Catholic mission, but gave him permission to
				  establish a permanent parish there. In 1876 Fr. Prefontaine secured a contract
				  from King County to care for sick people. He purchased a factory at Fifth
				  Avenue and Madison Street and persuaded the Sisters of Providence to come to
				  Seattle and establish a hospital there. In 1880 he asked the Sisters of the
				  Holy Names to set up Catholic education for the children of Seattle. He
				  purchased a plot of land at Second Avenue and Seneca Street, and the order
				  established the Holy Names Academy at that location. In his final years, he
				  served as chaplain at the academy. In Prefontaine Place South, near the site of
				  his first house, stands a fountain inscribed with his name; in his will, he
				  left money for a fountain in a public square.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrefontaineFX1</container><unittitle>Francis Xavier Prefontaine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prescott, Charles Harrison (March 29, 1837 - August 7,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Harrison Prescott was born in Boston, Massachusetts. In
				  1861, he went to Australia where he worked in mining and sheep raising. In
				  1868, he went to London and Boston before going to Kansas City, where he was a
				  manager of the Armour’s Bank of Kansas City and treasurer of the Missouri
				  River, Fort Scott and Gulf Railroad. In 1880, he was elected comptroller of
				  Oregon Railway and Navigation Company. and became manager of the company in
				  1881. Prescott held that position until 1887. In 1888, he became vice-president
				  of the Northern Pacific Railroad, as well as receiver of the western division
				  of the Northern Pacific and receiver of the East Side Railway Company. He was
				  also a stockholder in the Seattle, Lakeshore and Eastern Railroad; the Oregon
				  Transcontinental Company; and the Puget Sound and Alaska Steamship Company, and
				  was an active member of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, the Commercial Club,
				  and the Multnomah Club. He lived in Tacoma, Washington before moving to
				  Portland. He married Georgianna Bryant in 1870.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrescottCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Harrison Prescott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Preston, Harold (September 29, 1858 - January 1,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Preston was born in Illinois and received his academic
				  education at Iowa College and Cornell University. He was admitted to the bar in
				  Iowa in 1883 and left for Seattle soon after, where he opened a law office in
				  the Boston Block. He was a member of the State Senate from 1897 until 1901,
				  where he advocated for the regulation of railroad freight rates by a state
				  commission. He was chairman of the Freeholders’ Committee which drafted
				  Seattle’s second charter in 1885, and served as president of the Washington
				  State Bar Association and the Seattle Bar Association. He ran for U. S. Senate
				  in 1903 and was defeated in a narrow margin. Preston was the author of the 1911
				  Employers’ Liability Statute, a pioneer movement to grant compensation to
				  injured workers; the law was subsequently upheld by the U. S. Supreme Court.
				  During the First World War, Preston was chair of the King County Council of
				  Defense. After the war, he acted as master of chancery in the case of the
				  United States v. Skinner &amp; Eddy, which grew out of wartime shipbuilding
				  operations. Mary McCarthy, the writer, was his granddaughter. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PorXC1</container><container type="item">PrestonH1</container><unittitle>Pen and ink political cartoon of Harold
					 Preston</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Harry Murphy</persname></origination></did><note><p>Supplement to August 31, 1902 issue of The Argus.</p><p>Caption on cartoon: Harold Preston, Candidate for Senate -A
					 Man who is large enough to cover the entire State of Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Price, William Montelius (August 27, 1874 - January 26,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Montelius Price was born in Philadelphia and moved to
				  the Bellingham area in 1900. He moved to Seattle in 1901 and worked for the
				  Seattle Electric Company until settling up his own machinery dealership in
				  1910. He was one of the pioneers in Northwest climbing and was a founding
				  member of The Mountaineers. With his friend, Ashahel Curtis, he made the first
				  ascent of Mt. Shuksan in 1906. He led many trips and expeditions for The
				  Mountaineers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CurtisA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asahel Curtis and W. Montelius Price
					 on the summit of Mt. Shuksan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate></did><note><p>Asahel Curtis and W. Montelius Price claimed the first ascent
					 of Mt. Shuksan in 1906; Shuksan’s Curtis and Price glaciers serve as namesakes
					 to the climbers.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Asahel Curtis subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prim, Paine Page (May 2, 1822 - August 7,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paine Page Prim was born in Tennessee, the son of a poor farmer
				  who died when Prim was a boy. Schooling was intermittent until there were
				  sufficient resources for Prim to spend a year and a half at an academy. He then
				  taught school for a few years until he had the means to study law. In 1848, he
				  was the first graduate from the Cumberland University School of Law at Lebanon.
				  After passing the bar, Prim practiced law in Sparta, Tennessee, but soon saw
				  the west as offering greater opportunities. In the spring of 1851 he joined a
				  wagon train headed for the Oregon Territory. Upon arriving in the Willamette
				  Valley, Prim found there was little demand for his legal services. He filed a
				  Donation Land Claim near Albany, but soon tired of farming. When news of the
				  gold strikes in Jackson County reached him, Prim abandoned his land claim and
				  headed to Jacksonville where he mined for the next four years. By 1856 there
				  was sufficient demand for his professional services for him to resume a law
				  practice. The same year the Oregon Territorial Governor appointed Prim the
				  first District Attorney of the First Judicial District consisting of Jackson,
				  Josephine, and Douglas counties. He was appointed Associate Justice of the
				  Oregon Supreme Court and ex-officio Circuit Judge of the First Judicial
				  District, and was a Circuit Judge and Supreme Court Justice for the next 21
				  years, including three terms as Chief Justice. When Prim was not elected for an
				  additional judicial term in 1880, he resumed his Jacksonville law practice. He
				  returned to politics two years later when he was elected to the state Senate
				  and served for two terms before again retiring from politics. Prim continued to
				  practice law for the next 10 years, including a stint as Attorney for the
				  Southern Pacific Railroad. In 1897, with Prim’s health failing, he moved to San
				  Francisco and died there two years later.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrimPP1</container><unittitle>Paine Page Prim</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (June 10, 1921 - April
				  9, 2021)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, was the husband of Queen
				  Elizabeth II. A member of the Greek and Danish royal families, he was born in
				  Greece. His family was exiled from the country when he was an infant. After
				  being educated in France, Germany and the United Kingdom, he joined the British
				  Royal Navy in 1939, aged 18. During the Second World War he served with
				  distinction in the Mediterranean and Pacific Fleets. After the war, Philip was
				  granted permission by George VI to marry Elizabeth. Before the official
				  announcement of their engagement in July 1947, he abandoned his Greek and
				  Danish royal titles and became a naturalized British subject, adopting the
				  surname Mountbatten from his maternal grandparents. He married Princess
				  Elizabeth on November 20, 1947.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrincePhilip1</container><unittitle>Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh with Joseph E. Gandy
					 at the Seattle Space Needle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1962</unitdate></did><note><p>Prince Philip visited the Seattle World's Fair on June 1, 1962
					 and had lunch at the Space Needle with Joseph Gandy, president of the Fair.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prince, Thomas (May 15, 1687 – August 22,
				  1758)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Prince was an American clergyman, scholar and historian
				  noted for his historical text <emph render="italic">A Chronological History of
				  New England, in the Form of Annals</emph>, a history of New England beginning
				  with the 6th day of creation. Prince influenced historians such as Jeremy
				  Belknap and Thomas Hutchinson, and his book was still being used as a reference
				  text as late as 1791. He created the <emph render="italic"> Christian
				  History</emph>, a periodical in 1743, to report on the revivals sweeping Europe
				  and the United States; although the periodical only ran for two years, it is
				  notable as the first such Christian periodical to be created. In 1743 he wrote 
				  <emph render="italic">An Account of the Revival of Religion in Boston in the
				  Years 1740-1-2-3,</emph> an account of the revival of Christianity in Boston
				  linked in part to his support of the Great Awakening.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrinceT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Prince</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1740 and 1749?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Peter Pelham, Boston, Massachusetts</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Engraving by Peter Pelham after a painting by John
						Greenwood, Boston.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pringle, J. Arthur (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pritchard, Joel McFee (May 5, 1925 – October 9,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joel McFee Pritchard, born in Seattle, was a Republican
				  politician who served in the U.S. House of Representatives and as the 14th
				  Lieutenant Governor of Washington. He served in the United States Army during
				  World War II and attended Marietta College from 1946 to 1947. Pritchard was
				  president of the Griffin Envelope Company in Seattle from 1948 to 1971. He
				  served in the Washington State Legislature from 1958 through 1970 as both a
				  representative and a state senator, and was on the State Constitutional
				  Advisory Commission, the Women’s Rights Council, and the Metro Planning
				  Council. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1972 to 1984 where
				  he was ranking member of the Marine and Fisheries committee and the Foreign
				  Relations Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific. He was a delegate to the U. N.
				  General Assembly in 1983, a member of the Panama Canal Consultative Commission
				  from 1987 to 1988, and director of Government Relations for Bogle and Gates
				  from 1985 to 1988. He made a successful run for Lieutenant Governor of
				  Washington in 1988 and served from 1989 to 1997. After his second term as
				  Lieutenant Governor, Pritchard retired from politics and became a board member
				  of TVW, Washington's public affairs network. Along with a few of his friends,
				  Pritchard invented the game of pickle ball at his house in 1965.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritchardJM1</container><unittitle>Joel McFee Pritchard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1988 and 1992</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritchardJM2</container><unittitle>Joel McFee Pritchard seated at desk,
					 reading</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Priteca, Benjamin Marcus (December 23, 1889 – October 1,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin (or Bernard) Marcus Priteca, born in Glasgow, was a
				  theater architect, best known for his work for Alexander Pantages. Priteca
				  served an apprenticeship in Edinburgh under architect Robert MacFarlane Cameron
				  from 1904 until 1909, and earned degrees from the University of Edinburgh and
				  the Royal College of Arts. In 1909, he immigrated to the United States,
				  settling in Seattle, Washington. He met Seattle vaudeville theatre owner
				  Alexander Pantages in 1910 and won a commission to design the San Francisco
				  Pantages Theater (1911), the first of many vaudeville and motion picture houses
				  in what would become one of the largest theater chains in North America. In
				  all, Priteca designed 22 theaters for Pantages and another 128 for other
				  theater owners. Notable theaters include the Coliseum (1915) in Seattle; the
				  Pantages (1918) in Tacoma, Washington; the Pantages (1920) in Los Angeles
				  (downtown); the Pantages in San Diego (1924); the Pantages (1928) in Fresno,
				  California; the Paramount (1929) in Seattle; the Pantages (1929) in Hollywood;
				  the Warner on Pacific Boulevard in Huntington Park (1930); the Admiral (1938)
				  in West Seattle, and the Orpheum in Vancouver, Canada. He also designed the
				  1934 Grandstand and Clubhouse of Longacres Racetrack in Renton, Washington,
				  which has since been demolished. In 1951, Priteca became a Fellow of the
				  American Institute of Architects. He remained active as an architect well into
				  his eighties, working as a consultant in the design of the Seattle Opera House
				  (1962) and the Portland, Oregon, Civic Auditorium (1968). Priteca died in
				  Seattle on October 1, 1971 and was posthumously awarded honorary membership of
				  the Theatre Historical Society of America.</p></bioghist><note><p>His high school diploma has his first name as Benjamin; his
				  death certificate recorded it as Bernard.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritecaBM1</container><unittitle>B. Marcus Priteca, in suit, holding a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritecaBM2</container><unittitle>B. Marcus Priteca with two unidentified men at the
					 Coliseum Theater building site</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1914</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritecaBM3</container><unittitle>Benjamin Marcus Priteca</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Original in Carl F. Gould photograph collection, PH Coll. 426,
					 Box 2, Folder 18.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PritecaBM4</container><unittitle>Priteca and a group of six unidentified men receiving
					 awards</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Proctor, Clara Agnes Pavey (January 30, 1867 - October
				  19, 1932) - see Ethel Earle</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Earle was the stage name of Clara Agnes Pavey Proctor, a
				  theatrical and music-hall performer who was active between 1894 and 1934. She
				  was the daughter of Alfred Pavey, a builder and estate agent. She married
				  George Frederick William Proctor in 1886 and in 1896 married George Adney
				  Payne, a London music hall owner and producer, whom she divorced in 1902. She
				  appeared at the Adelphi Theater in London's West End.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prosch, Charles (June 25, 1820 - November 22,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Prosch was born in Pennsylvania. In 1882, his family
				  moved to a small town outside of New York, where he learned the printing trade
				  as an apprentice at<emph> The New York Express</emph>. He married Susan
				  Conkling in 1846; the couple had four children. The family traveled west in
				  1853 first to California and then north to Oregon. They moved to Washington
				  Territory in the winter of 1857. The following spring, Prosch started the 
				  <emph render="italic">Puget Sound Herald</emph> in Steilacoom, Fort Nisqually.
				  He went to the Snohomish River in 1859 to locate the townsite of the city of
				  Snohomish. In 1863 he was one of a party that examined Point Defiance near
				  Tacoma as a prospective park. He left Steilacoom in 1868 and moved to Olympia
				  to perform the Territorial printing under E. L. Smith, Secretary of Territory.
				  He purchased the <emph render="italic">Pacific Tribune</emph> and during the
				  session of Legislature of 1869, published the first daily ever-printed in
				  Territory. He remained in publishing, working with his sons in Tacoma and
				  Seattle until he retired in 1887. Prosch wrote <emph render="italic">Reminiscences of Washington Territory </emph>in 1904. He was a
				  supporter of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition and purchased the first five
				  bonds.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschC1</container><unittitle>Charles Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 30, 1905</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschC2</container><unittitle>Charles Prosch in hat and coat, seated in
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0115/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschC3</container><unittitle>Charles Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 20, 1909</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschC4</container><unittitle>Charles Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Charles Prosch. Compositor and Journalist
					 from 1837 to 1889, when he retired, doing nothing thereafter save writing and
					 publishing reminiscences and essays. Born Penn., 1822; removed to New York City
					 same year; came to Pacific Coast 1853, and Wash. 1858. Address, Seattle,
					 Wash.</p></note><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prosch, Susan Conkling (March 26, 1824 - August 1,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan Conkling, the daughter of Sylvester and Charity Conkling,
				  was born on the family farm in Orange County, New York. When she was 14, she
				  moved to town and trained as a tailor. She supported herself until her marriage
				  to Charles Prosch in 1846. She and her husband had four children. In 1855, the
				  family traveled west first to San Francisco, then north to Oregon and
				  Washington Territory. They settled in Steilacoom, Washington where Charles had
				  a newspaper. In 1868, they moved to Olympia where he started another paper and
				  did the Territorial printing. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschSC1</container><unittitle>Susan Conkling Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 30, 1905</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prosch, Thomas Wickham (June 2, 1850 - March 30,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Prosch, the son of Charles and Susan Prosch, came with
				  his family to the Pacific Coast in 1855 from Brooklyn, New York. The elder
				  Prosch was a printer and in 1858 founded the <emph render="italic">Puget Sound
				  Herald</emph> at Steilacoom. In his early years, Thomas Prosch worked for his
				  father as well as in a number of other jobs including clerking in the State
				  legislature and at the customs office at Port Townsend. In 1869 the Prosch
				  family, now residing in Olympia, acquired the <emph render="italic">Pacific
				  Tribune</emph> newspaper. When the complete ownership of the paper passed to
				  Thomas in 1872, he moved to Tacoma, and later to Seattle where he continued its
				  publication and eventually sold it. In 1879, Thomas Prosch and Samuel L.
				  Crawford bought the <emph render="italic">Daily Intelligencer</emph> newspaper.
				  Two years later, they bought the Post and merged the two into the 
				  <emph render="italic">Post-Intelligencer</emph> . Early in 1886, Prosch sold
				  the paper to a joint stock company. From 1876 onward, he was involved with a
				  series of jobs and activities relating to the city of Seattle. In 1876 Prosch
				  was appointed postmaster of Seattle by President Grant. He had charge of the
				  municipal census of Seattle in 1890 and at the same time was special agent in
				  charge of the federal census. In the early 1890's he served three years as a
				  member of the Seattle School Board. In 1894 he aided in platting the tidelands
				  of Seattle and Tacoma. He was also active in the Seattle Chamber of Commerce
				  and a member and officer of various pioneer and historical societies as well as
				  writing many articles and books about the history of the Puget Sound region.
				  Prosch, along with his wife and two others died in an automobile accident on
				  March 30, 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW1</container><unittitle>Thomas W. Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW2</container><unittitle>Thomas W. Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW4</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p></note><note><p>Copy of original photograph with names of attendees written on
					 the photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Prosch, Virginia McCarver (April 17, 1851 - March 30,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Virginia McCarver, the daughter of General Morton Matthew
				  McCarver and Julia Ann McCarver, was born on the McCarver homestead near Oregon
				  City, Oregon. Her father was a pioneer of 1843 and her mother of 1847; the
				  family lived in Oregon and Idaho before coming to Washington in 1868. Her
				  father founded cities in Oregon and Washington, and was one of the founders of
				  Tacoma. Virginia married Thomas Prosch in 1877; they had four children. She
				  died along with her husband and two others in an automobile accident on March
				  30, 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschVM1</container><unittitle>Virginia Prosch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prosser, William Farrand (March 6, 1834 - September 23,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Colonel William Prosser was a teacher, a miner, a soldier, a
				  farmer, a politician, the editor of a newspaper, the president of a railroad, a
				  postmaster, a surveyor, an historian, and a city treasurer. He was born in
				  Pennsylvania where he was a school teacher and a surveyor. He went to
				  California in 1854 to mine for gold, returning to Pennsylvania in 1861. When
				  the Civil War began, he enlisted in the Union Army. He served throughout the
				  war and was promoted through the ranks to Colonel. After the war, he settled on
				  a farm near Nashville, Tennessee and served in the Tennessee House of
				  Representatives (1867-69). In 1869, he was elected as a Republican to the
				  Forty-first Congress, serving until 1871. He served as postmaster of Nashville
				  (1872-75), director of the Tennessee, Edgefield &amp; Kentucky Railroad and was
				  one of the State commissioners to the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia in
				  1876. In 1879, President Hayes appointed him special agent for the Interior
				  Department of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Prosser moved to Washington
				  Territory where he established a trading post at Yakima Falls (later Prosser,
				  Washington) in 1882 and filed the town plat in 1885. He also brought irrigation
				  to the area, giving the farmers more options for the crops they grew. In 1886,
				  he was elected Yakima County auditor and later mayor of North Yakima. He was
				  chairman of the Washington State harbor line commission, city treasurer of
				  Seattle, president of the state historical society and published a book on the
				  history of the Puget Sound. In 1910, he was the president of the newly
				  organized Conservative Casualty Company of Seattle and remained there for over
				  a year until his death in 1911.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProsserWF1</container><unittitle>Colonel William Prosser</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Prouty, Charles Azro (October 9, 1853 - July 8,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles A. Prouty was a politician and government official who
				  was involved with reform movements including the Progressive and Prohibition
				  Parties. He served as a commissioner of the Interstate Commerce Commission from
				  1896 to 1914. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the United States Senate
				  from Vermont in 1914.He was twice elected State's Attorney in 1882 and 1884,
				  and to the Vermont House of Representatives in 1888. He served as principal of
				  Newport Academy for two years. From 1888 to 1896, he served as Reporter of
				  Decisions for the Vermont Supreme Court, helped start the Orleans Trust Company
				  and the Newport Electric Company, and served as general counsel for the Rutland
				  and Central Vermont Railroads.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClarkEErastus1</container><unittitle>Edgar Erastus Clark seated in courtroom with group of
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><origination encodinganalog="photographer"><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p> (Left to Right) Francis M. Cockrell, Judson C. Clements,
					 Martin A. Knapp, Charles A. Prouty, Francis K. Lane, and James S. Harlan, who
					 were all members of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Edgar E. Clark's name
					 is listed as E. A. Clark.</p><p>Filed under Edgar Erastus Clark subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pruner, George DeWitt Clinton (August 7, 1848 - July 6,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George DeWitt Clinton Pruner was born in New York and came to
				  Washington in 1892. He worked at the <emph>Tacoma News</emph>, the 
				  <emph>Seattle Telegraph</emph> and was founder and editor of the <emph>Blaine
				  Journal</emph> from 1892 until 1902. He was elected justice of the peace for
				  the Blaine precinct in 1894 and re-elected two years later. From 1892 until
				  1898, he was also United States customs inspector and federal court
				  commissioner. In 1900 he was appointed postmaster by President Theodore
				  Roosevelt and held the office continuously until his death. He was elected
				  justice of the peace for Blaine precinct in 1894 and was re-elected two years
				  later, holding the office until appointed postmaster. From 1892 until 1898 he
				  was also United States customs inspector and federal court commissioner. Pruner
				  married Evelyn E. Evans in 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PrunerGDC1</container><unittitle>George DeWitt Clinton Pruner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1893?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">N. A. Giguere, St. Paul, Minnesota</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pulaski, Edward Crockett (February 9, 1866 – February 2,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Crockett “Ed” Pulaski was a U.S. Forest Service ranger
				  based in Wallace, Idaho. Pulaski traveled west and worked as a miner, railroad
				  worker, and ranch foreman before joining the forest service in 1908. On August
				  20, 1910, Pulaski was credited with saving all but five of his 45-man crew
				  during what is known as the "Great Idaho Fire," the "Great Fire of 1910" or the
				  "Big Blowup.” Pulaski was supervising crews on the west fork of Placer Creek,
				  about five miles south of Wallace, when the fire suddenly broke out of control,
				  overwhelming the crew. Drawing on his knowledge of the area and of the dynamics
				  of forest fires, Pulaski led his men to safety in an abandoned prospect mine.
				  The mine entrance, now known as the Pulaski Tunnel, is listed on the National
				  Register of Historic Places. Pulaski remained with the Forest Service until
				  1929, though the great fire's smoke and flames had damaged his lungs and eyes;
				  during that time, he petitioned the government for money to care for the graves
				  of the firefighters killed by the 1910 fire and for compensation for his
				  injuries. Pulaski is widely credited for the invention of the Pulaski in 1911,
				  a hand tool commonly used in wildland firefighting. Mount Pulaski, a peak 1.5
				  miles southwest of Wallace, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PulaskiEC1</container><unittitle>Edward Crockett "Ed" Pulaski</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pullen, Daniel Dee (April 27, 1885 - September 22,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Dee Pullen, the son of Harriet Smith Pullen and Daniel
				  Webster Pullen, was born in La Push, Washington. After his parents separated in
				  1896, his mother moved the family to Skagway, Alaska where she started a hotel.
				  Pullen attended the University of Washington, where he played college football
				  and was captain of the rowing team. He then enrolled in the United States
				  Military Academy where he gained fame as a tackle for the Army Black Knights
				  football team. He was selected as a first-team All-American in 1906 and in
				  1908. Pullen received a Distinguished Service Cross for his service in World
				  War I. According to the citation, he displayed "extraordinary heroism in
				  action" and "conspicuous gallantry and leadership in directing a tank attack on
				  the Bois-de-Cuisy, after which he rallied a force of disorganized infantry,
				  leading it forward in the face of violent machine-gun fire, and occupying the
				  ground which had been taken by the tanks.” Pullen died in 1923 at age 38 at the
				  Walter Reed Army Medical Center, following an illness of several months.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1903 and 1906</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Seattle Photographic Co., Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD2</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front: Fraternally yours, Daniel D. Pullen, '07.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD3</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1906 and 1907</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McManus, West Point</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD4</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in cadet uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McManus, West Point</persname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD5</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McManus, West Point</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Daniel D. Pullen, U. S. M. A., 1910.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD6</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in military uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1922</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Canal Zone, January 1922.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD7</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in military uniform with Harriet
					 Stuart Pullen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 25, 1922</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Norfolk, VA, Christmas Day, 1922.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Pullen, Harriet Stuart (May 18, 1922 - December 17,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harriet Stuart Pullen was born in North Carolina in 1922. Her
				  parents were Daniel D. Pullen and Olivia Middleton Blake Pullen; her father
				  died in 1923. She graduated from Sweet Briar College in 1943 and married John
				  Ormsby Phillips in 1946; the couple had three children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PullenDD7</container><unittitle>Daniel Dee Pullen in military uniform with Harriet
					 Stuart Pullen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 25, 1922</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Norfolk, VA, Christmas Day, 1922.</p><p>Filed under Daniel D. Pullen subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Purdy, Bruce Franklin (October 16, 1854- April 2,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bruce Franklin Purdy was born in Salem, Oregon on October 16,
				  1854 to Aaron Purdy and Belinda Bucklew Purdy, who had traveled overland to
				  Oregon in a wagon train. They arrived in The Dalles in 1847 and completed the
				  journal to Salem by floating down the Columbia River. Bruce Purdy grew up on
				  the homestead in Salem and attended the local schools. His studies were
				  continued in Waitsburg, Washington until 1867, when he returned to Salem. In
				  1875, he returned to Washington State with his mother and took a land and
				  timber claim near Goldendale. He became one of the large wheat growers of that
				  district and was one of the leading stock raisers. After sixteen years in
				  Goldendale, he moved to Forest Grove, Oregon where he bought and sold farms
				  while continuing to own ranches in Washington and in the Imperial Valley of
				  California. Purdy was a member of the first state legislature of Washington and
				  occupied a seat in the Oregon House of Representatives from 1893 until 1897. He
				  was an appraiser for veterans of World War I and represented Washington County
				  on the state aid commission. He married Cora McCune in 1880; the couple had
				  nine children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PurdyBF1</container><unittitle>Bruce Franklin Purdy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Putnam, Marguerite Eleanor (December 11, 1890 - January
				  20, 1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>In a career spanning thirty-five years, Marguerite Eleanor
				  Putnam served as Chief Acquisitions Librarian at the University of Washington
				  and also was active in national and regional professional organizations. Born
				  in Minnesota, she attended the University of Washington, where she completed
				  her undergraduate degree in 1921 and continued her studies toward an MLS, which
				  she received in 1923. After graduating, Putnam taught as a library science
				  instructor at the University of Washington, later becoming an associate
				  professor from 1930-1933. She was made the Head of the Acquisitions Division at
				  the University of Washington Library in 1936. Her professional memberships and
				  activities over the years included the Pacific Northwest Library Association
				  (for which she served as Secretary), the American Library Association
				  (including terms on its Committee on Library Equipment and Appliances), the
				  Association of College and Research Libraries, and the Washington Library
				  Association. Following her retirement in 1956, she was appointed to become an
				  honorary Consultant in Bibliography at the University of Washington. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PutnamME1</container><unittitle>Marguerite Eleanor Putnam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW9</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, Dean Herbert T. Condon, Harry C.
					 Bauer, and Raymond B. Allen, with photograph of Charles Smith standing in
					 Suzzallo Library in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Blomdahl, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>Q</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Quigle, Edgar Allen (October 5, 1875 - December 21,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Allen Quigle was the vice-president of the International
				  Stevedoring Company and the president of the Waterfront Employers of Seattle
				  during the 1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">QuigleEA1</container><unittitle>Edgar Allen Quigle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from the Arctic Club series.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Quong, Chin (October 23, 1856 - October 29,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chin Quong arrived from China in 1868 when he was 11 years old.
				  He was one of the first Chinese residents of Seattle and one of the founders of
				  the Wa Chong Company; he served as general manager of the company until his
				  death. The store sold imported Chinese goods, tea, rice, coffee, flour, and
				  fireworks. Its most profitable business was labor contracting; the company
				  placed Chinese immigrants in domestic work, logging, mining, construction, and
				  later in fisheries and canneries. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">QuongC1</container><unittitle>Chin Quong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jacobs, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>R</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rabbeson, Antonio Bardiau (October, 1825 - February 14,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Antonio Bardiau Rabbeson was born in New York City and crossed
				  the plains to Oregon in 1846, moving to southwest Washington the same year
				  where he worked as a brick maker, carpenter, and general contractor. He built
				  the first sawmill in Tacoma and was the first undertaker in the city. Rabbeson
				  was appointed surveyor for the port of Nisqually during the Pierce
				  administration, serving from 1856 to 1860. He was a member of the state
				  legislature for one term and served as sheriff of Thurston County for one term.
				  In 1863, he started Washington Brewing Company, one of the first breweries in
				  the state. Rabbeson was the key witness against Chief Leschi during his trial
				  for the murder of A. B. Moses and also served as foreman of the jury that
				  indicted Leschi. The jury wasn't allowed to hear that the murder of which
				  Leschi was accused was a killing during combat. Leschi was convicted, and the
				  territorial Supreme Court upheld the conviction. Leschi was hanged on Feb. 19,
				  1858. In 2004, a Washington court unanimously decreed that A. B. Moses' killing
				  was not murder but an act of war and that under such circumstances, Leschi
				  should never have been tried for the crime.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RabbesonAB1</container><unittitle>Antonio B. Rabbeson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rader, Lewis Emerson (March 16, 1864 – May 11,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Emerson Rader was an American politician who served in the
				  Washington House of Representatives. He settled in Olalla in 1901 after his one
				  term in the legislature. He was the manager of the Sound Pacific Land Company
				  and the publisher of the <emph render="italic">West Pass Record</emph>, a
				  newspaper in Olalla, Washington. He also published <emph render="italic">Sound
				  Views</emph> magazine. In 1910, Rader starved to death after a 29-day fast
				  under the advice of Doctor Linda Burfield Hazzard for treatment of a stomach
				  issue. Hazzard later built a sanitarium on property that Rader had owned. After
				  a number of deaths at the sanitarium resulting from treatment she prescribed,
				  she was imprisoned by the state of Washington. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RaderLE1</container><unittitle>Lewis Emerson Rader</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. J. Merwin, Montesano, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Original in Collection 334, Early Photographers.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rader, Melvin Miller (November 8, 1903 - June 14,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melvin Miller Rader was an author and professor of philosophy at
				  the University of Washington for 51 years, and was an outspoken advocate of
				  civil rights. He taught ethics, aesthetics and political philosophy. In 1948,
				  he was accused of being a communist by the Canwell Committee (the Joint
				  Legislative Fact Finding Committee on Un-American Activities). Rader used the
				  period after the hearings to compile evidence to clear his name. Though the
				  prosecutor's office filed a perjury charge against his accuser, there was
				  resistance at every turn, and finally the New York court refused to extradite
				  the witness to Washington to stand trial. <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Times</emph> then took up Rader's cause, and reporter Ed Guthman won a Pulitzer
				  Prize in 1949 for the series of articles that proved Rader's innocence. Rader
				  continued to teach at the UW, but it was 20 years before he was able to write
				  about his experience in his memoir,<emph render="italic"> False Witness</emph>.
				  In 2009, an endowment fund was created in Rader's name at the University of
				  Washington to fund philosophy students engaged in social justice work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RaderMM1</container><unittitle>Melvin Miller Rader</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Information Services, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the University of Washington Philosophy
					 Department faculty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (L-R): Melvin Rader, Everett J. Nelson, Herbert
					 Phillips; back row (L-R): Herbert Wallace Schneider, others unidentified</p><p>The two unidentified men in the back row may be Abraham Irving
					 Melden (1910-1991) and John Herman Randall Jr. (1899-1880)</p></note><note><p>Filed under Herbert J. Phillips subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rahskoph, Dr. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rainier, Peter (November 24, 1741 –April 7,
				  1808)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Admiral Peter Rainier was a Royal Navy officer who served during
				  the Seven Years' War, the American Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars.
				  From 1794 to 1805, Rainier was commander-in-chief of the Navy's East Indies
				  Station, covering all seas between the Cape of Good Hope and the South China
				  Sea. Mount Rainier in Washington State was named after him by friend George
				  Vancouver.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RainierP1</container><unittitle>Admiral Peter Rainier in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Peter Rainier, Admiral of the Blue</p></note><note><p>Copy of a mezzotint by Charles Turner after an unknown artist,
					 originally published in 1824.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Raitt, Effie Isobel (June 13, 1878 - December 4,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Effie Raitt joined the University of Washington faculty in 1912
				  as director of the Department of Home Economics after earning two degrees from
				  Columbia University. At the time, home economics was a relatively new
				  discipline that gave students an opportunity to study the scientific problems
				  of the home. Raitt and her colleagues prepared students for professional work
				  as teachers and dietitians, clothing and textile designers, and other fields
				  intended to improve family life and public health. Classes were also offered to
				  the community through the University Extension program, which was founded the
				  year that Raitt joined the faculty. She chaired the Department of Home
				  Economics until her death in 1945. She was president of the American Home
				  Economics Association from 1934 to 1936, president of the American Dietetic
				  Association and national vice president of Omicron Nu, the Home Economics
				  society. In 1930-1931, she was an important committee chair of President
				  Hoover’s conference on home building and home ownership. In 1933, she
				  established the Persian Dining Room in the Northern Life Tower to provide
				  students with training in restaurant operations. The Home Economics Building
				  was renamed Raitt Hall in her honor in 1946.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RaittEI1</container><unittitle>Effie Raitt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Walters, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Raley, James Henry Robert (January 20, 1855- October 24,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James H. Raley, the son of Jonathan and Rachael Raley, was born
				  in Nebraska City when Nebraska was a territory. In the spring of 1862, the
				  family crossed the plains with ox teams, arriving at The Dalles in October of
				  the same year. The following winter was spent in Portland and in the spring of
				  1864 the family moved to Umatilla County, locating just one mile south of the
				  present site of Pendleton. Raley was in the first graduating class of the State
				  University of Oregon. He was elected county surveyor of Umatilla County and was
				  one of the first councilmen of Pendleton; he later was elected mayor. For eight
				  years, he was a member of the state senate and was the author of the irrigation
				  law of the state and of the bill creating the eastern Oregon State Normal
				  School where he served as one of the regents. In 1895 Raley was admitted to the
				  bar. He served during the Indian uprisings and received the title of colonel
				  while serving as a Lieutenant Colonel on Governor Pennoyer’s staff. He married
				  Minerva (Minnie) Pruett in 1879; the couple had four children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RaleyJHR1</container><unittitle>James H. Raley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ramsay, Claude Clinton (December 31, 1865 - October 28,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Claude Clinton Ramsay was born at Palermo, his father’s
				  plantation in Rowan County, North Carolina and received his early education in
				  that state. He arrived in Seattle in 1889 and by 1900 had opened his own
				  insurance business. He was also heavily involved in real estate. Ramsey was
				  associated with both the development of aeronautics and the early development
				  of the highways of Washington. He was elected to the Washington State
				  legislature in 1906. He was a founding member of the Washington Good Roads
				  Association, and in 1907, secured passage of the Washington Good Roads Law. He
				  was a member of the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition’s Publicity Committee and
				  was a King County commissioner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamsayCC1</container><unittitle> Claude Ramsay with Thomas Dobson, L. C. Smith and
					 William E. Boeing at the dedicatory exercises at Sandpoint</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 19, 1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: In the presence of a gathering of
					 distinguished citizens representative of the army, navy and air service of the
					 United States Government, Claude C. Ramsay, chairman of the Board of King
					 County Commissioners, in turning the first shovelful of earth declared: "I
					 hereby dedicate this field to the service of our country."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ramsey, Francis Riley (July 29, 1893-September 29,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Riley Ramsey was born in Redfield, Kansas and lived in
				  Portland for more than 30 years. During World War I, he was a member of the
				  United States Marine Corps and later became a member of Hurlburt Worsham post,
				  American Legion. He was sole owner of the Ramsey Machinery Company and
				  developed a 40-acre tract near Cedar Mills, Oregon in the 1940s. A member of
				  the Multnomah Athletic Club since 1917, he at one time was one of the
				  Winged-M’s outstanding wrestlers. He also held a membership in the Portland
				  Hunt Club. His daughter was Lorna LaVerne Ramsey, and he was a descendant of
				  Nez Perce Chief Joseph and Inashah, Chief Joseph's brother.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamseyFR1</container><unittitle> Francis Riley Ramsey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: Francis Riley Ramsey age 19 yrs., now
						deceased. Born 1894. Father of Lorna LaVerne Ramsey.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ramsey, Lorna La Verne (August 12, 1916 - December 24,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lorna LaVerne Ramsey was the daughter of Francis Riley Ramsey
				  and a descendant of Nez Perce Chief Joseph and Inashah, Chief Joseph's
				  brother.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamseyLLV1</container><unittitle> Lorna LaVerne Ramsey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1946?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamseyLLV2</container><unittitle> Lorna LaVerne Ramsey at Laney College in
					 Oakland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 29, 1973</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle>Randlett, Mary (May 5, 1924 -January 11,
				  2019)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Randlett was an American photographer who created hundreds
				  of photographs in five categories: architecture, nature, Northwest School
				  artists, Northwest writers, and public art. Her work is notable for her
				  documentation of the artists who created the Northwest School, such as Kenneth
				  Callahan, Morris Graves, and Mark Tobey. Collections of her works are located
				  at more than three dozen major institutions, such as the Metropolitan Museum of
				  Art, Smithsonian Institution, and University of Washington's Allen Library. She
				  held more than 30 solo exhibitions and was a recipient of the Anne Gould
				  Hauberg Artist Images Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MonroeRD1</container><unittitle>Robert Monroe with Mary Randlett and Larry
					 Kreisman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert D. Monroe subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Randolph, Catherine Breckinridge (June 19, 1838 - June
				  13, 1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine Breckinridge, the daughter of Preston and Catherine
				  (Moler) Breckinridge, was born in Springfield, Illinois and married Simon Peter
				  Randolph in 1856. The couple moved to Seattle in 1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RandolphCB1</container><unittitle>Catherine Breckinridge Randolph</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Randolph, Simon Peter (January 10, 1835 – January 15,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simon Peter Randolph was a pioneer steamboat captain who
				  operated the first steam vessel on Lake Washington. He was born in Logan
				  County, Illinois to Brooks Randolph and Susan Dotson Randolph. He came to
				  Seattle in 1868 and was engaged in transporting coal for the Lake Washington
				  Coal Company. He was also active in boating on the Duwamish and Black Rivers
				  and was responsible for dredging much of the lower White River, clearing it of
				  logs and snags. Randolph married Catherine Breckinridge in 1856. Their son,
				  Preston Brooks Randolph, was the last man to operate a steamer on the White
				  River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RandolphSP1</container><unittitle>Simon Peter Randolph</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RandolphSP2</container><unittitle>Photograph of Simon Peter Randolph's home at 1016
					 Columbia in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph in Seattle Neighborhoods-First
					 Hill.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RandolphSP3</container><unittitle>Photograph of Simon Peter Randolph's home at 3rd &amp;
					 Yesler in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph in Seattle Neighborhoods-Central
					 Business District.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rankin, Jeannette Pickering (June 11, 1880 – May 18,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Jeannette Pickering Rankin was an American politician and
				  women's rights advocate, and the first woman to hold federal office in the
				  United States. She was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives as a
				  Republican from Montana in 1916 and again in 1940. Each of Rankin's
				  Congressional terms coincided with initiation of U.S. military intervention in
				  the two World Wars. A lifelong pacifist, she was one of 50 House members who
				  opposed the declaration of war on Germany in 1917. In 1941, she was the only
				  member of Congress to vote against declaring war on Japan following the attack
				  on Pearl Harbor. A suffragist during the Progressive Era, Rankin organized and
				  lobbied for legislation enfranchising women in several states including
				  Montana, New York, and North Dakota. While in Congress, she introduced
				  legislation that eventually became the 19th Constitutional Amendment, granting
				  unrestricted voting rights to women nationwide. She championed a multitude of
				  diverse women's rights and civil rights causes throughout a career that spanned
				  more than six decades.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RankinJP1</container><unittitle> Jeannette Pickering Rankin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1914?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Jeannette Rankin, leader of Montana's
					 women's sufferage movement, 1914</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ranyard, Fred Dennett (December 7, 1886 - December 23,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fred Dennett Ranyard was born in Chicago and moved to Seattle in
				  1904. Raynard worked for the Rubber Manufacturing and Distributing Company from
				  1906 until 1911, when the company dissolved. He then worked for B. F. Goodrich
				  Company, retiring in 1947 as district manager. He married Lillian McClure in
				  1906. They lived in Seattle until 1962, moving to Miami a few weeks before his
				  death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RanyardFD1</container><unittitle>Fred Dennett Ranyard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph from the Arctic Club series.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ravalli, Antonio (May 16, 1812 - October 2,
				  1884)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Ferrara, Italy, in 1812, Antonio Ravalli entered the
				  Society of Jesus at the age of fifteen. He prepared for his missionary work by
				  studying medicine and surgery, as well as painting, sculpture, mathematics,
				  mechanics, and theology. Father Pierre Jean DeSmet recruited him for missionary
				  work among the Rocky Mountains Indians in 1844, and Ravalli took his final vows
				  at that time. Father Ravalli arrived at St. Mary’s Mission in the Bitterroot
				  Valley in mid-summer 1845. He developed the church’s agricultural program and
				  built Montana’s first grist mill and first sawmill. He became proficient in the
				  Salish language so he could minister to the local natives. Father Ravalli soon
				  created a regional reputation based on his skill and resourcefulness as a
				  craftsman, a physician, and a pharmacist. When St. Mary’s Mission closed in
				  1850, Father Ravalli accepted a series of posts in Idaho, Washington,
				  California, and then back in Montana. He returned to St. Mary’s with its
				  reestablishment in 1866 and remained there for the rest of his life. Father
				  Ravalli became a fabled figure, riding his pony through the countryside to
				  assist the sick, the wounded, the injured, and the dying. When a stroke
				  partially paralyzed him, he had a cot built on a wagon and continued his
				  ministry to the needy until he became completely bedridden. Ravalli County,
				  Montana and a World War I Liberty ship were named for him. In 2005 the Montana
				  Historical Society into the Gallery of Outstanding Montanans.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RavalliA1</container><unittitle>Antonio Ravalli</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 30, 1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of the monument to Father Ravalli in St. Mary's
					 Cemetery, Stevensville, Montana.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rawson, Zephaniah Benson (June 5, 1858 – June 29,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zephaniah Benson Rawson was born in Paris, Maine, in 1858. He
				  read law under the direction of Judge Enoch Foster of the Supreme Court of
				  Maine. He entered Columbian University (now George Washington University) in
				  Washington, D. C. and graduated with law degree in 1888. Rawson practiced law
				  in Maine until 1889 when he moved to the new state of Washington. He engaged in
				  general practice and real estate litigations, and in 1896-97 was the city
				  attorney of Seattle. Rawson served with the National Guard starting in 1893. He
				  resigned just prior to the Spanish-American War and re-enlisted in Company D.
				  He had the distinction of having been the first enlisted man sworn into the
				  service from the state of Washington. He served continuously with the regiment
				  until mustered out with the rank of second lieutenant in 1899. Soon after his
				  return, he was appointed brigade inspector with the rank of lieutenant colonel
				  and held that position until he became a member of the legislature. In 1900 he
				  was nominated as representative from the forty-first district to the state
				  legislature. While in the house he served as chairman of the military committee
				  and was a member of the committee on appropriation, a member of the judiciary
				  and horticultural committees.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RawsonZB1</container><unittitle>Zephaniah Benson Rawson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ray, (Dr.) Dixie Lee (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Raymond, Charles Walker (January 14, 1842 - May 3,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Walker Raymond was born in Connecticut and graduated
				  from the U. S. Military Academy at West Point in 1865. He retired as
				  Brigadier-General in 1904 after 40 years of service. In his long career, he
				  served throughout the United States and overseas. In 1869, he performed the
				  reconnaissance of the Yukon River to Fort Yukon and was the engineering
				  commissioner for Washington D.C. In civilian life, he was the chairman of the
				  Board of Engineers for the New York Tunnel Extension of Pennsylvania Railroad,
				  a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and a member of the
				  Washington Academy of Sciences. Fort Raymond (1942–1945) in Seward, Alaska was
				  named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RaymondCW1</container><unittitle>Charles Raymond in U. S. Army Corps of Engineers
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: LTC Charles W. Raymond, C. E., 1900.
					 National Archives photo.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Read, William M. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Reams, William (May 7, 1933 - June 6, 2020)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William “Bill” Reams was born in Seattle, Washington. He grew up
				  in the Green Lake area and graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1951. After
				  briefly working at the Gas Works coal plant, Reams was accepted to the
				  University of Washington where he was in the ROTC program. He served as
				  president of his fraternity, Psi Upsilon, and was elected team captain of the
				  Husky Baseball Team. He graduated from the School of Business at the University
				  of Washington in 1955. After graduation, Reams became a communications officer
				  in the U.S. Navy aboard the <emph>USS Yorktown</emph>. He worked in the
				  financial services industry following his discharge from the Navy and became
				  the managing partner of Reams-Goode &amp; Associates LLC. In 1969, Reams was
				  elected as a charter member of the King County Council, serving for just under
				  20 years. He was elected chairman of the council in 1970, 1975 and 1980.
				  Following his service on the King County Council, he was elected to three terms
				  (1993, 1995 and 1997) in the Washington State House, including four years as
				  Chairman of the House Government Operations Committee. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reamer, Robert Chambers (September 12, 1873 - January 7,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Chambers Reamer was an American architect, most noted for
				  the Old Faithful Inn in Yellowstone National Park. He was born in and spent his
				  early life in Oberlin, Ohio. At the age of thirteen, he went to work in an
				  architect's office in Detroit as a draftsman. By the age of twenty-one, Reamer
				  had moved to San Diego and had opened the architectural office in partnership
				  with Samuel B. Zimmer. The firm produced a wide variety of projects, but the
				  only surviving example of Zimmer &amp; Reamer's work is the George H. Hill
				  Block in the Gaslamp District. The partnership dissolved in 1898. During this
				  period, he met Harry W. Child, the president of the Yellowstone Park Company.
				  The Old Faithful Inn was commissioned by Child in 1902 and funded with loans by
				  the Northern Pacific Railroad. Reamer also built the Lake Yellowstone Hotel,
				  the Gardiner, Montana railroad depot at the northern entrance of Yellowstone
				  Park. and other buildings and residences in the Yellowstone area. By 1918,
				  Reamer had relocated to Seattle. Over the next few years, Reamer worked as a
				  staff architect with the Metropolitan Building Company, designing several
				  buildings, including the Seattle Times Building, the Skinner Building and the
				  1411 Fourth Avenue Building. Once he established his own practice, he designed
				  a series of eight hotels in Washington. The most notable was the Lake Quinault
				  Lodge, constructed in 1926 on the Olympic Peninsula. Later, Reamer began to
				  specialize in movie theaters, working in the elaborate thematic styles popular
				  at the time. The 1926 5th Avenue Theatre was part of the Skinner Building
				  project in Seattle, with a Chinese-inspired interior. The Moorish-inspired
				  Mount Baker Theatre opened in Bellingham, Washington in 1927. An Art Deco Fox
				  theater in Spokane followed in 1931, with another Fox in Billings, Montana the
				  same year. He died in Seattle of a heart attack on January 7, 1938. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReamerRC1</container><unittitle>Robert Chambers Reamer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1938?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reavis, James Bradley (May 28, 1846 - April 29,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Bradley Reavis was born in Boone County, Missouri and was
				  educated at Kentucky University. After graduation, he studied law and was
				  admitted to the bar in 1873. He worked as a journalist for two years before
				  relocating to Chico, California where he practiced law. In 1880, he moved to
				  Yakima, Washington where he established a law practice. Reavis was elected to
				  the Washington State Senate in 1884 and served until 1886. He was a member of
				  the Board of Regents for the University of Washington in 1886 and served on the
				  Board of Directors for the Yakima public schools. He was Chief Justice of the
				  Washington State Supreme Court in 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReavisJB1</container><unittitle>James Bradley Reavis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rector, Thomas (Tomas) Gaylord (September 12, 1859 -
				  August 1, 1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Gaylord Rector, the son of Thomas Rector and Mary Louisa
				  Hiott Rector, was born in Wood, West Virginia. He graduated from the University
				  of West Virginia in 1887 and continued his post graduate studies in physics and
				  chemistry at Johns Hopkins University. In1888 he was appointed to the Office
				  Meteorológica Argentina (OMA) at the request of Benjamin A. Gould. Based in
				  Córdoba, he worked under the direction of William G. Davis until 1901, when the
				  office was moved to Buenos Aires. Rector became the director of the Córdoba
				  Meteorological Station (EMC) until his retirement in 1920, when he was 61 years
				  old. He married Frieda Hulda Sidler in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RectorTG1</container><unittitle>Thomas Gaylord Rector</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1898</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Chute &amp; Brooks, Buenos Aires</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RectorTG2</container><unittitle>Thomas Gaylord Rector</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1891 </unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tey &amp; Pala, Córdoba, Argentina</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reddish, Joseph T</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph T. Reddish was the captain of and played first base for
				  the Seattle Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon,
				  Washington Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. He owned a
				  grocery store on Front Street in Seattle during the 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Redington, John William (November 11, 1856 - March 23,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Col. John William Redington served as a scout in the Nez Perce
				  Indian War of 1877, and in other campaigns in the Northwest. He was the first
				  adjutant general appointed in Oregon after the territory become a state. He
				  founded the <emph>Gazette</emph> in Heppner, Oregon, published the 
				  <emph>Puyallup Commerce </emph>in the 1890s. He later purchased the<emph>
				  Tacoma Sun</emph> and was once editor of the Portland <emph>Oregonian</emph>.
				  His daughter, Bernice Redington was the home economics editor of the 
				  <emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> and was the first to use the byline
				  “Prudence Penney.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW1</container><unittitle> John William Redington on horseback, in scout
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: In old frontier days. War map of Colonel J.
					 W. Redington, Volunteer, U. S. Scout and Courier in three Indian Wars in the
					 Pacific Northwest, 1877-1880. Assistant Adjt. General of Oregon, 1879-1883.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW2</container><unittitle> John William Redington on horseback, in scout
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: In old frontier days. War map of Colonel J.
					 W. Redington, Volunteer, U. S. Scout and Courier in three Indian Wars in the
					 Pacific Northwest, 1877-1880. Assistant Adjt. General of Oregon, 1879-1883.</p><p>Smaller version of the original</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedingtonJW3</container><unittitle> John William Redington in scout uniform, holding
					 rifle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Pioneer pathfinders of the Pacific
					 Northwest. Photographs on page include: Hon Jackson Lee Morrow, Judge William
					 P. Dutton, Henry Heppner and Hon. James William Morrow.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Redman, John Turley (January 3, 1856 - July 31,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Turley Redman was born in Linn County, Oregon on January 3,
				  1856. He was the second son of Benjamin Washington. Redman and Amanda Cravens
				  Redman, who had crossed the plains from Indiana to Oregon in 1852. He received
				  his early education in the public schools of Linn County and attended Whitman
				  College in Walla Walla, Washington. He taught school in eastern Oregon before
				  becoming a bookkeeper in the firm of Saling &amp; Reese in Weston, Oregon. In
				  1880, Redman married Fannie M. Reese, eldest daughter of Isham T. Reese, Jr., a
				  partner of the firm. In July, 1883, Isham Reese and Redman opened a general
				  merchandise store in the town of Adams, under the firm name of Reese &amp;
				  Redman, where they became the largest shippers of wheat from Eastern Oregon. In
				  1889, he moved to Tacoma where he and Reese started Reese, Crandall &amp;
				  Redman Grocery Company. That company merged with West Coast Grocery, a pioneer
				  wholesale grocery firm in 1894, and Redman became vice-president of the firm.
				  He was the founder of the Wholesale Grocers Commission in 1889, served as
				  president of the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce, and with a group of friends
				  launched the Pacific Building &amp; Loan Company in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RedmanJT1</container><unittitle>John Turley Redman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reece, Brazilla Carroll (December 22, 1889 – March 19,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Brazilla Carroll Reece was an American politician from Tennessee
				  who served in the United States House of Representatives for all but six years
				  from 1921 to 1961. During his time in Congress, he was a social and fiscal
				  conservative who supported isolationism and civil rights legislation. He
				  attended Watauga Academy (now Appalachian State University) in Butler, and
				  Carson-Newman College in Jefferson City, Tennessee. After graduating, he worked
				  as a high school principal for one year, then enrolled in New York University,
				  where he earned a master's degree in economics and finance in 1916. He also
				  studied at the University of London and worked as an assistant secretary and
				  instructor at New York University in 1916 and 1917. In April, 1917 Reece
				  enlisted for World War I. He was discharged in 1919 and was decorated with the
				  Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Purple Heart, and
				  French Croix de Guerre with Palm. After the war, Reese was director of the
				  School of Business Administration of New York University in 1919 and 1920 and
				  also studied law there. After passing the bar exam, he opened a law practice in
				  Johnson City. In 1920, Reece won the Republican nomination for Tennessee's 1st
				  Congressional District, and was reelected four more times before being defeated
				  in 1930 by Oscar Lovette. He defeated Lovette in 1932 and returned to Congress,
				  serving until 1947, when he stepped down to devote his full time to serving as
				  chairman of the Republican National Committee, a position he had held since
				  1946. In 1950, Reece ran against the man who succeeded him in the House and
				  defeated him in the Republican primary. He was re-elected five more times.
				  Reece died of lung cancer, just two months after being sworn in for his 18th
				  term.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReeceBC1</container><unittitle>Brazilla Carroll Reece with Ralph Lomen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: To my friends, Ralph Lomen and Carl J.
					 Lomen, whose association I have greatly enjoyed.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Barbara A. Steiner (May 17, 1843 - November 10,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Barbara A. Steiner married Walter J. Reed in 1864. They lived in
				  western Pennsylvania until the fall of 1878, when the couple moved first to
				  California and then in 1879, to Yakima. In 1886, they moved to what is now Cle
				  Elum, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedBAS1</container><unittitle>Barbara A. Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Charles Boyle (October 31, 1838 - May 17,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Boyle Reed was born in Pennsylvania and came to
				  Washington Territory in the late 1860s after serving in the Union Army during
				  the Civil War. He initially worked as a cattleman before starting a fruit
				  orchard in Malaga, Washington where he homesteaded the second claim in Chelan
				  County. He became one of the leading horticulturists in the area and worked on
				  improving the fruit growing industry. He served on an irrigation committee and
				  championed the creation of a system of fruit inspection which resulted in the
				  appointment of an inspector for the Wenatchee Valley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedCB1</container><unittitle>Charles Boyle Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Frederick Elroy (February 13, 1880 - April 26,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Elroy Reed was born in California and graduated from
				  the University of California Berkeley where he was the business manager of the
				  student newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Daily Californian</emph>. He was
				  in the real estate business in the Berkeley area from 1905 until his death and
				  was president of the Californian Real Estate Association in 1922. In 1962, he
				  gave $5 Million to UC Berkeley with no conditions or restrictions. Originally,
				  he had offered the University $1 Million if it would bar Communist speakers on
				  campus. He told the <emph render="italic">Berkeley Gazette </emph>that he had
				  been wrong in underestimating the intelligence of the students and said he saw
				  no harm in letting students hear speakers who present differing social or
				  political views. His revised will left all of his extensive real estate
				  holdings to the University. He married Leota Coulter in 1908. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Henry Edward (September 14, 1866 - September 22,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Edward Reed was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Phillip and
				  Catherine (Sexton) Reed. The Reed family left New York and, after a brief stay
				  in San Francisco, settled in Portland, Oregon in 1871. Henry Reed attended
				  Portland public schools and in his final year of high school, began work as a
				  printer’s apprentice. He became a typesetter in 1882, served as a reporter for
				  the <emph render="italic">Northwest Daily News</emph> (1883-1887) and then
				  joined the staff of the <emph render="italic">Oregonian </emph>(1887-1901)
				  where he served as real estate editor. When he left the paper, he became
				  Assistant Secretary of the Portland Chamber of Commerce (1901-1903). In 1903,
				  he became Director of Exploitation (head of public relations) for the 1905
				  Lewis &amp; Clark Centennial Exposition and also served as Secretary of the
				  fair corporation. This experience led to employment as director of the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition in Seattle, returning to Portland and his real
				  estate business in 1908. In 1906, he was a founding member of the Portland
				  Realty Board and would remain a member for the duration of his life. Reed
				  served two terms as the Multnomah County Assessor (1912 and 1916), a position
				  which ultimately qualified him as a nationally recognized expert on taxation
				  and real estate value assessment. Other positions held by Reed include manager
				  of the Red Cross and Liberty Loans campaigns (1917-1919), director of the
				  Portland Chamber of Commerce (1915-1917), director of the 1919 Rose Festival,
				  and Vice President of the Portland City Planning Commission (1923-1933). In his
				  later years, he served as Secretary and Director of the Oregon Historical
				  Society (1938-1945). He wrote <emph render="italic">Cavalcade of Front
				  Street</emph>, a history of Portland’s early days in 1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedHE1</container><unittitle>Henry Edward Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1909</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, John Silas (October 22, 1887 – October 17,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Reed was an American journalist, poet, and socialist
				  activist, best remembered for <emph render="italic">Ten Days That Shook the
				  World</emph> , his firsthand account of the November 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.
				  He died in Moscow on October 17, 1920, and he was buried at the Kremlin Wall
				  Necropolis, one of three Americans buried there.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedJS1</container><unittitle>John Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Stan (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Thomas Milburn (December 8, 1825 - October 7,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Milburn Reed was born in Sharpsburg, Kentucky in 1825
				  where he worked on a farm to obtain money to attend school. At age 18, he
				  taught school for two terms and then worked in mercantile for five years. In
				  1849, he went to California where he engaged in mining, studied law and was
				  admitted to the bar. He moved to Olympia, Washington in 1857, where he was a
				  Wells Fargo agent and worked for the Internal Revenue Service. He was speaker
				  of the House of Representatives for Washington Territory (1862 – 1863), a
				  member of the Idaho Legislature (1864), and prosecuting attorney of Idaho
				  (1864-1865). He was chief clerk in the office of the United States surveyor
				  general in Olympia (1865-1872), deputy surveyor general in Olympia at intervals
				  from 1872 to 1880, president of the council (Senate) of Washington Territory
				  (1877), territorial auditor (1878-1879), member of the constitutional
				  convention which framed the constitution of the State of Washington (1889), and
				  was first auditor of the state (1889 – 1893). He was a member of the Masons,
				  holding the title of Grand Secretary for 44 years and served as Grand Master
				  for three years. Reed was an original member of E Clampus Vitus, joining in
				  1856.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedTM1</container><unittitle>Thomas Milburn Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="engraver">E. G. Williams &amp; Brothers, New York</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of engraving.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO4</container><unittitle>Granville Owen Haller, Ludwig (Louis) Ziegler, Thomas
					 Reed and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harrison, Spokane Falls, Washington Territory</persname></origination><note><p>Original photograph in Coll. 334 Early Photographers</p><p>Filed under Granville O. Haller subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reed, Walter J. (April 3, 1842 - December 14,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter J. Reed was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1842 and
				  migrated with his parents while a boy to western Pennsylvania. When the Civil
				  War started, he enlisted along with his father and brother; both his father and
				  brother died during the war. Walter was a member of the 63d regiment,
				  Pennsylvania Volunteers and was present at Antietam with McClellan, at
				  Fredericksburg with Burnside, at Chancellorsville with Hooker, at Gettysburg
				  with Meade, and served through the entire Wilderness campaign with Grant. After
				  the war, he engaged in business and worked in the coal mines in western
				  Pennsylvania until the fall of 1878, when he and his wife moved first to
				  California and then in 1879, to Yakima. In 1886, he took a claim at the present
				  site of Cle Elum and moved his family there. He was one of the founders of the
				  towns of Cle Elum and Roslyn, and helped develop the coal fields in the
				  surrounding area. Although not an admitted member of the bar, he was a member
				  of the law firm of Reed &amp; Krutz and consulted on many legal affairs. During
				  the administration of President McKinley, he was appointed register of the
				  United States land office. In 1904, he was elected state senator of the
				  district that includes Yakima and Benton Counties. Reed was also elected mayor
				  of North Yakima during his term as senator. He was married to Barbara A.
				  Steiner in 1864, and her death in 1905, to Lydia MacMillan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReedWJ1</container><unittitle>Walter J. Reed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reeves, Charles Francis (October, 1854 - December 31,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>A native of Allentown, New Jersey, Charles Francis Reeves
				  attended Pennsylvania State College, where he obtained his B. A. degree. After
				  graduation, he studied abroad for a year. In 1889, he moved to Seattle and
				  taught French and German at the University of Washington for eight years. He
				  was appointed acting president of the University for one year in 1897, and at
				  the time of his death, was the oldest living former president. A member of the
				  Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, he was the founder of the local chapter and was an
				  active worker in its activities. After his retirement from the University, he
				  worked for the marine division of the United States Customs Service in Seattle.
				  He married Susan Howell in 1879. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReevesCF1</container><unittitle>Charles Francis Reeves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Sterling Studios, Seattle</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReevesCF2</container><unittitle>Charles Francis Reeves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Siegel-Cooper &amp; Company, Chicago</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reeves, Sara Caroline (January 21, 1882 - April 8,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sara Caroline Reeves, the daughter of Charles Francis Reeves and
				  Susan Howell Reeves, was born in Allentown, New Jersey and graduated from the
				  University of Washington in 1904. She taught school in Seattle until her
				  marriage to David Adams in 1909. The couple lived in Moore, Montana where they
				  had a farm and later moved to Spokane, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReevesSC1</container><unittitle>Sara Caroline Reeves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Sarah (sic) Reeves, daughter of Charles
					 Francis Reeves, acting pres. U of W 1897-1898.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reid, Frank H. (1844 – July 20, 1898) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank H. Reid was an American soldier, teacher, city engineer,
				  and one of the combatants in the shootout on Juneau Wharf that ended the life
				  of American outlaw Jefferson "Soapy" Smith, as well as Reid's own life. Reid
				  was born in Illinois about 1844. He enlisted in the army and became a
				  lieutenant in a company of Oregon volunteers. In the 1870s, he studied
				  engineering and taught school in Linn County, Oregon. He settled in Skagway,
				  Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush, where he was appointed town surveyor and
				  helped map the town of Skagway, working with Wilfrid Thibaudeau to plat the
				  streets. In 1898, he joined the Committee of 101, a vigilante group formed to
				  rid the town of Smith and his gang. On the evening of July 8, 1898, Reid was
				  assigned to guard the entrance of Juneau Wharf to keep Smith and his men from
				  entering a meeting being held by the 101. Smith arrived at the scene and
				  assaulted Reid, starting what is historically known as the Shootout on Juneau
				  Wharf. Smith died at the scene, while Reid lay wounded in the hospital for 12
				  days before dying on July 20, 1898.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReidFH1</container><unittitle>Frank H. Reid</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Howard Clifford</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph of Frank Reid's tombstone, Skagway Pioneer
					 Cemetery, Skagway, Alaska. Carved on tombstone: He gave his life for the Honor
					 of Skagway.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReidFH2</container><unittitle>Frank H. Reid on his deathbed, unidentified man and
					 woman seated next to him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July, 1898</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Howard Clifford</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Reid who killed Soapy &amp; died. Ethel
					 Becker.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reid, John Leonard (1838- January 8, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Leonard Reid was born in Sweden and came to the United
				  States in 1850. He fought with the Union Army during the Civil War. He married
				  Harriet Paul in 1872, and the couple had a farm in Walla Walla, Washington
				  during the 1880s. By 1900, he was living in Seattle where he worked as a day
				  laborer. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReidJL1</container><unittitle>John Leonard Reid</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">H. E. Dingman, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Regan, Kay D. (August 2, 1952- April 6,
				  2019)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kay Regan was a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971. Her early career involved working as a part-time teacher and
				  administrative assistant. She was actively involved in her local, state, and
				  national GOP, and serving as a delegate to six national Republican Conventions.
				  Regan was a constant source of conservative comment in Seattle editorial pages
				  and was invited to give many speeches to political and community organizations
				  in her lifetime. Kay was recognized in at least two editions of “Who’s Who in
				  American Politics” for her work in the Washington GOP. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Relander, Clifford Curtis “Click” (January 16, 1908 -
				  October 20, 1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clifford Curtis “Click” Relander was a journalist, historian,
				  and proponent of Native American rights. He began his career as a sculptor and
				  an artist; several of his works are on permanent display in the Smithsonian
				  Institution and at the Wanapum Dam Tourist Center. For the majority of his
				  life, Relander worked in the newspaper business, first in California and then
				  in Yakima in 1945. He was city editor of <emph render="italic">The Yakima Daily
				  Republic</emph>; when <emph render="italic">the Republic</emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">the Herald</emph> combined in 1967, he held the city
				  editor post for both newspapers. Relander was also a published author. His
				  best-known works are <emph render="italic">Drummers and Dreamers</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">Yakima Treaty Centennial, 1855-1955 </emph> and 
				  <emph render="italic">Strangers on the Land</emph>. He was an advocate for the
				  Yakama nation at a time when the rivers where they fished were being dammed,
				  and their traditional burial grounds were being encroached upon. He played an
				  active part in helping to get Fort Simcoe preserved as an historical site, and
				  he participated in the founding of the Yakima Valley Museum. He was a curator
				  of the Washington State Historical Society and a trustee of the Yakima Valley
				  Museum and Historical Society. When the Wanapum Dam was built on the Columbia
				  River, Relander was retained as historical consultant and advisor for the dam’s
				  tour center. Relander was interested in how the newspapers in Yakima evolved
				  over the years, and his collection of early newspapers included issues of 
				  <emph render="italic">The Daily Republic</emph> from 1893, the first edition of
				  <emph render="italic">The Weekly Epigram</emph> (1897) and many more local
				  newspapers from the late 1800s and early 1900s. His collected archives are at
				  the Yakima Valley Regional Library. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RelanderCC1</container><unittitle>Clifford Curtis “Click” Relander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Remington, David G. (April 15, 1937 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Remington was the deputy director of the Washington State
				  Library in 1991. He held positions in public and special lbraries, including
				  the Library of Congress and the Pend Oreille Regional Library in Newport,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><unittitle>Revelle Randall (Randy) (April 26, 1941 - June 3,
					 2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Randall “Randy” Revelle worked to improve Washington’s
					 health-care system, serving on the Seattle City Council, the King County
					 Council and as the senior vice president of policy and advocacy for the
					 Washington State Hospital Association (WSHA). He was born in Seattle in 1941
					 and attended Roosevelt High School, later graduating from Princeton University
					 and Harvard Law School. He served in the military for three years, working in
					 the Pentagon as an editor during the Vietnam War between 1967 and 1970. After
					 working on several political campaigns, he ran for Seattle City Council in
					 1973. His win solidified a progressive majority on the council; he was
					 re-elected in 1977. While on the council, he served on committees that focused
					 on a range of issues, from public safety to health to utilities. He ran against
					 Ron Dunlap, a conservative Bellevue Republican, in the election for King County
					 executive in 1980, winning by a thin margin. During that campaign, local media
					 began reporting on Revelle’s experience with bipolar disorder. He made no
					 secret of his condition, and was one of the first people in a public role to be
					 open about mental health. During his time as executive, Revelle worked on ways
					 to effectively manage King County’s rapidly expanding population. He changed
					 King County’s approach to conserving farmlands, forests and shorelines through
					 policy changes that current county leaders continue to use. He retired from the
					 Washington State Hospital Association in 2012, where much of his time had been
					 spent advocating for the mentally ill, including a mental health parity law.
					 Throughout his career, he used speeches and public appearances to raise
					 awareness around mental and physical health issues.</p></bioghist></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner. </p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reno, Marcus Albert (November 15, 1834 – March 30,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Marcus A. Reno was a career military officer in the American
				  Civil War and in the Great Sioux War against the Lakota (Sioux) and Northern
				  Cheyenne, where he served under George Armstrong Custer. Reno is most noted for
				  his prominent role in the Battle of the Little Big Horn, which created over a
				  century of controversy regarding his command decisions in the course of one of
				  the most infamous defeats in the history of the United States military.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">9</container><container type="item">CusterGA3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Armstrong Custer and staff,
					 7th Cavalry in the Black Hills of South Dakota</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1874</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William H. Illingworth, St. Paul, MN</persname></origination></did><note><p>Included in the photograph are Captain Tom Custer, Marcus A.
					 Reno, Bloody Knife and Colonel Fred Grant.</p><p>Copy of photograph owned by the Montana Historical
					 Society.</p><p>Filed under George Armstrong Custer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Renton, William (November 2, 1818 - July 18,
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain William Renton was a lumber and shipping merchant, at
				  first based in San Francisco, who established a sawmill on Puget Sound in 1852.
				  In 1863, he relocated to Blakely Harbor, Bainbridge Island, and started what
				  became the very successful Port Blakely Mill Company. An important investor in
				  the coal trade, Renton had the honor of having the coal town Renton,
				  Washington, named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RentonW1</container><unittitle>Captain William Renton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 18770-1879?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Reynolds, Almos Holbrooke (October 21, 1808 - April 21,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Almos Holbrooke Reynolds was born in Madrid. St. Lawrence
				  County, New York, on October 21, 1808. He was the son of Nicholas Reynolds, a
				  millwright by trade. After a temporary residence in several localities, the
				  family removed to Aurora, New York, where Almos was reared and educated,
				  becoming a millwright, having learned the trade from his father. In 1838, he
				  moved west, first to Illinois and then Davenport, Iowa. In 1850, he crossed the
				  plains to California and then Oregon, where he built mills. In May, 1859,
				  Reynolds became a resident of Walla Walla. He erected many mills throughout the
				  territory of Washington, two of them in Walla Walla. He also built and for
				  several years owned woolen mills at Dayton. He was associated with Dr. J. H.
				  Day in the establishing of the first banking business in Walla Walla under the
				  firm name of Reynolds &amp; Day. He later became one of the principal
				  stockholders of the First National Bank. He married Lettice J. Clark Millican
				  on May 23, 1861; she was the widow of Ransom Clark, who first crossed the
				  plains to Oregon with John C. Fremont in 1843. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">ReynoldsAH1</container><unittitle>Almos Holbrooke Reynolds</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1870 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rezanoff, Nikolai Petrovich (March 28, 1764 - March 13,
				  1807)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nikolai Petrovich Rezanoff was a Russian nobleman and statesman
				  who promoted Russian colonization of Alaska and California to three successive
				  Tsars (Catherine the Great, Paul, and Aleksander I). Aleksander I commissioned
				  him as Russian ambassador to Japan (1804) to conclude a commercial treaty and
				  appointed him co-commander of the First Russian circumnavigation (1803-1806),
				  led by Adam Johann von Krusenstern. Rezanoff departed the expedition when it
				  reached Kamchatka after visiting Japan where he was unsuccessful in his
				  ambassadorial mission. He was also the author of a lexicon of the Japanese
				  language and of several other works, which are preserved in the library of the
				  Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences, of which he was a member. Rezanoff's
				  biggest legacy was the Russian-American Company, a state-sponsored chartered
				  company that had the mission of establishing new settlements in Russian
				  America, conducting trade, and carrying out an expanded colonization
				  program.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RezanoffNP1</container><unittitle>Nikolai Petrovich Rezanoff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>A copy of Rezanov's portrait from the Russian State Historical
					 Museum.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rhodes, Egbert Ellis (October 27, 1875 - December 21,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Egbert Ellis Rhodes was born in Attleboro, Massachusetts and
				  graduated from Brown University. He moved to Seattle in 1900 and worked as a
				  bookkeeper and treasurer. In 1905, he went into the electrical manufacturing
				  business, forming the firm of Dwyer &amp; Rhodes. Rhodes later worked for the
				  Continental Distributing Company. He married Fannie Louise Carter in 1899. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RhodesEE1</container><unittitle>Egbert Ellis Rhodes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of Curtis Studio Arctic Club photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rhodes, Martin D. L. (August 15, 1867 - July 20,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin D. L. Rhodes was born in Fredericktown, Missouri and
				  graduated from Linfield College in McMinnville, Oregon, where he received his
				  bachelor of laws degree. He was admitted to practice law before the Supreme
				  Court of Oregon in 1895 and practiced law in McMinnville until 1901. From 1898
				  to 1901 he was referee in bankruptcy in the city. In 1901 he became associated
				  with F. J. Martin in the founding of the Northwest Mutual Fire Association in
				  Seattle. In 1904, he returned to McMinnville to become secretary of the Oregon
				  Fire Relief Association (now the Oregon Mutual Insurance Company). The
				  following year he resigned this position to return to the Northwestern Mutual
				  Fire Association as vice-president. He held this position until 1912 when he
				  became secretary of the company. Upon the death of F. J. Martin in 1929, Rhodes
				  was elected president of the Association, the position he held until his death.
				  He was also president of the Northwest Casualty Company, an affiliate company.
				  He was a member of the Seattle Bar Association, the Washington State Chamber of
				  Commerce, the Arctic Club, the Rainier Club, the Rotary Club of Seattle, and
				  Woodmen of the World. He married Maude L. Peery in 1896.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RhodesMDL1</container><unittitle>Martin D. L. Rhodes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of Curtis Studio Arctic Club photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rhodes, William Lawrence (October 14, 1867 - April 5,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Lawrence Rhodes was born in Wisconsin and attended
				  Presbyterian University of Galesville, Wisconsin and a commercial college at La
				  Crosse. Like his brother Albert, he relocated from Wisconsin to Washington in
				  1889, where he became a salesman for a tea and coffee company. In 1892, two
				  other brothers, Henry and Charles, joined William to establish a small tea shop
				  in Tacoma, and Albert left his sales job to work with his brothers managing the
				  Tacoma enterprise. The success and scope of their business resulted in the
				  department store concept, and Rhodes Brothers, Inc. was formed with William
				  acting as president. In 1899, the first Rhodes Brothers Ten Cent store was
				  established in Seattle. The business grew rapidly, and by 1927 there were four
				  separate Rhodes stores operating in Seattle and Tacoma, three of them still
				  managed by Rhodes family members with William managing the two Rhodes Brothers
				  Ten Cent Stores. William married Claudia Altenburg in 1892; they had two
				  children. Rhodes was active in the Seattle Chamber of Commerce finance
				  committee and was a member of numerous civic and charitable organizations,
				  including the Woodmen of the World, the Commercial Club, and the Arctic Club.
				  During World War I, he organized the first Red Cross campaign and promoted a
				  war savings stamps program in Seattle. After the war, he was chairman of a
				  committee that raised $5,500,000 for the University of Washington Stadium,
				  completed in 1926. In 1945, he took his own life at his home in Seattle. His
				  son, William, continued to manage the business after his death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RhodesWL1</container><unittitle>William Lawrence Rhodes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of Curtis Studio Arctic Club photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RhodesWL2</container><unittitle>William Lawrence Rhodes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Rice, George Samuel (September 8, 1866
				  - January 4, 1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> George Samuel Rice graduated from Columbia University with an
				  engineer of mines degree in 1887 and served with the Bureau of Mines for over
				  thirty years. As the chief mining engineer of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, he
				  drafted plans for the world’s first experimental mine and directed its accident
				  prevention tests. A pioneer in the study of the cause and prevention of coal
				  mine explosions, he was the leader in experiments that lead to the discovery
				  that a number of mine explosions were due to dust rather than gas as had been
				  previously supposed and advocated the spreading of rock dust, preventing many
				  mine disasters. After his retirement from active service in 1937, he continued
				  his work on an exhaustive study on mining conditions in the United States and
				  in Europe. He was an honorary member of the British Institution of Mining
				  Engineers and was honored by the governments of England, France and Canada for
				  his preventive work in mine explosions. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Watkin Evans with George S.
					 Rice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Watkin Evans subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rice, Margaret Mahala Glascock (July 25, 1881-August 5,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Mahala Glascock was born in Vandalia, Missouri and
				  married Samuel J. Rice on April 24, 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rice, Samuel Jack (May 18, 1876 - April 19,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel J. Rice was born in Prairie City, Missouri and moved to
				  Seattle in 1890. He began his career as a cashier with Metropolitan Bank and
				  retired as vice-president of Northern Life Insurance Company. He married
				  Margaret Glascock on April 24, 1902.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richards, John Stewart (February 16, 1892 – December 3,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Stewart Richards was born in Chicago, and his family moved
				  to Yakima when he was four. In 1912 Richards began his studies at the
				  University of Washington; in 1916, he was the first alumnus to graduate from
				  the University of Washington Library School with an A.B. degree. He did
				  graduate work at the New York State Library School and earned his master’s
				  degree from the University of California. In 1918, during World War I, Richards
				  served as a librarian in the Library War Service at Camp Fremont and
				  subsequently held a number of librarian jobs, including positions at the Idaho
				  Technology Institute (1920 to 1923), the Washington State Normal School (1923
				  to 1926), the University of California, Berkeley (1926 to 1934), and the
				  University of Washington (1934 to 1942). Richards became the head librarian of
				  the Seattle Public Library in 1942. Throughout his time at Seattle Public
				  Library, he urged Seattle citizens to provide greater funding for the library,
				  especially after the Carnegie-built Central Library was damaged and seriously
				  weakened by the 1949 earthquake; in 1956, Seattle voters finally approved a $5
				  million library bond to replace the structure. After retiring from Seattle
				  Public Library in 1957, Richards taught at the University of Washington Library
				  School and served on the Washington State Library Commission from 1959 to 1964.
				  Richards served as a consultant for libraries throughout the Pacific Northwest
				  and enacted many cooperative innovations via the Pacific Northwest Library
				  Association. He served as PNLA president from 1937 to 1938 and was the
				  president of the American Library Association's Division of Public Libraries
				  (later renamed the Public Library Association) from 1949 to 1950. Richards
				  served as president of the American Library Association from 1955 to 1956;
				  during his term, the Library Services Act was passed into law, funding public
				  libraries in rural areas. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsJS1</container><unittitle>John Stewart Richards</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richardson, James Asher (November 15, 1840 - June 4,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Asher Richardson was a pioneer physician and politician in
				  Salem, Oregon. He was born in Illinois and, with his parents, crossed the
				  plains to Oregon in 1851 where the family settled in the Willamette Valley.
				  Richardson was educated at the Bethel Academy in Polk County and graduated from
				  the Cooper Medical College at San Francisco in 1866. He practiced for several
				  years at McMinnville before moving to The Dalles, where he formed a partnership
				  with Dr. Hugh Logan. He was active in politics and represented Yamhill County
				  at the Union State Convention held by the Union party in Corvallis in 1866. He
				  was also a delegate to the Republican state conventions of 1880 and 1884.
				  During his residence in Salem, he served as the mayor and was a member of the
				  Legislature. Richardson married Fannie Boyd in 1871.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonJA1</container><unittitle>James Asher Richardson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richardson, Oliver Huntington (December 10, 1866 -
				  September 22, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Oliver Huntington Richardson received his A. B. in history from
				  Yale University in 1889 and his PhD from the University of Heidelberg in 1897.
				  He was an instructor at Colorado College (1889-1890), professor at Drury
				  College (1892-1897) and assistant professor at Yale University (1897-1909). He
				  joined the University of Washington in 1909, where he taught European history.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonOH1</container><unittitle>Oliver Huntington Richardson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Prince Foto, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richardson, Paul David (January 3, 1888 - April 10,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul David Richardson was born in Maryland and came to Seattle
				  with his parents two years later. He attended Broadway High School, and after a
				  brief architectural apprenticeship, joined Abraham H. Albertson in 1910. By
				  1919, Albertson had opened up his own firm, A.H. Albertson &amp; Associates,
				  and Richardson and Joseph Wade Wilson remained with him. Together they
				  completed most of the remaining Metropolitan Tract buildings including the
				  White &amp; Stuart Building (1923), the Arena Building (1925), and the Stimson
				  Building (1925). They produced a variety of work in a mix of architectural
				  styles, including the Spanish Revival style Cornish School (1921); the Art Deco
				  Municipal Building (1930) for the City of Everett; and several Collegiate
				  Gothic structures for the University of Washington. By 1924, Wilson and
				  Richardson were receiving billing as Albertson’s Associates on all the firm
				  drawings as well as in the credits accompanying the firms published works. They
				  officially became partners of the firm in 1935, and the name was changed to
				  Albertson, Wilson &amp; Richardson. Richardson died of a heart attack in 1939.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD1</container><unittitle>Paul David Richardson holding a magazine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Albert &amp; Alda Jourdan</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD2</container><unittitle>Paul David Richardson reading a magazine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Albert &amp; Alda Jourdan</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD3</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD4</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD5</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD6</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox looking at drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD7</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox sitting at a kitchen
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD8</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Joseph Wade
					 Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD9</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 and Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richardson, Samuel Hutaff (June 1, 1880 - December 7,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel Hutaff Richardson was born in Michigan and came to
				  Seattle in 1892 with his parents. He graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1904 with a degree in mining engineering. While at the UW, he was
				  the business manager for<emph> The Tyee</emph> and president of the Society of
				  Engineers. He worked as a mining engineer in Spokane and was elected to the
				  State Legislature from Ferry County in 1921. He married Charlotte Hammond, a
				  member of one of the pioneer families from Port Townsend, in 1907.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonSH1</container><unittitle>Samuel Hutaff Richardson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richett, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Walter (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richmond, America Harvey Walker (January 3, 1812 - June
				  14, 1850)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>America Harvey Walker was born in Kosciusko, Mississippi. She
				  married John Plastrus Richmondon October 14, 1835; the couple had three
				  children. In 1839, the family sailed around Cape Horn to Oregon, settling first
				  in a mission near Salem and then at the Nisqually mission on Puget Sound. A
				  fourth child, Francis, was born in 1841 at Nisqually. The Richmonds abandoned
				  mission life in 1842 and returned to Illinois because of a family illness.
				  America died in Rushville, Illinois in 1850.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondAHW1</container><unittitle>America Richmond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richmond, Francis Plastrus (February 28, 1842 - March
				  28, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Plastrus Richmond, the son of John Plastrus and America
				  Richmond, was born in 1842 at the Nisqually Mission. His parents had arrived in
				  Oregon in 1839 after sailing around Cape Horn; they later moved to the
				  Nisqually Mission where John Richmond was a missionary and physician. The
				  Richmonds left the mission in 1842 and returned to Illinois. Francis served in
				  the Civil War and married Lavenia Mallory in 1865. The couple farmed in
				  Missouri, South Dakota, Arkansas and Mississippi before moving to San Diego,
				  California where Francis died in 1914. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondFP1</container><unittitle>Francis Plastrus Richmond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondFP2</container><unittitle>Francis Plastrus Richmond wearing Knights Templar
					 uniform and medallion</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richmond, Howard Edward (October 10, 1914-July 2,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Richmond was born in San Francisco and moved to Seattle
				  with his family in 1922. By age 15, he had his own speed boat. In his 20s, he
				  helped found the University of Washington Ski Team and took part in rowing
				  competitions on Lake Washington. During World War II, Richmond was a Navy
				  shipman in the South Pacific, stationed aboard a Suwanee-class aircraft carrier
				  near Leyte Gulf in the Philippines. During one battle with the Japanese, the
				  carrier was struck by two kamikaze missions, resulting in more than 600
				  casualties. Richmond escaped unharmed, but many of his ship mates were killed
				  or severely wounded. After the war, he was an executive at Northern Commercial
				  Company, which owned a chain of retail stores in Alaska and controlled several
				  automobile and aircraft dealerships. Richmond was a trustee of Lakeside School,
				  a member of the Seattle Rotary, and a campaign chairman for the United Way. He
				  was an officer in the Seafair Gold Cup hydroplane races, a commodore of the
				  Seattle Yacht Club, and a member of the Cruising Club of America.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondHE1</container><unittitle>Howard Edward Richmond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dolph Zubick, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richmond, John Plastrus (August 7, 1811 - August 28,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Plastrus Richmond was a graduate of the University of
				  Pennsylvania (1833) and completed a medical course in Philadelphia. He was also
				  a Methodist minister and was serving as pastor of the Methodist Church in
				  Jacksonville, Illinois in 1838 when Oregon pioneer Jason Lee encouraged him
				  become a missionary in Oregon. Richmond, his wife, America, and their three
				  children sailed around Cape Horn to Oregon, arriving in 1839. They settled at
				  the Nisqually Mission in Puget Sound, where their son, Francis, was born. The
				  family returned to Illinois in 1842. Richmond was elected to the Illinois
				  Senate, and served varying terms from 1848 until 1862, including serving as
				  Speaker of the Illinois Assembly. He was a member of two Constitutional
				  Conventions, was Superintendent of Schools for the State of Illinois for eight
				  years and was postmaster at Tyndall in present-day South Dakota. Richmond
				  married his second wife, Katherine (Kitty) Gristy in 1858; they had three
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondJP1</container><unittitle>John Plastrus Richmond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Richmond, William (December 11, 1797 - September 19,
				  1858)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The Reverend William Richmond was born in Dighton, Massachusetts
				  in 1797. He was the rector of the affluent St. Michael’s Church in New York
				  when he began conducting services for Manhattan’s poor in 1820. In 1823, he
				  helped found St. Mary’s Protestant Episcopal Church and was made its first
				  rector. He originated the practice of holding religious services in mental
				  institutions in 1831 and assumed the first chaplaincy of the nearby
				  Bloomingdale Insane Asylum, where Columbia University now stands. When the city
				  was gripped by a cholera epidemic in 1832, upper Manhattan was put under his
				  authority and discretion to do whatever was need to care for the ill. His
				  missionary work took him from New York’s Five Points neighborhood to Oregon in
				  1851. In March of 1851, he and his wife, Clarissa, set out from New York to
				  Oregon by way of Panama. A week after he arrived in Portland, he held his first
				  service on May 18, 1851 and organized Trinity parish, which was the beginning
				  of the Episcopal Church in Oregon. Richmond and his wife also started a log
				  cabin school in Yamhill; the school was later moved to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichmondW1</container><unittitle>William Richmond</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rickard, George Lewis "Tex" (January 2, 1870 - January
				  6, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Lewis “Tex” Rickard was an American boxing promoter,
				  founder of the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League (NHL), and
				  builder of the third incarnation of Madison Square Garden in New York City.
				  Rickard also operated several saloons, hotels, and casinos, all named Northern
				  and located in Alaska, Nevada, and Canada. He was born in Kansas City, Missouri
				  and grew up in Texas, where his parents had moved when he was four. Rickard
				  became a cowboy at the age of 11, after the death of his father, and at the age
				  of 23, was elected marshal of Henrietta, Texas. In November 1895, he went to
				  Alaska, drawn by the discovery of gold. He was in the region when he learned of
				  the nearby Klondike Gold Rush of 1897. He hurried to the Klondike, where he and
				  his partner, Harry Ash, staked claims. They eventually sold their holdings and
				  opened the Northern, a saloon, hotel, and gambling hall in Dawson City, Yukon,
				  Canada. Although Rickard lost everything through gambling, he and Wilson Mizner
				  began promoting boxing matches. In 1899, he left for the gold strikes in Nome,
				  Alaska, where he served on the first city council. By 1906, Rickard was running
				  the Northern saloon and casino in Goldfield, Nevada where he promoted
				  professional boxing. A year later, Rickard opened the Northern Hotel in Ely,
				  Nevada. By 1920, he secured a ten-year lease of Madison Square Garden where he
				  promoted a number of championship and amateur boxing bouts as well as other
				  events. Rickard died on January 6, 1929 due to complications from
				  appendicitis.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rickerson, Carla T. (July 17, 1946 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carla T. Rickerson was head of Manuscripts, Special Collections
				  and University Archives, University of Washington Libraries. She had Masters
				  degrees in both history and librarianship and worked for forty years at the
				  University of Washington before retiring in 2009. She continued to work
				  part-time before finally retiring in 2015. She is a former board member of the
				  American Library Association and serves on the board of the Book Club of
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB2</container><unittitle type="itemphotoGov">Governor Gardner and Carla
					 Rickerson at Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rickey, John (October 19, 1844 - April 3,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Rickey was born in Knox County, Ohio, the son of Foster and
				  Nancy (Bowles) Rickey. His father was a physician and moved his family to
				  Missouri in 1845, where he practiced until death in 1853. His mother moved to
				  Wisconsin and later to Iowa where John Rickey was educated. Rickey crossed the
				  plains to California in 1864. Two years later, he went north to the Colville
				  Valley and then mined in British Columbia and along the Columbia River. He
				  began farming and raising stock in Colville as well as trading with incoming
				  settlers. He put in the first orchard in the valley and ran the first and only
				  steamer on the Columbia River from Kettle Falls to Fort Spokane. He was
				  appointed county treasurer in 1887. In 1892, he built a large brick block in
				  Colville, the largest structure in the town. He married Delphine Jenette in
				  1881; the couple had eight children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RickeyJ1</container><unittitle>John Rickey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1918</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">F. M. Baker, Colville</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rigg, George Burton (February 8, 1872 -July 10,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Burton Rigg grew up on a farm near Woodbine, Iowa and
				  graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1896 from the University of Iowa. His
				  boyhood on an Iowa farm instigated his interest in plants, nature and ecology,
				  and he was especially interested in Sphagnum bogs, which were common in the
				  Puget Sound area when he first arrived in 1907 as a teacher at Lincoln High
				  School. In 1909 he graduated with a master's degree in botany and become an
				  instructor at the University of Washington, along with fellow botanists, John
				  William Hotson and Theodore Christian Frye. There he spent his academic career
				  and was chair of the department of botany from 1940 to 1942. He taught for
				  thirteen summers at the University of Washington's Friday Harbor Laboratories
				  and also did some summer teaching at the University of Iowa and the University
				  of Chicago. At the University of Chicago, he received his Ph.D. in botany in
				  1914. Rigg's ecological research dealt mostly with peat bogs and marine algae.
				  In 1913 he went to the coast of southwestern Alaska to investigate the effects
				  on kelp of the pumice and volcanic ash produced by the 1912 eruption of Mount
				  Katmai. His studies of Sphagnum bogs were concerned chiefly with peat
				  stratigraphy, topology, vegetative composition of peat, and bog flora. Although
				  most of his bog work was done in the Pacific Northwest, Rigg also made
				  investigations in Alaska, British Columbia, Minnesota, Ohio, West Virginia and
				  the New England States. He published some 50 papers in this field. Rigg and the
				  geoscientist Howard Ross Gould investigated Glacier Peak's volcanic ash
				  deposits in peat bogs in Washington state and nearby areas, and he collaborated
				  with Gould in tracing the distribution of volcanic ash from Glacier Peak in
				  North America by its occurrence in peat bogs. His most extensive piece of
				  research is<emph render="italic">Peat Resources of Washington</emph>published
				  in 1958 by the Washington State Division of Mines and Geology. In tribute to
				  his long life as an ecologist and teacher, he received the title of "Eminent
				  Ecologist" from the Ecological Society of America.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiggGB1</container><unittitle>Group photo of George Rigg, Theodore C. Frye and John
					 W. Hotson, taken at the time of Dr. Rigg's retirement</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the Ecological Society Bulletin for the
					 District Ecologist Award.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiggGB2</container><unittitle>Photo of George Burton Rigg in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiggGB3</container><unittitle>George Burton Rigg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rikhoff, Charles C., Jr. (November 2, 1881 - August 24,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles C. Rikhoff, Jr. lived in Eugene, Oregon where his family
				  had a tailoring business. He worked as a tailor, a farmer, and invested in land
				  and antiques. When he sold his collection and the land, he gave the proceeds to
				  the University of Oregon, Seattle University and the University of Nevada to
				  establish a lifetime trust. Born in Ohio of first-generation Americans, Rikhoff
				  had to leave school in the eighth grade because of ill health. Neither he nor
				  his brothers received formal schooling beyond the elementary level. The lack of
				  such education influenced his decision to assure financial aid for future
				  students.</p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RickhoffCC1</container><unittitle>Charles C. Rikhoff, Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Charles Rikhoff taken when I was 87 years
					 old. I am now 91 years old.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rikhoff, Fanny Hillbush (February 15, 1856- June 27,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fanny Hillbush married Charles C. Rikhoff, Sr. in Ohio in 1880.
				  Charles worked in his family's tailoring business until 1908, when he, Fanny
				  and their sons moved to Eugene, Oregon where he opened another tailoring
				  business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RikhoffFH1</container><unittitle>Charles C. Rikhoff, Jr.'s second cousin wearing the
					 wedding dress of Rikhoff's mother, Fanny Rikhoff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Charles Rikhoff, about a century old wedding
					 dress of my mother; used by my second cousin at her wedding at Rochester, N.
					 Y.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Riley, Dean M. (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rinehart, Amanda Suzannah Gaines (March 4, 1841 - May
				  25, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amanda Suzannah Gaines was the daughter of Albert and Sarah
				  Gaines, who settled in Oregon City, Oregon in 1845 after crossing the plains by
				  ox team from Illinois. She married William Vance Rinehart in 1864 and came to
				  Seattle in 1883 with her husband and children. She was active in the Pioneer
				  Association, the Order of Eastern Star, the Daughters of the Nile, and the
				  Daughters of the American Revolution.</p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RinehartASG1</container><unittitle>Amanda Rinehart with grandsons Hugh Rinehart Chilberg
					 and Carl Edward Chilberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rinehart, James Harvey (October 1, 1836 - December 13,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Rinehart, one of the pioneers of Eastern Oregon, was born
				  in Illinois in 1836 and moved Iowa in 1845. His parents had thirteen children,
				  all but one of whom crossed the plains to Oregon with them in 1854. The
				  following year, Rinehart went to Yreka, California and the gold fields in the
				  area before returning to the Willamette Valley in 1856. In July 1862, he
				  arrived in Grande Ronde Valley with two of his brothers and settled on land
				  near Summerville, Oregon. For the first four years, he was engaged in
				  stock-raising and farming, and soon had over thirteen hundred acres. He started
				  a bank in Summerville in 1855 and began a flour mill in 1866, naming it
				  Anna-Lulu Mill after his daughters. Rinehart was elected to the state
				  legislature in 1878 on the Democratic ticket.</p></bioghist><c03 level="recordgrp"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RinehartJH1</container><unittitle>James Harvey Rinehart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rinehart, William Vance (December 28, 1835 - October 16,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Vance Rinehart was an American soldier who served as a
				  Union Army officer in both the 1st Oregon Volunteer Cavalry Regiment and 1st
				  Oregon Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War. He was later
				  appointed as Indian agent at the Malheur Indian Reservation in eastern Oregon.
				  After the Malheur Indian Reservation closed, Rinehart moved to Seattle where he
				  sold hardware and then opened a grocery store. He also established a successful
				  real estate business in the city. Rinehart was active in civic affairs, serving
				  in several city and state positions over the years, including a term on the
				  Seattle city council in 1884 and 1885. He was elected to Washington state's
				  first legislature, serving as a state senator from 1889 through 1890. During
				  this legislature session, he helped write Washington's first code of laws.
				  Rinehart did not seek re-election to the state senate when his term expired at
				  the end of 1890. Instead, he became Seattle's first commissioner of public
				  works and later returned to Seattle's city council, where he served for an
				  additional ten years. This included several terms as president of the city
				  council, a position that also served as acting mayor when the elected mayor was
				  away from the city. Rinehart was active in the Washington Pioneer Association,
				  serving as president of that organization in 1896. He married Amanda Suzannah
				  Gaines in 1864; the couple had five children, two of whom died in
				  childhood.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RinehartWV1</container><unittitle>William Vance Rinehart in Civil War
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1865</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Lloyd M. Bardo, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ringer, Lewis Mathias (June 17, 1834 - March 7,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Mathias Ringer was born June 17, 1834 in Maryland. His
				  family moved to Virginia, where he was educated. He established a mercantile
				  business in Missouri. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Ringer was obliged
				  either to enter the Confederate Army or to leave. He chose the latter course,
				  and the Confederate authorities at once confiscated his property. He went to
				  Patterson, a post occupied by the Union forces, and was appointed clerk in the
				  ordnance department. Soon afterwards he returned to Bloomfield, Missouri, a
				  place held at that time by the United States troops. He was appointed sheriff
				  of the county and adjutant of the post. He was then elected to the position of
				  sheriff and collector, having a detachment of volunteer state cavalry as body
				  guard, and served continuously until the close of the war. In 1870 he left
				  Missouri for Oregon and settled at Eugene City, where he had a harness and
				  saddlery business. He also bought a half-interest in the <emph render="italic">Eugene Guard</emph>, a leading newspaper of the time. After a
				  year’s visit back to Missouri, he returned to the Pacific Coast, settling at
				  Rebel Flat, in the newly organized Whitman County, Washington Territory. After
				  four years he moved to Almota, on the Snake River where he opened a store. He
				  served his county two terms in the lower house of the Washington territorial
				  legislature and one term in the council. Although a Democrat, he was appointed
				  by the Republican majority to the chairmanship of the important ways and means
				  committee in the legislative council. In 1859 he married Sophia W. Owen; the
				  couple had ten children, four of whom died in childhood. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RingerLM1</container><unittitle>Lewis Mathias Ringer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ripley, Sidney Dillon (September 20, 1913 – March 12,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sidney Dillon Ripley was an American ornithologist and wildlife
				  conservationist. He served as Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution from
				  1964 to 1984.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH2</container><unittitle>Hubert Humphrey with Edward Wenk, Jr. and S. Dillon
					 Ripley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Humphrey and Ripley presenting Wenk with a proclamation naming
					 him an admiral in the Smithsonian Navy for his work at the Smithsonian in ocean
					 studies.</p><p>Filed under Hubert H. Humphrey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Riplinger, John (October 13, 1864 - December 28,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Riplinger was born in Minnesota and came to Seattle in
				  1889. Trained as an accountant, he was deputy county treasurer (1893-1894) and
				  Seattle City Comptroller (1902-1906). In 1906, he was a candidate for mayor,
				  losing to William Hickman Moore by fewer than thirty votes. After his defeat,
				  he moved to Honduras where he had a banana plantation. He came back to Seattle
				  in 1910 to answer charges of embezzlement resulting from his time as
				  comptroller when an audit found $68,000 in city funds were missing. Riplinger
				  was acquitted, and the prosecutor dropped the remaining charges. After his
				  acquittal, he returned to Honduras. He later settled in New Orleans where he
				  worked in the insurance business.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ritter, Albert Rudolph (February 8, 1877 - March 27,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Ritter was president of the Ritter-Lowe Company, a real
				  estate firm in Portland. In 1921, he was chair of the Legal Forms Committee of
				  the Portland Realty Board and was president of the Northwest Real Estate
				  Association in the early 1920s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robeson, Paul (April 9, 1898-January 23, 1976) - See
				  Florence Bean James Collection PH1208</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1950</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Paul Robeson was an African-American singer and actor who became
				  involved with the Civil Rights Movement. He won an academic scholarship to
				  Rutgers University, where he became a football All-American and the class
				  valedictorian. He received his LL.B. from Columbia Law School, while playing in
				  the National Football League. He then had an international career in singing,
				  as well as acting in theater and cinema. He became politically involved in
				  response to the Spanish Civil War, Fascism, and social injustices. His advocacy
				  of anti-imperialism, affiliation with Communism, and his criticism of the US
				  government caused him to be blacklisted during the McCarthy era.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Adelene de Beelen (missing)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Andrew (August 6, 1821 - August 24,
				  1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Roberts was born in Forfarshire, Scotland. When he was
				  19, he left Scotland for the United States, living in New York City for several
				  years. In 1852, he traveled to California by way of Panama and then traveled to
				  Oregon. He served as treasurer of Benton County, Oregon before settling in
				  Portland. He had a partnership with Charles Fishel, doing business as Fishel
				  &amp; Roberts before establishing a merchant tailoring and clothing business
				  under his own name. He was active in the Masons and received all of the York
				  and Scottish Rite degrees. At the time of his death, he was one of the oldest
				  Masons in Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsA1</container><unittitle>Andrew Roberts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Frederick</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsF1</container><unittitle>Frederick Roberts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Frederick Roberts wearing suit coat and vest with watch
					 fob.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, George (August 1, 1845 - February 8,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Roberts was one of the first non-Indigenous children born
				  in Washington Territory. His father, George Barber Roberts, was an employee of
				  Hudson Bay’s Company who managed the Cowlitz Farm for the Company. He later
				  homesteaded on the Newaukum Prairie, and his son lived on the homestead for
				  over 75 years. George married Laura Winston in 1875 and Mary JoAnn Gray in
				  1899. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsG1</container><unittitle>George Roberts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, John Bannister Gibson (December 23, 1893 - May
				  15, 1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Bannister Gibson Roberts served in the 112th U. S.
				  Infantry, a unit that was mustered into federal active service on July 16, 1917
				  for service in World War I. The 112th was the first war-strength National Guard
				  regiment in the United States, reaching France in May 1918 as part of the
				  American Expeditionary Force. It went onto the line on July 4, 1918, in the
				  Second Battle of the Marne. The second battalions Companies G and H lost a
				  combined total of 200 men out of 230 when they were cut off at Fismette and
				  fended off a frontal attack on their position by a thousand German soldiers.
				  The 112th Infantry Regiment returned home in April 1919 and was mustered out of
				  federal service on May 6, 1919 at Camp Dix, New Jersey. The regiment was
				  awarded battle streamers marked Champagne 1918, Champagne-Marne, Aisne-Marne,
				  Oise-Marne, Lorraine 1918, and Meuse-Argonne for its service in France. After
				  the war, he was a foreman in steel finishing plant. His grandfather, William
				  Milnor Roberts, was a prominent civil engineer, and his uncle, Milnor Roberts,
				  was hired by the University of Washington in 1901 to develop a College of
				  Mines. The university soon named him its dean. When he retired in 1947,
				  university regents named the material sciences and engineering building after
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsJBG1</container><unittitle>John Bannister Gibson Roberts in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1918?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LeComte, Le Mans, France</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Lt. John B. G. Roberts, 112th U. S. Inf.,
					 28th Div.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Milnor O. (March 10, 1877 - May 5,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Milnor Roberts was born in New York City in 1877. His father,
				  William Milnor Roberts, was Chief Engineer for Northern Pacific Railway until
				  he was hired by the Brazilian government. His mother was descended from the
				  Baron de Beelen, the first Belgian Ambassador to the United States. After his
				  father's death, Roberts, his mother, and his sister, Milnora de Beelen Roberts,
				  lived in Colorado Springs where he attended Cutler Academy and Colorado
				  College, transferring in 1896 to Stanford to finish college and attend graduate
				  school. In 1901, he came to the University of Washington as Professor of Mining
				  Engineering. He was made Dean of the College of Mines in 1903, a position he
				  held until his retirement in 1947, after which he became Dean Emeritus. The
				  University Regents also named the College of Mines building after him. His
				  association with the University continued until his death in 1965. In addition
				  to his teaching, he built the first covered bleachers on campus, designed the
				  rowing team's coaching barge and its shell house, and in 1912 developed the
				  school's golf course on the South Campus. He was a highly regarded private
				  consultant in the field of mining and metallurgy in addition to his university
				  work and was awarded the American Institute of Mining's highest award,
				  membership in its Legion of Honor. His papers are held in the UW Special
				  Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGS1</container><unittitle>Group photo at banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1956</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Olin E. Myers, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Identified on verso: Trevor Kincaid, Milnor Roberts, and
					 Milnora Roberts.</p><p>Filed under Dr. Gayton Bailey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Milnora deBeelen (October 17, 1871-December 10,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Milnora deBeelen Roberts was the daughter of William Milnor
				  Roberts, Chief Engineer for Northern Pacific Railway until he was hired by the
				  Brazilian government. His mother was descended from the Baron de Beelen, the
				  first Belgian Ambassador to the United States. With her brother, Milnor, she
				  was a faithful supporter of local art, music and athletics. She was also a
				  painter. Her brother donated funds to name a wing of Children's Hospital in
				  Seattle the "Milnor and Milnora Roberts Wing."</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BaileyGS1</container><unittitle>Group photo at banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 4, 1956</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Olin E. Myers, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Identified on verso: Trevor Kincaid, Milnor Roberts, and
					 Milnora Roberts.</p><p>Filed under Dr. Gayton Bailey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Roberts, Willo Davis (May 29, 1928 - November 19,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Willo Davis Roberts was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan on May
				  29, 1928. Her first novel, <emph>Murder at Grand Bay</emph>, was published in
				  1955. <emph>The View from the Cherry Tree</emph> was originally meant to be an
				  adult novel, but was then sold as a children's book; it was published in 1975
				  and started her career as a children's mystery writer. Roberts wrote a total of
				  ninety-nine children and adult books during her lifetime and won numerous
				  awards including the Mark Twain award for <emph>The Girl with the Silver
				  Eyes</emph> (1980) and <emph>Baby-Sitting Is a Dangerous Job </emph>(1985) and
				  the Edgar Allen Poe Award for <emph>Megan's Island</emph> (1988), <emph>The
				  Absolutely True Story of My Visit to Yellowstone with the Terrible Rupes</emph>
				  (1994), and <emph>Twisted Summer</emph> (1996). She died on November 19,
				  2004.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robertson, Jack Bown (September 2, 1915 - October 17,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jack Bowen Robertson was born in Udall, Kansas. At the urging of
				  his pharmacist father, he earned a pharmacy degree at the University of Kansas.
				  The work of a druggist didn't interest him, however, and he headed to Alaska to
				  explore other jobs. Later he came to the UW to work in the Applied Physics Lab
				  while earning an engineering degree. He served the APL until 1969, then
				  co-headed Mathematical Sciences Northwest, a consulting firm, and did space
				  research. In 1974 he became Northwest regional director of the Federal Energy
				  Administration until it became part of the Department of Energy, and was named
				  the regional representative for the Department of Energy in 1978. He later
				  worked as an executive at Bonneville Power Administration. Among his efforts as
				  a citizen-activist was persuading the state Legislature to pass the Highway
				  Advertising Control Act, known as the "Billboard Act." He also lobbied for
				  passage of the Shoreline Management Act, co-founded the Washington
				  Environmental Council and engineered the State Environmental Policy Act. His
				  papers are held in University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsonJB1</container><unittitle>Jack Bown Robertson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1965</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 16 of the <emph>Seattle
					 Times</emph> on January 1, 1965</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robertson, Wilbur Wade (May 23, 1868 - March 29,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilbur Wade Robertson was born on an Iowa farm and started his
				  newspaper career as a printer on a small town paper. By the time he was
				  eighteen, he had saved enough money to attend the University of Nebraska in
				  Lincoln. He worked as a printer and reporter on The Lincoln Journal during his
				  junior and senior years. He left the university before graduating, and instead
				  gained experience in almost every aspect of newspaper work before purchasing
				  his own paper. He moved west, working in Denver, Salt Lake City and Portland,
				  Oregon, sometimes as a printer and sometimes as a reporter. He was with the
				  Portland <emph>Oregonian</emph> when he purchased the Chehalis, Washington 
				  <emph>Nugget</emph>. He operated the <emph>Nugget </emph>for seven years before
				  selling it to a competitor. He bought the <emph>Yakima Republic</emph> in 1898
				  and the <emph>Yakima Morning Herald</emph> in 1913. He was active in civic
				  affairs, serving as a member of the Yakima city school board. In 1931, he
				  helped draft a new city charter, and in 1923, he was president of the Yakima
				  Commercial Club, which he succeeded in reorganizing into an active Chamber of
				  Commerce. In recognition of his leadership and service, he was elected as the
				  only honorary member of the Yakima County Bar Association in 1913. He prided
				  himself on being a member of the Yakima Local No. 641 International
				  Typographical Union and carried a working tradesman’s card from 1905 until his
				  death. Robertson was known as the Colonel, although the title was an honorary
				  one. He married Grace Barrett in 1893.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsonWW1</container><unittitle>Wilbur Wade Robertson, wearing a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed W. W. Robertson</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robertson, William Francis (October 24, 1832 - September
				  5, 1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Francis Robertson was born in New York and came to the
				  Puget Sound area in 1881. He was one of the first photographers in the area and
				  took the first picture of Seattle when it had only a few wooden houses. He
				  wrote poetry for his own amusement and received letters of congratulations from
				  King Edward, John Hay and President Theodore Roosevelt for his poem on the
				  assassination of President William McKinley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RobertsonWF1</container><unittitle>William Francis Robertson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900s</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 11 of the <emph>Seattle
					 Times</emph> on September 6, 1907.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Robin, John (March 27, 1837 - April 4, 1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Robin was born in Prince Edward Island, Canada and
				  immigrated to Wisconsin in 1849. He crossed the continent in 1857 from Fort
				  Leavenworth to Fort Bridges, Utah. He was present at and assisted in the burial
				  of the victims of the Mountain Meadow Massacre of 1858. He returned to Fort
				  Leavenworth and then returned west, settling in Cowlitz County. For many years,
				  Robin operated lumber and shingle mills in Castle Rock. He served as Justice of
				  the Peace in Cowlitz County and ran for State Treasurer in 1896 on the
				  Prohibition Party.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robinson, Clyde</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RobinsonC1</container><unittitle>Clyde Robinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing July 2022</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robinson, Edward G. (December 12, 1893-January 26,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward G. Robinson was an American actor of stage and screen who
				  was popular during Hollywood's Golden Age. He appeared in 30 Broadway plays and
				  more than 100 films during a 50-year career. He is best remembered for his
				  roles as gangsters in such films as<emph> Little Caesar</emph> and <emph>Key
				  Largo</emph>. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HughesG4</container><unittitle>Glenn Hughes with Edward G. Robinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, University of Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Glenn Hughes subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Robinson, Ira Ulysses (February 8, 1869 - October 19,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ira Ulysses Robinson was born in Indiana and moved to Whatcom
				  County, Washington in the 1880s. He was a farmer and was one of the first
				  members of the Pioneer Park Association in Ferndale. He married Libbie Maes
				  (1880 - 1911) in 1897 and Kristina Hilde (1880-1927) in 1916. His daughter,
				  Pearl Robinson Limbacher, wrote <emph>As I remember</emph>, a book about
				  Ferndale.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RobinsonIU1</container><unittitle>Ira Ulysses Robinson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Robinson, John Sherman (December 17, 1880 - October 9,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Sherman Robinson was born in Mansfield, Ohio. He attended
				  the University of Michigan, where he was captain of the track team. He received
				  his law degree from Columbia University. Robinson moved to Seattle in 1910 and
				  was a partner in the firm of Bronson, Robinson and Jones, and later in the firm
				  of Haroun, Robinson, Maloy and Shidler. He was elected to the Washington
				  Supreme Court in 1936 and served until his retirement in 1950.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rock, Samuel M. (March 25, 1869 - February 1,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel M. Rock, the son of John Rock and Anna Morehead Rock, was
				  born in West Moreland County, Pennsylvania. He received his commission from the
				  U. S. Coast Guard Academy in 1897 and served as the second assistant engineer
				  on the U. S. Revenue Marine Steamer <emph>Thomas Corwin.</emph> He married
				  Frances Naughton in 1896.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RockSM1</container><unittitle>Samuel M. Rock of <emph>U.S.S. Corwin</emph>, in
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between1897 and 1900</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Elite Studio, San Francisco, California</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The U.S. Revenue Marine Steamer <emph>Thomas Corwin</emph>,
					 also known as simply <emph>Corwin,</emph> was completed in 1876 and was
					 commissioned on 17 July 1877 in San Francisco, California, which remained her
					 home port during her career with the Revenue Marine. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rockey, Eli (December 22, 1861 - November 7,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eli Rockey was born in Canada and came to Washington Territory
				  in the 1880s. He settled in Bay Center, Pacific County, Washington and was a
				  founding member of the Washington State Good Roads Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rockey, Erwin Jay (January 5, 1928 - February 24,
				  2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erwin Jay Rockey was the Director of Public Relations for the
				  1962 World's Fair. Born and raised in Olympia, he was the first athlete from
				  Olympia High School to letter in all four major sports. After high school, he
				  enlisted in the Navy. He graduated from WSC (now Washington State University)
				  in 1950 from the Department of Speech Communication and began his career in
				  public relations as a manager of Alcoa’s public relations department in New
				  York. In In 1960 he was offered a job with the Century 21 Exposition. He
				  suggested changing the name "Century 21 Exposition" to "The Seattle World's
				  Fair." Rockey and his staff secured 1,000 magazine stories and 50,000 newspaper
				  articles; the publicity helped draw more than 10 million fair visitors in six
				  months. The fair was the first international exposition to turn a profit. After
				  the success of the World’s Fair, Rockey opened the doors to his own Seattle
				  firm Jay Rockey Public Relations, later named The Rockey Company which became a
				  regional leader, adding offices in Portland, Ore. and Spokane, Wash. Over the
				  years the firm grew, serving local, national and global clients In 1976, Rockey
				  was elected president of the Public Relations Society of America. He served on
				  many boards and served as vice president of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. He
				  co-chaired the 25th Anniversary celebration of the Seattle World's Fair and
				  received the Seattle Center's Legion of Honor medal. Rockey urged establishment
				  of The Edward R. Murrow School of Communication at Washington State University
				  and served on the WSU Foundation Board of Trustees. He received WSU's Weldon B.
				  Gibson Distinguished Volunteer Award. In 2002, the WSU student society chapter
				  of the Public Relations Society of America was named in his honor. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RockeyEJ1</container><unittitle>Jay Rockey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Rockwell, Kathleen Eloise (October 4, 1876 – February
				  21, 1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kathleen Eloisa Rockwell, also known as Klondike Kate, the Belle
				  of the Yukon, was a vaudeville singer and dancer who made her name and fortune
				  during the Klondike Gold Rush. Rockwell was born in Junction City, Kansas, in
				  1876. After her parents divorced, when Kate was five, she accompanied her
				  mother first to Spokane, Washington, and then to Valparaiso, Chile. Rockwell
				  returned to America in 1894, where she worked as a chorus girl, performing in
				  vaudeville houses in New York. After hearing about the Klondike Gold Rush, she
				  arrived in Dawson in 1900 and joined the Savoy Theatrical Company. She was soon
				  offered a job dancing at the Palace Grande Theatre where she developed her
				  "Flame Dance," in which she wore a red sequined dress trailing 200 feet of
				  chiffon that she twisted and turned into an illusion of flames. The act
				  launched her into Klondike stardom, and she made a fortune from the newly rich
				  miners. Alexander Pantages, who later became a successful vaudeville and motion
				  picture promoter, borrowed money from her to launch his career as a theater
				  manager. When the gold boom ended, the couple moved to Seattle, where they
				  opened vaudeville theaters. In 1928, Pantages married a violinist in one of
				  Rockwell’s shows. After a legal and public relations battle, Pantages retained
				  most of their money, and Rockwell took her vaudeville show on tour, performing
				  in saloons and theaters on the West Coast before retiring from the stage. She
				  traded her house in Seattle for a homestead claim in Oregon. In 1917, she sold
				  the land and moved to Bend, where she built a lodging house. She spent her
				  final years in Sweet Home, Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RockwellKE1</container><unittitle>Kathleen "Klondike Kate" Rockwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RockwellKEs</container><unittitle>Postcard with photos of Kathleen "Klondike Kate"
					 Rockwell in 1900 and 1947</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 26, 1947?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Mush on and smile, Klondike Kate; written on
					 verso: Aug. 26 - Dear Mrs. Becker, At this late date, I don't know if I ans.
					 your letter, But, I just found the envelope &amp; no letter among my 'to be
					 answered' mail. If it was anything important, please write me again. I have
					 just been too busy with my semi-invalid husband and a few public appearances.
					 Faithfully, Kate R. Van Duren </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roeder, Heinrich Henry (July 4, 1824 - September 25,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Henry Roeder helped shape shape the settlement and
				  development of Bellingham, Washington. Born in Herstadt, Germany, Roeder moved
				  with his family to Vermillion, Ohio. He began his career as a sailor on the
				  Great Lakes before traveling to California in 1850 where he established a
				  business partnership with Russell Peabody. In 1852, Roeder and Peabody traveled
				  north, intending to pursue their fortunes in the fishing business. Given the
				  rising demands and prices for lumber, they decided to establish a sawmill. The
				  mill on Whatcom Creek was operational by 1853 and continued to operate until
				  its destruction by fire in 1873. Roeder participated in a number of other
				  business ventures in the area, including the construction of a schooner, the
				  first maritime vessel built on Bellingham Bay. He was actively involved in the
				  consolidation and industrial development of property around Whatcom Creek and
				  Bellingham Bay. In 1853, he purchased 93 acres of land along the Chuckanut
				  shoreline, from which he operated the Chuckanut Stone Quarry (later the Roth
				  Stone Quarry). Roeder also staked donation land claims in Whatcom in 1855, and
				  owned property on Whidbey Island and other San Juan islands. He served on
				  Whatcom County's first grand jury in October 1854, and as county commissioner
				  in 1855-56, 1857-61 and 1874-75. He was also among the individuals who drafted
				  a charter to incorporate Whatcom and Sehome in October 1883. In fall 1881, in
				  the hope of attracting more families to Bellingham Bay, Roeder persuaded
				  individuals from a utopian colony in Kansas to travel to the Puget Sound and
				  re-settle at the site of the mill. Members of the Washington Colony rebuilt the
				  sawmill and constructed a wharf into Bellingham Bay, although lack of incoming
				  migrants ultimately led to the colony's closure in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoederHH1</container><unittitle>Heinrich Henry Roeder</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rogers, Albert Luther (June 19, 1859 - May 16,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Luther Rogers was born in Minnesota and came to
				  Washington Territory in the 1880s. He was trained in civil engineering and had
				  railroad experience. He worked for the Great Northern Railroad and did the
				  original engineering of the Waterville Railroad; the Waterville railroad was
				  completed in the summer of 1910. He formed the Waterville mercantile
				  establishment known as Rogers &amp; Howe with his brother-in-law in the spring
				  of 1888; by June of that same year, the firm had begun advertising itself as
				  the largest merchant in the Big Bend. Rogers was considered to be an innovative
				  and energetic town promoter of Waterville and was also a member of the
				  Washington State Good Roads Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RogersAL1</container><unittitle>Albert Luther Rogers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between1890 qnd 1893</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Peavey &amp; Peterson, Faribault, Minnesota</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Louis Peavey and Christian Peterson were photographers in
						Faribault, Minnesota from 1890 to 1893.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rogers, Edwin R. (November 29, 1828 - August 25,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edwin R. Rogers, the son of Charles and Jane P. Rogers, was born
				  in Freeport, Maine. When he was fourteen, he shipped out of Boston for a career
				  as a sailor, traveling to New Orleans and Europe. On October 10, 1849, he
				  arrived in San Francisco on the bark Sarah Warren, later one of the early
				  lumber vessels on Puget Sound. He began mining for gold in Placer County, but
				  met with little success. In the fall of 1851, he returned to San Francisco
				  where he met Samuel McCaw. Along with McCaw and others, he organized an
				  expedition to Queen Charlotte Island on the west coast, buying and fitting out
				  the old schooner Mexico. They sailed from San Francisco in March, 1852, in
				  search of gold; however, the search for gold proved fruitless. They then headed
				  for Puget Sound, arriving at Steilacoom on May 25,1852 They contracted with
				  John B. Chapman to furnish them with a cargo of lumber which Rogers sold in San
				  Francisco. In February, 1854, Rogers returned to Steilacoom, Washington
				  Territory where he found McCaw engaged in merchandising. He and McCaw entered
				  into a partnership, engaging in mercantile, hardware and groceries. The
				  partnership continued until within a few weeks of McCaw’s death in 1881. McCaw
				  and Rogers built the first brick building north of the Columbia River and west
				  of the Rocky Mountains in 1859. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersER1</container><unittitle>Edwin R. Rogers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rogers, John Rankin (September 4, 1838 – December 26,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Rankin Rogers was an American politician who served as the
				  third governor of Washington from 1897 to 1901. Elected as a member of the
				  People's Party before switching his affiliation to the Democratic Party, Rogers
				  was elected to two consecutive terms in 1896 and 1900, but died before
				  completing his fifth year in office.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR1</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897-1901</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR2</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers in his office, unidentified
					 man in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1900</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR3</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers and William Jennings Bryan at
					 a banquet in Walla Walla, Washington; two unidentifed men in
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 29, 1900</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR4</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers with photographer in front of
					 the Governor's residence</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897-1901</unitdate><note><p>Written on front: The Governor and the photographer are not
						posing.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR5</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers and Hon. John B. Slater at
					 Myers Falls, Stevens County</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897-1901</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred S. Wheeler, Kettle Falls, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Taken by Fred S. Wheeler, 16 yrs. old of
						Kettle Falls</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR6</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers in San Francisco meeting
					 Washington soldiers returning from the Philippines.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 10, 1899</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR7</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897-1901</unitdate><note><p>Copy of orginial photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Rogers, Nathaniel S. (March 23, 1898 - February 6,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathaniel S. Rogers was born March 23, 1898 in Portland and
				  spent his boyhood in Treadwell, Alaska, where his father was a grocer. Rogers
				  returned to Auburn for high school and received a bachelor os science degree in
				  chemical engineering at the University of Washington. He entered the plywood
				  adhesive manufacturing business in 1921, and in 1924 was the co-founder, with
				  George Van Waters, of Van Waters &amp; Rogers Inc. In 1924, the two put up a
				  combined $2,500 to start their diversified distribution company now known as
				  Univar Corporation, one of North America's largest chemical distributors with
				  more than 110 locations throughout the U.S. and Canada. Rogers was named
				  Seattle's First Citizen in 1958 by the Seattle Real Estate Board and was
				  similarly honored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews. He was a
				  founding trustee of Camp Brotherhood and the Seattle Foundation, and a trustee
				  of the Seattle Housing Authority and Goodwill Industries. His presidencies
				  included the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, The Rainier Club and the Arctic Club;
				  and he was 1946 campaign manager of Seattle's Community Fund, now known as
				  United Way. In 1988, Rogers was named a laureate member of Junior Achievement's
				  Puget Sound Business Hall of Fame. Besides being a director and chairman of the
				  executive committee of Univar Corp., he served on the boards of Pacific
				  Northwest Bell, John Fluke Manufacturing Co. Inc., United Pacific Corp., United
				  Pacific Insurance Co., Equity Fund Inc., Pacific American Fisheries Inc.,
				  Electrical Products Consolidated and Olympic Steamship Company. Rogers remained
				  active in his business well into his 80s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RogersNS1</container><unittitle>Nathaniel S. Rogers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950-1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Kennel-Ellis, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rogers, William Penn "Will" (November 4, 1879 – August
				  15, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Penn "Will" Rogers was an American vaudeville performer,
				  actor, and humorous social commentator. As an entertainer and humorist, he
				  traveled around the world three times, made 71 films, and wrote more than 4,000
				  nationally syndicated newspaper columns. He died in 1935 with aviator Wiley
				  Post when their small airplane crashed in northern Alaska.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW1</container><unittitle>Will Rogers standing on wing of plane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination><note><p>The plane appears to be the Lockheed Orion Explorer hybrid
						airplane which crashed on August 15, 1935, taking the lives of Wiley Post and
						Will Rogers.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersW2</container><unittitle>Will Rogers with Isadore Goldstein, Wiley Post, Rex
					 Beach and Joe Crosson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Frederick K. Ordway</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roland, Dewitt Talmage (March 31, 1876 - March 9,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Dewitt Talmage Roland, the son of Isaac and Rebecca (Stiffler)
				  Roland, was born in Cherrytree, Pennsylvania. He had a farm in Napavine,
				  Washington and worked as a millwright. He married Sarah Adela Schlott in
				  1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RolandDT1</container><unittitle>Dewitt Talmage Roland and unidentified woman, possibly
					 Sarah Schlott Roland, at Napavine, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1895</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Rolands at Napavine. About 1895. Built
						near the train tracks. One train north from Kalama one day, returning south the
						next day.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roll, George W. (March 21, 1858 - July 27, 1933)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George W. Roll was the short stop for the Seattle Reds baseball
				  club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington Territory and
				  British Columbia) during the 1884 season. He married Henrietta Reyer in 1886
				  and worked as a painter in Spokane.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roller, Benjamin Franklin (July 1, 1876 – April 19,
				  1933) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Roller was an American physician, a
				  professional wrestler and a football player. Roller was born in Newman,
				  Illinois where he grew up on his family's farm. He attended college at De Pauw
				  University where he was the captain of the school's football and track teams
				  and graduated at the head of his class. Roller then attended the University of
				  Pennsylvania medical school. In order to earn money for college, he played
				  football at the professional ranks. Roller was a player and coach for the
				  Philadelphia Phillies of the first National Football League. He also played on
				  several of the Penn college teams and won the university championship in his
				  second and fourth years. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in
				  1902 with a medical degree. He remained with the college, working as an
				  assistant to Professor of Obstetrics Dr. Barton Cooke Hirst and writing a
				  textbook with him, before serving as chief of the Woman’s Clinic. He came to
				  Seattle to open a surgical practice. In 1904, he accepted a position as
				  professor of physiology at the University of Washington. For several years, he
				  combined his medical practice with training all classes of athletes at the UW,
				  including wrestling, track, baseball and gymnastics. He also assisted in
				  coaching and training the football squad. He left the UW to become a wrestling
				  and gymnastics instructor at the Seattle Athletic Club. In 1906 he became a
				  full-time wrestler under the names Dr. Roller, Dr. Benjamin Roller, Dr. B.F.
				  Roller, and Doc Roller. He used wrestling as tool for traveling the world and
				  studying under the noted professors in both the United States and Europe. Over
				  the span of his career, Roller defeated many of the top wrestlers of his day
				  and was the American Heavyweight Wrestling Champion three times. From
				  1906–1918, Roller posted a record of 39 wins, 26 losses, and 4 draws in 69
				  matches. In 1918, he returned to the practice of medicine in New York. Roller
				  died of pneumonia on April 19, 1933, at the age of 56.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF1</container><unittitle>Dr. Benjamin Franklin Roller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904-1906?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Dr. B. F. Roller, physical director, State
						University</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF2</container><unittitle>Doc Roller in wrestling pose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1906-1918?`</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Al Johnson, St. Paul, Minnesota</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF3</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller with Jakob Koch, Georg Hackenschmidt
					 and Americus (Gus Schoenlein)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF4</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller wrestling Georg
					 Hackenschmidt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ronald, James Theodore (April 8, 1855- December 27,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Theodore Ronald was born in Caldedonia, Missouri and
				  attended college at North Missouri Normal School (now Truman State University),
				  a teacher's school. After graduation in 1875, he moved to California ad worked
				  as a teacher. Ronald began studying law and passed the California bar
				  examination in 1882. In July of that year, he moved to Seattle with his family.
				  He was appointed a deputy prosecuting attorney in 1883 and became so well-known
				  for his aggressive prosecution of vice cases that he was elected district
				  attorney for King, Kitsap and Snohomish counties late in the following year. He
				  served in this position until 1889. He then formed a law firm in Seattle with
				  Samuel Piles (1858 - 1940), who later served a term as a United States Senator
				  from Washington. Ronald was elected mayor of Seattle on March 8, 1892. The
				  Freeholders Charter of 1890 prohibited Ronald from seeking re-election in 1894.
				  He was an unsuccessful candidate for Congress in 1900, but continued to enjoy
				  success as a practicing attorney. Ronald was appointed to serve as a King
				  County Superior Court judge in 1909. He sat on the bench for 40 years and is
				  remembers more for his accomplished tenure on the bench than for his brief
				  tenure as Seattle's mayor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT1</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ronald, Norma (October 17, 1879 - March 6,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norma Roland was the daughter of James T. Roland and Rhoda Coe
				  Roland. She attended the University of Washington and Mills College, where she
				  studied music. She married Edgar Wright, an attorney, in 1905.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RonaldN1</container><unittitle>Norma Ronald, Susie Lyons, Ethel Smith and
					 unidentified child.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roos, Clarence Everett (1861 - February 2,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Everett Roos was born in New York City and came to
				  Seattle in the 1890s. He was the deputy city comptroller and later worked at
				  the county hospital where he kept the books for the institution.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">28</container><container type="item">ParryWH1</container><unittitle>Will Parry with John Riplinger, Clarence E. Roos,
					 Harry W. Carroll, Clarence B. Bagley, Margaret Chisholm, George K. Coryell and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: This picture was taken 1896. The force in
					 the office of the City Comptroller. Parry, Riplinger and Carroll were City
					 Comptroller. (sic)</p><p>Filed under Will H. Parry subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roosevelt, Eleanor</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RooseveltE1</container><unittitle>Eleanor Roosevelt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roosevelt, Franklin Delano </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RooseveltFD1</container><unittitle>Franklin Delano Roosevelt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roosevelt, Quentin (November 19, 1897 – July 14,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Quentin Roosevelt was the youngest son of President Theodore
				  Roosevelt and First Lady Edith Roosevelt. Inspired by his father and siblings,
				  he joined the United States Army Air Service where he became a pursuit pilot
				  during World War I. He was killed in aerial combat over France on Bastille Day,
				  July 14, 1918. After his grave came under Allied control, thousands of American
				  soldiers visited it to pay their respects, and his resting place became a
				  shrine. Eleven years after the World War II, the American Cemetery was
				  established in France at Colleville-sur-Mer, and his body was exhumed and moved
				  there.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RooseveltQ1</container><unittitle>Carte Postale photograph of Quentin Roosevelt's
					 original grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1918?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roosevelt, Theodore (October 27, 1858 – January 6,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore Roosevelt was an American politician, author,
				  naturalist, soldier, explorer and historian who served as the 26th President of
				  the United States.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DillingGW5</container><unittitle>George Dilling and Theodore Roosevelt in a
					 car</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared on January 16, 1919 in the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Times</emph>; the photo was taken during
					 Roosevelt's visit to Seattle in 1911 when the city held a parade in his
					 honor.</p></note><note><p>Filed under George W. Dilling suberies</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Root, Reginald Dean (June 30, 1903 - May 30,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reginald Dean Root was born in Caledonia, New York and graduated
				  from Yale in 1926. He was the tackle on the football team (1924-25) and captain
				  of the lacrosse team during his senior year. After graduation, he coached
				  football and lacrosse at Yale, including eight years as head coach of the
				  freshman football and varsity lacrosse teams. In 1929, Root was the head
				  football coach at the National University of Mexico, where he introduced the
				  game of football so successfully, he was made a professor in causa honoris. He
				  followed Howie Odell to Seattle from Yale in 1948 when Odell was hired as the
				  Huskies' head football coach. Root was an assistant coach, but for most of the
				  first season at the UW, Odell was ill and Root assumed the head coaching role.
				  Root left coaching in 1952. After a year in private business, he returned to
				  the UW as director of financial aid. Two years later, he was named director of
				  nonacademic personnel. In 1961, he became dean of men, a position he held until
				  he retired in 1972. He married Mabel Fritzell in 1938. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RootRD1</container><unittitle>Reginald Dean Root sitting at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950-1959</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RootRD2</container><unittitle>Reginald Dean Root sitting in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950-1959</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1956, 1959 and 1960 issues of 
						<emph>The Tyee.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rose, Aaron (June 20, 1813– March 21,1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Aaron Rose was an American pioneer of Michigan and Oregon who
				  founded the city of Roseburg, Oregon. In 1851, he crossed the plains with his
				  family via the Applegate Trail, arriving in Oregon on September 23, 1851. He
				  settled a donation claim on the site which Roseburg now occupies and engaged in
				  selling to travelers, teamsters and packers. In addition, he farmed, raised
				  stock, and owned the New Era flour mills. He encouraged people to locate to
				  Roseburg. Every manufacturing enterprise and many of the leading mercantile
				  businesses in Roseburg at the end of the 19th-century were given free sites and
				  free lots. All eight churches in the town were given a lot free and money to
				  aid in the construction of the buildings, and he gave the land on which the
				  first public school was built in Roseburg. He contributed one thousand dollars
				  towards the erection of the first courthouse and was instrumental in erecting a
				  dam on the South Umpqua River, which was used to run the city water works and
				  the wool and flour mills. Root was elected a member of the territorial
				  legislature of 1855-56.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoseA1</container><unittitle>Aaron Rose</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880-1889?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roseleaf, Otto Rudolf (March 5, 1861 - November 8,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Otto Rudolf Roseleaf, the son of Anders Rosenlof and Augusta
				  Johnson Rosenlof, was born in Sweden and came to the United States in 1881. He
				  was a contractor who built many of the hotels and office buildings in Seattle.
				  He was the building contractor for the Swedish Club and Swedish Hospital, and
				  served on the hospital’s board of trustees. Roseleaf was also a member of the
				  Seattle Park Board and the Swedish Club, where he served as club president.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosellini, Albert Dean (January 21, 1910 – October 10,
				  2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Dean Rosellini, an American politician, served as the
				  15th governor of the state of Washington for two terms, from 1957 to 1965.
				  During a political career that spanned 40 years, 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. At the age of 29, he was elected to the state senate as its
				  youngest member, representing the 33rd district in south Seattle. Rosellini
				  served from 1939 to 1957, and rose to the rank of majority leader before being
				  elected governor. After leaving office in 1965, Rosellini returned to the
				  practice of law, and also became a political consultant, specializing in the
				  liquor and entertainment industries.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD1</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1972</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Fred Milkie Photographers, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD2</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini shaking hands with James W.
					 Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD3</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini with a group of unidentified
					 men, possibly affiliated Washington State Labor Council</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: <emph>Wash. State Labor News</emph></p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD4</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini with Peter R.
					 Giovine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1957 and 1959</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD5</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini at the podium with John Cherberg
					 and unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, University of Washington Office of Public Information</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD6</container><unittitle>Governor Albert D. Rosellini with the Washington State
					 Commission on the Status of Women; Mina Pease is second from the
					 left.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 24, 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>The Governor’s Commission on the Status of Women under the
					 direction of Mildred Dunn met with Governor Rosellini on January 24, 1964 to
					 recommend that a state agency be delegated to make a state-wide survey of
					 available positions for men and women, and provide information to state
					 employment offices regarding pay, pensions, and employment and promotional
					 opportunities. Included with the photo is a letter from Mildred Dunn to Mina
					 Pease commemorating the occasion. Mina Pease may have been a member of the
					 commission. The photo is signed by Governor Rosellini.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD7</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini at his desk, surrounded
					 by a large group of people.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD8</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini accepting a bowl from
					 an unidentified man; painting by Bleser in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD9</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, wearing New York Day
					 badge, with Debbie Sue Brown and Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance at the Seattle
					 World's Fair. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 10, 1962</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD10</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini with Senator Henry M.
					 Jackson, Senator Warren G. Magnson and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957 - 1963</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD11</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini at his desk signing;
					 Martin Durkan and two unidentified men standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1959 - 1963</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Merle Junk, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD12</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1972</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Fred Milkie Photographers, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD13</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini at his desk signing;
					 two unidentified men standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Merle Junk, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 37th Legislature 1961</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD14</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, Professor Hugh Bone,
					 Wing Luke, Alex Gottfried and internship class</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1957</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Professor Hugh Bone's (Pol. Sci.) first
						internship class in Olympia. Far right (w/ cigarette) is Alex Gottfried who
						later became a faculty member in Pol. Sci. Wing Luke is in front row to the
						Gov.'s right.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">21</container><container type="item">KingJL1</container><unittitle>John Lawrence King at right with Governor Albert D.
					 Rosellini at the podium</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under John Lawrence King subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Gordon Clinton at desk signing papers
					 with Eloise Pratt and Governor Albert Rosellini looking on.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Fred Carter, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosenthal, Gustave (July 4, 1840 - October 4,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gustave Rosenthal was born in Bavaria and emigrated to America
				  in 1856. The first three years he spent in Boston before moving to New York
				  where he engaged in mercantile business. In September 1861 he traveled west by
				  the Panama route to California; after two years in California, he moved to
				  Olympia, Washington Territory, arriving on June 19, 1863. He started a general
				  merchandise business in partnership, with Isaac Lightner; he purchased the
				  interest of his partner in 1874. Rosenthal brought the first mowing machine to
				  Olympia in 1869 as well as the first water ram, and supplied barrel and keg
				  hoops to San Francisco sugar refineries. As part of his business, he handled,
				  shipped and sold many products from the surrounding farms, shipped lumber and
				  oysters to San Francisco, and developed the second coal mine in Washington
				  Territory in 1872, located in Lewis County. He was county treasurer in 1869,
				  and during that year, collected a subscription, about four hundred dollars, to
				  construct a wagon road through the Natchez Pass, over the Cascade Mountains.
				  Rosenthal also donated forty acres of timber land toward the construction of
				  the Northern Pacific Railway between Olympia and Tenino in 1867. He married
				  Katie Bettman; the couple had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RosenthalG1</container><unittitle>Gustave Rosenthal</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1918</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Alta McDonnall (September 17, 1914 - June 30,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingAM1</container><unittitle>Alta McDonnall Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1987</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Alta McDonnall Rosling, the daughter of James Randall
					 McDonnall and Bertha Meyer McDonnall, was born on the TXT cattle ranch in South
					 Dakota. She attended South Dakota State University and moved to Seattle in
					 1938. During World War II, she was employed in the Boeing personnel department
					 before finishing the war years as a volunteer nurse’s aide. She was an active
					 volunteer in many Seattle organizations, including the Legal Aid Society,
					 Seattle Art Museum, the Children’s Home, the Seattle Symphony, and Bainbridge
					 Arts and Crafts. She married Edward Lincoln Rosling in 1949. She was previously
					 married to William Leonard Carr and Casper Jerome Gehring.</p></bioghist></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Eric Edward (March 3, 1865 - November 14,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eric Edward Rosling, the son of Charles E. and Charlotte
				  Peterson Rosling, was born in Sweden. His parents moved to Boston when he was a
				  year old. He graduated Boston Law School in 1889, moving to Tacoma the same
				  year. He formed a partnership, Garretson, Parker &amp; Rosling, but branched
				  out on his own. During the years 1893-1894, he served as Tacoma city attorney,
				  and for two years was president of the Tacoma Board of Education. The normal
				  school was established during his term of service. He was active in Tacoma's
				  educational system and served as secretary of the board of the YMCA, aiding in
				  the procuring of their building. He married Minnie Belle Lincoln in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEE1</container><unittitle>Eric Edward Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1905</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEE2</container><unittitle>Eric Edward Rosling in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1905</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEE3</container><unittitle>Eric Edward Rosling and Minnie Lincoln Rosling in the
					 parlor of their Tacoma house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1905</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEE4</container><unittitle>Tacoma residence of Eric Edward Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>The house was located at 516 North D Street in Tacoma.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Edward Lincoln (September 2, 1897 - May 22,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Lincoln Rosling, the son of Eric Edward Rosling and
				  Minnie Lincoln Rosling, graduated from the University of Washington Law School
				  and Harvard Graduate School of Law. He practiced corporate and medical law in
				  Seattle until his retirement in 1961. In the early 1960s, Rosling was the first
				  chair of the Seattle Artificial Kidney Center which determined which patients
				  would be put on the life-saving but scarce kidney machines; all of the
				  committee members were anonymous at the time. He was a board member of the
				  Seattle Symphony, the Arboretum Foundation, and a member of the overseers of
				  Whitman College. He served as a naval office during World War I. He married
				  Charlotte Lucille Thomas (1891 - 1967) in 1918, and Alta McDonnall (1914 -
				  2008) in 1949.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEL1</container><unittitle>Edward Lincoln Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Jean Durand (January 27, 1936 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jean Durand was born in Wisconsin and grew up in California. She
				  attended Whitman College in Walla Walla. She married John Carr Rosling in 1957;
				  the couple had three children (Susan, Lucia and Katherine).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingJC1</container><unittitle>John Carr Rosling with Jean Durand Rosling, Katherine
					 Rosling, Susan Rosling and Lucia Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Carr Rosling subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, John Carr (March 6, 1935 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Carr Rosling, the stepson of Edward Lincoln Rosling, and
				  the son of William Leonard Carr and Alta McDonnall Carr Rosling, was born in
				  South Dakota. He attended Whitman College in Walla Walla and served in the
				  Marine Corps. He married Jean Durand in 1957; the couple had three daughters.
				  Rosling worked in sales for Meyers-Pacific.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingJC1</container><unittitle>John Carr Rosling with Jean Durand Rosling, Katherine
					 Rosling, Susan Rosling and Lucia Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Katherine McDonnell</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Katherine Rosling, the daughter of John Carr Rosling and Jean
				  Durand Rosling, married Todd Ray McIntyre in 1991. She was the director of
				  development for Forest Ridge Academy in Bellevue, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingJC1</container><unittitle>John Carr Rosling with Jean Durand Rosling, Katherine
					 Rosling, Susan Rosling and Lucia Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Carr Rosling subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Lucia Durand (November 18, 1966 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucia Durand Rosling, the daughter of John Carr Rosling and Jean
				  Durand Rosling, married William Carlyle Britts in 1992. She was the development
				  director of the Seattle Hebrew Academy in 2002.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingJC1</container><unittitle>John Carr Rosling with Jean Durand Rosling, Katherine
					 Rosling, Susan Rosling and Lucia Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Carr Rosling subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Minnie Belle Lincoln (July 16, 1866 - February
				  22, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Minnie Belle Lincoln, the daughter of Freeman Smith Lincoln and
				  Annetta Small Lincoln, was born in Boston. She married Eric Edward Rosling
				  in1890; the couple had three children (Edward Lincoln, Harriet and Marion). She
				  was an active member of the Tacoma First Baptist Church for over 24 years,
				  serving as superintendent of the primary department for 21 of those years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingMBL1</container><unittitle>Minnie Belle Lincoln Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingEE3</container><unittitle>Eric Edward Rosling and Minnie Lincoln Rosling in the
					 parlor of their Tacoma house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Eric Edward Rosling subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rosling, Susan Kemper (1960 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan Kemper Rosling, the daughter of John Carr Rosling and Jean
				  Durand Rosling, married John Bradley Brickman in 1988.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoslingJC1</container><unittitle>John Carr Rosling with Jean Durand Rosling, Katherine
					 Rosling, Susan Rosling and Lucia Rosling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1983</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Carr Rosling subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, Charles Benjamin (December 27, 1876 – March 31,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Benjamin Ross was an American politician who served as
				  the first Idaho-born governor from 1931 to 1937. Ross was born in the Idaho
				  Territory in 1876 near Parma to cattleman John M. Ross and his wife Jeanette.
				  He left school after sixth grade, but at age eighteen, he decided to continue
				  his education and graduated from Portland Commercial College. Ross began his
				  political career in Canyon County, serving as county commissioner from 1915 to
				  1921. He served as mayor of Pocatello from 1922 to 1930, and won the Democratic
				  gubernatorial nomination in 1928. He was defeated by the Republican incumbent
				  H. C. Baldridge.Ross won the nomination again in 1930, winning the open seat
				  against Republican John McMurray. He was reelected in 1932 and 1934, becoming
				  the first in Idaho to win three elections for governor. During his tenure, Ross
				  was viewed as the chief proponent of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies
				  in Idaho.Instead of pursuing a fourth term, Ross ran for U.S. Senate in 1936
				  but was defeated by Republican William Borah. Ross ran for governor a fifth
				  time in 1938, defeating incumbent Barzilla Clark in the primary, but lost to
				  state Republican Party chairman C. A. Bottolfsen in the general election. After
				  the loss, he retired from public life. He is referred to as "Founding Father"
				  of the Idaho Farm Bureau Federation and was looked to as a champion of the
				  Idaho Democratic Party.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossCB1</container><unittitle>"Ding" Darling's cartoon on the Ross-Ickes controversy
					 entitled "Maybe it's stuck or something (ask Governor Ross)." The cartoon shows
					 a figure in rags labeled "Idaho" at a vending machine with the words "3 1/2
					 billion Public Works" on it. The controversy concerned the delay in providing
					 federal funds for road construction.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 24, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Ding Darling</persname></origination><note><p>The cartoon appeared in the <emph>Idaho
						Statesman.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ross, Etta Alice Beaton (January 31, 1880 - July 15,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Etta Alice Beaton was the daughter of Thomas Beaton and Hattie
				  Primrose Beaton; her mother was born on the family homestead in Port Madison,
				  Washington Territory in 1850. Etta married Robert Bruce Ross in 1902; they had
				  two sons.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB3</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross and Etta Beaton Ross sitting in
					 front of their home at Port Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert Bruce Ross subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB4</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross and Etta Beaton Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mr. and Mrs. R. B,. Ross of Port Madison.
						Mr. Ross, a pioneer, knew the old Indians who were contemporary with Chief
						Seattle. As a boy, he often was scared by Big John's fierce faces. E. B.
						Bertelson.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Robert Bruce Ross subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, James Delmage (November 9, 1872 – March 14,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Delmage Ross was the superintendent of lighting for
				  Seattle for 28 years and was the first administrator of the Bonneville Power
				  Administration. He was instrumental in developing the Cedar Falls and Skagit
				  River hydroelectric power plants. A self-taught engineer, Ross advocated for
				  public utilities and regional power networks. He also later served as a member
				  of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Ross Dam, the third Skagit River
				  project dam which was completed the year after his death, Ross Lake, and Mount
				  Ross were named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossJD1</container><unittitle>James Delmage Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, John Edward (February 18, 1818 - February 17,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Edward Ross was born in Ohio, lived in Indiana and
				  Illinois, and in 1847 crossed the plains to Oregon by wagon train. Soon after
				  he reached the Willamette Valley, the Cayuse War broke out, and he enrolled as
				  a volunteer. In 1852 and 1853 he took an active part in quelling the outbreak
				  of hostilities between the Native Americans and the settlers in the Rogue River
				  Valley. He was elected in 1855 to the Oregon Legislature, representing Jackson
				  County, and was one of the organizers of the Oregon &amp; California Railroad
				  Company (1866-67). In 1872 he was appointed by Governor Grover as
				  brigadier-general of Oregon volunteers, in command of the First Brigade. During
				  the Modoc War (1872-1873), he took command of the troops in the field. In 1878
				  he was elected representative of Jackson County and was appointed chairman of
				  the military committee. He was also a member of the investigating committee to
				  examine the records of the preceding administration.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossJE1</container><unittitle>John Edward Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, Nellie Tayloe (November 29, 1876 – December 19,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nellie Tayloe Ross was an American educator and politician who
				  served as the 14th governor of Wyoming from 1925 to 1927, and as the 28th and
				  first female director of the United States Mint from 1933 to 1953. She was the
				  first woman to serve as governor of a U.S. state, and remains the only woman to
				  have served as governor of Wyoming. Ross, the daughter of James Wynns Tayloe
				  and Elizabeth Green Tayloe, was born in St. Joseph, Missouri. Her family moved
				  to Miltonvale, Kansas in 1884, and she graduated from Miltonvale High School in
				  1892. She attended a teacher-training college for two years and taught
				  kindergarten for four years. In 1902, she married William B. Ross. Her husband
				  was the governor of Wyoming from 1923 to his death on October 2, 1924. She
				  succeeded her late husband's successor, Frank Lucas, as governor when she won
				  the special election, becoming the first female American governor on January 5,
				  1925. She lost re-election in 1926. She attributed her loss in part to her
				  refusal to campaign for herself and to her support for prohibition In 1933 Ross
				  became the first female Director of the United States Mint and was one of the
				  United States' highest-ranking female civil servants of her time. Ross served
				  five terms as Director, retiring in 1953. During her later years, she wrote for
				  various women's magazines and traveled. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossNT1</container><unittitle>Nellie Tayloe Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Publication or use of this photo must give
					 credit line to the Wyoming State Archives and Historical Department.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, Robert Bruce (December 16, 1867 - November 30,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Bruce Ross was born in Adelaide, Australia in 1867. In
				  1870 Ross's family sailed on the <emph>Benjamin Amer</emph> to San Francisco,
				  and later that year to Port Madison on Bainbridge Island, Washington aboard the
				  barkentine <emph>William H. Gawley</emph>. Ross began his maritime career in
				  his teens, steamboating on Puget Sound in the summer 1883 and working as a
				  machinist in various Puget Sound ports in 1884. In 1891, Ross began working for
				  the Puget Sound Tug Boat Company, serving as assistant or chief engineer on
				  nearly all 14 deep-sea tugs comprising the company fleet. In 1898, Ross
				  conveyed the fleet of 12 Moran Brothers river steamboats from Seattle to St.
				  Michael, Alaska during the Klondike gold rush. In 1903, he was chief engineer
				  of the tugboat<emph> Tyee </emph>when it towed the disabled freight steamship 
				  <emph>Meteor</emph> from Dutch Harbor, Alaska to Seattle. In 1917, Ross left
				  the towing fleets and worked installing machinery for the U.S. Shipping Board
				  Emergency Fleet Corporation. Around 1920, he worked aboard the steamship 
				  <emph>West Jessup</emph> as chief engineer. Ross also served as chief engineer
				  on tugs and the ferries of the Puget Sound Navigation Company. In 1930, Ross
				  went to New York, where he became chief engineer of the steamship <emph>Eastern
				  Coast</emph>, renamed the<emph> Diamond Cement</emph>. Ross left the ship in
				  Boston and returned to Seattle, but came on again as chief engineer when the 
				  <emph>Diamond Cemeny</emph>, of the Pacific Coast Coal Company, returned to
				  Seattle in 1935. He served continuously in this position until his retirement
				  in 1942. He married Etta Beaton in 1902. His collection of maritime photographs
				  is held in University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB1</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB2</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB3</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross and Etta Beaton Ross sitting in
					 front of their home at Port Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB4</container><unittitle>Robert Bruce Ross and Etta Beaton Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mr. and Mrs. R. B,. Ross of Port Madison.
						Mr. Ross, a pioneer, knew the old Indians who were contemporary with Chief
						Seattle. As a boy, he often was scared by Big John's fierce faces. E. B.
						Bertelson.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossRB5</container><unittitle>Photograph of a wooden ox yoke. The yoke has "R. B.
					 Ross 1871" on it; it is suspended from a post.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, Sarah E. Long Malson (December 20, 1846 -March 30,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah E. Long, the daughter of William Long and Sarah Ferguson
				  Long, was born in Iowa. She crossed the plains to Oregon in 1862 and moved to
				  Seattle in 1869. She married Allen Wiley Malson in 1873; the couple had two
				  daughters. Their home was at Second and Cherry, the future site of the New York
				  Block. After her husband’s death in 1879, she bought a home at Ninth and James,
				  where she rented rooms. She married David Ross in 1887; they had one daughter.
				  She was a charter member of the Tabernacle Baptist Church as well as several
				  pioneer organizations. Robert Long was her twin.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RossSELM1</container><unittitle>Sarah E. Long Malson Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John Ralston, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LongR1</container><unittitle>Robert Long with twin sister, Sarah E.
					 Ross</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Robert Long subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ross, Zola Helen (May 9, 1912 – November 14,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zola Helen Ross (née Girdey) was an American Pacific Northwest
				  writer who co-founded the Pacific Northwest Writers Association with Lucile
				  Saunders McDonald of <emph>The Seattle Times. </emph>Ross wrote in various
				  genres, including adventure, children's fiction, crime, mystery, suspense and
				  Western historical novels; the Pacific Northwest and the Great Basin are the
				  settings for many of her stories. She occasionally wrote under the pseudonyms
				  Helen Arre and Bert Iles. Ross taught classes on the novel, short story and
				  magazine writing at the University of Washington and the Lake Washington
				  schools in Kirkland, Washington; her students published more than 400 books. In
				  1974, some 30 successful area writers gave her a gratitude party, citing Ross
				  as responsible for more published authors than any other writing teacher in the
				  United States. In 1983, Governor John Spellman presented Ross with a special
				  award for a distinguished career in literature, particularly her work with
				  aspiring writers. She also was honored in 1981 at the 50th annual Matrix Table
				  of Women in Communications Inc. and at the Past Presidents Assembly's annual
				  Women of Achievement luncheon in 1976. In 1972, the Washington Press Women gave
				  her one of its Sugar Plum Awards for achievement. She married William Frank
				  Ross in 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RossZH1</container><unittitle>Zola Helen Ross seated at banquet table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roston, James Alexander (1863 - May 3, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Alexander Roston was a key organizer for the African
				  American labor movement in Seattle in the early part of the 20th century. He
				  was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1863 or 1864. Roston was commissioned as
				  a first lieutenant in the 10th U.S. Volunteer Infantry (Tenth “Immunes”),
				  Company K, during the Spanish American War, 1898-1899; the regiment never
				  served outside the United States. After the War, he enlisted a private in the
				  24th Infantry and served in the Philippines (1899-1902) rising to the rank of
				  corporal. While there, he distinguished himself in the field when, as Chief of
				  Scouts, he helped capture high-ranking rebel officers. After his service ended
				  in 1902, Roston settled in Brooklyn, New York where he sold real estate,
				  lectured about the Philippines and Africa, and served as chairman and president
				  of the 1903 Commercial American Negro Convention, a group whose goal was to tax
				  African Americans and use the revenue to establish black-owned businesses.
				  Roston moved to Seattle after a year as a Pullman porter in Spokane,
				  Washington, and soon established himself as a realtor for the many African
				  Americans that were moving to the area during the shipbuilding boom of the
				  early 1900s. During the Longshoreman’s strike of 1916, he helped recruit 400
				  African American strikebreakers. The strike was marked by racial tensions and
				  conflict with white workers. On February 27, 1917 the Central Labor Council
				  decided to include “negroes and whites in labor.” When the United States
				  entered World War I in April, the strike was ended by government fiat, and the
				  waterfront was integrated. Roston established and became president of the
				  Colored Marine Employees Benevolent Protective Association of the Pacific, the
				  first African American labor organization in the Pacific Northwest, to organize
				  African American workers. Roston was also a member of the local NAACP and the
				  King County Colored Republican Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RostonJA1</container><unittitle>James A. Roston standing with unidentified man in
					 front of the Colored Marine Employee's Benevolent Association's
					 office.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1917 and 1924</unitdate></did><note><p>Original photograph and enlargement</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rotch, Francis J. (October 20, 1885 - November 1,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Major Francis J. Rotch, author and veteran of World War I, was
				  the son of Francis Rotch, Sr., Seattle pioneer and member of the Washington
				  State Legislature (1889-1891). Rotch, Jr. was born in Bucoda, Washington and
				  moved to Seattle as a child. He attended the University of Washington. He
				  joined the Navy and took part in the international expedition to Peking during
				  the Boxer Rebellion, was a member of the Washington National Guard, and went
				  overseas with the 57th Regiment of Army Engineers during World War I. He was
				  awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and the Croix de Guerre. Major Rotch
				  was also quartermaster on the steamer<emph> Nome City</emph>, which sailed
				  between Valdez, Alaska and Seattle, and was a member of the Seattle Harbor
				  Patrol. He was a charter member of the Kirkland Rotary Club, and was the author
				  of <emph>The Blue-eyed God</emph> and other works. He was married to Maree
				  Chandler (1885-1943) and Helen Boyce, whom he married in 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RotchFJ1</container><unittitle>Francis J. Rotch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roundtree, Patrick Henry (February 18, 1843 - April 16,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patrick Henry Roundtree was born near Knoxville, Illinois in
				  1843. The family crossed the plains by covered wagon trek to Oregon in 1859
				  with a large immigrant party that had gathered at Omaha, Nebraska. They settled
				  in what is now Klaber, Lewis County, Washington where he attended the first
				  public school organized in the new territory of Washington. During his early
				  years, he worked as a hunter and trapper, and as a young man, was employed to
				  set fire to the forests so that more pasture land might be opened for stock
				  raising. Roundtree platted the townsite of Pacific Beach in Grays Harbor
				  County. Shortly before his death, he completed a biography telling of his early
				  life in western Oregon and Lewis County. He married Minerva Jane Cooper on
				  December 24, 1865; the couple had ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RoundtreePH1</container><unittitle>Patrick Henry Roundtree and Minerva J. Roundtree on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 24, 1915</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RoundtreePH2</container><unittitle>Patrick Henry Roundtree and Minerva J.
					 Roundtree</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roundtree, Minerva Jane Cooper (February 2, 1849 -
				  September 20, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Minerva Jane Cooper was born in Missouri in 1849 and arrived in
				  Polk County Oregon in September 1852. Her parents were James Cooper and Hester
				  Ann Moxtry Cooper. She married Patrick Henry Roundtree on December 24, 1865;
				  the couple had ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RoundtreePH1</container><unittitle>Patrick Henry Roundtree and Minerva J. Roundtree on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 24, 1915</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Patrick Henry Roundtree subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RoundtreePH2</container><unittitle>Patrick Henry Roundtree and Minerva J.
					 Roundtree</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Patrick Henry Roundtree subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rowe, Edward A. (February 22, 1913 - October 31,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward A. Rowe received his B.S. in 1935, M.S. in 1938 and PhD
				  in 1948, all from Michigan State University. He joined the University of
				  Washington in the late 1940s as a professor of metallurgy and resigned his
				  position in 1954.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Barr watching Dr. Edward A. Rowe
					 look in microscope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 27, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tom Cohen, The Daily</persname></origination></did><note><p>NIS negative.</p><p>Filed under John Barr subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BarrJA2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Close view of John Barr watching Dr.
					 Edward A. Rowe look in microscope</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 27, 1952</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Tom Cohen, The Daily</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under John Barr subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rowe, Patrick Trimble (November 20, 1856 – June 1,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Trimble Rowe was a Canadian prelate who served for decades
				  as the first bishop of the American Episcopal Diocese of Alaska. Rowe was born
				  in Meadowvale, Toronto Township, Ontario. He attended local schools and went to
				  Trinity College, Toronto where he earned his bachelor's degree in 1878, his
				  master's degree in 1880, and his doctorate of divinity in 1895. Rowe was
				  ordained to the diaconate in 1878 and the priesthood in 1880, by Frederick
				  Dawson Fauquier, bishop of the Diocese of Algoma. In 1895, he was appointed
				  Missionary Bishop of Alaska. He was consecrated on November 30, 1895. Rowe
				  traveled across his vast diocese for decades, by dogsled, boat and other
				  frontier means. During his tenure as bishop from 1895 to 1931, he was involved
				  in establishing several churches, missions and hospitals throughout Alaska.
				  Bishop Rowe made his home in Sitka until 1914, where he was involved in the
				  construction of the local church, St. Peter’s by-the-Sea, completed in 1899. He
				  gained many admirers, among whom was his colleague Hudson Stuck, Archdeacon of
				  the Yukon. Stuck praised Rowe's dedication in his three books published to
				  combat exploitation of the native peoples among whom they served.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RowePT1</container><unittitle>Peter Trimble Rowe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 25, 1908</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Very sincerely yours, P. T. Rowe (Bishop of
					 Alaska), Xmas 1908</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RowePT2</container><unittitle>Peter Trimble Rowe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Faithfully yours, P. T. Rowe, Bishop of
					 Alaska</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rowland, Levi Lindsey (September 17, 1831 – January 19,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Levi Lindsey Rowland was an American educator and physician in
				  the state of Oregon. He was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and in 1844 came over
				  the Oregon Trail with his parents and settled in the Yamhill District of Oregon
				  Country. After farming for a few years, he headed to the gold mines of
				  California during the California Gold Rush. Rowland returned to Oregon in 1851
				  before going to Virginia to attend college. In 1856, he graduated from Bethany
				  College in Virginia (now West Virginia) and was ordained as a minister of the
				  Disciples of Christ. After graduation, Rowland spent time in the eastern United
				  States as a teacher and as a minister. In 1859 he returned to Oregon and served
				  as the principal at the Bethel Institute in Polk County. In 1860 he became the
				  superintendent of Polk County's schools, and in 1862 started the first
				  teacher's institute in Oregon. He then served as the president of Monmouth
				  Christian College (now Western Oregon University) from 1866 to 1869. Rowland
				  left the college in order to start medical school at Willamette University
				  College of Medicine in Salem; he graduated in 1872. While still in school he
				  served as a professor at the medical school from 1870 until 1878. Rowland was
				  elected as Oregon Superintendent of Public Instruction in 1874, while still
				  working as a professor at Willamette. He was the first person elected to that
				  office and served as state superintendent until 1878. After a trip abroad, he
				  worked on his farm and started an insurance company, as well as serving as
				  president the State Insurance Society. In 1891, he returned to public office
				  when he was elected as the superintendent of the Oregon State Hospital.. He
				  served in that office until 1895 when he retired. He married Emma J. Sanders in
				  1859.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RowlandLL1</container><unittitle>Levi Lindsey Rowland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rowntree, Jennie Irene (June 9, 1890 - June 21,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jennie I. Rowntree, an authority on nutrition, joined the
				  University of Washington faculty in 1925 and became director of the department
				  of Home Economics in 1945. She retired in 1956 to become a technical assistant
				  with the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization in Cairo, Egypt. She
				  was a president of the University Chapter of Sigma XI, a national science
				  honorary, and was a member of the American Home Economics Association and the
				  American Dietetics Association. Rowntree, a professor emeritus, took part in
				  the White House Conference on Children and Youth in 1950. She wrote <emph>This
				  Problem of Food </emph>(1939) and <emph>Nutrition Guide for the Home
				  Front</emph> (1942).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RowntreeJI1</container><unittitle>Dr. Jennie Irene Rowntree in her office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Tyee Photo Lab, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appears in the 1955 edition of <emph>The
					 Tyee</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Royce, James Emmet (October 20, 1914 - January 6,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>The Rev. James Emmet Royce was a Jesuit priest who did
				  ground-breaking work in the field of addiction studies. He received his
				  doctorate in psychology from Loyola University in Chicago in 1945. He was
				  ordained in 1947 and received his licentiate in sacred theology at Santa Clara
				  University a year later. He went to work at Seattle University in 1948. Royce,
				  a native of Spokane, served on numerous national and local boards and
				  committees dealing with alcoholism. In 1989, he received the National Council
				  of Alcoholism Marty Mann Founder's Award for lifetime achievement in alcoholism
				  and education. He developed and taught what is thought to have been the
				  nation's first standard college course on alcoholism in 1950. In 1973, his
				  expanded alcoholism course became the university's addiction studies program,
				  also thought to be the first in the nation. In 1971-72, he did a series of
				  ground-breaking television programs on alcoholism in Seattle. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RoyceJE1</container><unittitle>James Emmet Royce</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1969</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Kennell-Ellis, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 33 of <emph>The Seattle
					 Times</emph> on October 5, 1969.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Royer, Charles Theodore (August 22, 1939 -July 26,
				  2024)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Theodore Royer is an American news reporter and
				  politician who served as the 48th mayor of Seattle, Washington from 1978 to
				  1990. A Medford, Oregon native, Royer worked as a reporter while attending the
				  University of Oregon. He spent the seven years following graduation as a
				  reporter and news analyst. He was awarded a fellowship to study government and
				  public policy at the Washington, D.C. Journalism Center and was also a visiting
				  associate at the Harvard-MIT Joint Center for Urban Studies from 1969 to 1970.
				  In 1977, Royer defeated 13 other candidates to become the mayor of Seattle. He
				  served three four-year terms in that office. As President of the National
				  League of Cities in 1983, he became a spokesperson for American cities on
				  housing, healthcare, civil liberties, and the needs of children. In 1990, Royer
				  became director of the Harvard Institute of Politics at the John F. Kennedy
				  School of Government. From 1995 to 2006, Royer served as director of the
				  National Program Office for the Urban Health Initiative, which worked to help
				  improve the health and safety of children. In 2005, he established the
				  non-profit Institute for Community Change to continue guiding work at the
				  national level toward improving the health of communities. In 2007, Royer
				  became founding partner in the consulting firm The Royer Group which provides
				  professional consulting services in public policy development, governmental
				  liaison, public finance, business and leadership development, marketing
				  communications and program management. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RoyerCT1</container><unittitle>Charles T. Royer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1980s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Roys, Ralph Loveland (February 14, 1879 - December 12,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ralph Loveland Roys was a noted scholar of Mayan culture and
				  language. Born in Greenville, Michigan, he was a member of a prominent lumber
				  family. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1900 with a Ph.B in
				  medieval French; he also spoke German, Spanish and Polish. He learned Russian
				  on his own and served in the Diplomatic Corps during World War I. On a trip to
				  the Yucatan in search of mahogany while working for the family lumber business,
				  he became interested in the Mayan ruins there. What began as a casual meeting
				  with the curator of the Peabody Museum blossomed into an intellectual fluency
				  with colonial and contemporary Mayan life. Roys' first major work was <emph>The
				  Ethnobotany of the Mayas</emph>, 1931. A research professor at the University
				  of Washington, he was elected a corresponding member of the Academy of American
				  Franciscan History and was made an honorary fellow of the Royal Anthropology
				  Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. He held honorary degrees from Whitman
				  College and the University of Yucatan. In 1960, he was cited by the Seattle
				  Anthropological Society for his contributions to Middle-American studies. He
				  was associated with Mayan research at Tulane University and since 1921, had
				  been a member of the department of historical research of the Carnegie
				  Institute of Technology. Shortly before his death he published <emph>The Ritual
				  of the Bacabs</emph>, the mastering of Mayan syllabication and grammar. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RoysRL1</container><unittitle>Ralph Loveland Roys</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ruby, Robert Holmes (April 23, 1921 - February 15,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert H. Ruby, a physician and author, was born in Mabton,
				  Washington and graduated from Mabton High School in 1939. He graduated from
				  Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis Missouri in 1945. After an
				  internship in a Detroit, Michigan hospital, he entered the Air Corps, serving
				  in the occupation of Japan. After his military service, he took a fellowship in
				  cancer surgery at the Sugerbaker Cancer Clinic in Jefferson City, Missouri.
				  This was followed by a year's postgraduate work at the Washington University
				  School of Medicine and a four-year residency in pathology and surgery at the St
				  Louis County Hospital. In 1953 Dr. Ruby began a second military service at the
				  request of the government where he was assigned to the United States Public
				  Health Service on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. On discharge
				  from this assignment, he moved with his family to Moses Lake, Washington where
				  he set up private practice in general surgery. After his time with the Public
				  Health Service, he continued his interest in Native Americans. He was an
				  adjunct faculty member of Big Bend Community College in Moses Lake where he
				  taught a course on Indians of the Pacific Northwest and was a consultant and
				  advisor to the Umatilla Confederated Tribes in Oregon. Ruby was co-author of a
				  number of books, including <emph>The Oglala Sioux Warriors in Transition</emph>
				  (1955), <emph>Half Sun on the Columbia: A Biography of Chief Moses</emph>
				  (1965), <emph>The Spokane Indians: Children of the Sun </emph>(1970), and<emph>
				  The Cayuse Indians: Imperial Tribesmen of Old Oregon</emph> (1972). Ruby was
				  honored with the Whitworth College 2006 Distinguished Alumnus Award.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RubyRH1</container><unittitle>Robert Holmes Ruby</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970s</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rucker, Helen Bornstein (January 8, 1903 - December 28,
				  2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Bornstein Rucker was a Northwest author who used Seattle's
				  history as a tableau for her stories. Her 1956 novel, <emph>Cargo of
				  Brides,</emph> recounted the story of the Mercer Girls, East Coast women
				  recruited by Asa Mercer in the 1860s to remedy the Puget Sound area's shortage
				  of marriageable women. Her second novel, <emph>The Wolf Tree</emph> (1960), was
				  a romance set in the Northwest's lumber camps. Born in Seattle on Jan. 8, 1903,
				  the only child of Julia and Maurice Bornstein, she traveled throughout Europe
				  as a young woman and graduated from National Park Seminary in Maryland in 1923.
				  In addition to her writing, Rucker dabbled in painting, studying under
				  Northwest artist Mark Tobey. She was also active in education and the
				  community. She served on the board of trustees of the Cornish School of Allied
				  Arts from 1935 to 1938, was the unit chairwoman in Seattle with the American
				  Red Cross from 1940 to 1945, and was a member of Seattle Junior Programs from
				  1941 to 1956. She was a lifelong member of Temple De Hirsch Sinai and also
				  belonged to the Washington Athletic Club and the Seattle Tennis Club. She
				  married B. Wallace Rucker in 1932.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RuckerHB1</container><unittitle>Helen Bornstein Rucker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1956</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">McBride &amp; Anderson, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso of duplicate photograph: Helen Rucker, author
					 of Cargo of Brides, to be published by Little, Brown and Company, July 9, 1956.
					 Please credit McBride and Anderson. Gift from <emph>Pacific Northwest Quarterly
					 </emph>office.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RuckerHB2</container><unittitle>Helen Bornstein Rucker standing in front of the steps
					 of a house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1968</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rudene, Bessie Jane (June 14, 1849 - January 25,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bessie Jane Wallace, the daughter of William and Ruthinda
				  Wallace, was born in Oregon City, Oregon in 1849. He father had crossed the
				  plains to Oregon in 1847, and her mother in 1845. Shortly after her birth, the
				  family moved first to Olympia and then to Whidbey Island. Her mother had
				  previously been married to Lemuel Browning (d. 1840?) and Isaac Cornelius (d.
				  1846); after Isaac died, Ruthinda married William Wallace in 1847. Ruthinda’s
				  stepson, John Cornelius, married Bessie in 1865. Bessie and John Cornelius had
				  three children (William, Arthur and Nellie). After Cornelius’ death in 1880,
				  Bessie married John Oscar Rudene, who had leased land from Cornelius.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RudeneJO2</container><unittitle>John Oscar Rudene, Bessie Jane Rudene, and Nellie
					 Cornelius</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>See John Oscar Rudene subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Rudene, John Oscar (August 13, 1850 - December 30,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Oscar Rudene was an American politician in the state of
				  Washington who served in the Washington House of Representatives. He was born
				  John Oscar Jacobson in the Ostergotland district of Sweden. His older brother
				  August emigrated to America to work for his uncle in Fairfield, Iowa in about
				  1871. For an unknown reason, August changed his surname from Jacobson to
				  Rudene. He returned to Sweden to persuade his brother John to move to Iowa.
				  John. went with August when his brother returned to Iowa, and when August went
				  west to LaConner in 1875, John followed a year later. He leased land from John
				  Cornelius, and after Cornelius died in 1880, Rudene married Cornelius’ widow,
				  Bessie, in 1882. Rudene was appointed diking commissioner and then elected
				  county commissioner in 1888. He was later elected as representative to the
				  state legislature in 1904 and re-elected for two terms after that. Rudene Road
				  in Mount Vernon, Washington is named after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RudeneJO1</container><unittitle>John Oscar Rudene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905-1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RudeneJO2</container><unittitle>John Oscar Rudene, Bessie Jane Rudene, and Nellie
					 Cornelius</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rulis, Edward Charles (July 13, 1914 - February 23,
				  1978)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Rulis was born in Chicago. He played football for the UW
				  Huskies in 1935 and 1936. He served in the U. S. Marine Corps during World War
				  II and later worked as a machinist in Chicago.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RulisEC1</container><unittitle> Edward Charles Rulis with Frank "Fritz"
					 Waskowitz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1936?</unitdate></did><note><p>Waskowitz is on the left, Rulis on the right.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR2</container><unittitle>Students posing with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ed Rulis, Frank
					 "Fritz" Waskowitz, unidentified, unidentified; Back row (left to right):
					 unidentified, Vic Markov, Bob Ingram, Negley England.</p><p>Written on verso: The Lindbloom bunch, Tri-Alpha House,
					 1933.</p><p>Filed under Robert Ingram subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">MarkovVW1</container><unittitle> Victor William Markov with Ed Rulis and Jim
					 Rucka(?)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Victor Markov subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Runeberg, John Ludwig (February 5, 1804 – May 6, 1877)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Ludwig Runeberg was a Finno-Swedish lyric and epic poet. He
				  is the national poet of Finland and the author of the lyrics to 
				  <emph render="italic">Vårt land </emph>(Our Land) that became the Finnish
				  national anthem, <emph render="italic">Maamme-laulu</emph>. Runeberg was also
				  involved in the modernization of the Finnish Lutheran hymnal and produced many
				  texts for the new edition</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">RunebergJL1</container><unittitle>John Ludwig Runeberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="painter">N. P. Lofgren</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Runnels, George Williamson (August 9, 1835 - November
				  17, 1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Williamson (“Tenas George”) Runnels, the son of Thomas
				  and Eliza (Morong) Runnels, was born in Edmundstown, Maine on October 9, 1835.
				  At the age of ten, he went to sea, continuing in that occupation for thirteen
				  years. In 1858 he traveled to Puget Sound by way of Cape Horn, sailing in the
				  bark<emph> Oak Hill.</emph> Two years later, he went to what is now Okanogan
				  County, where he worked as a stock raiser, store keeper, and prospector. Among
				  the mines he located are the Mountain Lion Mine in Republic, as well as the
				  Last Chance Mine, the Flatiron Mine, the Copper King Mine and the Iconoclast
				  Mine. In 1861, he married Skocum Analix, a member of the Sanpoil or San Poil
				  people; the San Poil are one of the twelve members of the Confederated Tribes
				  of the Colville Reservation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RunnelsGW1</container><unittitle>George W. Runnels</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: George W. Runnels. This photo of me taken in
					 the year 1901. Born Oct. 9, 1835, Edmunds State of Maine. Came to Washington in
					 the year 1858 in the bark <emph>Oak Hill</emph>. Sailed from Boston around Cape
					 Horn to Port Gamble, Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rushton, Allie Shearer (December 23, 1883 - December 23,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Concordia, Kansas, Allie Shearer came to Seattle with
				  her parents in 1883. She attended the seminary school which preceded Seattle
				  Pacific College. She married Clarence Arthur Rushton in Victoria, B. C. in
				  1904. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rushton, Clarence Arthur (July 4, 1882 - December 2,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clarence Rushton was the superintendent of the Aqua Theater
				  construction project which was completed in time for the gala opening of Aqua
				  Follies on Aug. 11, 1950 during the first Seafair.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Russell, Hugh Hopkins (June 29, 1899 - July 20,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Hopkins Russell, the son of Frederick and Mabel (Hopkins)
				  Russell, was born in Ontario, Canada. He lived in Seattle from early childhood
				  and graduated from Franklin High School and the University of Washington. In
				  real estate since 1923, he was the past president of the Seattle Real Estate
				  Board, the Washington State Association of Real Estate Boards, past
				  vice-president of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, and a member
				  of the Brokers’ Institute and The American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers.
				  Russell was a director of British Pacific Properties and the Park Royal
				  Corporation, both of Vancouver, B.C. and was the planner for the Park Royal
				  Center in Vancouver. He was formerly the real estate manager for William E.
				  Boing and had planned and promoted several subdivisions in Seattle, including
				  Blue Ridge and Innis Arden. He was a consultant for several subdivisions and
				  business centers in Idaho, Oregon and Arkansas.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellHH1</container><unittitle>Hugh Hopkins Russell with James W. Wheeler at the Real
					 Estate Board Banquet where Russell was installed as president of the Seattle
					 Realty Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 12, 1939</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roy M. Peak Photography, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: To Mr. Wheeler, the "daddy" of the Real
					 Estate Board</p><p>The photograph appeared on page 9 of the January 13, 1939
					 edition of <emph>The Seattle Times.</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Russell, Israel Cook (December 10, 1852 – May 1,
				  1906)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Israel Cook Russell was an American geologist and geographer who
				  explored Alaska in the late 19th century. Russell was born in Garrattsville,
				  New York. He received B.S. and C.E. degrees in 1872 from the University of the
				  City of New York (now New York University), and later studied at the School of
				  Mines, Columbia College. In 1874 he accompanied one of the parties sent out by
				  the United States government to observe the transit of Venus. On his return in
				  1875, he was appointed assistant in geology at the School of Mines, and in 1878
				  he became assistant geologist on the United States geological and geographical
				  survey west of the 100th meridian. In 1880, he became a member of the United
				  States Geological Survey (USGS). Between 1881 and 1885 he worked at the Mono
				  Lake in east-central California. Originally employed for work with regard to
				  surveying and building the Bodie Railway connecting the Lake with Bodie, he
				  stayed for four years and wrote the seminal work<emph> Quaternary History of
				  Mono Valley, California </emph>(1884). He represented the USGS in 1889 in an
				  expedition sent to Alaska by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey to
				  establish a portion of Alaska's eastern boundary. During the next two years, he
				  explored, under the joint auspices of the USGS and the National Geographic
				  Society, the slopes of Mount Saint Elias and the Yakutat Bay area. In 1890 he
				  made the first reported sighting of Mount Logan, the highest mountain in
				  Canada, and gave the mountain its name. In 1892 he became professor of geology
				  at the University of Michigan. In May 1902, Russell was one of a party of
				  scientists who travelled on the USS Dixie to document the eruptions of La
				  Soufriere, St Vincent and Mont Pelee, Martinique. Russell Fiord, Mount Russell
				  in Alaska, Mount Rainier's Russell Glacier in Washington, Mount Russell
				  (California), and the prehistoric Lake Russell in California's Mono Basin are
				  named for him. Russell died suddenly on May 1, 1906, after suffering pneumonia.
				  At the time of his death, he was president of the Geological Society of
				  America.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellIC1</container><unittitle> Israel Cook Russell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Randall, Michigan</persname></origination><note><p>The University of Michigan seal is embossed on the
						photograph's mat</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellIC2</container><unittitle> Israel Cook Russell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Russell, Sarah Jane Gallagher (May 25, 1845 - December
				  29, 1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Jane Gallagher was one of eleven women and girls who left
				  their homes on the East Coast in 1864 to come to the Puget Sound area to teach.
				  These women and girls, age 15 to 35 were recruited by Seattle resident Asa
				  Mercer, and known as "Mercer Girls." Gallagher was nineteen when she arrived to
				  the west coast. She taught music and school at the Territorial University in
				  downtown Seattle. She married Thomas Russell on April 24, 1865; the couple had
				  three children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellSJG1</container><unittitle>Sarah J. Russell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Moved to Arthur Churchill Warner Collection PH0273</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Russell, William M. (February 28, 1847 - October 2,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William M. Russell was a veteran theatrical manager in Seattle.
				  Born in Detroit, he made his stage debut in 1858. After acting for twenty
				  years, he became the manager of road attractions in 1878. In 1887, he first
				  visited the west coast, coming to San Francisco with John Morris Sullivan. His
				  first visit to Seattle was in 1889 when he brought Essie Tittell and her sister
				  Minnie, popular actors, to Turner Hall. In 1893, John Cordray of Portland hired
				  him to manage the Cordray Theater in Seattle, which he renamed the Third Avenue
				  Theater. He remained as manager until the Denny Regrade project demolished the
				  building in 1906. In 1897, he formed Russell and Drew with Ed Drew. After the
				  Third Avenue Theater was demolished, the partners leased the Seattle Theater,
				  built and opened The Alhambra, reopened The Lyric, and operating for a time a
				  new Third Avenue Theater. Russell also operated the Cordray Theater in Portland
				  for eighteen months. He retired from show business and became a traveling
				  salesman. He married Elizabeth Haley in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellWM1</container><unittitle>William M. Russell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Lithograph of John Pardee Howe on verso</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rust, Frank Allen (January 24, 1859 - September 20,
				  1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Allen Rust was a labor leader, business executive, and one
				  of the founders of the Seattle Labor Temple. He was born in Carleton, Michigan
				  and came to Washington in 1890. Rust worked for several years in the state
				  printing office. Shortly after moving to Seattle, he became the business
				  manager for <emph>The Union Record.</emph> In 1904, he helped found the Labor
				  Temple, and was the business agent and secretary of the Central Labor Council
				  from 1904 to 1910. After <emph>The Union Record </emph>became a daily paper,
				  Rust became the secretary of the Record Publishing Company, a position he held
				  until the company disbanded. Rust was a delegate from the Musicians’ Union to
				  the Central Labor Council for forty consecutive years and was a member of the
				  International Typographical Union for over fifty years. He was also chairman of
				  the board of the Union Saving and Loan Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RustFA1</container><unittitle>Frank Allen Rust</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Rutter, Washington Clark (May 18, 1854 - May 14,
				  1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Washington Clark Rutter, the son of John and Eliza Jane (Horton)
				  Rutter, was born in Kittanning, Pennsylvania and came to Washington in 1888
				  where he went to work in the Gilman coal mines. A year later, he was nominated
				  and elected to the Washington State House of Representatives in the state’s
				  first legislative session. He was re-elected for a second term and made a
				  member of the committees on mines and mining, labor and labor statistics, and
				  military matters. In 1890, Rutter was elected to the State Senate and
				  re-elected for a second term. He was made chair of the same committees as well
				  as a committee on public buildings and grounds. In 1893, Rutter was employed by
				  the Washington World’s Fair Commission to make a collection of minerals for
				  exhibition at the World’s Fair in Chicago. For this collection, he obtained a
				  25-ton piece of bituminous coal from the Roslyn Mines; he divided it into
				  10,000 pieces, which were labeled and given away at the fair. In 1897, he was
				  appointed clerk of the Probate Court of King County and served for several
				  years. He then organized and became president of the Kittanning Mining Company,
				  with mines in Eastern Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RutterWC1</container><unittitle>Washington Clark Rutter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ruzicka, Drahomir Josef (February 8, 1870 - September
				  30, 1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>One of the world’s most important later pictorialists, Drahomír
				  Joseph Ruzicka practiced pictorial photography for four decades, from the
				  mid-1910s past mid-century. He photographed primarily the architecture of New
				  York as well as scenes in his native Czechoslovakia. He was born in Trhová
				  Kamenice, Bohemia. At age six, he moved with his family to a farm near Wahoo,
				  Nebraska. In 1882, he went to New York to finish high school, then to Vienna
				  for college, and graduated from New York University with a medical degree in
				  1891. A few years later, he set up a private practice on Manhattan’s Upper East
				  Side and became one of the earliest doctors to use X rays before retiring in
				  his mid-fifties. Ruzicka’s knowledge of X rays fostered an interest in
				  photography, and he purchased his first camera in 1904. Within a few years his
				  pictorial images were appearing in magazines such as <emph>Photo Era</emph>.
				  Ruzicka’s straight pictorialism helped nurture the movement of modern
				  photography in his native Czechoslovakia, and he committed himself to assisting
				  photographers in the United States as well. In 1916 he helped found the
				  Pictorial Photographers of America (PPA), and served on the PPA’s first
				  executive committee, spoke at many meetings, judged its salons, and was
				  designated honorary president in 1940. He was also active in the Camera Club of
				  New York. Ruzicka’s photographs were exhibited at numerous other venues and
				  were acquired by museums during his lifetime. England’s Royal Photographic
				  Society presented him with an honorary fellowship (Hon. FRPS) in 1949, and a
				  year later the Photographic Society of America bestowed upon him a similar
				  title. Ruzicka may be best known for his images of the old Pennsylvania
				  Station.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RuzickaDJ1</container><unittitle>Drahomír Joseph Ruzicka</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank Kunishige, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Ruzicka spoke at a meeting of the Seattle Photographic
						Society in May 1937, and the photograph may have been taken at that time. Frank
						Kunishige, the photographer, was a member of the Seattle Camera Club.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Albert Herbert (November 20, 1876 - March 17,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Herbert Ryan, the son of Robert C. and Eva Billingsworth
				  Ryan, was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. He served in the U. S. Navy from 1897
				  to 1901 as a fireman. After his service, he worked as a machinist and operated
				  an amateur radio station. He married Ethel Geelan in Sidney, Australia in
				  1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RyanAH1</container><unittitle>Albert Herbert Ryan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1937</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Typed on front: "To W8JPY, The post office has not been able
					 to find the maps u (sic) sent me. I would like to have maps of Ohio, Indiana,
					 and Kentucky. Allso (sic) of Tennessee if you can get them. I can get u (sic)
					 ones of California, Oregon, British Columbia and Nevada. What will u (sic)
					 have?" </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Commodore Duey (August 13, 1892 - January 3,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Commodore Duey Ryan, the son of Henderson Ryan and Harriet Oden
				  Ryan, was born in Fort Smith, Arkansas. The family moved to Seattle in 1898. He
				  married Gladys Eliza Mason in 1919 in Oregon City; the couple had two sons,
				  Phillip Antony Ryan and Rovert Cecil Ryan. Commodore was in the Army during
				  World War I and later worked as a mechanic.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH3</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan and family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Henderson Ryan, Kalida Sophia Ryan, Frances Starkey Ryan,
						Commodore Duey Ryan and Theodore Johnston Ryan</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Addie Frances (1869 - March 29, 1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Addie Frances Proctor, the daughter of Edwin and Hattie Proctor,
				  was born in Minnesota. She married Frederick Hafner in New Jersey in 1886,
				  Edward Starkey in Ohio in 1891, and Henderson Ryan in Tacoma in 1920. She had
				  two sons, William Walter Starkey (1896-1919) and Herbert Lewis Starkey
				  (1901-1973).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH3</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan and family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Henderson Ryan, Kalida Sophia Ryan, Frances Starkey Ryan,
						Commodore Duey Ryan and Theodore Johnston Ryan</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Gladys Eliza Mason (May 31, 1898 - June 2,
				  1987)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gladys Eliza Mason, the daughter of James B. and Mary A. Mason,
				  married Commodore Duey Ryan in Oregon City, Oregon in 1919. The couple had two
				  sons, Phillip Antony Ryan and Robert Cecil Ryan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Henderson (January 16, 1856 – August 29,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henderson Ryan was an American architect notable for designing
				  buildings in Seattle Washington in the early 20th century, including several
				  theaters and a significant number of residential apartment buildings. Among
				  other buildings he was the architect of the Ballard Carnegie Library and
				  Neptune Theatre, both Seattle city landmarks. Ryan also received a patent for
				  his invention of a ramp used in theaters that maximized convenience and seating
				  capacity. He equipped the Waldorf, the large apartment building he designed,
				  with an early central vacuuming system.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH1</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH2</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><note><p>Note included with photograph: "To Robert Matson, from Uncle
						Henderson, 12-27-1919. Wishing you a Happy New Years."</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH3</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan and family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Henderson Ryan, Kalida Sophia Ryan, Frances Starkey Ryan,
						Commodore Duey Ryan and Theodore Johnston Ryan</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ryan, James M. (April 16, 1908-April 27,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James M. Ryan, known in Seattle as “Mr. Downtown,” was first
				  president and then chairman of UNICO Properties, which manages the 10-acre
				  parcel of property in the heart of downtown Seattle owned by the University of
				  Washington and known as the Metropolitan Tract. Ryan served on the Board of
				  Trustees of the Central Association, United Way of King County, United Good
				  Neighbors, and the University of Washington Alumni Association, and on the
				  steering committee and Board of Directors for the Century 21 Exhibition. He was
				  vice-president of the Seattle-King County Chamber of Commerce and president of
				  the Building Owners and Managers Association. A member of the Board of
				  Governors of the Washington Athletic Club, Ryan also belonged to the Seattle
				  Golf Club, the Seattle Yacht Club, and the Rainier Club, which he served as
				  president in 1964. The Seattle-King County Association of Realtors named James
				  M. Ryan First Citizen of 1980.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">RyanJM1</container><unittitle>Photograph of James M. Ryan in the form of a face
					 mask</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1985</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appeared in the October 3, 1985 issue of 
						<emph>The Daily.</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BullittDS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Bullitt speaking at the
					 opening of the Stimson Building Cornerstone with James M. Ryan of University
					 Properties and Harold S. Shefelman of the UW Board of Regents</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1970</unitdate></did><note><p>Before the Stimson Building was replaced by the Financial
					 Center, commemorative ceremonies were held there. Mrs. Bullitt was the daughter
					 of C. D. Stimson, for whom the building was named and stands beside the bronze
					 plaque honoring her father.</p><p>Filed under Dorothy Stimson Bullitt.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Kalida Sophia (October 28, 1878 - November 29,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kalida Sophia Ryan, the daughter of Henderson Ryan and Harriet
				  Oden Ryan, was born in Leesdale, Alabama. The family moved to Seattle in 1898.
				  She married Charles Volentine McNeill on July13, 1913 in Cove, Oregon. The
				  couple lived in Molalla, Oregon before moving to McMinnville, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH3</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan and family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Henderson Ryan, Kalida Sophia Ryan, Frances Starkey Ryan,
						Commodore Duey Ryan and Theodore Johnston Ryan</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Phillip Antony (July 2, 1920 - February 15,
				  2002)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Phillip Antony Ryan, the son of Commodore Duey Ryan and Gladys
				  Mason Ryan, was born in Molalla, Oregon. He served during World War II and
				  later worked as an aircraft machinist. He married Anita Osborne Chandler in
				  1948.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ryan, Theodore Johnston (September 9, 1890 - March 9,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore Johnston Ryan, the son of Henderson Ryan and Harriet
				  Oden Ryan, was born in Fort Smith, Arkansas. The family moved to Seattle in
				  1898. Theodore served in the Army during World War I and later worked as a
				  carpenter. He married Maude Steininger April 13,, 1921 in Vancouver,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH3</container><unittitle>Henderson Ryan and family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Henderson Ryan, Kalida Sophia Ryan, Frances Starkey Ryan,
						Commodore Duey Ryan and Theodore Johnston Ryan</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p><p>Filed under Henderson Ryan subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ryther, Olive Hannah Spore (March 15, 1849 - October 2,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Olive Hannah Spore (“Ollie”) was born in Iowa to Nicholas and
				  Ann Spore. At the age of eighteen, in 1867, she married Noble Ryther, a
				  carpenter and Civil War veteran; the couple soon had three daughters. Noble, a
				  devout Methodist, left his family in 1874 to serve as a missionary in
				  Washington Territory. It was nine years before he sent for his family, who
				  finally arrived in Seattle in 1883. Olive, who worked with her husband at the
				  mission, soon found her life-long vocation, when she took in the four children
				  of a neighbor, promising the dying woman that these children would be raised as
				  her own. These were the first of many children and women that she would care
				  for over the course of nearly 50 years. The focus of the organization changed
				  upon her death in 1934 when Ryther Home became Ryther Child Center, focusing on
				  serving children with severe emotional and behavioral issues; the organization
				  continues to provide outpatient mental health programs to help young people.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS1</container><unittitle>Olive Hannah Spore Ryther</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ella Ann Ryther Chase, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS2</container><unittitle>Olive Ryther and unidentified children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mother Ryder and four of her many
						children</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS3</container><unittitle>Olive Ryther and unidentified child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1933?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mother Ryder and one of her 3,000
						children</p><p>The photograph appeared in the October 29, 1972 issue of 
						<emph>The Seattle Daily Times.</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS4</container><unittitle>Olive Ryther and Noble Ryther by fireplace in the
					 Wendell Chase home</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS5</container><unittitle>Olive Ryther and unidentified woman, possibly her
					 niece</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mother Ryther in puckish mood. Taken on
						visit to California in 1930 (with niece?)</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS6</container><unittitle>Children playing baseball at Ryther Home at 1262 Denny
					 Way</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1914</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS7</container><unittitle>Children sitting under a tree at Ryther Home at 1262
					 Denny Way</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ryther, Noble E. (June 12, 1849 - March 9.
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Noble E. Ryther, the son of Elkanah and Catherine Corwin Ryther,
				  was born in Michigan. He served during the Civil War. He married Olive Hannah
				  Spore in 1867; the couple had three daughters. Noble, a devout Methodist, left
				  his family in 1874 to serve as a missionary in Washington Territory. He worked
				  at the City Mission in Seattle while building a cabin and doing land clearing
				  and carpentry. It was nine years before he sent for his family, who finally
				  arrived in Seattle in 1883. Soon after his family joined him, his wife began
				  taking in abandoned and orphaned children, eventually establishing Ryther
				  Children's Home.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherNE1</container><unittitle>Noble E. Ryther reading a book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RytherOHS4</container><unittitle>Olive Ryther and Noble Ryther by fireplace in the
					 Wendell Chase home</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Olive Hannah Spore Ryther subseries</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>S</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sabatini, Nicholas (February 28,
				  1881-August 19, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Nicholas Sabatini was an internationally known chef who created
				  Chicken Tetrazzini, named for opera star Luisa Tetrazzini, while he was the
				  head chef at the original Delmonico's in Manhattan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">5</container><container type="item">BorahWE1</container><unittitle>William Borah in kitchen of the Mayflower Hotel in
					 Washington, D.C. with chef Nicholas Sabatini and former Senator Fred T. Dubois,
					 inspecting potatoes for the Idaho State Society banquet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 1926</unitdate><origination><corpname>Tucker Photography, Boise, ID</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The banquet was held March 3, 1926. The photo was taken in
					 February.</p><p>Filed under William Borah subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sackman, Daniel Jacob (December 16, 1830 - May 30,
				  1889)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Jacob Sackman arrived at Alki Point near Seattle in 1852
				  at the age of 22. He and partners built a sawmill there, moved it to Enetai and
				  provided much of the timber for the operation. He settled on the shores of Dyes
				  Inlet at Fairview with his first wife, Maria Sanchos. He acquired sections of
				  timber throughout Central Kitsap and at one time owned so much land, he was the
				  largest taxpayer in Kitsap County. In 1867, he was instrumental in getting a
				  school built in Manette so that his children could attend, and was on the first
				  school board. He married Elizabeth Ware Phillips in 1877.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SackmanDJ1</container><unittitle>Daniel J. Sackman with Elizabeth W. Sackman, Mrs.
					 Joseph W. (Mary Elizabeth) Phillips, and Rev. John F. Damon sitting in the
					 Sackman yard at Port Blakely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1885</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sackman, Elizabeth (February 28, 1834 - December 21,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Ware Sylva Renton married Joseph Phillips (1826 -
				  1861) in 1852 or 1853; they had two sons, Joseph and William. She later married
				  Daniel Jacob Sackman, a prominent lumberman. William Renton, a pioneer lumber
				  and shipping merchant, was her step-father.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SackmanDJ1</container><unittitle>Daniel J. Sackman with Elizabeth W. Sackman, Mrs.
					 Joseph W. (Mary Elizabeth) Phillips, and Rev. John F. Damon sitting in the
					 Sackman yard at Port Blakely</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1885</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Daniel Jacob Sackman subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sadler, George Marsh (December 3, 1882 - April 25,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Marsh Sadler, the son of Charles W. And Emma Marsh
				  Sadler, was born in Sandusky, Ohio. He graduated from the University of
				  Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1905, and from the University of Washington Law School
				  in 1908. While at the UW, he was a member of the UW varsity eight that defeated
				  Stanford in 1907. Sadler lived in Tacoma after graduation before enlisting in
				  the Army in 1917. He was stationed at Camp Lewis, Washington before serving
				  overseas. He married Helen Claire Graefe in 1920, and the couple moved to Los
				  Angeles. Sadler died in Palo Alto in 1976.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SadlerGM1</container><unittitle>George Marsh Sadler in UW letterman's
					 sweater</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1908</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John E. Ralston, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1909 edition of <emph>The
						Tyee.</emph></p><p>Written on front: Sincerely yours, "Filly" (?); written on
						verso: George M. Sadler No. 2</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sadler, Kate (February 20, 1874 - November 6,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kate Sadler was a prominent speaker and activist for labor and
				  socialism before and during World War I. Born Catherine Chalmer Balmain in
				  Edinburgh, Scotland, she came to the United States in 1907. She met Samuel V.
				  Sadler in Philadelphia, and the couple moved to Seattle in 1909 where both were
				  labor activists. Samuel became the president of the Longshoremen’s Union of
				  Seattle, and Kate participated in many strikes, free speech fights and labor
				  causes, working on behalf of the Industrial Workers of the World and the
				  Socialist Party. During World War I, she was a member of the People’s Peace
				  Council, and her anti-draft and pacifist speeches led to her arrest on several
				  occasions. In 1918, she married Charles Greenhalgh, a member of the Central
				  Labor Council, and they moved to Home Colony at Vaughn, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SadlerK1</container><unittitle>Kate Sadler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Clarence and Alice Parks</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Fresno, Calif 1921. Taken by Clarence and
						Alice Parks, former Seattlites. Written on front: To Harvey O'Connor, for Auld
						Lang Syne, Kate.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><unittitle>SadlerK2</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Kate Sadler's grave, Lake Bay, Washington</unitdate><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Van Ness Studios</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>St. Denis, Ruth (January 20, 1879 – July 21,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth St. Denis (born Ruth Dennis) was an American pioneer of
				  modern dance, introducing eastern ideas into the art and paving the way for
				  other women in dance. She was inspired by the Delsarte advocate Genevieve
				  Stebbins. St. Denis was the co-founder in 1915 of the American Denishawn School
				  of Dancing and Related Arts, and she taught notable performers including Martha
				  Graham and Doris Humphrey. In 1938, she founded the pioneering dance program at
				  Adelphi University. She published several articles on spiritual dance and the
				  mysticism of the body. Her signature solos continue to be performed. St. Denis
				  was inducted into the National Museum of Dance and Hall of Fame in 1987.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">StDenisR1</container><unittitle>Ruth St. Denis in flowing costume in an outdoor
					 setting</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy. Original in vault.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>St. Germain, Mary Ann (April 7, 1827 - November 3,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ann St. Germain was the daughter of Simon Plamondon and
				  Veronica (Thas-e-muth) Skiwa Plamondon. Simon Plamondon, a fur trader for
				  Hudson’s Bay Company, married Veronica, the daughter of Schanewah, a Cowlitz
				  tribe leader and settled on Cowlitz Prairie. Mary Ann married Joseph St.
				  Germain in 1842; they had a farm in Cowlitz County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">StGermainMA1</container><unittitle>Mary Ann St. Germain</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Saling, Isham Emery (October 19, 1830 - January 12,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Isham Emery Saling was born in Missouri in 1830. In 1852, he
				  traveled overland to Oregon with a team of oxen. When he reached Salmon Falls
				  on the Snake River, Saling traded his oxen for horses and began packing in to
				  the Jacksonville mines in southern Oregon. After three years, he left mining
				  for a farm in Yamhill County, Oregon where that he met and married Malinda
				  Morton, who had also come west in 1852. After their marriage in 1856, the
				  Salings farmed for several years in Yamhill County before moving to the Walla
				  Walla valley where they worked as farmers and ranchers. In 1873 the Salings
				  moved to Weston, Oregon. and Isham entered the merchandise business while
				  continuing to farm. His other business endeavors included half-interest in the
				  town's brick hotel, three brick stores and a tract of land known as the Saling
				  Addition. The Salings had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SailingIE1</container><unittitle>Isham Emery Saling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Salisbury, Albert Pierce (June 2, 1904 - June 11,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Pierce Salisbury was born in Wisconsin in 1904 and grew
				  up on a ranch in Montana where his father was a photographer. Salisbury came to
				  Seattle in 1923. He held jobs milking cows, felling trees and fighting fires
				  before he raised enough money to enroll at the University of Washington, where
				  he studied journalism in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Working after college
				  as a traveling salesman for a Seattle printing company, he took his camera with
				  him on business trips, shooting little-known historical landmarks in small
				  towns. He turned his hobby into a career. His wife, Jane, joined him in the
				  venture that in 1948 became the book <emph>Here Rolled Covered Wagons.</emph>
				  Two years later, a second book, <emph>Two Captains West</emph>, detailing the
				  Lewis and Clark expedition, became a national best seller. Superior, which
				  published both of the Salisburys' books, was a small publishing house when
				  Salisbury bought it in the late 1950s, merging it with his own engraving and
				  lithography firm. Superior became the nation's leading publisher of pictorial
				  history books and the largest publishing house north of San Francisco. After
				  Salisbury retired in the mid-1970s, Superior fell on hard times, and it was
				  sold to a California publisher in the early 1980s. In retirement, Salisbury
				  carved totem poles that decorated his West Seattle house and yard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SalisburyAP1</container><unittitle>Albert Pierce Salisbury</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Salomon, Edward Selig (December 25, 1836 – July 18,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Selig Salomon was a German-American politician and
				  military official. Born in the Duchy of Schleswig in modern-day Germany, he
				  immigrated to Illinois in 1856 and 5 years later, at age 24, was elected an
				  alderman of Chicago's sixth ward in 1861, the youngest in Chicago history. In
				  July 1861, Salomon was commissioned as a first lieutenant in Colonel Friedrich
				  Hecker's 24th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Salomon became a hero during the
				  Battle of Gettysburg, assuming command of the regiment when Hecker was wounded.
				  He led the regiment during the Atlanta Campaign and through the capture of
				  Atlanta. Assigned to deliver messages to Nashville, he missed the famous march
				  to the sea. In December 1864, he rejoined the regiment and finished out the war
				  with them. On March 13, 1865, Salomon received a promotion to brigadier
				  general. After the war, Salomon returned to Chicago where he was elected Cook
				  County Clerk in the fall of 1865, serving until November 1869. On March 4,
				  1870, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Salomon governor of Washington
				  Territory. Salomon was caught up in the political scandals of the Grant
				  administration and resigned in 1872. <emph>The Pacific Tribune</emph> ,
				  commenting on his resignation, lauded his honesty and integrity. He then moved
				  to San Francisco, where he practiced law. In 1898 Salomon was appointed
				  assistant district attorney for the city and county, and was elected to the
				  California State Assembly in 1890. His cousin Edward Salomon, who also served
				  as a general in the Civil War, later became Governor of Wisconsin.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SalomonES1</container><unittitle>Edward Selig Salomon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870 - 1872</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SalomonES2</container><unittitle>Edward Selig Salomon in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1861 -1865</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">William Shaw, #186 Clark St., Chicago</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Original in PH Coll 1034</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Samms, Carrie Alfreda Rowe (April 17, 1878 - May 25,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carrie Alfreda Rowe, the daughter of William Albert Rowe and
				  Angelina Hitt Rowe, married Robert Samms in 1897, two days after they had beeen
				  commissioned for service in the Friends Church. Together, they estabished on of
				  the first missions in Alaska north of the Bering Strait in Kotzebue.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SammsR1</container><unittitle>Robert and Carrie Samms</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Robert Samms subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Samms, Robert (September 19, 1865 - December 31,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Samms was a Christian missionary in Alaska. The
				  foundation of Christianity in Arctic Alaska was laid by Uyaraq, an Alaskan
				  Native who had been converted to Christianity by the Covenant missionaries, and
				  by Robert and Carrie Samms between 1897 and 1902. Robert Samms and his wife,
				  Carrie Rowe Samms, established one of the first missions in Alaska north of the
				  Bering Strait. Members of the Friends Church, they were commissioned for
				  service on May 17, 1897, and they married two days later. Although the Samms
				  originally had intended to establish their mission on the Kobuk River, Uyaraq
				  persuaded them to stay in Kotzebue because the location provided access to a
				  large region which included the Kobuk valley. After two years, the Samms’
				  efforts began to bear fruit, and by the time of their first furlough in the
				  summer of 1902, a community of Inupiaq Christians had been firmly established
				  in the Kotzebue Sound region. The Samms served there periodically until 1947,
				  but they never regained the influence they had had at the start.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SammsR1</container><unittitle>Robert and Carrie Samms</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sample, George Albert (February 15, 1876 - October 11,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Albert Sample was an executive with Foster &amp; Kleiser,
				  an American advertising company founded in 1901 that grew into the west coast's
				  leading billboard company. He was promoted to national advertising manager of
				  the company in 1923. He was married to Myrtle Wright.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SampleGA1</container><unittitle>George Albert Sample</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1917</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Original in PH Coll 512, Curtis Studio portraits of members of
					 the Arctic Club</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Samuels, Henry Floyd (April 4, 1869 - February 23,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Floyd Samuels was born in Mississippi, graduated from
				  Ulysses College in 1890 and studied law at the University of Michigan at Ann
				  Arbor. He was admitted to the bar at Leavenworth, Indiana in 1892. In April of
				  1892, he moved to Idaho where he started a law practice. From 1896 until 1898
				  he served as city attorney in Wallace, Idaho, and in the latter year was
				  elected the first county attorney of Shoshone County, Idaho, occupying that
				  position for two years. He returned to the east for post-graduate work in law
				  at Columbian University, now George Washington University, receiving the degree
				  of Master of Law in 1902. Returning to Idaho, he began focusing on mining and
				  banking and was the first to make zinc a profitable commercial product in the
				  state. Samuels was the leading spokesman of the Idaho chapter of the
				  Non-Partisan League and later the Idaho Progressive Party in the 1910s and
				  1920s, running unsuccessfully for governor of Idaho in 1918, 1922 and 1924 and
				  for U. S. Senate in 1926. He retired from public life after the demise of the
				  Idaho Progressive Party in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SamuelsHF1</container><unittitle>Henry Floyd Samuels</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Printed on photo: H. F. Samuels,candidate for governor of
						Idaho, Nov. 5, 1918. "Dear Neighbor: I am for our one country, one flag, one
						purpose, TO WIN THE WAR. Let us have true Democracy at home as well as abroad.
						To do this Idaho must be freed from 'special privilege.'"</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Sandall, Lois Beil (January 31, 1888 - May 30,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lois Beil Sandall was active in the Soroptimists Club, serving
				  as both president of the Seattle chapter and as national president of the
				  organization. She married Robert Sandall in 1915.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE1</container><unittitle>Cast of <emph render="italic">Treasure Island
					 </emph>performance at the Seattle Soroptimists Club luncheon at the Olympic
					 Hotel; Lois Sandall (as Long John Silver), Ella McBride (as Darby McGraw),
					 Jessie Kelly (as Jim Hawkins), Rose Morgan (as Black Dog) and Mary Ann Wells
					 (as Captain Billy Bones)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 29, 1926</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the September 30, 1926 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sanderson, Caroline Kavanagh (November 5, 1837 - July
				  27, 1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline Kavanagh, the daughter of Michael and Elizabeth
				  (McLachlan) Kavanagh, was born in Vermont. She married John Hall Sanderson, a
				  merchant, in Boston in 1861. The couple moved to Seattle in 1869. Caroline was
				  a charter member of the Ladies Relief Society, which owned and operated the
				  Seattle Children’s Home, and a charter member of the Ladies’ Library
				  Association in 1888. Both Caroline and John were charter members of Plymouth
				  Congregational Church, which was organized in their home.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SandersonCK1</container><unittitle>Caroline Kavanagh Sanderson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1910?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Santander, Luis Antonio (December 24, 1872 - October 19,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Luis Antonio Santander Ruiz was born in Chile and graduated from
				  the University of Santiago where he received his B.S. and PhD degrees. In 1898,
				  the honorary degree of Juris Doctor was conferred on him. He held a number of
				  offices in Santiago, was attorney for the Santiago Water Company, taught
				  history at the University of Santiago, and was consul to the Argentine Republic
				  before coming to Tacoma in 1910 to serve as Chilean consul to the state of
				  Washington. In 1914, the consular office was moved to Seattle. That same year,
				  he became an instructor in Spanish at the University of Washington and was
				  promoted to assistant professor in 1915. He married Elena Benitez Labbé in
				  Santiago in 1904. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SantanderLA1</container><unittitle>Luis Antonio Santander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SantanderLA2</container><unittitle>Luis Antonio Santander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1919</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Copy. Original in PH Coll. 484</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SantanderLA3</container><unittitle>Luis Antonio Santander funeral thank you
					 card</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920</unitdate><note><p>Printed card: Your kind expressions of sympathy are deeply
						appreciated and gratefully acknowledged. (Signed) Elena B. de Santander</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Santos, Bienvenido Nuqui (March 22, 1911-January 7,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bienvenido Nuqui Santos was a Filipino-American fiction, poetry
				  and nonfiction writer. He was born and raised in Tondo, Manila and received his
				  bachelor of arts degree from the University of the Philippines where he studied
				  creative writing under Paz Marquez Benitez. In 1941, Santos was a government
				  scholar to the United States at the University of Illinois, Columbia
				  University, and Harvard University. During World War II, he served with the
				  Philippine government in exile under President Manuel L. Quezon in Washington,
				  D.C. In 1967, he returned to the United States to become a teacher and
				  university administrator. He received a Rockefeller fellowship at the Writers
				  Workshop of the University of Iowa where he later taught as a Fulbright
				  exchange professor. Santos also received a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship, a
				  Republic Cultural Heritage Award in Literature as well as several Palanca
				  Awards for his short stories. <emph render="italic">Scent of Apples</emph> won
				  a 1980 American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation. He received an
				  honorary doctorate degrees in humanities and letters from the University of the
				  Philippines and Bicol University (Legazpi City, Albay) in 1981. He was also a
				  Professor of Creative Writing and Distinguished Writer in Residence at the
				  Wichita State University from 1973 to 1982, at which time the university
				  awarded him an honorary doctorate degree in humane letters. After his
				  retirement, Santos became Visiting Writer and Artist at De La Salle University
				  in Manila; the university honored Santos by renaming its creative writing
				  center after him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SantosBN1</container><unittitle>Bienvenido Nuqui Santos portrait with
					 typewriter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1989?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sargent, Fred A. (March 17, 1868 - March 19,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fred A. Sargent, the son of Elisha Nelson Sargent and Lucinda
				  Mounts Sargent, had a farm near Centralia. He married Elsie Rutledge in
				  1889.</p></bioghist><note><p>His name is listed variously as Fred Aymer Sargent, Fred Aymer
				  Sarjent, Fred Ahmer Sargent and Fred Asher Sargent.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SargentLM2</container><unittitle> Lucinda Mounts Sargent, Fred A. Sargent and
					 unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 23, 1931</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Nelson Sargent, her son and others in
						front of her home on Mound Prairie.</p><p>Filed under Lucinda Mounts Sargent subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sargent, Lucinda Mounts (September 6, 1846 - September
				  17, 1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucinda Mounts, the daughter of Thomas Jefferson Mounts and Mary
				  Ann Barbee Mounts, was born in Iowa. The family crossed the plains in one of
				  the six month journeys in 1853 and then traveled by steamer from Portland to
				  the mouth of the Cowlitz River. While her father was transferring their
				  household goods from the steamer, they met Elisha Sargent, whom Lucinda would
				  later marry. The family reached South Bay, twelve miles from Olympia, where her
				  elder brother, an earlier arrival, had built a cabin. Lucinda married Elisha
				  Nelson Sargent in 1861, and they lived on a farm near Grand Mound. After
				  Elisha’s death in 1914, she continued to operate a stock ranch. The couple had
				  two sons, Fred (1868 - 1950) and Asher (1866 - 1921).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SargentLM1</container><unittitle> Lucinda Mounts Sargent</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1901</unitdate><origination><persname>T. R. Williams, Centralia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SargentLM2</container><unittitle> Lucinda Mounts Sargent, Fred Ahmer Sargent and
					 unidentified men in front of her home on Mound Prairie.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 23, 1931</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Nelson Sargent, her son and others in
						front of her home on Mound Prairie.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Saunders, Charles Willard (October 13, 1857 - March 13,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Willard Saunders was born and spent his youth in
				  Cambridge, Massachusetts. Between 1887-1889, he practiced architecture in
				  Pasadena, California in partnership with his first wife, Mary Channing
				  Saunders. He came to Seattle in 1889, drawn by work after the Seattle Fire
				  destroyed most of the city's downtown. Within a few months, he had a series of
				  commissions and soon entered into partnership with Edwin Walker Houghton. In
				  addition to Saunders’ projects, the firm took on a number of commissions,
				  including the Fire Department Headquarters and the Olympic Block. In 1891,
				  Saunders returned to the east coast, leaving the firm in Houghton’s hands. When
				  he returned to Seattle in 1892, he established an independent practice. During
				  his career, Saunders was one of the leading architects in the city, designing
				  the Alaska Building, the original Rainier Club, the Forestry Building for the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, and Denny Hall, the first building on the new
				  campus for the University of Washington. He also designed the pedestal for the
				  statue of George Washington the UW campus. Saunders served as secretary of the
				  Seattle Board of Park Commissioners from 1903 to 1905 and became involved in
				  early legislation supporting forest fire prevention and reforestation. He
				  supported conservation efforts while representing Seattle’s 45th district in
				  the legislature from 1923 to 1932. He was a founding member of the Washington
				  State Chapter of the AIA in 1894 and served as its first secretary. Saunders
				  retired from architectural practice in 1929.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaundersCW1</container><unittitle>Charles Willard Saunders</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George N. Moore, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Saunders, Stephen (January 8, 1867 - August 30,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stephen (Steve) Saunders was born in Charlottetown, Prince
				  Edward Island, Canada and came to the United States in 1888. He started a real
				  estate firm in Snohomish County in Washington State. In 1895, he married Mary
				  Swinmerton, the daughter of Mark Swinmerton, the first mayor of Marysville,
				  Washington. Saunders was the editor of the <emph>Marysville Globe</emph> in
				  1893 and served as mayor of Marysville from 1906 to 1908. He was appointed to a
				  six year term as a member of the Bellingham Normal School (now Western
				  Washington University) board in 1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaundersS1</container><unittitle>Stephen (Steve) </unittitle><unittitle>Saunders</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John H. Blome, Everett, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Copy. Original in PH Coll 334</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, Annie Frances Sibley (August 23, 1870 - March
				  24, 1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Frances Sibley, the daughter of Seth Wellington Sibley and
				  Mary Simmons Sibley, was born at the home of her uncle, Dr. David Maynard. She
				  married George Milton Savage, Sr. in 1888. She was the president of the Women's
				  Century Club in 1907 and was a life member of the Daughters of the Pioneers of
				  Washington. Her grandfather, Colonel Michael Simmons, let the first group of
				  non-indigenous settlers north of the Columbia River in 1845.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageAFS1</container><unittitle>Annie Frances Sibley Savage and her daughter, Ethel
					 Savage</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><corpname>Sterling Studio</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, Ethel Frances (October 17, 1889 - March 1,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethel Frances Savage, the daughter of George Milton Savage Sr.
				  and Annie Frances Savage, married Arthur L. Clark in 1908.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageAFS1</container><unittitle>Annie Frances Sibley Savage and her daughter, Ethel
					 Savage</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><corpname>Sterling Studio</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Annie Frances Sibley Savage subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, George Milton Jr. (April 25, 1904 - January 24,
				  1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Milton Savage, Jr. was a playwright and teacher of
				  playwriting. He was born in Tacoma, Washington in 1904 and graduated from
				  Phillips Exeter Academy in 1923. He received his bachelor's, master's and
				  doctoral degrees from the University of Washington. A professor of English, he
				  taught composition and literature at the University of Washington from 1930 to
				  1951. Savage provided generous editorial assistance to students and writers,
				  such as Betty MacDonald, who went on to successful careers. In 1943 Savage
				  established the Tryout Theatre in Seattle, which was dedicated to the
				  production of newly written plays, including some of his own. In 1945 he
				  organized a writer's conference in Seattle that was a predecessor to the
				  Pacific Northwest Writers Conference. He was also an editorial adviser to
				  Superior Publishing Company, a publisher of novels and non-fiction. In 1951
				  Savage moved to the University of California, Los Angeles in order to direct
				  graduate work for their theater arts department. He received a Fulbright grant
				  to teach at the University of Bristol, England in 1958 and held visiting
				  professorships at the University of Iowa, the Idyllwild Arts Foundation, and
				  the Dramatische Werkstatt in Salzburg, Austria. In 1962 he was elected to
				  receive the Margo Jones Award, one of the highest honors in American theater,
				  for his support of new play programs. Savage retired from the University of
				  California, Los Angeles in 1971, but continued teaching in the school's
				  extension unit. In 1975 he returned to Seattle, where he died in 1977. Over his
				  lifetime, Savage wrote 72 plays, a number of them in collaboration with his son
				  George Savage. In 1929 Savage married Gladys Ferrier, the daughter of
				  Washington pioneers from Aberdeen.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr2</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr. with Francis Marion
					 Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Francis Marion Simmons was the son of Michael Simmons,
						George Milton Savage Jr.'s great-grandfather.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr3</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr. with Leslie Ford (Zenith
					 Jones Brown) and Allen Benham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930-1939</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Taken before 1950. In the 1930's, I guess.
					 Leslie Ford's real name Zenith Jones Brown, married to Ford Brown.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, George Milton Sr. (May 20, 1865 - November 11,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Milton Savage, Sr. , the son of John Nelson Savage and
				  Anna Kilmer Savage, was a pioneer Northwest contractor who had much to do with
				  the development of Tacoma over 55 years of business. He was instrumental in
				  securing for the city many landmarks including Stadium High School and the
				  Nisqually Power Plant. Savage was born in Minnesota in 1865 and came to Tacoma
				  in 1884. His first work was with the Northern Pacific Railway as a laborer,
				  later going to Gig Harbor as a mill foreman, and then to Olympia where he
				  started in general contracting. In Olympia, he formed a partnership with George
				  Scofield, the Savage Scofield Company, which handled many large contracts
				  throughout the state. At the turn of the century, the company handled contracts
				  for the Northern Pacific Railway, built thirty miles of Tacoma sidewalks and
				  paved many of the streets in Tacoma. The company worked on completing the first
				  municipal power project and had the contract to tear down the old Tourist Hotel
				  for the Northern Pacific Railway which later became the site of Stadium High
				  School. Savage was a director of Pioneer Sand and Gravel and was president of
				  the Tacoma Chamber of Commerce in 1914. He married Annie Frances Sibley in
				  1888. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMSr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Sr., with William Russell
					 Nichols, James R. Stirrat, Herman Goetz and Fred T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Lawton Gowey Street Railroad
						Photograph Collection, PH Coll. 209</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, John Nelson (February 25, 1832-?) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Nelson Savage, the son of Daniel Stevens Savage and Mary
				  Covell Savage, was born in Canada and served during the U.S. Civil War with the
				  Indiana Volunteers. He married Anna Marie Kilmer in 1857; their son was George
				  Milton Savage Sr.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageJN1</container><unittitle>John Nelson Savage, Seth Wellington Sibley and
					 unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original tintype filed in Coll. 1034.</p><p>Written on folder: Lower right is either Mr. Sibley, maternal
					 grandfather of George Milton Savage (1904- 1977) or John Nelson Savage,
					 paternal grandfather to George Milton Savage (1904-1977).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savage, William Eugene (September 26, 1826 - September
				  20, 1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Eugene Savage, the son of Gibson and Esther Savage was
				  born in Mexico, Oswego County, New York in 1826. In 1842, he moved to Hancock
				  County, Ohio and then crossed the plains to Oregon. He drove the third wagon of
				  the first train that crossed the Cascade Range in July, 1846. He settled in
				  Yamhill County, Oregon near Sheridan, where his occupation was farming and
				  stock-raising. He married Sarah Brown in 1854; they had ten children and
				  divorced sometime before 1883. He married Mary Christina Lady in 1883. Savage
				  was a member of the Oregon Legislature from Polk County in 1880.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageWE1</container><unittitle>William Eugene Savage</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s-1880s`</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savelle, Maxwell Hicks (January 8, 1896 - September 12,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maxwell Hicks Savelle was born in Mobile, Alabama in 1896. He
				  received his B.A. from Columbia University in 1925, an M.A. in 1926, and a
				  Ph.D. in 1932. He was an instructor of history at Columbia and then moved to
				  Stanford University in 1932. During his years at Stanford, he became a noted
				  historian in American Colonial history, particularly in the field of diplomatic
				  history of America, and was promoted to professor in 1941. Professor Savelle
				  joined the University of Washington faculty in the autumn of 1947 and taught
				  the beginning graduate writing seminar, which resulted in numerous theses in
				  the field of American Colonial history. An endowment in his name was
				  established for acquisitions to the University Libraries' collections of books,
				  periodicals, sets of collected works, facsimiles of manuscripts, and
				  information formats in American Colonial History of the 17th and 18th centuries
				  relating to the colonies in the Western Hemisphere.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavelleMH1</container><unittitle>Maxwell Hicks Savelle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Savery, William Briggs (September 26, 1876 - December 8,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Briggs Savery received his A.B. from Brown University
				  and his PhD from Harvard University. From 1900 to 1902, he was head of the
				  department of philosophy at Fairmount College in Kansas before accepting the
				  position as head of the department of philosophy at the University of
				  Washington. He taught at the UW from 1902 until his death in 1945. In 1972,
				  Philosophy Hall (completed in 1920) and Commerce Hall (completed in 1917) were
				  renamed Savery Hall in his honor. His first wife, Isabella Barnett Savery, died
				  in 1918. His second wife, Helen Brewster Savery, taught art history at the UW
				  and was the first curator of the Henry Gallery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaveryWB1</container><unittitle>William Briggs Savery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Burdsal, Wichita, Kansas</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaveryWB2</container><unittitle>William Briggs Savery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="Painter">Walter Isaacs, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Photograph of a painting </p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Saxon, Elizabeth Lyle (December 2, 1832 - March 14,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elizabeth Lyle Saxon was a writer and a late 19th and early 20th
				  century advocate of women's rights. She reached national recognition as one of
				  the key pioneer suffragettes of the South, making numerous appeals to the
				  federal government to recognize women's right to vote. Saxon served as state
				  president of the Tennessee Suffrage Association and vice president of the
				  Women's National Suffrage Association. Because she viewed women as an oppressed
				  class, she aligned herself with groups that opposed tyranny in any form. She
				  was an abolitionist, argued for prison and school reform, and emphasized the
				  need to have women on boards of directors. Saxon later traveled west to
				  Washington State, where she founded a settlement and a public library, and was
				  an early member of the Women's Century Club. She eventually returned to
				  Memphis. Saxon died five years before the ratification of the Nineteenth
				  Amendment, which gave American women the right to vote.; however, her work was
				  instrumental to the social changes leading up to the amendment's passing, and
				  she left behind a lasting legacy as an activist, writer, and woman of the
				  South.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaxonEL1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Lyle Saxon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Saylor, Conrad George (October 6, 1818 - September 13,
				  1884)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Conrad George Saylor was born in Martinsville, Indiana. When he
				  was twenty-two years old, he went west to Iowa where he learned brick making
				  and worked as a contractor and builder. He married Mary A. Black at Iowaville
				  on November 3, 1842. In 1852 the family began the journey west over the Oregon
				  Trail. Mary died of cholera during the trip, leaving her husband with four
				  small children, one of whom died shortly after they reached Oregon. The winter
				  of 1852 was spent in Portland; the following spring, he moved to Olympia, where
				  he engaged in brick making until 1854. In May of that year he married Matilda
				  Sargent, the eldest daughter of Asher Sargent a pioneer of 1849. After a brief
				  stay in Olympia, they moved to a farm he had purchased on Rock Prairie, some
				  eight miles away. When the Indian War broke out in the following spring, he
				  served as a volunteer in Company F until the fall of 1856 when he was
				  discharged. The family then moved to McMinnville, Oregon. Soon after his
				  arrival, he opened a general merchandise store and continued with brick making.
				  In 1861, he sold his mercantile business and left for Oro Fino mines in Walla
				  Walla before returning to Oregon. With Asher Sargent as partner, he again
				  engaged in merchandising until 1864 when he retired.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SaylorCG1</container><unittitle>Conrad George Saylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870-1880</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sayre, James Willis (December 31, 1877 - January 11,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Willis Sayre was one of the most influential figures in
				  conserving and writing about theater and dance in Seattle. His connection with
				  Seattle theatrical enterprises started during high school around 1891 when he
				  found a job folding programs at the Seattle Opera House. In 1898, Sayre joined
				  the First Washington Volunteers and fought in the Philippines during the
				  Spanish American War. After the war, Sayre did publicity work for many Seattle
				  area theaters, including the Grand Opera House, the Seattle Theatre, the
				  Lyceum, the Palm Garden, the Second Avenue Orpheum, the Star, the Alhambra, the
				  Majestic, the Mission, Liberty, the Fifth Avenue, the Coliseum, the Rex, the
				  Strand, the Pantages and the Blue Mouse. Sayre worked as a theatre critic for 
				  <emph>The Argu</emph>s beginning in 1907, then the <emph>Seattle Star</emph>
				  from 1909, and the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> (currently the 
				  <emph>Seattle Times</emph>). He was also manager of the Seattle Symphony for a
				  time, beginning in 1908. Around 1919, Sayre gave up his journalism career to
				  work in publicity and to write books, screenplays and stage plays. In 1936,
				  Sayre began theatre criticism again at the<emph> Seattle
				  Post-Intelligencer</emph>, where he stayed until his retirement in 1954. In
				  1959, Sayre and his wife, Pearl Shackelford Sayre moved to Santa Cruz,
				  California where he died in 1963. Sayre collected theatre programs and
				  publicity stills of performers throughout his long career. <emph>The Town
				  Crier</emph> estimated that Sayre owned more autographed portraits of actors,
				  actresses, child performers, singers, dancers, musicians, comedians and
				  acrobats than any other man in the United States. Using this collection, he
				  compiled indices and other works that serve as notable resources for Seattle
				  theatrical history research. This collection is housed at the University of
				  Washington Libraries Special Collection Division.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SayreJW1</container><unittitle>James Willis Sayre</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: J. W. Sayre, Seattle, July 20, 1904.
					 Photograph is a copy of the original missing from the Sayre Collection
					 PH0200</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Scaylea, Josef (January 28, 1913 - July 19,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josef Scaylea was an award-winning photographer best known for
				  his photographs of Mount Rainier and other Pacific Northwest scenes. Born in
				  South Glastonbury, Connecticut as Joseph Louis Scaglia, he changed the spelling
				  later in life so it would be easier to pronounce. Scalyea left New England in
				  the mid-1930s to attend photography school in New York. He soon started
				  receiving assignments and selling his work to corporate and trade publications,
				  including Ford Motor Company. Serving in the Army Air Corps in World War II, he
				  photographed missions over Japan, Okinawa and the Philippines. Stationed at
				  Paine Field and Moses Lake, Washington, he discovered the Pacific Northwest and
				  vowed to make it his home. He was chief photographer of <emph>The Seattle
				  Times</emph> for 35 years and published seven books on photographic themes,
				  including the 1967 publication, <emph>Moods of the Mountain,</emph> which
				  showcased 20 years of his photos of Mount Rainier. His photographs were also
				  featured in <emph>Look</emph> and <emph>Life</emph> magazines as well as 
				  <emph>Sports Illustrated</emph>, <emph>Newsweek</emph>, and <emph>the Saturday
				  Evening Post</emph>, among others. He won more than 1,000 photography awards in
				  his lifetime, including being named West Coast Photographer of the Year 10
				  times and one of the top 10 Press Photographers of the Nation, an honor he also
				  received 10 times.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">ScayleaJ1</container><unittitle>Josef Scaylea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1971</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination><note><p>Do not reproduce without permission</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sceva, Paul Horace (September 23, 1890 - December 21,
				  1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Horace Sceva was born in Mechanicsburg, Ohio and moved to
				  Tacoma in 1906. After graduating from Stadium High School in Tacoma, he went on
				  to earn an engineering degree from the University of Washington. From 1917 to
				  1923, he worked for the Rhodes Department Store as assistant merchandising
				  manager. In 1923, he became the president and general manager of the Rainier
				  National Park Company, which ran the tourist facilities at the park, working
				  there until the company closed in 1969. During his career, he was an
				  enthusiastic promoter of the park. He was active in the Tacoma Chamber of
				  Commerce, the Washington State Good Roads Association, the Washington State
				  Hotel Association and the Pacific Northwest Tourist Association. He was
				  appointed to the planning commission for the Century 21 World’s Fair in Seattle
				  by Governor Arthur Langlie. Sceva wrote <emph render="italic">The Old Man of
				  the Mountains</emph>, a collection of his experiences as a woodsman and
				  longshoreman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">ScevaPH1</container><unittitle>Paul Horace Sceva</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.ScevaPH1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scheffer, Victor Blanchard (November 27, 1906 -
				  September 20, 2011)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Blanchard Scheffer was an American biologist and the
				  author of eleven books relating to natural history. He was born in Kansas and
				  moved to Washington state at a young age. His father, Theophilus H. Scheffer,
				  an associate biologist for the United States Bureau of Biological Survey for 27
				  years, focused on wildlife management in the Pacific Northwest. Scheffer
				  received his bachelor of science in 1930, his master of science in 1932, and
				  his doctorate in zoology in 1936, all at the University of Washington. In 1937,
				  he began his scientific career as a biologist for the U. S. Bureau of
				  Biological Survey, where he remained for three years. Scheffer investigated
				  fishes and invertebrates in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska from 1936-1938, a
				  survey overseen by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. From 1940 to
				  1969, Scheffer was an employee in various sections of the U. S. Fish and
				  Wildlife Service. His work included a study of the food of the Alaska fur seal
				  and the anatomy and pelage of the northern fur seal. His first book, 
				  <emph render="italic">Seals, Sea Lions, and Walruses: A Review of the
				  Pinnepedia</emph>, was published in 1958. Scheffer also was a lecturer for the
				  Ecology Department at the University of Washington between 1966 and 1972. He
				  served as chairman of the initial United States Marine Mammal Commission from
				  1973 to 1976 and was a founding member of the advisory board of 
				  <emph render="italic">BirdNote</emph>, a radio show about birds dedicated to
				  education and conservation. His 1969 book, <emph>The Year of the Whale,</emph>
				  became a popular classic of marine biology and won the 1970 John Burroughs
				  Medal as the best natural history book. He went on to write a total of eleven
				  books on topics in the fields of natural history, environmentalism, and
				  zoology. These books included a memoir of his career, an analysis of modern
				  environmentalism, and books for children, along with several additional popular
				  works on the natural history of marine mammals.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchefferVB1</container><unittitle>Victor Blanchard Scheffer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schillestad, Alfred Melvin (February 17, 1869 - March
				  17, 1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Schillestad, son of pioneers Ole and Regina Schillestad,
				  first went to work as a bookkeeper at Nordhoff’s in 1896 and then as head
				  cashier at the Bon Marche for 10 years, later making his career in the
				  real-estate and insurance businesses. He married Lucy May Brown in 1903.
				  Schillestad was also an artist, drawing landscapes and scenes from his everyday
				  life in small sketchbooks that left a unique visual record of early life along
				  the shores of Salmon Bay. Two of Alfred Schillestad's sketchbooks form part of
				  the Michael Cirelli Collection on Northwest Photography at the Museum of
				  History &amp; Industry (MOHAI).</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadAM1</container><unittitle>Alfred Melvin Schillestad</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890-1899?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadAM2</container><unittitle>Alfred Melvin Schillestad's house in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1908?</unitdate></did><note><p>The house was located at 532 Malden, possibly built by Ole
					 Schillestad.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadAM3</container><unittitle>Alfred Melvin Schillestad's house in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1908?</unitdate></did><note><p>The house was located at 532 Malden, possibly built by Ole
					 Schillestad.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schillestad, Lucy May Brown (June 10, 1876 - August 20,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lucy May Brown and her younger brother, George, came to Seattle
				  from Chicago in 1885 as orphans. Lucy's aunt, Mary Peterson, wife of pioneer
				  photographer Henry Peterson, was appointed guardian. Lucy studied music at the
				  University of Washington and afterwards taught music for many years. In 1903,
				  she married Alfred Schillestad, the son of one of the earliest Norwegian
				  settlers in Seattle, whose uncle was Henry Peterson. The couple moved to a home
				  on Maldren Avenue and stayed there until Alfred's death in 1942 when Lucy moved
				  to Bothell. Alfred and Lucy had one daughter, Gladys, who married Charles
				  Kaysner, a mayor of Bothell.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadLMB1</container><unittitle>Lucy May Brown Schillestad as a child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1877</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hough, Chicago</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadLMB2</container><unittitle>Lucy May Brown Schillestad as a young girl</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Elite, Victoria, BC, Canada</corpname></origination><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadLMB3</container><unittitle>Lucy May Brown Schillestad as a young girl</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885-1890?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadLMB4</container><unittitle>Lucy May Brown Schillestad, holding
					 diploma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1896?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadLMB5</container><unittitle>Lucy May Brown Schillestad standing in a
					 parlor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of original</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schillestad, Ole (December 24, 1833 - May 24,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ole Schillestad was born in Bergen, Norway and immigrated to the
				  United States in 1862, settling first in Chicago. In 1863, he married Regina
				  Peterson, another Norwegian immigrant. They lived in Chicago for thirteen years
				  before moving to Seattle in 1875 with their three children, Frank, Alfred and
				  Sophie; a fourth child, William, died in Illinois. Schillestad constructed a
				  building on Front Street in Belltown where the family lived. Trained in Norway
				  as a cabinetmaker, he opened an undertaking business with a partner, Theodore
				  Coulter, opposite Henry Yesler's sawmill, advertising as "Coulter &amp;
				  Shillistad [sic], Undertakers, Upholsterers and Furniture Manufactures."
				  Schillestad kept the business going after Coulter's death in 1880, retiring in
				  1888. He was active in the Methodist Church and was a member of the Ancient
				  Order of United Workmen, Columbia Lodge.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO1</container><unittitle>Ole and Regina Schillestad</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1865-1875?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">L. W. Felt, Chicago</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO2</container><unittitle>Ole Schillestad residence on Salmon Bay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO3</container><unittitle>Ole Schillestad as a young man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1863-1865?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Handsome, Chicago</persname></origination></did><note><p>copy of original</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO4</container><unittitle>Ole Schillestad residence at First &amp; Bell in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880?</unitdate></did><note><p>copy of original</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO5</container><unittitle>Ole Schillestad residence at First &amp; Bell in
					 Seattle including adjoining buildings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1876-1880?</unitdate></did><note><p>copy of original</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schillestad, Regina Peterson (November 22, 1835 - March
				  30, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Regina Peterson was born in Norway and immigrated to the United
				  States in 1858. She first lived in Evanston, Illinois before moving to Chicago.
				  She married Ole Schillestad in 1863. In 1875, they moved to Seattle with their
				  three children, Frank, Alfred and Sophie; a fourth child, William, died in
				  Illinois. Her brothers, Henry and Lewis Peterson, were pioneer photographers,
				  offering photographs of the Puget Sound and Alaska, as well as having an
				  established portrait business, operating as Peterson &amp; Bro.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchillestadO1</container><unittitle>Ole and Regina Schillestad</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1865-1875?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">L. W. Felt, Chicago</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Ole Schillestad subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schlesinger, Arthur Meier (February 27, 1888 – October
				  30, 1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Meier Schlesinger was an American historian who taught at
				  Harvard University, pioneering social history and urban history. He was a
				  Progressive Era intellectual who stressed material causes, such as economic
				  profit and conflict between businessmen and farmers, and downplayed ideology
				  and values as motivations for historical actors. He was highly influential as a
				  director of PhD dissertations at Harvard for three decades, especially in the
				  fields of social, women's, and immigration history. His son, Arthur M.
				  Schlesinger Jr., also taught at Harvard and was a noted historian. Harvard's
				  Schlesinger Library in women's history is named after him and his wife,
				  Elizabeth, a noted feminist. He became an editor of the <emph>New England
				  Quarterly</emph>in 1928. That same year, he was elected to the American Academy
				  of Arts and Sciences, and was elected to the American Philosophical Society in
				  1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchlesingerAM1</container><unittitle>Arthur M. Schlesinger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George H. Davis Studio, Boston, Massachusetts</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph of original painting. Signed on front: With Cordial
					 regards, Arthur M. Schlesinger.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schluger, Saul Seymour (January 9, 1908 - June 29,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Saul Seymour Schluger was a pioneer in the field of periodontics
				  and a professor emeritus at the University of Washington. His achievements in
				  his field and at the University were so renowned that an endowed chair in
				  clinical research was set up in his name. He was born in Jersey City, New
				  Jersey, attended New York University and in 1929 entered the University of
				  Louisville School of Dentistry. After receiving his dental degree in 1931, he
				  returned to Jersey City to enter private practice. Six years later, he became a
				  specialist in periodontics. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II as
				  an instructor in mines and demolition, aerial photography, and map reading. In
				  1946 he accepted an invitation from Columbia University to administer the first
				  specialty program in periodontics. Dr. Schluger joined the UW School of
				  Dentistry in 1958 and established the first periodontics program west of the
				  Mississippi. As associate dean of graduate dental education and director of
				  admissions in 1974, he was an outspoken critic of the failures to recruit women
				  to the field. He lectured throughout Europe and Asia, was the primary author of
				  several textbooks, and designed dental procedures and instruments, including
				  the Schluger file. He was the former director of the American Board of
				  Periodontology and the president of the American Academy of Periodontology. He
				  received numerous awards for his contributions to the field, including the 1975
				  Gold Medal Award from the NIH, and was named a distinguished alumnus of the
				  University of Louisville School of Dentistry and an honorary distinguished
				  alumnus of Columbia University School of Dental and Oral Surgery. Dr. Schluger
				  was a supporter of the arts, serving as the first president of the Henry Art
				  Gallery Association in 1968 and played a role in bringing Barnett Newman’s
				  Broken Obelisk sculpture to the UW.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchlugerSS1</container><unittitle>Saul Seymour Schluger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970-1979?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schmidt, Mr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">Schmidt1</container><unittitle>Mr. Schmidt receiving a floral lei from unidentified
					 woman; two other unidentified women standing behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schmidt, Emanuel (April 28, 1868 - March 18,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emanuel Schmidt was the president of Adelphia College, a
				  Swedish-American college in Seattle, established by the Swedish community and
				  run by the Swedish Baptist Church. The college opened in 1905 with academic and
				  commercial departments and continued until finances forced the college to close
				  in 1918. Schmidt left Seattle and joined Bethel Academy in St. Paul, Minnesota.
				  In 1919, the main building and campus of Adelphia College were sold to the
				  Jesuit Seattle College (later known as Seattle University) and has since been
				  used by a related Jesuit institution, the Seattle Preparatory School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchmidtE1</container><unittitle>Emanuel Schmidt in academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schmidt, Leopold Frederick Ludwig (January 23, 1846
				  -September 25, 1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leopold Frederick Ludwig Schmidt owned the Centennial Brewery in
				  Butte, Montana. After moving to Tumwater, he started the Capital Brewing
				  Company, which later became the Olympia Brewing Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">SchmidtLFL1</container><unittitle>Photograph of Leopold Schmidt's monument</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Carved on the monument: This stone erected by the children of
					 Leopold Schmidt in accordance with his wishes.</p><p>The granite monument, commemorating the arrival of the first
					 settlers to Tumwater, is located between the upper and middle falls of the
					 Deschutes River in Olympia,on the west bank.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schmitz, Ferdinand (December 4, 1860 - August 21,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ferdinand Schmitz was born in Germany and came to the United
				  States in 1876 when he was sixteen. He lived in Baltimore, St. Louis, and
				  Pomona before coming to Seattle in 1886. He prospered as a real estate
				  entrepreneur, building two hotels in downtown Seattle, the Butler and the
				  Snoqualmie. He served on the Park Board and was a member of the Seattle City
				  Council when the city annexed West Seattle in 1902. He moved to West Seattle
				  and was responsible for municipal lighting being installed in the newly annexed
				  area. In 1908, he donated the land for Schmitz Preserve Park in West Seattle
				  because he wanted future generations to be able to walk in and see what Seattle
				  had once been. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schmitz, Henry (March 25, 1892-January 30,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Schmitz attended the University of Washington and
				  graduated with a bachelor's degree in forestry in 1915 and a master's degree in
				  botany in 1916. After serving in WW I, he received a doctorate in botany from
				  Washington University in St. Louis. From 1919 to 1925 he taught forestry at the
				  University of Idaho, then became chief of the Division of Forestry at the
				  University of Minnesota. He won national recognition for his efforts in raising
				  the standards of forestry education. He authored more than 50 research papers
				  on forestry, and from 1937 to 1942 was editor of the <emph render="italic">Journal of Forestry</emph>. In 1944 he was named dean of
				  Minnesota's School of Agriculture, Forestry, Home Economics, and Veterinary
				  Medicine. He became president of the UW in 1952, serving until 1958. He
				  continued his work with the university after retiring as its president,
				  becoming the director of the UW's Council of Gifts, Trusts and Bequests, and
				  serving in this position until 1962. The UW's administration building,
				  completed in 1970, is named Schmitz Hall in his honor. The Schmitz name also
				  lives on in other parts of Seattle: Schmitz Park, named after Schmitz's
				  parents, is near Alki Point in West Seattle, and nearby Schmitz Park Elementary
				  School also carries the family name.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BabbAL1</container><unittitle>Albert Babb with Dean Harold E. Wessman, Henry M.
					 Jackson and UW President Henry Schmitz at the nuclear pile located in Bagley
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1957</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Robert I. Peterson, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The wall behind Babb is a precursor type of reactor known as a
					 graphite pile, which was not a net producer of energy, located in Bagley Hall,
					 the chemistry building. The cylinders sticking out of the graphite pile are
					 fuel rods containing natural uranium. The people in the picture are wearing
					 radiation dose badges, commonly known as dosimeters. The picture was probably
					 taken in 1956 or 1957, shortly after the U.S. Government's announcement of the
					 Atoms for Peace Program. This time frame would be consistent with Henry Schmitz
					 still being UW president; he stepped down in 1958.</p><p>Filed under Albert Babb subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schmoe, Floyd Wilfred (September 21, 1895 – April 20,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Floyd Wilfred Schmoe was a pacifist, author, college professor,
				  marine biologist, and park ranger who earned Japan's highest civilian honor for
				  his peace activism and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize three times.
				  Born in Kansas, he moved to Seattle in 1917 to pursue a degree in forestry from
				  the University of Washington. During World War I, Schmoe joined the American
				  Friends Service Committee and spent his 14 months in Europe taking care of
				  refugees. After the war, he returned to his forestry studies at the University
				  of Washington. In 1920, because of financial difficulties, he left school to
				  begin a seven-year career with the National Park Service. He took a position
				  with the University of Washington as the Director of the Puget Sound Academy of
				  Science in 1928 and was an instructor in forestry from 1935 to 1942. While at
				  the University he earned a master's degree in marine biology. During World War
				  II, he began a career of public peace activism; working with the American
				  Friends Service Committee, he assisted refugees fleeing the war in Europe. He
				  left the University of Washington in 1942 to head a regional office of the
				  American Friends Service Committee in Seattle where much of his work was
				  devoted to helping Japanese-Americans who faced removal under Executive Order
				  9066. After World War II he went to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, where he built
				  houses to replace those destroyed by the atomic bombs. In 1953, after the
				  Korean War, Schmoe was sent to South Korea under the auspices of the United
				  Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency to examine humanitarian needs in the
				  war-torn country. He also worked on helping refugees from the 1956 Sinai War.
				  He continued to work for peace in his later life, speaking out against the war
				  in Viet Nam and for nuclear disarmament. He assisted in the establishment of
				  the Seattle-Tashkent Peace Park in 1988 and was the prime mover behind the
				  Seattle Peace Park. His papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchmoeFW1</container><unittitle>Floyd Wilfred Schmoe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schnebly, David Jacob (February 6, 1818- January 5,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Jacob Schnebly was born near Hagerstown, Maryland, in
				  1818. He arrived in Oregon in 1850 where he became the editor of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Oregon Spectator</emph> , the first paper established on
				  the Pacific Coast (1846) and the only one published in Oregon. In the following
				  year, Schnebly purchased the newspaper and was editor and proprietor until 1854
				  when he sold it. He became a rancher in Oregon until 1860 when he moved to
				  Walla Walla to begin a stock business. After a severe winter, he bought a team
				  of oxen and began freighting. In 1865 Schnebly went north to the Spokane River
				  and built a toll bridge above Spokane Falls. Returning to Walla Walla, in 1870,
				  he erected a flour mill; however, the mill was a failure, and he was forced to
				  begin again. He farmed in the Kittitass Valley in1872 for several years before
				  starting the<emph render="italic">Kittitass Localizer </emph> in Ellensburgh,
				  Washington Territory in 1883. Initially he was the editor, but soon became sole
				  proprietor and publisher. He married Margaret Ann Painter in 1851.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchneblyDJ1</container><unittitle>David Jacob Schnebly</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schneider, Herbert Wallace (March 16, 1892 – October 15,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Wallace Schneider was a German American professor of
				  philosophy and a religious studies scholar long associated with Columbia
				  University. Born in Berea, Ohio, Schneider completed his undergraduate and
				  graduate education at Columbia, going on to teach at that school for many
				  years. He also held visiting professorships at University of Illinois,
				  University of Washington, University of Georgia, University of Hawaii, Oregon
				  State University and Western Washington State College. An early student of John
				  Dewey, he studied pragmatism, ontology, social philosophy, and fascism, and is
				  best remembered for his works <emph>The Puritan Mind</emph> (1930) and <emph>A
				  History of American Philosophy </emph>(1946). The Herbert Schneider Award, an
				  annual presentation of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy,
				  is named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PhillipsHJ3</container><unittitle>Photograph of the University of Washington Philosophy
					 Department faculty</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (L-R): Melvin Rader, Everett J. Nelson, Herbert
					 Phillips; back row (L-R): Herbert Wallace Schneider, others unidentified</p><p>The two unidentified men in the back row may be Abraham Irving
					 Melden (1910-1991) and John Herman Randall Jr. (1899-1880)</p></note><note><p>Filed under Herbert J. Phillips subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schoenberg, Wilford Paul (January 5, 1915 - August 4,
				  2003)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilfred Paul Schoenberg was born in Uniontown, Washington. He
				  attended St. Aloysius Grade School and in 1933 graduated from Gonzaga
				  Preparatory. After entering the Jesuit Society, he took his first studies at
				  the Jesuit Novitiate in Sheridan, Oregon. He received a bachelor's degree in
				  1945 and a master's degree in 1946 from Gonzaga University, a certificate as an
				  accredited archivist in 1946 from Archive Administration in Washington, D.C.,
				  and a bachelor of sacred theology degree in 1952 from Alma College. He taught
				  at Seattle Preparatory from 1952 to 1953, served at Manresa Hall in Port
				  Townsend, Washington, and was assistant dean of students, teacher, and
				  provincial archivist at Gonzaga Preparatory from 1957 to 1966. Schoenberg was
				  the founder, archivist and director of the Museum of Native American Cultures
				  at Gonzaga University. After a sabbatical at Gonzaga University, he served as
				  writer there from 1981 to 1988, at the provincial office and residence in
				  Portland from 1988 to 2002 and at Regis Community in Spokane from 2002 to 2003.
				  Throughout his teaching years, he wrote many pamphlets, publications, lectures,
				  articles and reviews. In the early 1990s, the artifacts of the Museum of Native
				  American Culture were turned over to Spokane's Northwest Museum of Arts and
				  Culture, and the Schoenberg building now houses Gonzaga's Student Program
				  Offices. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchoenbergWP1</container><unittitle>Reverend Wilford Paul Schoenberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1964</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schoenlein, August John (December 25, 1883 - July 17,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>August John “Americus” Schoenlein was born in Baltimore and made
				  his professional debut in 1901, after studying architectural drawing at the
				  Maryland Institute. Schoenlein won the World Light Heavyweight Title from Fred
				  Beell in April 1908 and the World Heavyweight Champion in 1914, losing the belt
				  two months later to Stanislaus Zybysko. After his retirement from professional
				  wrestling, he coached Princeton’s wrestling team in the 1920s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RollerBF3</container><unittitle>Dr. B. F. Roller with Jakob Koch, Georg Hackenschmidt
					 and Americus (Gus Schoenlein)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1911?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph from the collection of David Chapman.</p><p>Filed under Benjamin Franklin Roller subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schorr, George Frederick (October 27, 1856 - September
				  14, 1912)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Frederick Schorr was born on the family farm near
				  Sacramento, California. He graduated from the State University in Berkeley,
				  where he was the editor of the college newspaper. After graduation, he taught
				  school in Butte and Kern Counties. In 1884, he moved to Cheney, Washington
				  Territory to work at<emph render="italic">The North-West Tribune</emph> , a
				  newspaper started in 1880 by Lucien E. Kellogg. Kellogg sold the paper to
				  Schorr, who continued to publish it in Cheney until 1886 when he moved it to
				  Spokane Falls. He and his brother Jacob published the paper until 1895. In
				  1896, he was the president and manager of NW Granilite in Spokane. He later
				  moved to California where he worked in chemical manufacturing. He married
				  Caroline Bried in 1890.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchorrGF1</container><unittitle>George Frederick Schorr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schram, Lloyd W. (March 27, 1912 - February 12,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lloyd W. Schram was the University of Washington's first dean of
				  continuing education. Born in North Dakota, he grew up in Seattle and earned
				  four academic degrees from the UW and a degree from Harvard Law School. He was
				  admitted to the Washington Bar in 1939, the same year he was appointed
				  assistant council of the Washington Tax Commission. He began his academic
				  career at the UW in 1940 when he joined the political science faculty as a
				  research associate in the Bureau of Government Research. In 1944 he was
				  appointed the University's director of adult education, and a year later,
				  became the head of extension services as well. He was Director of Public
				  Services and University Relations from 1960-1964, Dean of Continuing Education
				  from 1964-1977, and Emeritus in 1977. He served as Vice Chairman and Chairman
				  of the Center for the Study of Liberal Education for Adults, Chairman of the
				  Washington Commission for the Humanities, member of the Washington State Select
				  Committee for Non Traditional Study, on the Executive Board of the Seattle 2000
				  Commission, member of the Executive Committee and President of the National
				  University Extension Association, member of the Seattle Bar Association, the
				  American Society for Public Administration, and the American Academy of
				  Political and Social Science. He received the Julius Nolte Award in 1973, the
				  most prestigious award given by the National University Continuing Education
				  Association for outstanding leadership. He served as that organization's
				  president in 1955 as well as serving on the World Affairs Council, the
				  Washington Commission for the Humanities, and the Board of Directors of the
				  Seattle-King County Chapter of the American Red Cross. Dr. Schram was selected
				  to be a member of the International Adult and Continuing Education's Hall of
				  Fame.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchramL1</container><unittitle>Lloyd Schram</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schroeder, George Harwood (January 13, 1909 - March 31,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Harwood Schroeder retired from Crown Zellerbach as Chief
				  Forester in 1975. He had worked in the woods from the time he was 14, doing
				  just about every task and job required to move trees from the stump to the
				  mill. He greased skids for oxen teams, climbed spar poles to set the heavy
				  cables, and felled huge trees. With his wife, Clara E. O'Neil, he began to
				  accumulate timber land starting in 1949. They founded Schroeder and O’Neil,
				  which now manages over 300 acres of forest land in Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GrondalBL1</container><unittitle>Bror Leonard Grondal in testing lab with George H.
					 Schroeder, chief of forestry for Crown Zellerbach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, UW, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Bror Leonard Grondal subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schultz, Cecilia Augspurger (August, 1878 - March 4,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Cecilia Augspurger graduated from Wesleyan College of Music at
				  the age of 17 and by age 21 was teaching music at Kansas State College. She
				  moved to Seattle circa 1908 and quickly established herself as both a piano
				  instructor and a performing pianist. By 1919 Augspurger had a piano studio
				  where she both taught and presented musical performances by her students,
				  herself, and other musicians. In 1920 she was appointed manager of the Seattle
				  Symphony Orchestra, a post she held for two years. In 1921 she was elected
				  president of the Seattle Musical Art Society and under her leadership the
				  organization began presenting concerts featuring a variety of both local and
				  touring musicians. She took over the Moore Theater in 1935 and began booking
				  local, national and international performers. She is largely responsible for
				  the survival of classical music during challenging times, and by the 1940s, she
				  was acclaimed as the greatest woman impresario in the country. In 1948, Schultz
				  was instrumental in creating the Seattle Orchestra after the Seattle Symphony
				  Orchestra cancelled its season. The following year, a new Seattle Symphony
				  Orchestra was started under her management. She also organized the Northwest
				  Opera in 1950 and served on the board of Allied Arts, founded in 1954 to
				  advocate for public funding of the arts, She retired in 1959 but stayed active
				  in Seattle's performing-arts scene. She married Gustav Shultz, a businessman,
				  in 1924. She donated funds for a music room at the Seattle Opera House and in
				  her will left money to establish an opera scholarship.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchultzC1</container><unittitle>Cecilia Schultz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schwartz, Frederick Charles (January 15, 1913 – January
				  24, 2009)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Charles Schwarz was born in Brisbane, Australia, the
				  fourth of twelve children. Schwarz obtained dual degrees in Arts and Science at
				  the University of Queensland, Brisbane, and later completed a degree in
				  medicine. He founded and was chairman of the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade
				  (CACC), based originally in Sydney and later in Long Beach, California. During
				  his time with the CACC, Schwarz gave lectures and seminars across the United
				  States on the subject of communism, and in the early 1960s, he gained a
				  national following through his television network and powerful allies among
				  southern California anticommunists. Schwarz wrote four books and a fortnightly
				  newsletter for nearly 40 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchwartzF1</container><unittitle>Dr. Fred Schwartz speaking at a lectern</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s-1960s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchwartzF2</container><unittitle>Dr. Fred Schwartz speaking at a lectern, arm
					 raised</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s-1960s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schweitzer, Albert (January 14, 1875 – September 4,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Schweitzer was an Alsatian theologian, organist, writer,
				  humanitarian, philosopher, and physician. A Lutheran, Schweitzer challenged
				  both the secular view of Jesus as depicted by the historical-critical method
				  current at this time, as well as the traditional Christian view. He received
				  the 1952 Nobel Peace Prize for his philosophy of "Reverence for Life", becoming
				  the eighth Frenchman to be awarded that prize. His philosophy was expressed in
				  many ways, but most famously in founding and sustaining the Albert Schweitzer
				  Hospital in Lambaréné, in the part of French Equatorial Africa which is now
				  Gabon. As a music scholar and organist, he studied the music of German composer
				  Johann Sebastian Bach and influenced the Organ Reform Movement
				  (Orgelbewegung).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SchweitzerA1</container><unittitle>Albert Schweitzer playing the organ</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: à l’organe de Gunsbach, à Monsieur George A.
					 Kellogg, un souvenir du dimanche le matin en août (?) que nous avons passé
					 ensemble à New York. Albert Schweitzer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Schwellenbach, Lewis Baxter (September 20, 1894 – June
				  10, 1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Baxter Schwellenbach was a United States senator from
				  Washington, a United States district judge of the United States District Court
				  for the Eastern District of Washington and the 5th United States Secretary of
				  Labor. He received a Bachelor of Laws in 1917 from the University of Washington
				  School of Law and was an assistant instructor at the University of Washington
				  from 1916 to 1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="series"><did><unittitle>Scott, Charles Heber (January 28, 1854 - August 5,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Heber Scott, the son of Asahel Adams Scott and Mary
				  Baldwin Scott, was born in New Haven, Connecticut He married Frances Adalade
				  Phelps in 1876, in Belmont, Portage, Wisconsin. He had a farm in Wisconsin and
				  worked as a contractor in Hoquiam, Washington. After Frances’ death in 1898, he
				  married Sarah Sanderson in 1901.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">32</container><container type="item">ScottCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Heber Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Merrihew Studio, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front: Sincerely Yours, C. H. Scott, 3/4/16</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, George Campbell (October 18, 1927 – September 22,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Campbell Scott was an American actor, director, and
				  producer. He was known for his stage and film work. He was the first actor to
				  refuse the Academy Award for Best Actor (for <emph render="italic">Patton</emph> in 1970), having warned the Academy of Motion
				  Picture Arts and Sciences in advance that he would do so on philosophical
				  grounds if he won. He was in Seattle for the filming of <emph render="italic">The Changeling</emph> (1980), a movie set in Seattle, although
				  most of its scenes were filmed in the Canadian cities of Vancouver and
				  Victoria. Exceptions include scenes shot at University of Washington's Red
				  Square and interior college scenes at the University of Washington. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottGC1</container><unittitle>George C. Scott and Trish Van Devere with unidentified
					 man, possibly Peter Medek, the director of <emph>The
					 Changeling.</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1980</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Henry Winfield (March 3, 1861 - November 1,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry W. Scott, the principal assistant engineer for Seattle,
				  was born on Whidbey Island in 1860. He was educated in public schools and
				  attended the University of Washington. Prior to his work for the city of
				  Seattle in 1888, he was employed as a surveyor in locating the right of way of
				  the Seattle, Lakeshore and Eastern Railroad Company, later the Seattle and
				  International Railroad. His first important work with the city was his
				  direction of the Cedar River water system where he was in charge of the field
				  work. After the completion of the project, Scott was made principal assistant
				  engineer responsible for general supervision of all city work. In 1904, he was
				  in charge of all water system extensions and drafted the plans for Cedar River
				  pipeline. Scott was the treasurer of the Pacific Northwest Civil Engineers
				  Society. He married Lydia Jennie Loveland in 1886.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">33</container><container type="item">ScottHW1</container><unittitle>Henry Winfield Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Mary Isabell (May 13, 1839 - June 3,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Isabell Marlin, the daughter of Luke and Mary Marlin, was
				  born in Detroit, Michigan; she was orphaned an an early age. She was educated
				  in New York public schools and married Roswell Scott in 1855. In July 1867, she
				  and her husband started for the San Francisco by way of Nicaragua. In 1871,
				  they arrived in Seattle where they built a home on Fourth and Pine in the
				  downtown area. The couple later moved to Startup, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottMI1</container><unittitle>Mary Isabell Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, John Tucker (February 18, 1809 - September 1,
				  1880)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Tucker Scott was born in Washington County, Kentucky. His
				  parents, James and Frances (Tucker) Scott, were Kentucky pioneers, having moved
				  there from North Carolina in the early years of the nineteenth century. Scott
				  left Kentucky for Illinois where he farmed and operated a sawmill. In 1830, he
				  married Anna Raelafson (1811-1852), whose parents were also Kentucky pioneers.
				  In 1852, they decided to cross the plains to Oregon; Anna died of cholera when
				  they were 30 miles west of Fort Laramie, Wyoming. Nine children started the
				  journey to Oregon, three having previously died in infancy. The youngest child,
				  William Neill, died and was buried along the Oregon Trail near what later
				  became the town of Durkee, Baker County, Oregon. The remaining children and
				  their father reached Oregon City late in October 1852, eventually settling in
				  LaFayette, Yamhill County. Scott married Ruth Eckler Stevenson (1828 – 1906) in
				  1853. The family went north to the Puget Sound area near Olympia. Scott spent a
				  few years there before returning to Oregon in 1859 near Pacific University in
				  order to provide educational opportunities for his children. He secured town
				  property near Forest Grove. Harvey W. Scott, his oldest son, was a leading
				  journalist, the first graduate of Pacific University (1861) and the editor of 
				  <emph>The Oregonian.</emph> His daughter, Abigail Scott Duniway, was the first
				  editor of the <emph>New Northwest,</emph> a paper which she established for the
				  purpose of carrying on the contest for woman’s suffrage in the Northwest.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottJT1</container><unittitle>John Tucker Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Levi (February 8, 1797 - April 21,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Levi Scott was a politician in the Oregon Territory, arriving in
				  1844. A native of Illinois, he was a captain during the Cayuse War, helped lay
				  the Applegate Trail, served in the Oregon Territorial Legislature, and in 1857
				  was a member of the Oregon Constitutional Convention. Scott also founded
				  Scottsburg, Oregon and is the namesake for several natural features in Southern
				  Oregon, including Scott Mountain in Douglas County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottL1</container><unittitle>Captain Levi Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Patricia "Pat" (July 5, 1938 - January 7,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Patricia “Pat” Scott was a nine-term Democratic state
				  representative from Everett. A former dispatcher for the Everett Police
				  Department, she also worked as the community-relations officer for Everett
				  Transit. Scott was raised in Montana and moved to Everett in 1969. She was
				  appointed to her House seat in 1984 and won election two years later, one of a
				  few women elected to the House in the mid-1980s. She had previously worked for
				  10 years as an aide to former U.S. Representatives Al Swift and Lloyd Meeds.
				  Early in her career, she sponsored major child-abuse legislation and shortly
				  before her death, sponsored a bill making it a crime to harass or stalk people
				  via e-mail or the Internet.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottP1</container><unittitle>Pat Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1986</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Roswell Cheney (October 6, 1831 -December 19,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roswell Cheney Scott was born in Batvia, New York. When he was
				  five years old, his parents moved to Chicago. His mother died in 1840, and his
				  father lost the family home. Scott applied himself to his studies and was able
				  to pass an examination and receive a teacher’s certificate when he was
				  eighteen. He taught school for three years before turning to bookkeeping. The
				  loss of his home prompted him to study law, and he began reading law books at
				  night while working as assessor of West Chicago and as a bookkeeper. In 1859,
				  he was elected vice president of the Cameron and Lincoln Club, and was at the
				  Republican convention in Chicago where Lincoln was nominated for the
				  presidency. He then toured Illinois in support of Lincoln’s candidacy. When the
				  Civil War broke out, Scott joined the 37th Illinois, serving for a year before
				  being honorably discharged due to health reasons. Returning to Chicago, he was
				  admitted to the bar and began practicing law. In 1864, he was elected to the
				  board of the police, fire and health departments of Chicago, and in 1865 was
				  elected city assessor. In 1867, he left Chicago for San Francisco, spending a
				  year in the city and unsuccessfully mining in Nevada. In 1871, he arrived in
				  Seattle. Scott was elected secretary of the Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad in
				  1873, and justice of the peace and police judge the following year. He then
				  engaged in real estate. He was an early vice president of the Y.M.C.A., first
				  quartermaster general of the G.A.R. of Washington and Oregon, and a charter
				  member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, a fraternal organization. He
				  married Mary Isabelle Marlin on April 10, 1855. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottRC1</container><unittitle>Roswell Cheney Scott in ceremonial sash and
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James M. McMurry, Port Townsend, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Scott, Silas Franklin (June 5, 1870 - August 7,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Silas Franklin Scott was an instructor in Pharmacy. He received
				  his Ph.C. from the University of Michigan (1902), his B.S. from Michigan
				  Agriculture College (1903) and his M.S. from the University of Michigan (1905).
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scott, Thomas Fielding (March 12, 1807 - July 14,
				  1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Fielding Scott was the first missionary Episcopal bishop
				  of Washington and Oregon territories. He was born in North Carolina and
				  attended Franklin College (later the University of Georgia), graduating in
				  1829. Scott was ordained deacon in 1843 and ordained priest the following year.
				  After his ordination to the priesthood, he became rector of St. James' Church
				  in Marietta, Georgia and later rector of Trinity Church in Columbus, Georgia,
				  remaining there until his ordination as bishop. On August 2, 1853, the First
				  Convocation of Clergy and Laity of the Episcopal Church in the Oregon and
				  Washington Territories created the Missionary District of the Oregon and
				  Washington Territories and elected Scott as first Missionary Bishop. He arrived
				  in Portland on April 22, 1854. Because the English Church had no Bishop in
				  British Columbia, he also assisted there. His first consecration of a church
				  was Trinity Church, Portland in 1854. In 1856, Scott founded a boys’ school in
				  Portland, which was reorganized and renamed after him after his death. In 1867,
				  he died of a fever while visiting New York City and is buried at Trinity Church
				  in New York.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottTF1</container><unittitle>Bishop Thomas Fielding Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottTF2</container><unittitle>Bishop Thomas Fielding Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1850s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Scott, Winfield (June 13, 1786 – May 29,
				  1866)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Winfield Scott was an American military commander and political
				  candidate. He served as a general in the United States Army from 1814 to 1861,
				  taking part in the War of 1812, the Mexican–American War, the early stages of
				  the American Civil War and conflicts with Native Americans. Scott was the Whig
				  Party's presidential nominee in the 1852 election, but was defeated by Democrat
				  Franklin Pierce. He was known as Old Fuss and Feathers for his insistence on
				  proper military etiquette, as well as the Grand Old Man of the Army for his
				  many years of service. Scott's military talent was highly regarded by
				  contemporaries, and historians generally consider him to be one of the most
				  accomplished generals in U.S. history.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">33</container><container type="item">ScottW1</container><unittitle>Winfield Scott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1845 and 1850?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia
					 of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scranton, John Hart (November 8, 1822 - September 30,
				  1865)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Hart Scranton, the son of Abraham Fowler Scranton and
				  Clarissa Griswold Scranton, was born in Connecticut. He went to California in
				  1849 where he mined and worked as a merchant in San Francisco. In 1854, he
				  purchased the <emph render="italic">Major Tompkins</emph>, a steamboat, to
				  transport passengers, mail and freight along the coast to the various ports
				  between San Francisco and Victoria, B.C. The ship was the first steamer on the
				  Puget Sound - Victoria route and towed logs and other ships in addition to
				  transportation. She was wrecked at the entrance of Victoria harbor in 1855.
				  Scranton had one of the first government contracts to carry mail in the
				  territory; however, the contract was cancelled after seven months because of
				  the expense.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScrantonJH1</container><unittitle>John Hart Scranton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Scurry, John George (September 21, 1845 - July 14,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John George Scurry was born in Lynchburg, Virginia. When the
				  Civil War began, he enlisted in the Eleventh Virginia Regiment and served in
				  the Confederate Army for the duration of the war. After the war, he attended
				  the University of Virginia and Johns Hopkins University, graduating with a
				  degree in civil engineering. Scurry assisted in locating the Southern &amp;
				  Union Pacific Railway lines and later laid out the Northern Pacific route
				  through Washington. He was the chief engineer of the Seattle, Lakeshore &amp;
				  Eastern Railway and located and laid out the Columbia &amp; Puget Sound Railway
				  He became the city engineer of Seattle under the administration of Mayor Robert
				  Moran. During his tenure, the city water system was inaugurated. He later did
				  reconnaissance work on the Olympic Peninsula and worked in Alaska where he
				  located the Copper River and Northwestern Railroad and the Alaska Central
				  Railroad. He married Nellie Terry, the daughter of Charles C. Terry, in 1876.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScurryJG1</container><unittitle>John George Scurry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seagraves, Sarah Chatham (September 1, 1837 - December
				  31, 1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Sarah Chatham, the daughter of Sebastian Chatham and Catherine
				  Burtless Chatham, was born in Seneca Falls, New York. She taught school in San
				  Francisco before coming to Seattle in the 1880s where she was one of Denny
				  School’s first teachers. She married Arthur Amasa Seagrave in 1888; Seagrave
				  was a construction engineer for the Union Pacific Railroad and later built the
				  Seagrave Hotel after the Seattle Fire of 1889. Arthur’s daughter and Sarah’s
				  stepdaughter, Mabel, was one of the first female physicians in Seattle. Sarah
				  Chatham died in Seattle and is buried in Seneca Falls.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeagravesSC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sarah Chatham with her first grade
					 class at Denny School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate></did><note><p>One of the children, Tom McCombs, is identified. The photo is
					 a copy of the original.</p><p>Missing</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">33</container><container type="item">SeagravesSC2</container><unittitle>Sarah Chatham, Tom McCombs and the first grade class
					 at Denny School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: First grade, Denny School, 1887. Miss Chatam
					 (sic), now Mrs. Seagrave, Tom McCombs boy second from right in back row. My
					 girl 4th from right in bottom row. I was not there that day. J. M. Lough</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Seaman, Arthur Henry (February 9, 1891
				  - June 25, 1949</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Henry Seaman, the son of Joseph and Minnie Seaman, was
				  born in Davenport, Iowa. He worked for Frye &amp; Company meat packers before
				  going into the garage business in Seattle. In 1926, he was vice president of
				  Totem Broadcasting (KOMO radio). He married Ethel Lawrence in 1913.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt in front of building with
					 Nellie Vogt, Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt looking at Nellie Vogt,
					 Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Searles, Catherine Marie (May 17, 1903 - December 26,
				  2001)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine Marie Amundson was born in Sunnyside and graduated
				  from Washington State College (University). She married Harry G. Searles in
				  1938. In 1955, she was the traffic director for KYAK radio in Yakima and became
				  the manager of the Women’s Residence Halls at the University of Washington in
				  1956. Her daughter, Marikay Searles Morris, was the UW Homecoming Queen in
				  1955. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SearlesCM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Catherine Marie Searles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sears, William Henry (May 29, 1878 - April 7,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Sears was a public official and law officer for
				  more than fifty years. He was born in Grass Valley, California. As a young man,
				  he was a gold prospector in California and worked in the copper mines of Butte,
				  Montana. He moved to Buckley, Washington to work as a timber cruiser. A job as
				  a Pierce County deputy sheriff was the beginning of his career in law
				  enforcement; he later became a deputy sheriff and county detective in King
				  County. Sears was appointed Seattle’s police chief in 1936 and was reappointed
				  for a five-year term, but failed to be confirmed by the City Council in 1941.
				  In June, 1941 he was appointed chief of detectives for the Washington Jockey
				  Club at Longacres and also entered the construction business, developing
				  residential homes in the South Park area. He served as King County Commission
				  for twelve years until his death in 1958. During his years as county
				  commissioner, he also served as the chairman of the Duwamish and Green River
				  Industrial Survey Committee and was instrumental in obtaining funds for the
				  Eagle Gorge Dam. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SearsWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William Henry Sears in uniform and
					 wearing glasses, seated at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1936 </unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Wm. H. Sears, chief of police</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SearsWH2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William Henry Sears in uniform and
					 wearing glasses, seated at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1939 -1941</unitdate><note><p>The hat is different than previous photograph; the style of
						the hat changed in 1939.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SearsWH3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William Henry Sears in uniform,
					 without glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1936-1939</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seaton, Chauncey B. (March 17, 1848 - December 12,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chauncey B. Seaton was born in Crawford County, Ohio. He worked
				  as an architect in Selma, Alabama, Chicago, Illinois and St. Paul, Minnesota
				  and moved to Spokane, Washington in 1889, about six months before a fire in the
				  city destroyed 30 city blocks. He designed the old exposition building and the 
				  <emph>Spokesman-Review</emph>building soon after the fire. Seaton was the
				  architect for many small buildings and a large number of residences in the city
				  as well as the Cheney Normal School.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeatonCB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Chauncey B. Seaton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880-1896</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seattle, Chief (c. 1786 – June 7, 1866) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chief Seattle, or si?al in his native Lushootseed language, led
				  the Duwamish and Suquamish Tribes as the first Euro-American settlers arrived
				  in the greater Seattle area in the 1850s. Baptized Noah by Catholic
				  missionaries, Seattle pursued a path of accommodation to white settlers.
				  Seattle was the first tribal chief to place his mark on a document that ceded
				  ownership of most of the Puget Sound basin. The treaties promised that some
				  lands would stay in Native American ownership, and that education, health care,
				  money, and other payments would be made. He also opposed Native American
				  attempts to dislodge settlers during the "Indian Wars" of 1855-1856. A widely
				  publicized speech arguing in favor of ecological responsibility and respect of
				  Native Americans' land rights had been attributed to him by pioneer Dr. Henry
				  A. Smith; however what he actually said has been lost through translation and
				  rewriting. Chief Seattle retired to the Suquamish Reservation at Port Madison,
				  and died there on June 7, 1866. The city of Seattle is named for him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Alf Bruseth</persname></origination><note><p>Copy of a drawing by Alf Bruseth</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of the statue of Chief
					 Seattle at Tilikum Place</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Nowell &amp; Rognon</corpname></origination><note><p>Program from the Founders' Day Exercises, Wednesday,
						November 13, 1912.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Group of unidentified men and Boy
					 Scouts standing by Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Group of unidentified men and women
					 standing by Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC5</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Angie E. Bowden and unidentifed woman
					 standing by Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 31, 1911</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC6</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Printed on front: Compliments of Ole Hanson &amp; Co., Real
						Estate, New York Block, Seattle</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC7</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle's grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: August 15, 1915, Many thanks for the cards
						of Mount Rainier. Am so glad you could have the trip. Here for a couple of
						days. Sincerely, Ethel.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC8</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle's grave from a
					 distance</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC9</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Closeup of Chief Seattle's
					 grave</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC10</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Moore, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Reproduction of a Raphael Coombs drawing</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC11</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle's grave at Suquamish on
					 Bainbridge Island, looking east to Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleC12</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chief Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1865</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward A. Sammis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Seattle (Sealth), Moses (about 1869 - February 24,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Moses (Sealth) Seattle, the grandson of Chief Seattle and the
				  son of James Seattle, grew up on the Tulalip Reservation and attended schools
				  in Chico, Washington, on the Tulalip Reservation and at the Chemawa Indian
				  School. He was less than four feet tall, but was known for his strength. After
				  graduation, he worked at a lot of odd jobs, picking hops or, in the off-season,
				  performing in a circus. He was also known for his musical ability, having
				  learned to play the accordion, which he played at dances in the area. He died
				  from burns suffered after he was pushed into a campfire during a party. He was
				  buried beside his grandfather in the Suquamish graveyard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleM1</container><unittitle>Moses (Sealth) Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeattleM2</container><unittitle>Photograph of gravestone of Moses Sealth in
					 Suquamish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seavey, James (January 1825 - May 4, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Seavey, Jr. was born in Thomaston Maine in 1825. He
				  attended the local public school and received his teaching certificate in 1850.
				  He married Julia A. Carle the same year. In March of 1854 James, Julia and
				  their son William sailed from Boston for California. They arrived in San
				  Francisco where Seavey had a position as a teacher. The family moved to Port
				  Ludlow in the fall of 1856 where Seavey was hired as bookkeeper for a sawmill
				  company. By 1859 Julia was living in San Francisco, and he and Julia only lived
				  together occasionally after 1862. Seavey was appointed postmaster for Port
				  Townsend in 1865 and two years later was elected auditor of Jefferson County.
				  He resigned in 1886 and was elected again in 1888. He also served as city
				  clerk. In July of 1894 he was elected mayor of Port Townsend. Seavey started
				  Jefferson Abstract Company in the 1890s and built the Seavey Building on Water
				  Street; the building burned in 1960.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeaveyJ1</container><unittitle>James Seavey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seehorn, Elihu Irwin "Billy" (August 19, 1860 - June 2,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elihu Irwin “Billy” Seehorn was born in Quincy, Illinois and
				  came to Spokane in the 1880s. He started Seehorn Transfer and Storage Company,
				  which became one of the largest moving and storage companies in the area. The
				  company occupied a building that has been restored and is now part of Spokane’s
				  Steam Plant Square. He married Lenora Cowan in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeehornEI1</container><unittitle>Elihu Irwin “Billy” Seehorn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oswald Angvire, Spokane</persname></origination><note><p>Signed photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seering, Esther (January 28, 1903 - December 2,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Stratford, Wisconsin, Esther Seering received a degree
				  in journalism from the University of Wisconsin and landed her first job as a
				  reporter for <emph render="italic">The Minneapolis Journal.</emph>She moved to
				  Seattle with her husband, Judge Harold A. Seering, in 1929. During World War
				  II, she directed the public-information department of the Seattle Community
				  Chest, the predecessor of United Way of King County. From 1945 to 1955, she ran
				  her own public-relations firm. She went on to work as the executive secretary
				  to Seattle Mayor Gordon Clinton for eight years before moving to Olympia to
				  work for Governor Daniel J. Evans as his executive assistant. Seering was a
				  member of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women and helped write
				  laws to strengthen women's rights in the areas of community property and
				  credit.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH1</container><unittitle>Group photo. Left to right: Edwin Adams and H.P.
					 Everest, directors of the journalism school; Mrs. Esther Seering, public
					 relations counsel; Mrs. Mary Coyle Osmun, Seattle Times women's editor; Carroll
					 Foster, special events director at KIRO</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 11, 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Many professional publicity workers turned
					 out for the recent conference on publicity methods, originally planned just for
					 amateur publicity chairmen. Due to scores of requests, the conference, first of
					 its kind on campus, will be followed next fall by an expanded series of
					 lectures.</p><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sefrit, Louis Benson (April 3, 1874 - December 12,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Benson Sefrit, who came from a family of newspapermen, was
				  a police reporter and assistant city editor for the <emph render="italic">Seattle Times.</emph>He reported extensively on the hunt for
				  Harry Tracy and narrowly avoided being shot by him. He ran for city council in
				  1909, but withdrew in favor of his friend, Joe Schlumpf. Despite being
				  seriously ill, he wrote letters to each of his supporters notifying them that
				  he had withdrawn from the race and thanking them for their support. He died of
				  pneumonia shortly after completing the letters.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seigenthaler, John Lawrence (July 27, 1927 – July 11,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lawrence Seigenthaler was an American journalist, writer,
				  and political figure who was known as a prominent defender of First Amendment
				  rights. He joined the Nashville newspaper <emph render="italic">The
				  Tennessean</emph> in 1949, resigning in 1960 to act as Robert F. Kennedy's
				  administrative assistant and later worked on Kennedy’s 1968 presidential
				  campaign as an advisor. Seigenthaler would serve as one of the pallbearers at
				  Kennedy’s funeral, and later co-edited the book <emph render="italic">An
				  Honorable Profession: A Tribute to Robert F. Kennedy.</emph> He rejoined 
				  <emph render="italic">The Tennessean</emph>as editor in 1962, publisher in
				  1973, and chairman in 1982 before retiring as chairman emeritus in 1991.
				  Seigenthaler was also founding editorial director of <emph render="italic">USA
				  Today</emph> from 1982 to 1991. During this period, he served on the board of
				  directors for the American Society of Newspaper Editors, and from 1988 to 1989
				  was its president. Seigenthaler founded the First Amendment Center in 1991 with
				  the mission of creating national discussion, dialogue and debate about First
				  Amendment rights and values.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SeigenthalerJL1</container><unittitle>John Lawrence Seigenthaler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Selleck, Inez Georgia (September 21, 1899 - April 3,
				  1992)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Inez Georgia Selleck, the daughter of Charles and Lena Selleck,
				  was born in Mankato, Minnesota. She married Stuart Sandow Johnson in 1923; they
				  had one son. Prior to her marriage, she worked as an usher and a
				  bookkeeper.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SelleckIG1</container><unittitle>Inez Georgia Selleck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photogrpaher">Krause, Mankato, Minnesota</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sellwood, J. R. W. (June 21, 1808 - March 22,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James R. W. Sellwood, an Episcopal missionary, and clergyman,
				  was born in Cornwall, England and served parishes in Illinois and South
				  Carolina before traveling to Oregon in 1856 via the Isthmus of Panama. He
				  served parishes in Eugene and Portland as well as acting as a missionary at
				  large. His brother, John Sellwood, was also a clergyman and started the town of
				  Sellwood near Portland; the town was later absorbed into Portland in 1893. He
				  married Elizabeth H. Dawe in 1837, in Hamilton, Ohio.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">SellwoodJRW1</container><unittitle> James R. W. Sellwood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sennes, Gertrude Joren (September 8, 1903 - October 29,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gertrude Sennes graduated from the University of Washington in
				  1926 with a degree in Education. She illustrated<emph>The Golden Book of
				  Poetry</emph> in 1949. She married Richard Elliott in 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM2</container><unittitle>Mount Rainier excursion: Helen Morrill, Harold
					 Stevenson, Warner Chapson, Amelia Nicoles, Gertrude Sennes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Morrill Wolfle subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Settle, Josiah (June 2, 1813 - May 17, 1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josiah Settle was born in Indiana and crossed the plains in 1846
				  with his nephew, Campbell Settle. He returned to Indiana following the death of
				  his first wife, Mary Loring Settle. In 1849, he again crossed the plains,
				  possibly as a doctor in the same wagon train as Mary Etta Hotteschell Crow,
				  whom he later married following the death of her husband in 1852. He settled in
				  Portland and had a drug store on Front Street. Settle moved to Seattle in 1860
				  where he became one of Seattle's first doctors. He was one of the original
				  parties to develop the Newcastle coal fields. Injuries that he received while
				  trying to clear the Black River of stumps for coal shipments to Seattle were
				  largely responsible for his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SettleJ1</container><unittitle>Josiah Settle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Settlemier, Jesse Holland (February 5, 1840 - February
				  20, 1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jesse Holland Settlemier, one of Oregon's pioneer nurserymen,
				  was born in Alton, Illinois, on February 5, 1840. His family crossed the plains
				  to California in 1849 where his mother and one of his brothers died. His father
				  and the remaining six children traveled to Oregon, settling in the Willamette
				  Valley where his father started a farm and nursery business. In 1857, he and
				  two of his brothers started a nursery in Linn County, which his brother Henry
				  continued to operate after Jesse started Woodburn Nursery. He developed it into
				  one of the largest nurseries on the West Coast. In 1871, Settlemier platted the
				  first four blocks of what is now downtown Woodburn and gave a lot to anyone who
				  would build a business on it. He also provided land for a church, a school, and
				  eighty-five acres to the railroads to persuade them to build track through
				  town. In January 1879, Settlemier became Woodburn’s first mayor in 1885,
				  serving two terms. He was a member of the county convention, a delegate to the
				  state convention in 1886, and served two terms as a state legislator beginning
				  in 1905. Settlemier was inducted into the Oregon Nurserymen's Hall of Fame.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SettlemierJH1</container><unittitle>Jesse Holland Settlemier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Seward, Frederick William (July 8, 1830 – April 25,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick William Seward was an American politician and member
				  of the Republican Party who twice served as the Assistant Secretary of State.
				  The son of U.S. secretary of state William H. Seward, he served as Assistant
				  Secretary from 1861 to 1869, when his father was the secretary under both
				  Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson and then from 1877 to 1879 in the
				  administration of Rutherford B. Hayes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seward, William Henry (May 16, 1801 – October 10,
				  1872)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Seward was United States Secretary of State from
				  1861 to 1869, and earlier served as governor of New York and as a United States
				  Senator. A determined opponent of the spread of slavery in the years leading up
				  to the American Civil War, he was a prominent figure in the Republican Party in
				  its formative years, and was praised for his work on behalf of the Union as
				  Secretary of State during the Civil War. He was one of the targets of the 1865
				  assassination plot that killed Lincoln and was seriously wounded by conspirator
				  Lewis Powell. Seward remained in his post through the presidency of Andrew
				  Johnson, during which he negotiated the Alaska Purchase in 1867 and supported
				  Johnson during his impeachment. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Seward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Horatio Seymour Squyer, Auburn, N.Y</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Seymore, William Byron (October 15, 1850 - March 11,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Byron Seymore was a steamship captain who sailed between
				  Chico, California and Kotezbue Sound in the 1890s. He also captained the
				  American whaling bark<emph render="italic">Hope On,</emph><emph>the
				  Holyoke</emph> and <emph>the Despatch.</emph> He retired from the sea in 1887
				  and began work for <emph>The Argus</emph> a newspaper in the Puget Sound
				  area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SeymoreWB1</container><unittitle>Captain William Byron Seymore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shadden, Thomas Jefferson (April 6, 1809 - February 4,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Jefferson Shadden, an Oregon Trail pioneer, was born in
				  Pulaski County, Tennessee. He, his wife Martha and their children crossed the
				  plains to Oregon in 1842. After an uncomfortable winter in Oregon City, exposed
				  to the storms and living on boiled wheat, the family traveled to California in
				  1843, where Shadden spent time at Sutter's Mill during the California Gold
				  Rush. He also served as a mounted rifleman under John C. Fremont. In 1850,
				  Shadden and his family returned to Oregon and settled on a farm in the
				  McMinnville area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShaddenTJ1</container><unittitle>Thomas Jefferson Shadden</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880-1889</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shane, Carlos Walstein (September 19, 1817 - October 4,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carlos Walstein Shane was born in Cincinnati, Ohio where he
				  learned bookbinding and printing. In 1846, he crossed the plains to Oregon City
				  where he became the first bookbinder in the Oregon Territory. After teaching in
				  a number of schools in the Clackamas area, he worked as a boatman on the
				  Columbia and Williamette Rivers from Oregon City to Astoria. In 1850, he took a
				  donation land claim near the site of Fort Clatsop, where Lewis and Clark had
				  wintered. From 1857 to 1866 he worked as a miner in California before returning
				  to Oregon. He taught school until 1870 when he located a homestead in Clark
				  County, near Vancouver, Washington. He married Sarah Bond in 1850, but the
				  marriage was not a happy one, and the couple soon separated. Through a series
				  of reverses, he lost what property he had accumulated, and his final years were
				  lived in poverty.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShaneCW1</container><unittitle>Carlos Walstein Shane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Carlos W. Shane, the Oregon and Washington
					 pioneer, who destroyed the remains of Lewis &amp; Clark's Fort Clatsop to make
					 room for his cabbage patch. Presented by Hayes &amp; Hayes Photographers,
					 Portland, Oregon.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaner, Amanda Jane Rogers (February 17, 1852 - July 20,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amanda Jane Rogers was born in Pennsylvania on February 17,
				  1852. She married Daniel Shaner in 1872. The family moved to Washington
				  Territory in the 1880’s where they lived in Auburn and Kent, Washington. In the
				  1890s, they moved to Lewis County, where they had a farm on the Klickitat
				  Prairie on what was known as Sparks Place. The couple had twelve children.
				  Their son, Charles, was killed in 1918 while serving in France with the 181st
				  Infantry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShanerAJR1</container><unittitle> Amanda Jane Rogers Shaner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910 - 1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaner, Daniel, Jr. (May 18, 1845 - July 24,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Shaner, Jr. was born in Eastbrook, Pennsylvania and left
				  home at the age of 10. A family history relates that he made his way from
				  Pennsylvania to the Washington Territory and back again. In 1863, he enlisted
				  in the Union Army, serving as a member the 58th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry
				  and Company E 100th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry. Six days short of his
				  nineteenth birthday, he was wounded at the Battle of Spottsylvania. Shaner
				  served with the Veterans Reserve Corps where he said he was a guard for
				  Secretary of State William H. Seward and later a guard for President Lincoln at
				  the White House. He was at that position when the president was assassinated.
				  He attended President Lincoln’s funeral and afterwards witnessed the execution
				  of the conspirators. Shaner continued his military affiliation with the state
				  militia of Pennsylvania, having been appointed to the rank of second
				  lieutenant. He married Amanda Jane Rogers in 1872 and moved his family to the
				  Washington Territory in the 1880s where he worked as a farmer, miner,
				  prospector and lawman. He was appointed a deputy in Seattle and is reported to
				  have been the first law enforcement officer in what is now the town of Auburn,
				  Washington. In the 1890s, the family moved to Lewis County, where they had a
				  farm on the Klickitat Prairie on what was known as Sparks Place. He died in
				  Mossyrock, Washington in 1926.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShanerD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Shaner sitting in chair with his dog Bill by
					 his side</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Nellie Inez Kjesbu, Mossyrock, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: May 10, 1916. Edmond S. Meany, Seattle. Dear
					 Sir, This is my latist (sic) picture taken this week by Mrs. Kjesbu of
					 Mossyrock, also a picture of one of my most faithful friends, my educated Bill
					 the Kisser (?) 4 years old and always with me. Hope this will do for to head
					 the published letter. Yours faithfully, Daniel Shaner.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shannon, George D. (December 20, 1832 - September 4,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George D. Shannon, the son of Thomas and Mehitable (Corwin)
				  Shannon, was born in Schuyler County, New York, on December 20,1832. At the age
				  of sixteen, he began railroading, following that and other employment until
				  1854. In that year, he went to St. Paul, Minnesota where he worked for a large
				  lumber company. In 1858 he was appointed superintendent of construction of the
				  Winona &amp; St. Paul Railroad, which when completed in 1860, was the first
				  passenger train west of the Mississippi in Minnesota. Shannon followed
				  railroading in that state until 1868, and then in railroad contracting in New
				  York, Indiana and Wisconsin. In 1870 he moved to Olympia, Washington Territory
				  where he was the superintendent of construction for the Northern Pacific
				  Railroad on their line from Kalama to Tacoma. In 1873 he purchased eleven
				  hundred acres of farmland near Olympia. Governor Ferry appointed him to the
				  State building committee, where he and his associate, A. F. Tullis, oversaw the
				  construction of the State asylum. He later served as chairman of the board of
				  trustees for the asylum. Shannon was vice-president of the First National Bank
				  of Olympia, an institution of which he was one of the incorporators. He married
				  Mary A. Kennedy in Cleveland, Ohio in 1876.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShannonGD1</container><unittitle>George D. Shannon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shapard, J. S.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>J. S. Shapard, a part-time police constable in Victoria, British
				  Columbia, opened the Confederate Saloon on August 1, 1863. Shapard was a
				  Southern sympathizer, and the saloon quickly became a meeting place for a group
				  of Confederate sympathizers known as the Southern Association. Prior to the
				  existence of the saloon, the group had met in private homes; the opening of the
				  saloon made it easier to keep track of the association members. Shapard had
				  also been involved in a flag raising incident in November 1862 when the city
				  planned a celebration for the birthday of Prince Edward of Wales, Queen
				  Victoria’s son, who was reaching his majority. Shapard rented a shop on a main
				  street and hoisted the Confederate Stars and Bars. The United States Counsel to
				  the province, Allen Francis, rushed to lodge a formal protest with the
				  province’s governor. The authorities insisted there was nothing they could do
				  since Britain was officially neutral in the Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShapardJS1</container><unittitle>J. S. Shapard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: J. S. Shapard, Vanc. Is. Colony, 1860</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sharp, Paul Edward Albert (August 4, 1902 - February 14,
				  1983)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Paul Edward Albert Sharp was born in Pine Ridge, Arkansas to
				  Arthur William and Minnie Lavina Hanes Sharp. He moved to the Bremerton area at
				  the age of 3 and attended schools in Grapeview, Washington. He worked as a
				  galvanizer-quarterman at Puget Sound Naval Shipyards for twenty-six years. In
				  1950, he took a job with Pesty Christmas Tree Company in Shelton, Washington.
				  He was a Belfair Fire Warden, a Past Master of Hood Canal Masonic Lodge 288,
				  and helped build the Masonic Lodge Building. Paul Sharp Scenic Area near
				  Aldridge Lake in Mason County, Washington was named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SharpPEA1</container><unittitle>Paul Sharp in suit</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SharpPEA2</container><unittitle>Paul Sharp in workshirt, smiling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sharpe, Thomas James (November 12, 1850- May 8,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas James Sharpe, the son of James and Margaret (Nelson)
				  Sharpe, was born in Tyrone, Ireland. He immigrated to the United States in 1864
				  and settled on Fidalgo Island, Washington in 1871. In 1907, he discovered a
				  talc deposit on the side of a hill facing the Strait of Juan de Fuca near the
				  entrance of Deception Pass and was able to sell the rights to F. T. Thomas of
				  Seattle for $75,000, the equivalent of over $2 million in 2021. He married Mary
				  Jane Carr in 1884; the couple had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SharpeT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Sharpe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shattuck, Erasmus Darwin (December 31, 1824 – July 26,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erasmus Darwin Shattuck was an American politician and judge in
				  the state of Oregon. He served as the 7th Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme
				  Court, serving from 1866 to 1867. He served two separate terms on the Oregon's
				  high court, was a district attorney, and a member of the Oregon Constitutional
				  Convention in 1857. Shattuck served as a trustee for Portland Academy and was
				  one of the founders of the Portland Library.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShattuckED1</container><unittitle>Erasmus Darwin Shattuck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaw, Benjamin Franklin (May 8, 1829 - February 3,
				  1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Shaw was born in Missouri and crossed the
				  plains to Oregon with his parents in 1844. In 1845, he went to Puget Sound, and
				  in the company of Michael T. Simmons and George Bush, built a saw mill at
				  Tumwater, Washington Territory. Two years later, the men built a gristmill at
				  the same place, the first mills built by American settlers north of the
				  Columbia River. Governor Isaac Stevens took advantage of Shaw’s facility with
				  the Chinook language and hired him as an interpreter in treaty negotiations. In
				  1856, Stevens placed him in command of a battalion and ordered him to lead an
				  expedition against the tribes in Eastern Washington and Oregon because of their
				  perceived failure to abide by the terms of the 1855 Walla Walla Council
				  treaties. Shaw was a vocal defender of the U.S. government’s actions against
				  tribes who resisted the treaties. He was the leader of a military expedition of
				  volunteer troops that attacked a Native village in eastern Oregon in 1856 as
				  part of the Yakima War, leading a force of nearly two hundred men against a
				  village of Walla Walla, Cayuse, and Umatilla families camped along the Grande
				  Ronde River near present-day Summerville, Oregon. The troops killed about sixty
				  men, women, and children, destroying their homes and foodstuffs, and capturing
				  some two hundred horses. Once Stevens left Washington Territory in 1857 to be
				  the territorial delegate to Congress, Shaw moved to Oregon and later to
				  Vancouver, Washington Territory, in 1870. During the 1870s, he represented
				  Clark County in the Washington Territorial legislature, and he served one term
				  as register of the federal land office in Vancouver in the 1880s. He married
				  Cynthia Nye in 1871.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawBF1</container><unittitle>Colonel Benjamin Franklin Shaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawBF2</container><unittitle>Colonel Benjamin Franklin Shaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Jesse A. Meiser, Vancouver, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawBF3</container><unittitle>Colonel Benjamin Franklin Shaw and a group of men
					 locating the site of the battle of Grande Ronde.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 27, 1907</unitdate><note><p>Written on front: Col. Shaw and party locating the battle of
						Grand Round (sic) October 27, 1907. Fought July 17, 1856. Moorhouse.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaw, Minerva Jane (November 15, 1851-March 25,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Minerva Jane Laws, the daughter of Lindsley and Martha (Wright)
				  Laws, was born in Illinois. She married Henry Norton Shaw, a Civil War veteran,
				  on December 23, 1867. The family lived in Illinois before moving to Chehalis,
				  Washington in the 1880s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawMJ1</container><unittitle>Minerva Jane Shaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaw, Sarah Gilliam (May 1, 1796 - July 9,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Gilliam, the daughter of Epaphroditus and Sarah Israel
				  Gilliam, was the sister of General Cornelius Gilliam, after whom Gilliam County
				  in Oregon is named. She married Captain William Shaw on October 11, 1822 in
				  Missouri. The couple had nine children. The family moved to Oregon Territory in
				  1844 to settle in the Willamette Valley.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawW1</container><unittitle>Captain William Shaw and Sarah Gilliam
					 Shaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under William Shaw subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shaw, William (December 15, 1795 - January 20,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Shaw was born in Tennessee. When he was 18, he enlisted
				  with the United States troops in the War of l8l2 and served for two years. In
				  l8l7 he moved to Missouri and remained there until 1844 when he crossed the
				  plains to Oregon. He took up a donation claim on Howell Prairie in l846. In
				  1848 he joined the regiment of Col. Cornelius Gilliam, his brother-in-law, to
				  fight in the Cayuse War. After Col. Gilliam’s death, Shaw raised a company of
				  volunteers, and as captain, returned to the scene of active operations. In
				  l850, he was elected a member of the territorial legislature, serving one term.
				  After his return from the legislature, he returned to his farm. He married
				  Sarah Gilliam in1822.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShawW1</container><unittitle>Captain William Shaw and Sarah Gilliam
					 Shaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sheehan, John Francis (October 11, 1840 - September 10,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Francis Sheehan was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1840.
				  His father, John Sheehan, died when he was an infant, and his mother, Mary,
				  went back to Ireland with John and his brother. After a year, the family
				  returned to Baltimore. John lived with his uncle in New Orleans until he was
				  fifteen. He then traveled to California via the Nicaragua route, arriving in
				  San Francisco in the summer of 1856. He spent his first two years in California
				  in the mines before traveling to the Fraser River minefields in Canada. On
				  leaving the mines, Sheehan went to Port Townsend and worked in the stove and
				  tinware business. Sheehan was a member of the city council of Port Townsend,
				  and in 1882 was elected sheriff of Jefferson County, an office he held for
				  three successive terms. He married Mary Loftus in 1864; the couple had nine
				  children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheehanJF1</container><unittitle>John Francis Sheehan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shefelman, Harold Samuel (April 15, 1898 - May 30,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Samuel Shefelman was born in New York City in 1898. He
				  grew up in San Antonio, Texas. He received a bachelor's degree from Brown
				  University in 1920 and a law degree from Yale in 1925. Shefelman came to
				  Seattle in 1925 to join the law firm of Weter &amp; Roberts and was later a
				  partner in the law firms of Roberts &amp; Shefelman. He served on the
				  University of Washington Board of Regents for 18 years and chaired the
				  selection committee that brought Dr. Charles E. Odegaard to the university. He
				  was instrumental in Seattle's downtown awakening and in the development of the
				  Seattle Center as the home of the 1962 Seattle World's Fair. He served on the
				  Washington State Board of Education, several state and city government
				  reorganization committees, the Seattle Planning Commission and was president of
				  the Municipal League of Seattle from 1956-1958. Shefelman was president and
				  chairman of the Board of the Pacific Science Center Foundation from 1968 to
				  1971 and Chancellor of the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia from 1951 to 1979.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheffelmanHS1</container><unittitle>Harold S. Sheffelman seated at desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1975</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">BullittDS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dorothy Bullitt speaking at the
					 opening of the Stimson Building Cornerstone with James M. Ryan of University
					 Properties and Harold S. Shefelman of the UW Board of Regents</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1970</unitdate></did><note><p>Before the Stimson Building was replaced by the Financial
					 Center, commemorative ceremonies were held there. Mrs. Bullitt was the daughter
					 of C. D. Stimson, for whom the building was named and stands beside the bronze
					 plaque honoring her father.</p><p>Filed under Dorothy Stimson Bullitt.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sheffer, Nicholas Vance (September 18, 1830 - September
				  15, 1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nicholas Sheffer reached California during the gold rush of
				  1849, traveling by ox team. He traveled through California and Oregon, finally
				  ending up in Whatcom County in 1883. He was a carpenter in the army for several
				  seasons and helped build several of the forts in the Puget Sound area. He was
				  in Olympia at the beginning of the Indian War and then went to Seattle where he
				  served until peace was restored. He was one of the pioneers of Bellingham
				  before he moved to Lynden. Sheffer went to the gold fields of the upper Fraser
				  River during the Yukon Gold Rush. Later, with his son-in-law, R. E. Hawley, he
				  operated a mill on the Nooksack River near Lynden. He also built one of the
				  first steamers that ran on the Nooksack.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JarmanWR2</container><unittitle> William R. Jarman with Ezra Meeker and Nicholas Vance
					 Sheffer at the Old Settlers Picnic in the Skagit Valley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R. E. Hawley</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Wm. R. Jarman (standing), Ezra Meeker
					 (center), N. V. Sheffer.</p><p>Photograph published in <emph render="italic">The Skagit River
					 Journal</emph> of August 30, 2007.</p><p>Filed under William R. Jarman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sheffield, William M. (February 22, 1869 -March 12,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William M. Sheffield was born in Marysville, California and
				  spent his childhood in Oregon. He was a reporter for <emph render="italic">The
				  Oregonian</emph> and <emph render="italic">The Seattle
				  Post-Intelligencer</emph> and was for several years the city editor at 
				  <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times.</emph> He was secretary of the
				  Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition and following the 1906 earthquake in San
				  Francisco, served as a special agent of the Chamber of Commerce, traveling to
				  San Francisco to assess the damage. After moving to New York in 1916, he
				  devoted himself to scientific research and was the successful inventor of
				  woodpile machinery. He died in an automobile accident.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheffieldWM1</container><unittitle>William M. Sheffield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Wm. M Sheffield, secretary,
						Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sheller, Roscoe (April 3, 1889 - April 27,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roscoe Sheller was a regional writer and businessman from the
				  Yakima Valley in Washington State. He was born in Lanark, Illinois, and with
				  his parents, John and Leafy (Ustic) Sheller, moved to Sunnyside, Washington in
				  1899. In 1915, Sheller rode in a Model T automobile, which had been introduced
				  seven years earlier by Henry Ford. He subsequently joined the local dealership
				  and made his living selling the cars. By the 1920s he owned and managed a Ford
				  automobile dealership. He became known as “Mr. Sunnyside” for his role in
				  shaping Sunnyside and the lower Yakima Valley region. In the late 1940s, he
				  headed a campaign that raised over $90,000 to improve the streets and sidewalks
				  of Sunnyside. As a hobby, he wrote short stories and brief histories on the
				  people and places of the Pacific Northwest, publishing twenty-two books and
				  numerous articles for regional newspapers and journals. <emph render="italic">Me and the Model T</emph> , published in 1965, has been praised
				  as a lively and humorous chronicle of Sheller’s life, as well as a great
				  insight into the history of the iconic car and the dawn of the automobile
				  age.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShellerR1</container><unittitle>Roscoe Sheller sitting in chair, holding a copy of his
					 book, <emph>Blowsand.</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>The book was a narrative of Sheller's experience growing up in
					 central Washington's Yakima Valley during the early part of the century. It was
					 published in 1963.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShellerR2</container><unittitle>Roscoe Sheller sitting in chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960-1969</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShellerR3</container><unittitle>Roscoe Sheller standing in front of a
					 bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960-1969</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shelley, Joseph (July 3, 1850- October 8,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Shelley was born in Staffordshire, England and served in
				  the British Navy. He arrived in the United States in 1872 and settled in
				  Maytown, Thurston County, Washington where he had a dairy farm. He married
				  Sarah Gunstone in 1875.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShelleyJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Shelley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shelor, Douglas Abell (April 26, 1882 - January 1,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Douglas Abell Shelor was born in Graystown, Virginia. He was
				  assistant to the manager of the <emph render="italic">San Francisco Chronicle
				  </emph>(1906-1911), automobile editor of the <emph render="italic">Portland
				  Journal</emph> (1911-1916) and automobile editor of the <emph render="italic">Seattle Post-Intelligencer</emph> (1916-1917). He resigned to
				  become the general manager of the Automobile Club of Washington, which
				  sponsored the formation of statewide traffic and safety committees, the
				  completion of traffic surveys for aid in decreasing accidents, and safety
				  legislation. The organization also supported highway landscaping and
				  beautification and took a leading role in attracting tourists to the state.
				  Shelor served as vice-president of the Washington State Good Roads Association
				  for over 25 years. Although he retired from the Automobile Club in 1950, he
				  continued working with the Washington State Good Roads Association as
				  secretary-treasurer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShelorDA1</container><unittitle>Douglas Abell Shelor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/563.ShelorDA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shelton, William (July 4, 1868-February 11,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Shelton Wha-cah-dub, Whea-kadim was an author, wood
				  carver, sculptor, teacher and Tulailip cultural leader. Shelton was one of the
				  few Snohomish to speak both English (which he learned when he was enrolled in a
				  mission school) and Lushootseed, the language of the Coast Salish. During his
				  lifetime, he carved a number of story poles, collecting Lushootseed sklaletut
				  stories from many regional tribal elders and carving pole figures representing
				  many of their stories. A 71 foot pole unfinished at the time of his death was
				  completed by members of the tribe on his behalf. The pole stood on the grounds
				  of the state capitol campus in Olympia, Washington until November 3, 2010, when
				  it was removed due to safety concerns. Shelton was married to Ruth Sehome
				  Shelton (Siastenu). Shelton's 1925 book <emph render="italic">The Story of the
				  Totem Pole or Indian Legends,</emph> subtitled "Early Indian Legends As Handed
				  Down From Generation To Generation Are Herewith Recorded By Chief William
				  Shelton Of Tulalip, Washington,” is one of the only records of many legends of
				  the Coast Salish people. His title of chief was as Tulalip Chief of Police;
				  however, his works made him a cultural leader. So important was he to the
				  preservation of Tulalip tribal tradition that upon his death, many feared the
				  culture would vanish with him. Instead, his accomplishments served as the
				  bridge for following generations who found new ways to continue his work.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheltonW1</container><unittitle>Grave monument of Chief William Shelton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shelton, David (September 18, 1812 - February 15,
				  1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Shelton was born in North Carolina; his family moved to
				  Missouri when he was seven. He married Frances Wilson in 1837; the couple
				  crossed the plains to Oregon in 1847. They settled initially near Vancouver and
				  then in Yamhill, Oregon. In the spring of 1849, Shelton put in a crop and left
				  his family while he traveled to the gold fields of California. Although he
				  found some gold, he returned to Oregon with little improvement in his finances.
				  He farmed in East Portland until 1852 when he traveled to Port Townsend, where,
				  along with Loren B. Hastings and Francis Pettygrove, he was one of the founders
				  of the town. He operated a hotel there before establishing a donation land
				  claim at Hammersley’s Inlet where the city of Shelton is today. The city is
				  named for him, and when it was incorporated in 1890, he became the first mayor.
				  Shelton was a member of the First Territorial Legislature. In 1854 when the
				  legislature created a new county, he named it "Sawamish" after a local tribe;
				  in 1864, the name was changed to Mason County. When the county seat was moved
				  to Shelton in 1888, Shelton donated the land for the court house. He also
				  donated the land for several churches and was an official of the local school
				  district. Lewis D. W. Shelton was his son.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheltonD1</container><unittitle>David Shelton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Shelton, Joseph Martin (January 31, 1841 - December 27,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Martin Shelton was born in Caswell County, North
				  Carolina. He crossed the plains with an ox-team in the Godfrey train, arriving
				  in Denver, Colorado, in 1865. He engaged in stock-raising in Boulder County for
				  seventeen years. In 1882, he sold his interests in Colorado and early in the
				  same year arrived at Walla Walla before eventually settling in the Kittitas
				  Valley, establishing a farm west of Ellensburg. He was elected county
				  commissioner in 1884 and during his term of office, assisted in the building of
				  a new courthouse. He married Missouri C. Jones in 1866.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheltonJM1</container><unittitle>Joseph M. Shelton and Missouri Shelton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shelton, Lewis David Wilson (October 18, 1841 - November
				  19, 1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis David Wilson Shelton, the son of David and Frances Wilson
				  Shelton, crossed the prairie to Oregon with his parents in 1847. Lewis was
				  educated at home and began working with surveying parties when he was fourteen.
				  He was an active participant in the Indian Wars of 1855 and 1856. After the
				  war, he worked at various jobs, including teaching school. In 1875, he took up
				  surveying as a regular occupation and opened a surveying office in Olympia in
				  1878. In 1879 he was commissioned United States Deputy Surveyor. From 1877 to
				  1888 he was in charge of all the Port Blakely lands, and in the last six years
				  was superintendent of all their logging interests between Portland and British
				  Columbia. In 1888 Shelton gave up surveying and engaged in real estate, buying,
				  improving, and selling property for three years before resuming his work with
				  the government, serving as County Surveyor, sheriff and auditor. He married
				  Lydia Morris in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheltonLDW1</container><unittitle>Lewis D. W. Shelton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900 - 1909</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Shelton, Missouri Cora Jones (June 12, 1845 - November
				  21, 1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Missouri Cora Jones was born in Missouri in 1845. Her father,
				  John Jones, originally from Virginia, went to Missouri in 1840 and then to
				  Colorado in 1873, where he raised cattle. She married Joseph M. Shelton in
				  1866.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheltonJM1</container><unittitle>Joseph M. Shelton and Missouri Shelton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Joseph M. Shelton subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sherburne, Zoa (September 30, 1912 - October 10,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zoe Sherburne was an American author, best known for her young
				  adult fiction. She was born in Seattle and began writing in elementary school.
				  Her local newspaper, <emph render="italic">The Ballard Tribune</emph>,
				  published a column of her poetry called “The Gremlin’s Say.” Sherburne went on
				  to be a very prolific writer, publishing over 300 short stories in magazines.
				  In the 1950s, she began writing books and went on to publish thirteen novels,
				  which together have been translated into over 27 languages. One of her books, 
				  <emph render="italic">Stranger in the House</emph>, about a family dealing with
				  the return of their mother from a mental institution, became a movie. All of
				  her stories and novels dealt with young girls in some kind of crisis. She
				  received the Children's Book Award for 1959 for her novel, 
				  <emph render="italic">Jennifer</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SherburneZ1</container><unittitle>Zoa Sherburne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sheridan, Philip Henry (March 6, 1831 - August 5,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philip Henry Sheridan was a career United States Army officer
				  and a Union general in the American Civil War. His career was noted for his
				  rapid rise to major general and his close association with General-in-chief
				  Ulysses S. Grant, who transferred Sheridan from command of an infantry division
				  in the Western Theater to lead the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Potomac in
				  the East. In 1864, he defeated Confederate forces under General Jubal Early in
				  the Shenandoah Valley and his destruction of the economic infrastructure of the
				  area was one of the first uses of scorched-earth tactics in the war. In 1865,
				  his cavalry pursued and was instrumental in forcing General Robert E. Lee's
				  surrender at Appomattox. Sheridan fought in later years in the Indian Wars of
				  the Great Plains. Both as a soldier and private citizen, he was instrumental in
				  the development and protection of Yellowstone National Park. In 1883, Sheridan
				  was appointed general-in-chief of the U.S. Army, and in 1888 he was promoted to
				  the rank of General of the Army during the term of President Grover
				  Cleveland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SheridanPH1</container><unittitle>General Philip H. Sheridan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circ a 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheridanPH2</container><unittitle>General Philip H. Sheridan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia
					 of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheridanPH3</container><unittitle>General Philip H. Sheridan in uniform with sash and
					 sword</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1883</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">C. M. Bell, Washington. D.C</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Lieut. General Philip Henry Sheridan. Taken
					 in 1883 when he took command of the United States Army.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheridanPH4</container><unittitle>Philip Henry Sheridan in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1860s</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Lieut. General Philip H. Sheridan, taken
					 when he was a major general. Copied from a picture in the regimental album of
					 the 4th U. S. Infantry at Fort George Wright, Wash., through courtesy of Lieut.
					 Colonel E. J. Oliver, August 30, 1940.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SheridanPH5</container><unittitle>Philip Henry Sheridan in uniform as a Second
					 Lieutenant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1853</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: General Philip Henry Sheridan at the age of
					 22 years. Photograph taken in 1853 in his uniform as Second Lieutenant of
					 Infantry soon after his graduation from West Point. This picture is a copy of
					 the frontpiece in his "Personal Memoirs." </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sherman, Fred TenEick (August 29, 1875 - January 30,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fred TenEick Sherman was the secretary-treasurer of the Western
				  Warehouse Company, owner and operator of the National Building, and a real
				  estate investor. During his early life, he was a contractor of installations
				  for public utilities in the eastern United States as well as Cuba, Mexico and
				  several South American countries. He came to Seattle in 1900 to serve as
				  general manager for the Barber Asphalt Paving Company. In 1905 he became
				  part-owner of the Independent Asphalt Paving Company and was associated with
				  much of the early paving of Seattle’s streets. Sherman was also partner of the
				  State Gravel Company in Steilacoom, vice president of the Arctic Club in 1929,
				  president of the Broadmoor Golf Club, and a member of the Rainier Club.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMSr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Sr., with William Russell
					 Nichols, James R. Stirrat, Herman Goetz and Fred T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Lawton Gowey Street Railroad
						Photograph Collection, PH Coll. 209.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Sr. subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sherman, J.W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShermanJW1</container><unittitle>J. W. Sherman in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860s</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a tintype</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sherman, William Tecumseh (February 8, 1820 – February
				  14, 1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Tecumseh Sherman was an American soldier, businessman,
				  educator, and author. He served as a general in the Union Army during the
				  American Civil War (1861–1865), achieving recognition for his command of
				  military strategy as well as criticism for the harshness of the scorched-earth
				  policies that he implemented against the Confederate States. Born in Ohio into
				  a politically prominent family, Sherman graduated in 1840 from the United
				  States Military Academy at West Point. He interrupted his military career in
				  1853 to pursue private business ventures, without much success. In 1859 he
				  became superintendent of the Louisiana State Seminary of Learning &amp;
				  Military Academy (now Louisiana State University), a position from which he
				  resigned when Louisiana seceded from the Union. Sherman commanded a brigade of
				  volunteers at the First Battle of Bull Run in 1861 before being transferred to
				  the Western Theater. Sherman served under General Ulysses S. Grant in 1862 and
				  1863 in the battles of Forts Henry and Donelson, the Battle of Shiloh, the
				  campaigns that led to the fall of the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg on
				  the Mississippi River, and the Chattanooga campaign, which culminated with the
				  routing of the Confederate armies in the state of Tennessee. In 1864, Sherman
				  succeeded Grant as the Union commander in the Western Theater. He led the
				  capture of the strategic city of Atlanta, a military success that contributed
				  to the re-election of President Abraham Lincoln. Sherman's subsequent march
				  through Georgia and the Carolinas involved little fighting but large-scale
				  destruction of cotton plantations and other infrastructure, a systematic policy
				  intended to undermine the ability and willingness of the Confederacy to
				  continue fighting. Sherman accepted the surrender of all the Confederate armies
				  in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida in April 1865, but the terms that he
				  negotiated were considered too generous by U.S. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton,
				  who ordered General Grant to modify them. When Grant became president of the
				  United States in March 1869, Sherman succeeded him as Commanding General of the
				  Army. Sherman served in that capacity from 1869 until 1883 and was responsible
				  for the U.S. Army's engagement in the Indian Wars. He steadfastly refused to be
				  drawn into party politics and in 1875 published his memoirs, which became one
				  of the best-known first-hand accounts of the Civil War.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">ShermanWT1</container><unittitle>General William T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. after a photograph by Bell from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography.</emph> The original1885
					 portrait of Sherman by Napoleon Sarony is in the frontispiece of the second
					 edition of Sherman's Memoirs, published in 1886.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shinn, William Joab (October 3, 1851 - August 31,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Joab Shinn was born in Iowa and educated in the public
				  schools there. In 1870, he went to Truckee, California where he owned a drug
				  store. In 1885, he moved to the White River Valley in Washington where his
				  parents had settled. Shinn purchased a hotel in Kent, Washington and operated
				  it until 1887 when he began investing in real estate. He was one of the first
				  to subdivide the large farms in the area into smaller tracts to encourage
				  people to settle there. In 1897, he purchased the Meeker hop ranch and began
				  marketing hops in England. He was elected to the first legislature of the state
				  of Washington in 1889 and served on the Kent City Council. Shinn was one of the
				  organizers of the State Bank of Kent and the White River Land Company, and
				  helped start a local newspaper. Active in the Good Roads movement, he
				  encouraged the paving of roads in Kent and the surrounding area. Because of his
				  involvement in civic affairs and the development of the town, he was called
				  “the father of Kent.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShinnWJ1</container><unittitle>William Joab Shinn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1891</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shockey, Stanley Arthur (March 18, 1944 - February 10,
				  2019)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Arthur Shockey was born in Seattle, graduated from Queen
				  Anne High School and from Western Washington where he majored in philosophy. He
				  married Shirley Rudin in 1968 (divorced 1978) and Lynne Hendrix in 1988. His
				  father, Stanley Merrill Shocke,was the superintendent of the power distribution
				  and plant maintenance division of the Seattle Transit System.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShockeySA1</container><unittitle>Stanley Arthur Shockey wearing a mask</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1984</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stan Shockey, U of W LMS. </p><p>The LMS studied ways of making IT accessible beginning in
						1984, when IT accessibility support was embraced by the Microcomputer Support
						Group under what became Computing and Communications (and is now called UW-IT).
						In 1990, the Access Technology Lab opened, providing access to assistive
						technology. The mask Shockey is wearing may have been part of this study.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shoudy, Loyal Ambrose (September 23, 1880 - August 30,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Loyal Ambrose Shoudy was born in Ellensburg, Washington, a town
				  founded by his parents and named for his mother, Ellen Stewart Shoudy. He
				  graduated from the University of Washington in 1904, where he was captain of
				  the basketball team and a member of the football and track teams. He received
				  his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Shoudy, a pioneer
				  in the field of industrial medicine, served as medical director for Bethlehem
				  Steel Company from 1914 until his death in 1950. He did extensive research in
				  the treatment of lead poisoning, tuberculosis and industrial injuries, and
				  served on the board of the Association of Industrial Physicians for over 25
				  years. During the 1918 flu pandemic, Shoudy directed the medical efforts at the
				  Bethlehem Steel plant and in the city. Although never a member of the rowing
				  team, he was a generous supporter of the UW rowing program over the years,
				  raising money for the 1936 Olympics team and hosting a dinner every year for
				  the Washington crew members attending the Intercollegiate Rowing Association
				  regatta where each attendee would receive a purple tie. In 1943, he was chosen
				  alumnus summa laude dignatus for his distinguished service to the University,
				  and in 1940 a racing shell was named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShoudyLA1</container><unittitle>Loyal Ambrose Shoudy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900 - 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Shoudy, Mary Ellen (March 7, 1846 - January 15,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ellen Stewart, the daughter of William and Mary Jane
				  Stewart. was born in Harrison County, Kentucky. In 1865, after her father died,
				  she moved to Oakland, California to join her brother, John. In 1867, she met
				  and married John Alden Shoudy, a Civil War veteran, and the couple moved to
				  Seattle, where the rest of the Shoudy family lived. In 1871, the couple bought
				  a trading post and store in the Kittitas Valley. Both Mary Ellen Shoudy and her
				  husband saw potential in the area, and in April 1875 they filed a plat for a
				  town they would call “Ellensburgh” after Mary Ellen. The “h” in the city’s name
				  was dropped in 1894. Mary Ellen also proved to be a booster for the new town,
				  encouraging businesses to come into the area, as well as helping underwrite her
				  husband’s business, which expanded to another dry-goods store. Mary Ellen
				  opened a millinery store on the northwest corner of Main and Third streets; the
				  building is now part of the Shoudy-Cadwell block in the historic downtown. She
				  and her husband also donated land for the Ellensburg Presbyterian Church, the
				  Independent Order of Odd Fellows and other organizations. John Shoudy died in
				  1901. Mary Ellen moved to Tacoma in 1910, where she lived with her daughter and
				  son-in-law. She died in Seattle in 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShoudyME1</container><unittitle>Mary Ellen Shoudy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShoudyME2</container><unittitle>Mary Ellen Shoudy sitting in chair,
					 reading</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Shumway, Raymond Phillips (September
				  23, 1894 - February 2, 1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Raymond Phillips Shumway graduated from Everett High School
				  where he played football for the 1912 championship team coached by Enoch
				  Bagshaw, who later coached the University of Washington football team. After
				  graduation, Shumway owned a cigar and candy store in Everett. He married
				  Estelle Hall in 1921. Shumway drowned while fishing.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">ShumwayRP1</container><unittitle>Raymond Phillips Shumway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James Bushnell, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sibley, Seth Wellington (January 13, 1830 - September
				  17, 1908)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Seth Wellington Sibley was born in Uxburg, Massachusetts where
				  he worked as a shoemarker. He went to California during the 1850s and then to
				  Washington. He worked in Olympia and Tacoma, where he was a member of the
				  police department. Later in life, he worked as a guard at the McNeil Island
				  penitentiary. He married Mary Simmons, the daugher of Michael Simmons, who was
				  one of the founders of Tumwater, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageJN1</container><unittitle>John Nelson Savage, Seth Wellington Sibley and
					 unidentified man </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Original tintype filed in Coll. 1034.</p><p>Written on folder: Lower right is either Mr. Sibley, maternal
					 grandfather of George Milton Savage (1904- 1977) or John Nelson Savage,
					 paternal grandfather to George Milton Savage (1904-1977).</p><p>Filed under John Nelson Savage subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sichel, Sigmund (December 16, 1858 - December 10,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sigmund Sichel was born in Bavaria and attended a commercial
				  college there. He left Germany in 1873 and worked in New York before joining
				  his uncle, Solomon Hirsch, in Portland. After three years, he went to
				  Goldendale, Washington, where he established the firm Lowengart &amp; Sichel,
				  becoming the sole proprietor of the store in 1887. On May 13, 1888, Goldendale
				  was destroyed by fire, and much of his business was lost. Sichel started again
				  in business, but sold out his interest and moved to Portland where he started a
				  wholesale and retail tobacco and cigar business. He was active in commercial
				  and political affairs, serving on the executive board of the city and in 1903
				  as police commissioner. In 1904, Sichel was elected to a four year term as a
				  state senator. He successfully sponsored a bill prohibiting the diversion of
				  water from Multnomah Falls for any purpose, preserving the Falls for future
				  generations. In addition to his cigar business, he was a partner in Peg Leg
				  Mining and Milling Company, a general mining and milling firm that owned,
				  leased, developed, and operated claims in Oregon and Idaho. He was president of
				  Congregation Beth Israel, grand deputy of the B’nai B’rith, and served on
				  several civic committees. He married Sara Salomon in 1888.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SichelS1</container><unittitle>Sigmund Sichel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sick, Emil George (June 3, 1894 – November 10,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Emil George Sick was born in Tacoma and attended Western Canada
				  College, Calgary, and Stanford University. He entered the brewery business as a
				  shipping clerk with Lethbridge Breweries, Ltd., in Alberta, Canada, which was
				  founded and owned by his father. In subsequent years, he headed numerous
				  corporations which operated breweries in the United States and Canada. He was
				  chairman of the board of Sick's Rainier Brewing Co. and president of Sicks'
				  Brewery Enterprises, Inc., both of Seattle, and a director of three other
				  firms, Molson's Brewery, Ltd., and Sicks' Breweries, Ltd., both of Canada, and
				  the Peoples National Bank of Washington. He also was a director of the 1962
				  Seattle World's Fair. Sick was well known for his leadership in civic
				  activities. He led two successful $100,000 fundraising drives, one to support
				  St. Mark’s Cathedral and the other to build the Museum of History and Industry,
				  which opened in 1952. He was active in the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, serving
				  as its president in 1941. In 1954, the Chamber named him an honorary lifetime
				  member. In 1937, he purchased the Seattle Rainier baseball club and a year
				  later built the stadium which bore his name. The club was sold in 1960. He was
				  past state chairman of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis and was
				  a founder of the King County Central Blood Bank. In 1949, Sick became the first
				  Washingtonian to be named for the Disabled American's Veteran's award for
				  outstanding civic leadership, and was named Greater Seattle's First Citizen in
				  Sports for 1963.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SickEG1</container><unittitle>Emil George Sick</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sidey, Thomas Kay (April 8, 1869 - June 27,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Cobourg, Ontario, Canada, Thomas Kay Sidey earned his
				  B.A. at Victoria College in Toronto in 1891 and his Ph.D. in Latin at
				  University of Chicago in 1900. He taught at Ottawa Collegiate Institute and was
				  a member of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome, Italy from
				  1912-1913. He joined the faculty at the University of Washington at Seattle as
				  an assistant professor of Latin and Greek in 1903, was promoted to associate
				  professor in 1913 and became a full professor in 1927. He served ten years as
				  the head of the Classical Languages Department at the University. When he
				  retired in 1942, he was accorded the title of professor emeritus. Dr. Sidey
				  achieved prominence as an authority on Greek and Latin and as an interpreter of
				  the classical aspects of the Greek and Roman world. He wrote <emph>The
				  participle in Plautus, Petronius and Apuleius.</emph>Sidey married Helen Mowatt
				  in Vancouver, Canada in 1913.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SideyTK1</container><unittitle>Thomas Kay Sidey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sieg, Gretchen Lantz Potts (November 25, 1891 -
				  September 11, 1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gretchen Lantz Potts, the daughter of Harry and Ola Potts, was
				  born in Unionville, Iowa. She met Lee Paul Sieg, her future husband, at the
				  University of Iowa where she was a student and he was a professor of physics.
				  They married in 1913 during her senior year; after her graduation, the couple
				  moved to Pittsburg where Dr. Sieg was appointed head of the physics department
				  at the University of Pittsburg. He was also Dean of the College, Dean of
				  Education and dean of Arts &amp; Sciences. In 1934, Dr. Sieg was named
				  president of the University of Washington. As the wife of the university
				  president, Gretchen Sieg was active in faculty affairs. She was also a member
				  of the Women’s University Club and many other organizations. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP9</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg and Gretchen Sieg at the Studio
					 Theatre</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lee Paul Sieg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sieg, Lee Paul (October 7, 1879 - October 8,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lee Paul Sieg was president of the University of Washington from
				  1934 to 1946. He received his Masters Degree in physics in 1901 and his PhD in
				  1910 from the University of Iowa. During World War I, he worked in France and
				  England on the development of the first aerial bombsights. He taught at
				  Carleton College, the University of Iowa and served as the Dean of the School
				  of Education at the University of Pittsburgh before coming to the University of
				  Washington in 1934. As president during the depression years, he inspired many
				  students to continue their education and fostered research and scholarship in
				  the development of adult education throughout the state. President Sieg oversaw
				  the University of Washington during World War II when the war froze much of the
				  school's physical expansion; after the war, the University launched a building
				  program to accommodate the influx of new students. Sieg was responsible for the
				  establishment of the University’s schools of medicine and dentistry, and the
				  University nearly doubled in size during his tenure. To the great credit of
				  Sieg and his administration, the University of Washington was particularly
				  responsive to the plight of its Nisei students during the months leading up to
				  the internment of Japanese Americans. With the internment looming, he took an
				  active leadership role in advocating for the transfer of Nisei students to
				  universities and colleges outside the West Coast to help them avoid the mass
				  incarceration authorized by the signing of Executive Order 9066. When he
				  retired, he was named president emeritus, the first head of the UW to be so
				  honored. Sieg Hall, the general engineering building, is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP1</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP2</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg in academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1944</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Walter F. Isaacs</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photograph of a painting</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP3</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP4</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930-1939?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP5</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg with Governor Monrad C. Wallgren after
					 the landing from the crew regatta on Lake Washington; Herbert T. Condon and
					 Maude Condon in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP6</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg holding pipe, with unidentified naval
					 officer in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photographer appears to have been taken at the same time
					 as the photograph with Governor Wallgren</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP7</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg with unidentified naval officer and
					 others at the Montlake Cut.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photographer appears to have been taken at the same time
					 as the photograph with Governor Wallgren</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP8</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg and Governor Wallgren on the deck of a
					 boat with unidentified people in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photographer appears to have been taken at the same time
					 as the previous photograph of Sieg and Wallgren.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP9</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg and Gretchen Sieg at the Studio
					 Theatre</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP10</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930-1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph appears to have been taken at the same time as
					 SiegLP4</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP11</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940-1949?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Siler, Judson Swain (June 14, 1863 - June 7,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Judson Swain Siler was an American politician who served in the
				  Washington House of Representatives from 1913 to 1921 and 1923 to 1929.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SilerJS1</container><unittitle>Judson Swain Siler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simenstad, Charles (November 18, 1873 - August 2,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Simenstad was born in Benson, Minnesota and arrived in
				  Seattle in 1898. He soon went to Alaska to prospect for gold in the Valdez and
				  McCarthy areas. He returned to Seattle in 1905 and entered the University of
				  Washington, graduating with a degree from the School of Mines. He worked in
				  mining in Washington and Alaska until 1940 when he accepted a job with Pacific
				  Car and Foundry in Renton. He was a member of the Arctic Club and a charter
				  member of the Tillicum Club of Valdez.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimenstadC1</container><unittitle>Charles Simenstad</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Curtis Studios, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph taken by the Curtis Studios for the
					 Arctic Club.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Annie Elizabeth (July 25, 1871 - January 7,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Annie Elizabeth Simmons, the daughter of Christopher Columbus
				  Simmons and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. In 1890,
				  she married David Mathew Ellison (1864-1946), a farmer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Asenath Ann Kennedy (July 26, 1851 - October 8,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Asenath Ann Kennedy, the daughter of Benjamin Franklin Kennedy
				  and Elizabeth Ann Farrington Kennedy, was born in Pike County, Illinois and
				  crossed the plains by wagon train with her parents. She married Christopher
				  Columbus Simmons in Seattle when he was 19 and she was 13; Dr. David Maynard
				  performed the ceremony.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsAAK1</container><unittitle>Asenath Ann Kennedy Simmons, seated in a
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Aunt Seena (Asenath Kennedy) 63rd wedding
					 anniversary.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC2</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons,
					 and three men and one woman who are not identified </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 24, 1931</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Benjamin Franklin (September 15, 1848 - January
				  6, 1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Franklin Simmons, the son of Michael Troutman Simmons
				  and Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Tumwater, Washington Territory. He
				  lived in Mason County, Washington and worked as a farmer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC3</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons and George
					 Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Bertha Asenath (February 27, 1893 - March 18,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bertha Asenath Simmons, the daughter of Christopher Columbus
				  Simmons and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. She
				  married Emil Isaac Fairson in 1910; they were divorced in 1927. She married
				  Benjamin Goe in 1969.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Catherine (October 5, 1857 - February 2,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine (or Catharine) Simmons, the daughter of Michael
				  Troutman Simmons and Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Olympia,
				  Washington. She married James Charles Cantwell (1840 – 1912); they had eight
				  children. They lived in Little Falls, Washington where he was the postmaster,
				  and she operated a boarding house. After his death, she married John Bannon
				  (1868 –1960) on August 26, 1914.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsC1</container><unittitle>Catherine Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Charles Mason (March 10, 1860 - July 5,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Mason Simmons, the son of Michael Troutman Simmons and
				  Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Mason County, Washington. He married
				  Barbara Cunninham (1860-1916) in Drews Prairie, Washington in 1882. He had a
				  farm in Centralia, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCM1</container><unittitle>Charles Mason Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: C. Mason Simmons, son of Colonel M. T.
					 Simmons</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Charlotte Elizabeth (February 17, 1850- January
				  25, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charlotte Elizabeth Simmons, the daughter of Michael Troutman
				  Simmons and Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Tumwater, Washington
				  Territory. The Simmons family had crossed the plains in 1844, stopping for a
				  short time at Washougal before moving to Tumwater where her father was one of
				  the founders of the town. She married John Nicholas Koontz, a member of another
				  pioneer family, on November 12, 1867.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCE1</container><unittitle>Charlotte Elizabeth Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1895</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Christopher Columbus (April 14, 1845 - July 9,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons, the son of Michael Troutman
				  Simmons and Elizabeth Simmons, was the first child born to settlers north and
				  west of the Columbia River. He married Aseneth Ann Kennedy in Seattle when he
				  was 19 and she was 13; Dr. David Maynard performed the ceremony. They lived at
				  Alki Point before moving to Mason County. Simmons worked as a farmer and
				  oysterman and later became an authority on indigenous languages and history.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons,
					 and three men and one woman who are not identified </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 24, 1931</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC2</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC3</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons and George
					 Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, David Walter (July 22, 1888- November 7,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Walter Simmons, the son of Christopher Columbus Simmons
				  and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. He worked as a
				  farmer and for the gas company as a stationary engineer.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Elizabeth Kindred (February 15, 1820 - March
				  23, 1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Elizabeth Kindred, the daughter of David and Talitha Kindred,
				  married Michael Troutman Simmons in 1835. The Simmons family had crossed the
				  plains in 1844, stopping for a short time at Washougal before moving to
				  Tumwater where Michael Simmons was one of the founders of the town. The couple
				  had ten children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsEK1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Kindred Simmons sitting in a
					 chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsEK2</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Kindred Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT6</container><unittitle>A drawing of Michael Troutman Simmons, Elizabeth
					 Kindred Simmons, and the wagon in which they crossed the plains.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Included with the drawing is a map showing the route they
					 traveled from Independence, Missouri to Tumwater, Washington.</p><p>Filed under Michael Troutman Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Frances Marion (February 3, 1841 - January 10,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Francis Marion Simmons, the son of Michael Troutman Simmons and
				  Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Missouri and crossed the plains with his
				  parents who eventually settled in Tumwater, Washington. He married Helen Lewis
				  in 1873, and the couple moved to Puyallup, Washington where he was the overseer
				  of Ezra Meeker's hop farms. He served during the Indian Wars of 1855-56, and at
				  the time of his death, was the last survivor of that conflict.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsFM1</container><unittitle>Francis Marion Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsFM2</container><unittitle>Francis Marion Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsFM3</container><unittitle>Francis Marion Simmons in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: F. M. Simmons in his Indian War toggs
					 (sic)</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsHL2</container><unittitle>Helen Lewis Simmons and Francis Marion
					 Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Lewis Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMjr2</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Jr. with Francis Marion
					 Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Francis Marion Simmons was the son of Michael Simmons, George
					 Milton Savage Jr.'s great-grandfather.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Jr. subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC3</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons and George
					 Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, George Washington (January 1, 1836 - September
				  10, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Washington Simmons, the son of Michael Troutman Simmons
				  and Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Missouri. The family crossed the
				  plains in 1844 with the Gilliam Company wagon train. George was an interpreter
				  for his father during the Indian Wars of 1855. He later moved to San Francisco
				  where he worked as a carpenter. He married Virginia Caroline Hubbs in 1864 in
				  Port Townsend.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsGW1</container><unittitle>George Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC3</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons and George
					 Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Helen Lewis (January 27, 1857 - December 22,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Lewis, the daughter of John W. Lewis and Justa Greenman
				  Lewis, was born in Oregon City, Oregon. She married Francis Marion Simmons in
				  1873. She was active in her church, where she played the organ, and was a
				  member of the Custer Circle, Ladies of the G.A.R.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsHL1</container><unittitle>Helen Lewis Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsHL2</container><unittitle>Helen Lewis Simmons and Francis Marion
					 Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, James Franklin (March 18, 1874 - March 20,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Franklin Simmons, the son of Christopher Columbus Simmons
				  and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. He worked for
				  the railroad. He married Eva Crawford in 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Louise Farrington (October 9, 1884 - November
				  2, 1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louise Farrington Simmons, the daughter of Christopher Columbus
				  Simmons and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. She
				  married James Christian Johnson in 1904; they had a daughter, Winifred Asenath
				  Johnson. She married George Edward Hansen in 1917.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Margaret May (March 11, 1890 - November 19,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret May Simmons, the daughter of Christopher Columbus
				  Simmons and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. She
				  married Clinton Abraham Weaver (1878 -1954) in 1912. After his death, she
				  married his cousin, William Henry Weaver (1888-1980) in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Mary Elizabeth (July 23, 1876 - July 5,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Simmons, the daughter of Christopher Columbus Simmons and
				  Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Kamilche, Washington. She married Robert
				  Gaudette, a lumberman, in 1916.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC1</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons with James F. Simmons,
					 Annie Simmons, Asenath Kennedy Simmons, Mary Simmons Moore, Louise Farrington
					 Simmons, David Walter Simmons, Margaret May Simmons and Bertha Simmons
					 Fairson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Michael Troutman (August 5, 1814 - November 15,
				  1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Troutman Simmons was an American pioneer and one of the
				  first non-Indigenous men to settle in the Puget Sound. Simmons was one of ten
				  children, born in Kentucky in 1814. As a boy, he moved with his mother to Pike
				  County, Illinois. When Michael was 21 years old, he moved to Iowa and married
				  Elizabeth Kindred, who was fifteen. Five years later, the couple moved to
				  Missouri where Michael built a gristmill. At the age of 30, he decided to
				  abandon the Midwest and traveled to Puget Sound in a wagon train with a group
				  of settlers, including his friend George Bush, in 1844. He assumed leadership
				  of the new settlers, who gave him the title of "Colonel". After taking advice
				  from the traders of the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort Nisqually, the new
				  American settlers founded New Market (later Tumwater).]Despite the help, three
				  years later Simmons led a campaign against the Company. At New Market, Simmons
				  exploited the power of Tumwater Falls to construct mills, but in 1850 sold his
				  interests at New Market and moved to Olympia. Simmons invested in shipping and
				  became Olympia's postmaster. After the appointment of Isaac Stevens as the
				  first governor of newly established Washington Territory, Simmons was appointed
				  Indian agent in 1854, and in 1855 was charged with preparing the enforcement of
				  Governor Steven's Indian treaties.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT1</container><unittitle>Michael Troutman Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT2</container><unittitle>Michael Troutman Simmons in suit and hat, with cane,
					 standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT3</container><unittitle>Michael Troutman Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT4</container><unittitle>Michael Troutman Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph, from a magazine. Printed on front:
					 Michael T. Simmons, the first settler on Puget Sound</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT5</container><unittitle>Michael Troutman Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a photograph</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT6</container><unittitle>A drawing of Michael Troutman Simmons, Elizabeth
					 Kindred Simmons, and the wagon in which they crossed the plains.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Included with the drawing is a map showing the route they
					 traveled from Independence, Missouri to Tumwater, Washington.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsMT7</container><unittitle>A crowd of people at the Simmons Monument in Olympia,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Michael Troutman Jr. (October 8, 1862 -
				  February 19, 1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., the son of Michael Troutman
				  Simmons and Elizabeth Kindred Simmons, was born in Mason County, Washington
				  Territory. He lived in Ellensburg, Washington where he worked as a farmer. He
				  married Louisa Gavitt (1857 - 1943) in 1885. They had two children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC3</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons and George
					 Washington Simmons</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Ruby Elizabeth (May 8, 1891 - May 12,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruby Elizabeth Simmons was born at Oyster Bay, Washington. She
				  moved to Ellensburg in the Kittitas Valley with her parents, Michael Troutman
				  Simmons Jr. and Louisa Gavitt Simmons, when she was two years old. She was a
				  granddaughter of Michael Troutman Simmons, Sr., who settled at Tumwater in 1845
				  and built the first sawmill there.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsRE1</container><unittitle>Ruby Elizabeth Simmons wearing a tricorn
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Simmons, Zaza Farrington (August 21, 1878 - October 22,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zaza Farrington Simmons, the son of Christopher Columbus Simmons
				  and Asenath Kennedy Simmons, was born in Washington Territory. He was an oyster
				  grower and packer on Mud Bay, Washington where he had a shucking plant near his
				  oyster beds. He married Marguerite Evangeline Riley (1883 - 1936) in 1903 and
				  Myrtle Hicks (1890-1971) in 1945.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">34</container><container type="item">SimmonsCC4</container><unittitle>Christopher Columbus Simmons, Benjamin Franklin
					 Simmons, Michael Troutman Simmons Jr., Francis Marion Simmons, George
					 Washington Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons and probably
					 Zaza Farrington Simmons.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1916</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Marvin D. Boland, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: 5 Brothers and nephews.</p><p>Christopher Columbus Simmons had three sons who lived to
						adulthood: James Franklin Simmons, David Walter Simmons, and Zaza Farrington
						Simmons. Zaza is probably the third nephew in the photo; however, there are no
						other photos of him to compare with this one.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Christopher Columbus Simmons subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simms, George Otto (July 4, 1910 – November 15,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Otto Simms was an archbishop in the Church of Ireland. He
				  was born in Dublin, Ireland and studied at Trinity College, Dublin. He became a
				  deacon in 1935 and a priest in 1936. He was appointed Dean of Cork in 1952;
				  consecrated a bishop, he served as Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, between
				  1952 and 1956 and served as Archbishop of Dublin, from 1956 to 1969. He was a
				  scholar and published research on the history of the Church of Ireland and on
				  the<emph> Book of Kells</emph>. Simms visited Seattle in 1960 on his way to
				  lead sessions in the Episcopal Church’s School of Prophets in San
				  Francisco.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsGO1</container><unittitle>Archbishop George Otto Simms</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsGO2</container><unittitle>Archbishop George Otto Simms with unidentified man
					 examining a manuscript.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960</unitdate><note><p>The unidentified man may be Neal O. Hines, assistant to the
						President of the University, Charles Odegaard.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsGO3</container><unittitle>Archbishop George Otto Simms with unidentified man
					 examining a manuscript.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960</unitdate><note><p>The unidentified man may be Nelson A. Wahlstrom, UW
						comptroller.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsGO4</container><unittitle>Archbishop George Otto Simms with Robert D. Monroe,
					 curator of Rare Books at the University of Washington, examining a
					 manuscript.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simms, William Gilmore (April 17, 1806 – June 11,
				  1870)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Gilmore Simms was a poet, novelist, politician and
				  historian from the American South. His writings achieved great prominence
				  during the 19th century, with Edgar Allan Poe pronouncing him the best novelist
				  America had ever produced. He is still known among literary scholars as a major
				  force in antebellum Southern literature. Simms is also remembered for his
				  strong support of slavery and for his opposition to <emph>Uncle Tom's
				  Cabin</emph>, in response to which he wrote reviews and the pro-slavery novel 
				  <emph>The Sword and the Distaff</emph>(1854). During his literary career, he
				  was the editor of several journals and newspapers, and served in the South
				  Carolina House of Representatives.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimmsWG1</container><unittitle>William Gilmore Simms</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><origination><persname role="engraver">Griboyedoff</persname></origination></did><note><p>Engraving by Griboyedoff after a portrait by an unknown artist
					 from <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Simon, Arthur Emil (September 16, 1895
				  - July 14, 1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Emil Simon was a Seattle attorney and civic leader. In
				  1917, he became the first summa cum laude graduate of the University of
				  Washington. After serving as a sergeant in the Army Medical Corp during World
				  War I, he graduated from Harvard Law School where he was editor of the law
				  review. He began his private practice in Seattle in 1920. He was the assistant
				  and then the chief assistant United States attorney during the late 1920s, and
				  became assistant Western counsel for the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1928 and
				  1929 before returning to private practice. While at the UW, he was a member of
				  the varsity crew, the Big W Club, the Fir Club and the Varsity Boat Club. Simon
				  served as president of the Rainier Club, the Harvard Club and the UW Alumni
				  Association. He was the clerk of the session of the First Presbyterian Church
				  for thirty-six years, a member of the UW Board of Rowing Stewards, president of
				  the board of trustees of the UW Foundation for Research and was a member of the
				  Board of Trustees of King County Hospital System and of Goodwill
				  Industries.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimonAE1</container><unittitle>Arthur Emil Simon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Simon, Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimonM1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Mrs. Simon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William F. Boyd, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on envelope with photograph: Mrs. C. H. Frye had this
					 photo. Presumably Mrs. Simon was a Seattle friend.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simpson, George (1787? - September 7, 1860)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir George Simpson was a Scottish explorer and the colonial
				  governor of the Hudson's Bay Company during the period of its greatest power.
				  From 1820 to 1860, he was in practice, if not in law, the British viceroy for
				  the whole of Rupert's Land, an enormous territory of 3.9 millions square
				  kilometers corresponding to nearly forty per cent of modern-day Canada. His
				  administration of the west was a precondition for the confederation of western
				  and eastern Canada, which later created the Dominion of Canada. He was noted
				  for his grasp of administrative detail and his physical stamina in traveling
				  through the wilderness. Simpson was also the first person known to have
				  circumnavigated the world by land, and became the most powerful man of the
				  North American fur trade during his lifetime.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimpsonG1</container><unittitle>Sir George Simpson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1856</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Stephen Pearce</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Collotype reproduction of a portrait of Sir
					 George Simpson, painted in 1856 by Stephen Pearce. Original hangs in the
					 entrance hall of Beaver House, London. (Hudson's Bay Company)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Simpson, George Barton ( August 12, 1881 - June 21,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Barton Simpson, a native of Pomeroy, Washington, started
				  a private law practice in Vancouver, Washington in 1907 after graduating from
				  Willamette University Law School in Salem, Oregon. He was elected Vancouver
				  City attorney in 1915 and in his time in that position never lost a case. In
				  1920, Simpson became a judge of the Superior Court and held this position until
				  1937 when he was appointed to the state Supreme Court. He was elected in 1938
				  and again in 1944, serving two terms as chief justice. In 1950, Simpson was
				  defeated for re-election. He returned to Vancouver, where he practiced law with
				  his son Donald, until his death in 1954 at age 72. In addition to his work as
				  an attorney and a judge, he was the founder of the Vancouver Boy Scout
				  movement, founder and president of the Clark County Golf and Country Club,
				  first chairman of the Clark County Game Commission and a leader in numerous
				  other civic and service organizations. He is credited with having initiated the
				  local trout hatchery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SimpsonGB1</container><unittitle>George Barton Simpson in judicial robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Presented to my friend Walter, Geo. B.
					 Simpson</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sisson, Edgar Allen (October 27, 1849 - March 25,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edgar Allen Sisson was born in Pennsylvania and attended
				  Bucknell University and Cornell University. He came west by way of San
				  Francisco in 1872, arriving at LaConner aboard the steamer<emph render="italic">J.B. Libby.</emph> He formed a partnership with his cousin,
				  Alvinza G. Tillinghast and R. E. Whitney, to build dikes and farm in Padilla
				  Bay. Sisson retired from active farming in 1909. He was a member of the 1913
				  state legislature and was Skagit County commissioner for six years. Joining the
				  Skagit County Pioneer Association in 1904, he served as secretary for four
				  years and as president for one year. Later he was elected president of the
				  State Pioneer Association for a one-year term. For sixty-one years, he recorded
				  the daily events on the Skagit Flats, and his seventeen ledgers document
				  everyday life in the area. He married Ida Leamer on May 31, 1876.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SissonEA1</container><unittitle>Edgar Allen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Charles L. Judd, Anacortes, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sisson, Ida Leamer (June 14, 1856 - June 19,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida Leamer, the daughter of David Leamer and Eliza Jean Campbell
				  Leamer, was born in Davenport, Iowa. She taught at the first Pleasant Ridge
				  school at the age of 15 and later became the first teacher in the LaConner
				  schools. She married Edgar Allen Sisson in 1876. The couple lived on a farm in
				  Padilla Bay before moving to Anacortes, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SissonIL1</container><unittitle>Ida Leamer Sisson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sitton, Nathan Koontz “Doc” (September 2, 1825 - July
				  10, 1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nathan Koontz Sitton was born in Missouri and crossed the plains
				  to Oregon in 1843. Arriving in Oregon, he found employment on various farms and
				  at a mill before taking a Donation Land Claim north of McMinnville in 1846. He
				  married Priscilla Rogers in 1847. In 1848 Sitton made the trip to California in
				  search of gold, and on his return, was able to make improvements on his farm,
				  developing grain and stock. After Priscilla’s death in 1869, he married Mary
				  Laughlin in 1871.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SittonNK1</container><unittitle>Nathan Koontz Sitton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sixkiller, Alex L. “Sonny” (September 6, 1951-
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alex “Sonny” Sixkiller is a former American football player and
				  current sports commentator. Born in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, his family moved to
				  Ashland, Oregon when he was a year old. He attended Ashland High School and was
				  a letterman in football, basketball, and baseball. University of Washington
				  head coach Jim Owens recruited Sixkiller and offered him a scholarship.
				  Sixkiller became the starting quarterback for the Huskies as a sophomore in
				  1970 and led the Huskies to a 6-4 record. He finished his college career with
				  385 completions for 5,496 yards and 35 touchdowns, and held fifteen school
				  records. Not selected in the 1973 NFL Draft, Sixkiller signed with the
				  Philadelphia Bell of the World Football League in September 1974 and played
				  with The Hawaiians in 1975 before the entire league collapsed. He is currently
				  a senior manager for business development for Huskies Sports Properties, the
				  rights-holder for University of Washington Athletics.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SixkillerAS1</container><unittitle>Alex "Sonny" Sixkiller in UW football uniform, holding
					 a football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970-1972</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SixkillerAS2</container><unittitle>Alex "Sonny" Sixkiller throwing a football during a
					 game</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1970-1972</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Skidmore, John Nathan (January 12, 1833 - July 23,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Nathan Skidmore, the son of Elijah Baker Skidmore and Agnes
				  Long Skidmore, was born in Lincoln, Kentucky. He crossed the plains to Oregon
				  by ox train when he was twenty. He joined the Oregon Mounted Volunteers and
				  served under Colonel Thomas Cornelius during the Indian Wars (1855-1856). He
				  initially settled on a site where Portland, Oregon is today, before moving to
				  South Bend, Pacific County, Washington. He married Sidney Lambert in Portland
				  in 1858; they had eight children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN1</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN2</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore, Sidney Lambert Skidmore, Mary
					 Caroline Gordon, Ruth Gordon Baker, Glenn Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912-1913</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Photograph of John N. Skidmore of South
					 Bend, Wash, &amp; wife &amp; daughters Mrs. Charles Gordon, Mrs. Alfred Baker,
					 &amp; Glen (sic) Baker.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Skidmore, Mary Caroline (May 23, 1869 - July 13,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Caroline Skidmore, the daughter of John Nathan Skidmore and
				  Sidney Lambert Skidmore, was born in Westport, Oregon. She married Charles
				  Harvey Gordon on September 12, 1886 in South Bend, Pacific County, Washington.
				  They divorced sometime before 1920. She married Alexander Ashten in 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN2</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore, Sidney Lambert Skidmore, Mary
					 Caroline Gordon, Ruth Gordon Baker, Glenn Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912-1913</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Photograph of John N. Skidmore of South
					 Bend, Wash, &amp; wife &amp; daughters Mrs. Charles Gordon, Mrs. Alfred Baker,
					 &amp; Glen (sic) Baker.</p><p>Filed under John Nathan Skidmore subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Skidmore, Sidney Lambert (October 25, 1843 - April 27,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sidney Lambert, the daughter of Wesley Lambert and Sarah Gustin
				  Lambert, was born in Kentucky. She married John Nathan Skidmore in Portland,
				  Oregon in 1858; they had eight children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkidmoreJN2</container><unittitle>John Nathan Skidmore, Sidney Lambert Skidmore, Mary
					 Caroline Gordon, Ruth Gordon Baker, Glenn Baker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912-1913</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Photograph of John N. Skidmore of South
					 Bend, Wash, &amp; wife &amp; daughters Mrs. Charles Gordon, Mrs. Alfred Baker,
					 &amp; Glen (sic) Baker.</p><p>Filed under John Nathan Skidmore subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Skinner, Eugene Franklin (September 13, 1809 - December
				  17, 1864)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eugene Franklin Skinner was an early settler in Oregon and the
				  founder of the city of Eugene, which is named for him. He was born in Essex,
				  New York, and lived in Wisconsin and Illinois, where he received his education.
				  He married Mary Cook in 1839. In May 1845, he and his wife joined a large
				  company traveling across the plains. They arrived at Sutter’s Fort in September
				  of that year and the following spring journeyed to Oregon. They arrived in the
				  Willamette Valley in 1846 with 1,200 other settlers that year. Advised by the
				  Kalapuyans to build on high ground to avoid flooding, Skinner erected a cabin
				  on the slope of what the Kalapuyans called Ya-po-ah. The hill is now known as
				  Skinner's Butte. The cabin was used as a trading post and was registered as an
				  official post office on January 8, 1850. The settlement was relocated in 1853
				  and named Eugene City in 1853. Formally incorporated as a city in 1862, it was
				  named simply Eugene in 1889. Skinner ran a ferry service across the Willamette
				  River where the Ferry Street Bridge now stands.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkinnerEF1</container><unittitle>Eugene Franklin Skinner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Skinner, Victor Garfield (May 12, 1882 - May 21,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Victor Garfield Skinner was a member of the Aberdeen city
				  council for several years before being elected to the Washington State House in
				  1933. He was chair of the Roads and Bridges Committee and served as
				  sergeant-at-arms. In 1938 he was appointed the state supervisor of the Savings
				  &amp; Loan Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD2</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with group signing SB 151 creating a
					 division for the blind in the State Department of Social Security, making
					 appropriations and providing for the blind and the prevention of
					 blindness</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 15, 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. C. Gerard</persname></origination></did><note><p>Standing (L-R): State Representative George Twidwell, State
					 Representative Victor Skinner, John Nelson with his seeing-eye dog, State
					 Senator Joseph Walter Thein.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Skoglund, Anna Siensdr (August 7, 1872 - August 24,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Siensdr Skoglund, the daughter of Sven Svensson Skoglund
				  and Kajsa Persdter, was born in Sweden. She married Anders Nilsson in 1895; the
				  couple had four children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AndersonJA1</container><unittitle>John Anderson with his mother, Anna Siensdr
					 Skoglund</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Alexius Anderson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Skowronski, Helen Elsa “Hella” (June 15, 1905-June 9,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Elsa “Hella” Skowronski was an award-winning fabric
				  designer and weaver whose work is part of the permanent design collection at
				  the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. She was born in Germany in 1905. She
				  came to the United States in 1929 and settled in Detroit. In 1937 she took up
				  weaving as a hobby; however, it was not until the 1950s, when she came to
				  Seattle, that designing and weaving became her full-time profession. She
				  settled first on Vashon Island and later set up a studio in Bellevue. She was a
				  textile designer and weaver and the first weaver to use dacron fiber.
				  Tapestries, rugs, draperies and wall hangings were among the thousands of works
				  she did on commission. Skowronski received the prestigious American Institute
				  of Decorator's Awards in 1957 and 1958. Her designs have been featured in
				  decorator magazines and have been exhibited on world tours. Skowronski wrote
				  several books on weaving, taught at Bellevue Community College and gave many
				  lectures to community groups. Some of her works can also be found in the Henry
				  Art Gallery at the University of Washington, and her papers are held in UW
				  Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SkowronskiHE1</container><unittitle>Helen Elsa “Hella” Skowronski at a loom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 24, 1968</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Slater, Florence Ballard (April 1, 1861 - February 23,
				  1934)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Florence Ballard, the daughter of physician, Senator and Idaho
				  Territorial Governor David Wesley Ballard and Eliza Jane (Rooker) Ballard, was
				  born in Lebanon, Oregon. Her parents were 1852 Oregon Trail pioneers. She
				  married John Berry Slater, an attorney, in 1889. The couple lived in Colville,
				  Washington where John practiced law.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SlaterFB1</container><unittitle>Florence Ballard Slater</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1916</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on photograph: Mrs. John B. Slater, Colville,
					 Wash.</p><p>Written on verso in pencil: Inda (Mayfield) Slater.</p><p>This appears to be a photograph of Florence Slater of
					 Colville, rather than Inda Mayfield Slater, who was married to John (NMI)
					 Slater and lived in Ferndale, Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Slater, John Berry (April 10, 1860 - November 29,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Berry Slater was born in Yreka, California, the oldest of
				  four sons born to James B. Slater (1825-1901) and Sarah Jane James (1840-1867).
				  He received his early education in Oregon public schools and attended Santiam
				  Academy for two years, clerking in a drug store after school. At age 20 he
				  moved to Sprague, Washington and worked in the coppersmith's department of
				  Northern Pacific Railway for two years. He began his own drug store business in
				  Heron, Montana in 1883. A year later, he went to the Coeur d'Alene mines in
				  Idaho for a short time before returning to Heron, to close his store. He then
				  went to Medical Lake, Washington where he opened another drug store. He
				  purchased the <emph>Medical Lake Banner,</emph> a local newspaper, in 1885 and
				  four months later, moved the newspaper to Colville, Washington. He changed the
				  name of the paper to the <emph>Stevens County Miner</emph>. It was the first
				  regular newspaper published north of Spokane. In February 1886, Slater was
				  appointed postmaster of Colville. In 1886, he was elected probate judge of
				  Stevens County while studying law. He was admitted to the Washington bar in
				  June 1890. In the fall of 1890, he was elected prosecuting attorney for Stevens
				  County, remaining two years in that job. He continued his law practice and
				  wrote for the Colville newspaper for the rest of his life. Slater also served
				  on the Colville school board for many years, founded both the Stevens County
				  Pioneer Association (now the Stevens Co. Historical Museum) and Stevens
				  County's first local Chamber of Commerce in Colville. In April 1900 he was
				  appointed by Governor Rogers to be a member of the Washington State Board of
				  Audit and Control; he served until April 1901. He married Florence E. Ballard,
				  a daughter of 1852 Oregon Trail pioneer, physician, Oregon Senator and two-term
				  Idaho Territorial Governor David Wesley Ballard (1824-1883) and Jane Eliza
				  Rooker (1831-1891) in 1889. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SlaterJB1</container><unittitle> John Berry Slater</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RogersJR5</container><unittitle>Governor John R. Rogers and Hon. John B. Slater at
					 Myers Falls, Stevens County</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897-1901?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographerFred">Fred S. Wheeler, Kettle Falls, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Taken by Fred S. Wheeler, 16 yrs. old of
						Kettle Falls</p><p>Filed under John Rankin Rogers subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Slattery, John Ruskin (August 3, 1882 - August 7,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Ruskin Slattery was born in Ohio and graduated from the
				  University of Washington with a degree in economics in1905 and a law degree in
				  1907. While at the University, he was active in student affairs as a member of
				  the debate team; the Dragon's Eye, the junior-senior society; the bookstore
				  committee; and <emph>The Tyee</emph>staff. He was also editor in chief of the 
				  <emph>Pacific Wave</emph>, 1903-1905, and was the graduate manager of UW
				  athletics, 1906-1907. He entered public life in 1908 when he became the
				  secretary to Mayor John F. Miller. Slattery began a private law practice in
				  1910, but was forced to retire due to ill health. He then engaged in real
				  estate investments, Slattery married Marie Baillargeon in 1911; the couple had
				  three children. Slattery and his wife died on the same day in 1938. He died in
				  Seattle and she in Piedmont, California where she had resided since 1927.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SlatteryJR1</container><unittitle> John Ruskin Slattery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William F. Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Fmr editor Pacific Wave 1905 &amp; later
						graduate manager of UW athletics</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Slauson, Celeste Langley (July 1, 1862 - September 3,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Celeste Langley, the daughter of Judge James W. Langley and
				  Jeannette Young Langley, was born in Champaign, Illinois, and graduated from
				  Illinois State University and Boston School of Oratory. She married Howard B.
				  Slauson, an attorney, on November 15, 1888 in Champaign, and the couple moved
				  to Seattle sometime before the Seattle Fire of 1889. Slauson taught elocution
				  in Champaign, and in Seattle was the founder and director of the Seattle
				  Conservatory of Arts. She taught speech and elocution at the Conservatory and
				  after its closure in 1893, as an independent teacher. She was charter member of
				  the Women's Century Club of Seattle and was one of the first presidents of the
				  organization.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SlausonCL1</container><unittitle>Celeste Langley Slauson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Arthusa Emeline (June 12, 1834 - May 6,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthusa Emeline Lynn, a native of Missouri, crossed the plains
				  with her parents, David Lynn and Rachel Haun Lynn, in 1850. Her father died
				  from cholera by the Platte River, and Arethusa, her mother and two sisters
				  continued to Oregon. They first located at Portland and later moved to
				  Yoncalla, Douglas County, where Arethusa married Thomas Smith in 1852. Shortly
				  after their marriage, the couple moved to a farm in Wilbur and later to
				  Roseburg. Her husband had crossed the plains in 1847 and was one of the
				  organizers of Douglas County. In1852, he was elected County Commissioner;
				  served as Justice of the Peace from 1855 to 1858; was Postmaster from 1854 to
				  1860, in 1858; was elected Public Administrator of Douglas County; served as
				  County Judge from 1874 to 1878; and served as Inspector of Stock for the
				  County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithAE1</container><unittitle>Arthusa Emeline Smith</unittitle><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Alice Maude (January 14,1867 - January 11,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Physician and writer Alice Maude Smith began her medical career
				  as a nurse at the Lynn Hospital Training School for Nurses in Massachusetts.
				  She graduated with a Doctor in Medicine degree from Northwestern University in
				  1896. Smith moved to Tacoma, Washington in 1898 where she began her medical
				  practice. Smith was a member of the American Medical Association, Washington
				  State Medical Society, Washington State Medical Examining Board, League of
				  Women Writers, and Director of Health and Hygiene for the Women's Legislative
				  Council of Washington. She researched and published articles about child
				  development, mental health, and syphilis and served as a psychiatrist for the
				  Tacoma court system, assessing the competence of defendants in court. Smith was
				  also a playwright, essayist, and poet. Her play,<emph render="italic">The
				  Strength of the Weak,</emph> was performed in Tacoma and New York City and
				  eventually was made into a movie in 1916. She wrote under her own name, as well
				  as Alice Smith Scoville, Sutton Broome, Smith Sutton Brome, Scovill Smith, and
				  Scovill Smith Browe. She donated her library and her papers to the University
				  of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithAM1</container><unittitle>Alice Maude Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1896</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">35</container><container type="item">SmithAM2</container><unittitle>Alice Maude Smith in cap and gown</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1896</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">35</container><container type="item">SmithAM3</container><unittitle>Alice Maude Smith in evening gown, holding a
					 fan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1900</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Bernice (January 31, 1909 - October 10,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bernice Beverly Ferrier, the daughter of Lee and Julia Ferrier,
				  was born in Aberdeen, Washington. She was interlibrary loan director at the
				  University of Washington for many years and served on the University of
				  Washington Alumni Board, including as president in 1942. She married Cecil
				  Smith, a Seattle lawyer, musician and dance band leader, in 1941.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesFD2</container><unittitle>Group photo of six people in a boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Judge Frank James, Bea Smith, Cecil Smith,
					 Betty James (l to r)</p><p>Filed under Frank Dexter James subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Benjamin Joseph (May 6, 1895- July 6,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Benjamin Joseph Smith, the son of Hiram and Alice (Storm) Smith,
				  was president of the Seattle Mortage Company and a member of the Seattle Real
				  Estate Board. He married Genita Weaver in 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBJ1</container><unittitle>Ben Smith with Fred J. O'Brien, George Baker, Vincent
					 D. Miller, Leslie W. Eastman, Fred W. Darnell, Alonzo "Lon" Forbush and two
					 unidentified men, possibly taken at a meeting of the Seattle Real Estate
					 Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March, 1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Doug Madison, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith. Blaine Robert (February 6, 1870 - March 5,
				  1935)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Blaine Robert Smith, the son of Amedee Smith and Mary Spellman
				  Smith, was in Buena Vista, Oregon. He was educated in Portland and went into
				  his father's business at an early age. After his father's death in 1894, he
				  became the secretary-treasurer of the family company, the Oregon Pottery
				  Company, later reorganized as the Western Clay Mfg. Co. When the business was
				  sold, he began work for the Denny-Renton Clay &amp; Coal Company in 1914 and
				  commuted to Seattle. He had a Tudor style home built by architect Ellis F.
				  Lawrence in 1909 located at 5219 S.E. Belmont in Portland that is now on the
				  National Register of Historic Places. He sold the Belmont home in 1919, and the
				  family moved into a new country house in Clackamas, Oregon; it burned to the
				  ground in 1921. At that time he was the owner and manager of the Monarch Fire
				  Clay Company, capitalized by him &amp; his son, Blaine Jr., and operated with
				  his three sons. His middle son, Sherrill, died on a business trip in 1924, and
				  Smith suffered a fractured skull in 1925 when he was thrown from an auto driven
				  by his son, Blasdel. The injury caused him to be confined to a chair for the
				  balance of his life. The company closed the following year.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithBR1</container><unittitle>Blaine Robert Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1914</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Robert Mushet, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Cecil Haven (June 15, 1905 - July 15,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Bellingham, Washington, Smith played drums in the
				  Whatcom High School band and spent several years following his graduation from
				  high school working in a factory by day and playing in dance bands at night. In
				  1926, he entered the University of Washington's School of Architecture, but
				  abandoned his studies after a year, finding it more profitable to continue
				  working as a musician, generally using the name, "Cec" Smith. He re-enrolled at
				  the University in 1929, having decided to pursue a degree in business, while
				  keeping a very active schedule with his band, which went by several names.
				  Smith's bands played at most of the important social events on campus and went
				  on two tours of Asia during summer vacations. Smith eventually received a law
				  degree and set up practice as an attorney in Bellevue, Washington after the
				  Second World War. He continued to lead a band that played frequently at
				  Eastside social functions until the mid-1950s, when he became interested in
				  local politics. In later life, Smith continued to be active in local civic and
				  fraternal organizations. An avid traveler and amateur photographer, Smith
				  frequently gave travel lectures, illustrated with his own slides. He married
				  Bernice Ferrier in 1941. His photograph album is in University of Washington
				  Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JamesFD2</container><unittitle>Group photo of six people in a boat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Judge Frank James, Bea Smith, Cecil Smith,
					 Betty James (l to r).</p><p>Filed under Frank Dexter James subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Smith, Celiast Helen (November 1801? - June
				  1891)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Celiast (Helen) was the daughter of Coboway, a prominent Clatsop
				  chief who had hosted the Lewis and Clark Expedition at Fort Clatsop in the
				  winter of 1805-1806. Celiast married Basil Poirier, the baker at Fort Vancouver
				  in the 1820s, and the couple had three children. This marriage was dissolved
				  when it was discovered he also had a wife in Canada. She met teacher Solomon
				  Smith in 1834. Solomon and Celiast (who took the name "Helen") opened a school
				  house and became known as the first schoolteachers in Oregon. On February 11,
				  1837, the Smiths were married by Methodist missionary Jason Lee, and the Smith
				  family settled on a land claim on the Clatsop Plains, near what is now Seaside,
				  Oregon. Celiast and Solomon had seven children, and the couple operated a store
				  along the Skipanon River and a saw-mill on the Lewis and Clark River. Solomon
				  and Celiast continued their interest in education, starting a subscription
				  school in the 1840s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSH1</container><unittitle>Celiast Helen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Filed under Soloman Howard Smith suberies</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Charles Jackson (March 13, 1854 - November 15,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Jackson Smith was born in Kentucky and graduated from
				  Blackburn University in Illinois in 1870. After graduation, he became a clerk
				  for the Missouri, Fort Scott &amp; Gulf Railroad and was promoted to the
				  auditing department. Two years later, he went to Portland where he was the
				  assistant comptroller and later comptroller for the Oregon Railroad &amp;
				  Navigation Company and the Oregon Improvement Company. In 1890, he went to
				  Seattle as the vice-president and general manager of the Oregon Improvement
				  Company, which later became the Pacific Coast Company, an important factor in
				  the development of the Seattle waterfront, ocean commerce, railroads and coal
				  mines. He was a member of the board of trustees for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
				  Exposition and the chair of the buildings and grounds committee. Smith was a
				  long time member of the Seattle Parks Board and was a member and president of
				  the Seattle School Board. Smith also served as director of the Dexter Horton
				  National Bank, president of the Pacific Shipping &amp; Fuel Company, and was
				  chairman of the building committee for the Rainier Club. He married Elizabeth
				  McMillan in 1880.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ1</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1893</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">LaRoche, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ2</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith sitting on a porch with four
					 unidentified men; Smith is on the right.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ3</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Benjamin F. Bush. Lord Thomas
					 and Lady Anna Brassey, four unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. J. Smith, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Lord and Lady Brassey visited Seattle during their around the
					 world voyage on their yacht, <emph>Sunbeam</emph>; Lady Brassey published a
					 book about their travels. During their visit, they toured Anacortes and the
					 Skagit Valley. Lord Brassey was interested in the Oregon Improvement Company
					 which owned and operated coal mines, railroads, and steamship companies; the
					 company's subsidiaries included the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. Newspaper
					 accounts recorded General Counsel Andrew F. Burleigh, Treasurer Charles B.
					 Tedcastle, and Superintendent Phelps as members of the group touring the area
					 with Lord and Lady Brassey; they are probably the men in the photograph.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ4</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Lord Thomas Brassley, Benjamin
					 F. Bush, Charles B. Tedcastle and Andrew F. Burleigh.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Company, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ6</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith residence, 803 Summit Avenue,
					 Seattle</unittitle></did><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in UW Coll. Seattle
					 Neighborhoods: Capitol Hill. Printed on photograph: later part of Swedish
					 Hospital. </p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ5</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith residence, 1147 Harvard Avenue
					 E., Seattle</unittitle></did><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in UW Coll. Seattle
					 Neighborhoods: Capitol Hill </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Charles Wesley (June 20, 1877 - July 5,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Charles Wesley Smith was a librarian, administrator, and
				  scholar at the University of Washington Library and University of Washington
				  School of Librarianship. Smith received a BA (1903) and BLS (1905) from the
				  University of Illinois, and was a faculty member with the University of
				  Washington School of Librarianship from 1913 to 1947. He also served as the
				  Head of Reference at the University of Washington Library. Smith collected
				  resources about Pacific Northwest history while working as a librarian and
				  published a research guide titled <emph>Checklist of Pacific Northwest
				  Americana</emph>in 1909. During his tenure, he also focused on photocopying
				  books and records, as well as reproducing articles on microfiche. Smith was an
				  active member of professional organizations including the Pacific Northwest
				  Library Association and the Pacific Northwest Bibliographic Center.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW1</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW2</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW3</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW4</container><unittitle>Portrait of Charles Wesley Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dolph Zubick, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW5</container><unittitle> Charles Wesley Smith in his office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW6</container><unittitle>Portrait of Charles Wesley Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1940</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW7</container><unittitle>Portrait of Charles Wesley Smith, close up</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW8</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, seated at desk, signing
					 papers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW9</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, Dean Herbert T. Condon, Harry C.
					 Bauer, and Raymond B. Allen, with photograph of Charles Smith standing in
					 Suzzallo Library in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Blomdahl, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW10</container><unittitle>Charles Wesley Smith, seated at desk, studying a
					 book</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="[hotographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle, Washingtoon</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Edith Jane Percy (February 28, 1878 - September
				  26, 1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith Jane Percy was born in London, England and came to the
				  United States in 1902. She married John MacRae Smith in 1903. The couple lived
				  in Whatcom County, Washington and had five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithEJP1</container><unittitle>Edith Jane Smith with unidentified man, standing in
					 front of a house.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1912</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Edith Smith (Little Boot), "Pete,"
					 Bellingham April 1912.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Edward Slade (February 28, 1827 - December 31,
				  1885)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Slade Smith was born in New York. His parents, Joel and
				  Anna Smith, were early settlers in Winona, Minnesota. In 1852, he moved to
				  Minnesota where he built the first sawmill erected by a civilian in what is now
				  Minneapolis. He sold out his interest in the mill and its location, and in 1853
				  established himself in Winona, Minnesota where he bought property and became a
				  prominent factor in the building of the city, investing in roads and the Winona
				  &amp; St. Peter Railroad and constructing a flour mill. In 1871 he was hired by
				  General J.W. Sprague to assist operations as manager of the interests of the
				  Northern Pacific Railroad on the Pacific coast. He was influential in the
				  selection and purchase of the Kalama and Tacoma sites. Under his direction, the
				  railroad was completed within the time required by the charter. The growing
				  interest in building the railroad led a survey of the resources of along coast
				  region. The Wilkeson coal mines were discovered by him from information
				  received from one of the United States surveyors; the mines yielded the first
				  coking coal found in Washington Territory. Smith acquired large interests in
				  Tacoma real estate and built a sawmill near the railroad wharf and is
				  considered to be one of the founders of Tacoma. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithES1</container><unittitle>Edward Slade Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1880</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Smith, Ethel</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RonaldN1</container><unittitle>Norma Ronald, Susie Lyons, Ethel Smith and
					 unidentified child.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890?</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Norma Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Eugene Danfred (April 30, 1837 - June 14,
				  1909)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Eugene Danfred Smith is often referred to as the father of
				  Lowell, which was incorporated into Everett, Washington in the 1960s. Smith was
				  born in Columbia, Maine and arrived in Washington Territory in 1861. He set up
				  a logging camp and eventually operated a mill and a general store. He owned
				  property on the peninsula that became Everett and put in a system of water
				  works to supply the town with spring water. Smith was a member of Everett's
				  "Committee of 21" provisional government in 1892. He married Margaret Getchell
				  in San Francisco in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithED1</container><unittitle>Eugene Danfred Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Ezra Leonard (September 17, 1837 - January 22,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ezra Leonard Smith was born in Vermont and attended school at
				  Lombard University in Illinois. He knew Abraham Lincoln and attended the
				  Republican convention in Chicago in 1862, where Lincoln received his first
				  nomination for president. He married Georgina Slocum, a fellow Lombard student,
				  on March 4, 1861, the afternoon of Lincoln’s first inauguration. The couple
				  left for California by way of the Isthmus of Panama. For a number of years,
				  they lived in El Dorado County, where Smith engaged in mining. He was elected
				  to the California General Assembly and was instrumental in holding California
				  for the Union. In 1867, he received appointment as secretary and acting
				  governor for Washington Territory. On quitting office, he and his pioneer
				  associates established a bank in Olympia. He later moved to Hood River, Oregon,
				  where he purchased land and began the development of the fruit industry in the
				  area, establishing one of the first commercial apple orchards. Smith was a
				  leader in the Oregon Development League, the Oregon Waterways Association, and
				  the Oregon Horticultural Society. In 1889, he was speaker of the Oregon House
				  of Representatives.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithEL1</container><unittitle>Ezra Leonard Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithEL2</container><unittitle>Ezra Leonard Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Moved to PH Coll 1034</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Green Berry (September 10, 1820 - May 7,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Green Berry (or Greenbury) Smith, the son of George and Nancy
				  (Hamilton) Smith, was born in Grayson County, Virginia. At the age of sixteen
				  years, his parents moved to St. Joseph County, Indiana where they farmed. In
				  1840, he emigrated to Platte County, Missouri, and remained until the spring of
				  1845 when he joined a wagon train at St. Joseph, Missouri, under the command of
				  Captain T’Vault. After changes in the leaders of the party, Stephen Meek
				  undertook to conduct them into the Willamette Valley by the old Columbia route.
				  Those who followed Meek experienced a terrible ordeal when Meek’s memory of the
				  terrain apparently failed. Lost for weeks with little or no water and a
				  shortage of food, the survivors eventually reached The Dalles, Oregon. Smith
				  wintered at the mouth of the Washougal, some fifteen miles above Fort
				  Vancouver. In 1846, he took up residence north of Corvallis and engaged in
				  farming and stock-raising. Smith represented his county in the territorial
				  legislature in 1849. He was married twice, in the first instance in 1848 to
				  Eliza Hughart, a native of Missouri, who died one year later. He married Mary
				  Baker in 1850.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithGB1</container><unittitle>Green Berry Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, G. Frederick (1874 - ?)</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithGF1</container><unittitle>G. Frederick Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between September 2, 1901 and May 23, 1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Souvenir, Equality School District Number
					 68, Skagit County, Washington, presented by L. A. Jennings, teacher. Directors:
					 L. L. Gifford, R. H. Young, H. W. Halladay; Mrs. Ruie J. Ault, Clerk.</p><p>The Equality Colony was founded and financed by members of the
					 Brotherhood of the Cooperative Commonwealth (B.C.C.). Organized in 1895 in
					 Maine, the B.C.C. hoped to encourage the spread of socialism by establishing
					 socialist colonies in the American West. In October 1897, B.C.C. member G.E.
					 “Ed” Pelton purchased 280 acres near Blanchard, Washington for the site of
					 “Equality.” At its height, the colony had an estimated population of 200-300
					 people. Colonists operated their own sawmill, creamery and school, and
					 published a newspaper. In 1905, the colony re-organized as “Freeland
					 Colony.”</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, George Otis (February 22, 1871 – January 10,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Otis Smith was an American geologist. He graduated from
				  Colby College in 1893 and earned a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1896.
				  Smith was the Geologist-in-charge of the Section of Petrography of the Geologic
				  Branch, succeeding Charles Doolittle Walcott as Director in May 1907 and
				  continued as Director until December 1930. After the coal strike in 1922, a
				  Coal Commission was established to study the problems of the industry and to
				  aid Congress on legislation that would ensure the nation of an adequate supply
				  of coal. Smith was a member of the Commission, and the Geological Survey's
				  resource data provided the basis for much of the Commission's report. Smith
				  also served as Chairman of a three-man commission appointed by President Calvin
				  Coolidge in March 1924, after the Teapot Dome scandal, to study the efficient
				  management of the naval petroleum reserves, and as Chairman of the Advisory
				  Committee to the Cabinet-level Federal Oil Conservation Board established in
				  December 1924 to reappraise Federal oil policies. He also served as the first
				  chairman of the Federal Power Commission under Herbert Hoover from 1930 to
				  1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithGO1</container><unittitle>George Otis Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Hannah Moore Stone (1814 - October 3,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hannah Moore Stone was born in Rutland, Vermont and grew up in
				  Ohio where her family moved when she was four years old. She married Hiram
				  Smith in 1835. In 1850, she accompanied her husband to Oregon when he was
				  elected captain of an emigrant train; this was his second trip west. When they
				  reached Portland, he engaged in the mercantile trade, and he and Hannah helped
				  other newly arrived immigrants to the territory. In 1852, she and Hiram crossed
				  the plains to Ohio on horseback in 60 days; they returned to Oregon via Panama.
				  They went to the mines of southern Oregon in 1855 and then to California,
				  remaining until 1859. During the Civil War, the couple established a fund to
				  help the widows and orphans of Union soldiers. Her husband died in 1870. Hannah
				  invested in real estate in the Portland area and left an estate of $200,000
				  (the equivalent of $7.5 million in 2024) primarily to charity.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHMS1</container><unittitle>Hannah Moore Stone Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Henry Allen (April 11, 1830 – August 16,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Allen Smith was a physician, poet, legislator and early
				  settler of Seattle. In 1852, Smith traveled from Ohio to Portland, Oregon
				  Territory in a wagon train with his mother, Abigail Teaff Smith, and sister. In
				  1853, he settled at the north end of Elliott Bay, at what came to be known as
				  "Smith's Cove" (later Smith Cove), deciding that it was a likely spot for docks
				  and that the flat area could be a terminus for the rumored transcontinental
				  railroad. His mother staked the next claim north. Smith built a cabin and, the
				  next year, an infirmary at what is today Grand Boulevard (Dravus Street) and
				  15th Avenue West. Seattle at the time was heavily forested; the only route to
				  the main settlement was by small boat or canoe until Smith cut a trail through
				  the woods. He farmed, invested in a general store, logging camps, and fruit
				  orchards, and developed in land as far north as Smith Island at the mouth of
				  the Snohomish River. He also made house calls throughout most of the Puget
				  Sound area, often by canoe, and was appointed official physician for the
				  Tulalip Indian Reservation. Smith joined the Territorial Legislature as a
				  Republican and lobbied for a railroad. In 1887, with the arrival of the
				  Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway Company, Smith sold most of his land
				  and invested in hotels and the Smith block on First Avenue. He also served as
				  the first superintendent of King County public schools. The Great Northern
				  Railway built a depot at Smith's Cove in the 1890s; the wealth from this and
				  other ventures made Smith at one time King County's largest taxpayer. Smith may
				  be best known today for his translation of an 1854 speech by Chief Seattle (or
				  Sealth or Si'ahl) that is still in print. <emph>The Seattle Sunday Star</emph>
				  published Smith's rendition of the speech about thirty years later, based on
				  notes he took at the time. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHA1</container><unittitle>Henry Allen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHA2</container><unittitle>Henry Allen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHA3</container><unittitle>Henry Allen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate></did><note><p>From the <emph>Magazine of Western History</emph></p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHA4</container><unittitle>Residence at Smith's Cove</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph held in the Asahel Curtis
					 Collection, U W Special Collections.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHA5</container><unittitle>Portrait of Henry Allen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph held in the Asahel Curtis
					 Collection, U W Special Collections.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Henry C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHC1</container><unittitle>Henry C. Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>missing 2024</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Henry Ladd (June 24, 1906 - December 9,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Ladd Smith began his career as a reporter at a Midwest
				  newspaper. At his retirement in 1972, he was a professor in the UW's
				  communications program, and had served as the department's director in the
				  1950s and acting director in the late 1960s. He graduated from Yale University
				  in 1929 and received his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin in 1946. He
				  taught at the University of Kansas (1938-1940), the University of Minnesota
				  (1940-1942) and the University of Wisconsin (1946-1955) before joining the
				  faculty of the University of Washington. During World War II, he was a
				  lieutenant commander in the Navy’s air combat intelligence. Dr. Smith
				  co-authored a journalism history textbook, <emph render="italic">The Press in
				  America</emph>, and wrote two books that were part of the Smithsonian’s history
				  of aviation, <emph render="italic">Airways: The History of Commercial Aviation
				  in the United States</emph>, and <emph render="italic">Airways Abroad: The
				  Story of American World Air Routes.</emph>Smith, who had a commercial pilot's
				  license, celebrated his 86th birthday by flying a seaplane with a fellow pilot
				  and landing the plane on Lake Union. He considered it quite a feat for a man
				  who, as a young reporter, had interviewed Orville Wright.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonGW1</container><unittitle>Gerald Johnson with Henry Ladd Smith, director of the
					 UW School of Communications, at the dedication of the Communications
					 Building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Smith is pointing at a space in the wall of the building,
					 possibly where the time capsule was placed at the time of the dedication.</p><p>Filed under Gerald White Johnson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Hiram (May 23, 1810 - January 17,
				  1870)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Smith was born in Danville, New York in 1810. He married
				  Hannah Moore in 1835. Soon after their marriage, they moved to Findlay, Ohio,
				  where he engaged in the manufacture of fanning mills, the first in western
				  Ohio. In 1845, he went to Oregon and made a survey of Oregon and the Puget
				  Sound region. Returning to Ohio the following year, he was able to give
				  information which led many to cross the plains to Oregon. In 1850, Hiram and
				  Hannah went to Oregon when he was elected captain of an emigrant train; this
				  was his second trip west. When they reached Portland, he engaged in the
				  mercantile trade, and he and Hannah helped other newly arrived immigrants to
				  the territory. In 1852, they crossed the plains to Ohio on horseback in 60
				  days; they returned to Oregon via Panama. They went to the mines of southern
				  Oregon in 1855 and then to California, remaining until 1859. During the Civil
				  War, the couple established a fund to help the widows and orphans of Union
				  soldiers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithH1</container><unittitle>Hiram Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Hiram Francis (June 11, 1829 – September 9,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hiram Francis "Okanogan" Smith was one of the first American
				  settlers in the Pacific Northwest. Smith was born in Maine and learned the
				  printer's trade, working on papers in Detroit and with Horace Greeley in New
				  York. He went to California during the 1849 Gold Rush. He then went to The
				  Dalles in Oregon, where he operated a pack train, and prospected gold in the
				  Fraser River Valley of British Columbia. Unsuccessful in that venture, he
				  located a claim on the east bank of Osoyoos Lake, near today's Oroville,
				  Washington, in 1859, where he opened a trading post. The post became an oasis
				  in a wilderness for traders and travelling miners, and earned Smith a
				  reputation for hospitality. He introduced vegetable farming and fruit orchards
				  to the region, and is remembered is a pioneer of Washington's apple industry.
				  His fair dealings with the Indians won him their respect, and he was often
				  consulted as an arbiter. According to Tonasket, a chief of the Okanogans, Smith
				  was a better friend to the Indians than the government. He married Mary, the
				  daughter of a Similkameen chief. In 1865, he began a series of terms in the
				  territorial, and later the state legislatures. In 1960, he was inducted into
				  the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy &amp; Western Heritage
				  Museum. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHF1</container><unittitle>Hiram Francis Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithHF2</container><unittitle>Hiram Francis Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photo. Written on verso: Hon. Hiram F. Smith,
					 known as "Okanogan Smith."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, James Allen (May 5, 1860 - January 30,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Allen Smith was a professor of political science
				  (1897-1924) and Dean of the Graduate School (1909-1920) at the University of
				  Washington. Smith was born in Pleasant Hill, Missouri and attended the
				  University of Missouri where he received a B. A. in 1886 and a law degree in
				  1887. He received his PhD in 1894 from the University of Michigan. Smith
				  practiced law in Kansas City from 1887 to 1892 and taught economics and
				  sociology at Marietta College (1895-1897) in Marietta, Ohio. After moving to
				  Seattle in 1897, Smith frequently lectured at the Seattle Labor Temple on
				  topics of politics and government. He wrote a number of books, including 
				  <emph>The Multiple Money Standard,</emph><emph>The Spirit of American
				  Government,</emph> and <emph>The Growth and Decadence of Constitutional
				  Government;</emph>the latter was published after his death. He married Doris J.
				  Lehman in 1890; their daughter, Elfreda, edited his final book. Smith Hall on
				  the UW Campus is named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJA1</container><unittitle>James Allen Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJA2</container><unittitle>James Allen Smith standing outside</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJA3</container><unittitle>James Allen Smith </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, James Andrew (October 25, 1845 - November 14,
				  1951)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Andrew Smith, the son of Joseph and Minerva (Loudther)
				  Smith, was born in Jackson County, Virginia in 1845. He went west in 1870,
				  where he hunted buffalo, worked on a ranch and later as a logger on Hood Canal,
				  Washington. He retired when he was in his 90s. He was known as “Cougar” Smith,
				  a nickname he said he received when he killed a cougar with his bare hands.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJAndrew1</container><unittitle>James Andrew Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, James Francis (January 28, 1859 – June 29, 1928)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Francis Smith was an associate justice of the Supreme
				  Court of the Philippines, Governor-General of the Philippines and an associate
				  judge of the United States Court of Customs Appeals. He was born in San
				  Francisco, California. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1877 from
				  Santa Clara University and a Bachelor of Arts degree and Master of Arts degree
				  in 1878 from the same institution. He then attended the University of
				  California, Hastings College of the Law. He was in private practice in
				  California from 1881 to 1898. In April 1898, Smith joined the United States
				  Army and served in the Spanish–American War as Colonel of the 1st California
				  Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and in the Philippine–American War, where he
				  served as the Collector of Customs for the Philippine Archipelago in Manila.
				  After the war, Smith held a number of offices on the Philippine Commission,
				  including Secretary of Public Instruction and Vice-Governor. From 1901 to 1903
				  he was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, and was
				  Governor-General of the Philippines from 1906 to 1909. When the Philippines
				  held its first democratic elections, he was present at the inauguration of the
				  first Philippine Assembly on October 17, 1907. Smith was nominated by President
				  William Howard Taft on March 9, 1910, to the United States Court of Customs
				  Appeals (later the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals), and
				  served until his death in 1928.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJF1</container><unittitle>James Francis Smith standing on the ground of the
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank H. Nowell, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy; the orginal photograph is held in Special Collections
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, AYP378</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJF2</container><unittitle>James Francis Smith visiting the Igorrote Village,
					 Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition; Igorotte Chief, on left, Director General Ira
					 Nadeau, in center and Governor General James F. Smith, of the Philippines, on
					 the right.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Frank H. Nowell, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy; the orginal photograph is held in Special Collections
					 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, AYP367</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" (November 2, 1860 –
				  July 8, 1898)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith II was an American confidence
				  man and gangster in the American frontier and the Klondike. Smith operated
				  confidence schemes across the Western United States and had a large hand in
				  organized criminal operations in both Colorado and the District of Alaska.
				  Smith gained notoriety through his "prize soap racket," in which he would sell
				  bars of soap with prize money hidden in some of the bars' packaging in order to
				  increase sales. However, through sleight of hand, he ensured that only members
				  of his gang purchased "prize" soap. The racket led to his sobriquet of "Soapy."
				  The success of his soap racket and other scams helped him finance three
				  successive criminal empires in Denver and Creede, both in Colorado, and in
				  Skagway, Alaska. He was killed in the shootout on Juneau Wharf in Skagway, on
				  July 8, 1898.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR1</container><unittitle>Jefferson Randolph Smith on horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July,1898</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR2</container><unittitle>Three unidentified men performing the autopsy of
					 Jefferson Randolph Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July1898</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Case &amp; Draper, Skagway, Alaska</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR3</container><unittitle>Postcard showing a painting of Jefferson Randolph
					 "Soapy" Smith's skull on a cliff near Skagway, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s-30s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR4</container><unittitle>Photograph of a Skagway Military Company
					 ribbon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: Freedom for Cuba. Remember the Maine!
					 Compliments of The Skagway Military Co., Jeff R. Smith, Capt.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR5</container><unittitle>Jefferson Randolph Smith standing in his saloon in
					 Skagway</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1898</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Theodore E. Peiser, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Reprinted from the collections of the Library of Congress</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR6</container><unittitle>Jefferson Randolph"Soapy" Smith on a horse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 4,1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Printed on front: July 4, 1898: Dictator of Skagway</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR7</container><unittitle>Group of unidentified men standing in front of Skagway
					 City Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July,1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Holding meeting to see what needs to be done
					 about Soapy Smith. Skaguay (sic) was thoroughly frightened at the boldness of
					 Soapy Smith and his gang. In July, the vigilantes met at the City Hall to
					 search out some method to rid the city of the outlaws. The City Hall proved to
					 be inadequate to hold the crowd and they adjourned to the warehouse on
					 Sylvester Dock. E. A. Becker (Ethel A. Becker)</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR8</container><unittitle>Unidentified man standing next to Soapy Smith's
					 gravestone.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithJR9</container><unittitle>Members of Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith's
					 gang</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1898</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Case &amp; Draper, Skagway, Alaska</corpname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR1561/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Handwritten on verso: No. 1 Charlie Walker, No. 2 Doc Boyle,
					 No. 6 Spencer (?), No. 7 Bill Pike, No. 8 Malamute Kid. Soapy Smith 4th from
					 right.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Lena K. (January 20, 1877 - July 15,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lena K. Smith was a well-known business woman in Tacoma and a
				  member of the Tacoma Business Woman's Club where Dr. Alice Maud Smith was also
				  a member. Lena Smith was a member of the Harmony Townsend Club and the 50 Year
				  Club as well. Her parents, William and Rosa Hildebrandt, were Olympia
				  pioneers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithLK1</container><unittitle> Lena K. Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1920</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Dr. Alice Smith collection.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Louis Cass (June 19, 1855 - December 6,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Cass Smith was born near Corvallis, Oregon in 1855. His
				  parents, Mason Daniel Smith and Mary Williams Smith, had arrived in Oregon in
				  1851. Louis moved to Washington in 1870 and settled near Auburn, Washington. He
				  served two terms as King County Commissioner (1917-1923), three terms as mayor
				  of Auburn and one term as King County sheriff. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RamsayCC1</container><unittitle> Claude Ramsay with Thomas Dobson, L. C. Smith and
					 William E. Boeing at the dedicatory exercises at Sandpoint</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 19, 1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: In the presence of a gathering of
					 distinguished citizens representative of the army, navy and air service of the
					 United States Government, Claude C. Ramsay, chairman of the Board of King
					 County Commissioners, in turning the first shovelful of earth declared: "I
					 hereby dedicate this field to the service of our country."</p><p>Filed under Claude C. Ramsay subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Linda Ann Simpson (July 16, 1950 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Linda Ann Smith (née Simpson), a member of the Republican Party,
				  represented Washington's 3rd congressional district from 1995 to 1999 and was
				  the unsuccessful Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate in 1998, losing to
				  incumbent Democrat Patty Murray. After leaving politics, she founded Shared
				  Hope International, a nonprofit organization focused on ending minor sex
				  trafficking. Since its creation, Smith has worked around the world and within
				  the United States on behalf of those who have been victimized through sex
				  trafficking.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithLA1</container><unittitle>Linda Ann Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1986</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Smith, Mary Hannah Swain (October 13, 1844 - January 8,
				  1904)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Hannah Swain was born in Meridith, New Hampshire. She
				  married Silas Bryant Smith in New Hampshire on April 10, 1870; the couple had
				  five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSH1</container><unittitle>Mary Hannah Swain Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Filed under Soloman Howard Smith suberies</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Myrtle</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RiceSJ1</container><unittitle>Samuel Rice and Margaret M. Rice with Cecil Bagley,
					 Clarence Rushton, Garfield A. Garrett, Alan Hooper, Myrtle Smith, Myrtle
					 Bagley, Allie Rushton, Maude Garrett, and Maude Hooper on the occasion of
					 Samuel and Margaret Rice's thirty-fifth wedding anniversary.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa April 24, 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>There are several individuals in the group photograph who are
					 not identified.</p><p>Filed under Samuel J. Rice subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Robert Philip (September 21, 1907 - April 30,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Philip Smith was born in Brocton, Massachusetts. His
				  father was an itinerant preacher, and the family moved frequently. Smith grew
				  up mostly in Kansas and graduated from the Kansas University Medical School in
				  1934. He moved to Seattle in 1939, opening a practice in obstetrics and
				  gynecology and teaching both subjects at the University of Washington Medical
				  School. He was vice president of Greater Seattle in 1957 and chaired or
				  co-chaired the Seafair celebrations in 1954, 1960 and 1961. He also served on
				  the city's Seattle Center Advisory Committee, and was the president of the
				  Washington Athletic Club, the commodore of the Seattle Yacht Club, and a member
				  of the Seattle Parks board. He co-chaired the first Seattle Open Golf
				  Tournament at Broadmoor in 1961. Smith's avocation was sports. He was a skier,
				  a golfer and a sailor. In the 1950s, he sailed his boat, the 
				  <emph>Gossip</emph>, to Honolulu, making a movie about the journey that won an
				  award at an international film festival. In 1965, he accepted an offer to be
				  the first medical director at the La Costa Spa in Carlsbad, California. He
				  wrote <emph>The La Costa Diet and Exercise Book</emph> in 1977 and <emph>The La
				  Costa Prescription for a Longer Life </emph>in 1979. He retired from the La
				  Costa Spa in 1986. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithRP1</container><unittitle>Robert Philip Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Dolph Zubick, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, S.F., Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSF1</container><unittitle>Dr. S. F. Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Samuel J. "Sam" (July 23, 1922- November 16,
				  1995)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel J. "Sam" Smith was a member of the Washington House of
				  Representatives and the Seattle City Council. He served as president of the
				  city council for eight years and ran unsuccessfully ran for Mayor of Seattle
				  four times during his council tenure. A Seattle city park is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EvansDJ3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Governor Daniel J. Evans signing
					 House Bill 74 before assembled dignitaries</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Possibly at the signing of HB 74 in 1969 which established the
					 LEOFF (Law Enforcement Officers and Fire Fighters) retirement system. This was
					 a major piece of legislation and would explain the large group attending the
					 bill signing. Representative Sam Smith is second from the left.</p><p>Filed under Daniel J. Evans subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Smith, Silas Bryant (September 22, 1839 - August
				  22,1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Silas Bryant Smith played a key role in recording the
				  traditions, religions, and customs of the Clatsop people in nineteenth-century
				  Oregon. A prominent historian of the region, he won the first Native land
				  claims settlement for a Pacific Northwest tribe. Smith was born on September
				  22, 1839, near what is now Newberg. His mother was Celiast (Helen Smith), the
				  daughter of Coboway, a prominent Clatsop chief who had hosted the Lewis and
				  Clark Expedition at Fort Clatsop in the winter of 1805-1806. His father,
				  Solomon Howard Smith, was an early settler in Oregon and one of the first
				  teachers. Silas attended the first formal school on the Clatsop Plains before
				  traveling to the eastern United States, where he studied law with solicitor
				  William N. Blair. He entered law practice in Gilford, New Hampshire, where he
				  met and married Mary Hannah Swain of Meridian, New Hampshire, the daughter of
				  George W. Swain and Elizabeth Swain. The couple settled in Missouri, where
				  Smith was admitted to the Bar. After the birth of their daughter, they
				  relocated to the Clatsop Plains. Working and living at the family farm at
				  Skipanon, they had four more children in Oregon. Smith was admitted to the
				  Oregon Bar in 1876, one of the first Native Americans to practice law in the
				  West. He began his new law practice in Astoria.He had a strong interest in
				  history and the traditions of the Clatsop people, and was one of the early
				  members of the Oregon Historical Society. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSH1</container><unittitle>Silas Bryant Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Filed under Soloman Howard Smith suberies</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Smith, Silas Raynor (June 14, 1918 -
				  May 18, 2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Silas Raynor Smith was born in Harvard, Illinois and grew up in
				  India, where his parents were missionaries with the Methodist Episcopal Church.
				  Returning to Oregon when he was 13, he lived in Tillamook and Tigard,
				  graduating from high school in 1935. In 1939, he received his bachelor's degree
				  from Willamette University and in 1942, a Master's of Divinity from Boston
				  University. In 1943, he became a chaplain with the U.S. Army and served in
				  Germany for two years. Smith received his Ph.D. in 1955 from the University of
				  Southern California, where he also served as a Methodist minister. He returned
				  to the Northwest where he continued his ministry with churches in Centralia,
				  Tacoma, Bothell and Spokane, Washington, and Moscow, Idaho. After he retired
				  from the Methodist Church, he served for 20 years as the minister of the
				  Community Congregational Church in Astoria. Smith served as the Oregon State
				  Chaplain for the American Legion and the 40 et 8 Honorary Society for more than
				  20 years and was named an honorary department commander. He moved to Boise in
				  1999.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSR1</container><unittitle>Reverend Silas Raynor Smith in fishing outfit with
					 catch of fish in Tillamook, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between February 7, 1934 and February 8,
					 1934</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Bell Photo, Tillamook, Oregon</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on front: Reverend Raynor Smith, Tillamook, Oregon. 2
					 days catch for the parson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Smith, Solomon Howard (December 26, 1809-August 14,
				  1876)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Solomon Howard Smith was born in Lebanon, New Hampshire and
				  received his early education in Vermont. He studied medicine with his uncle;
				  however, instead of taking a diploma, he went fishing for cod in Newfoundland.
				  After a shipwreck, he joined Captain Wyeth and crossed the plains to Oregon in
				  1832. Reaching Vancouver, Smith soon found employment as a teacher at Fort
				  Vancouver. The following year, he married Celiast (Helen), the daughter of
				  Coboway, a prominent Clatsop chief, and began teaching school at Chemawa where
				  he and Ewing Young built a mill at the mouth of the Chehalem Creek. In 1840, he
				  moved to Clatsop County, trading in horses and cattle. In 1849 he opened a
				  store at Skipanon, Oregon, and in 1851 Smith went into the lumber business. In
				  1874, he was elected to represent the counties of Clatsop, Columbia and
				  Tillamook as senator to the state legislature.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSH1</container><unittitle>Solomon Howard Smith</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1860s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Stewart Ellsworth (September 7, 1864 - March 12,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stewart Ellsworth Smith was a resident of Seattle for more than
				  fifty years. He came to Seattle with his parents when he was 18; his father was
				  Superior Court Judge Eban Smith. Stewart Smith was the State Deputy Insurance
				  Commission from 1912 until 1918 when he resigned to become the treasure of
				  Northwestern Mutual Fire Association. Prior to that, he was the business
				  manager for the <emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Thomas G. (February 12, 1824 - March 3,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas G. Smith was born in Henley, Oxfordshire, England. The
				  family came to the United States in 1830, initially settling in Rochester, New
				  York. In 1831, the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio and in 1834 to LaPorte
				  County, Indiana. In 1847, Smith and his brother crossed the plains to Oregon,
				  leaving from St. Joseph, Missouri. After arriving in Oregon, Smith took up a
				  donation land claim near Eugene and later one near Wincester, Oregon where he
				  engaged in farming and stock raising. He was one of the organizers of the
				  county and became county commissioner in 1852. He served as Justice of the
				  Peace (1855 – 1858), and postmaster (1854 to 1860). In 1858, he was elected
				  public administrator. He served as county judge (1874-1878), block inspector
				  for eight years, and was a member of the State Agriculture Society. He married
				  Arthusa Emeline Lynn, the daughter of Daniel and Anna Lynn, in 1852; they had
				  twelve children. He moved to Roseburg in 1887. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithTG1</container><unittitle>Thomas G. Smith of Roseburg, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, Thomas Hardman (1824 - January 4,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Hardman Smith, the son of William Laughlin Smith and
				  Constantia Dudley Burnett Smith, was an early Oregon pioneer, arriving in 1845.
				  He was appointed postmaster on Nov. 8, 1849, and in 1859 was postmaster of St
				  Helens, Oregon. He was considered to be the first sheriff in the Oregon
				  Territory. He moved to California where he became a lawyer. Smith and Captain
				  Nathaniel Crosby founded the town of Milton in Columbia County in 1851; it was
				  one of the early rivals of Portland. Smith married Maria McKay in 1846; they
				  divorced in 1865. He married Luana Wheat in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas Hardman Smith, wearing a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smith, William Alexander - see Amor De
				  Cosmos</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Alexander Smith was born in Nova Scotia and changed his
				  name to Amor De Cosmos (Lover of the Universe) in 1854. He was a Canadian
				  journalist, publisher and politician who served as the second Premier of
				  British Columbia who played a major role in bringing British Columbia into
				  Confederation. He promoted union with Canada through his newspaper and, as a
				  founding member of the Confederation League, helped organize the Yale
				  Conference that formalized the demands for union. He settled on Vancouver
				  Island in 1858 and founded a newspaper, <emph render="italic">The British
				  Colonist</emph> . De Cosmos served as a member of the legislative assembly of
				  Vancouver Island from 1863 to 1866 and was appointed to British Columbia's
				  legislative council in 1867. For a time he held seats in both the provincial
				  and federal legislatures. He served as the premier of British Columbia, Canada
				  from December 23, 1872 until February 11, 1874 and also serving as a Liberal
				  member of the Canadian House of Commons. His government supported the
				  implementation of free, non-sectarian public schooling, extended the rights of
				  married women and introduced the secret ballot. De Cosmos lost the 1882 federal
				  election and retired to Victoria. Although widely regarded as a stirring
				  orator, effective debater, and a man of great intellectual depth, De Cosmos had
				  always been considered eccentric, and he had unusual phobias, including a fear
				  of electricity. As he grew older, his eccentricities intensified, he became
				  increasingly incoherent, and by 1895 he was declared insane. One of his more
				  notable eccentricities was the founding of a hot food delivery company to
				  prospectors in the Klondike Gold Fields. The difficult logistics of this
				  service scared away investors and ultimately provided its downfall. He died in
				  Victoria at the age of 71.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smithers, Erasmus Monroe (February 17, 1830 – November
				  20, 1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Erasmus Monroe Smithers was born in Virginia. In 1852, he joined
				  a wagon train to Oregon. The trip to Oregon took six months. Smithers found a
				  job assisting in the construction of a mill. In April 1853, he went to Seattle,
				  selling timber to ships bound to San Francisco, California. When the Indian War
				  of 1855 broke out, he volunteered for service, and continued a member of the
				  volunteer militia until 1856. He married Diana B Gilman, widow of Henry H
				  Tobin, in November 1857. They lived on the Tobin claim, and Smithers eventually
				  platted the land, forming the town of Renton in 1901. With several others, he
				  established the Renton Coal Company; the coal seam had been discovered in
				  Renton in 1853 or 1854 by Henry Tobin's first neighbor, Dr. R.M. Bigelow. He
				  was on board of trustees of the South Prairie Coal Mining Company and served as
				  King County Commissioner 1874 - 1875. He was appointed by Governor Edward Selig
				  Salomon and once by Governor Elisha Peyre Ferry as a trustee of University of
				  Washington and was elected president of the Board of Regents.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithersEM1</container><unittitle>Erasmus Monroe Smithers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Smohallah (circa 1815 - 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Smohalla (Dreamer) was a Wanapum dreamer-prophet associated with
				  the Dreamers movement among Native American people in the Pacific Northwest’s
				  Columbia Plateau region. Born between 1815 and 1820 in the Wallula area of
				  present-day Washington State, Smohalla belonged to the Shahaptian Wanapum
				  tribal group. At birth, he was called Wak-wei or Kuk-kia, meaning “arising from
				  the dust of earth mother.” After achieving prominence as a spiritual leader, he
				  became known as Smohalla (or Smo-halla, Shmoqula, Smuxale, Smowalla), also
				  defined as “preacher.” Following political conflicts with the Walla Walla chief
				  Homli, Smohalla and his followers moved to a more isolated area at the foot of
				  Priest Rapids in present-day Yakima County, Washington. Already distinguished
				  as a warrior, Smohalla began to preach his revitalization doctrine, which
				  emphasized a return to tribal traditions and beliefs. The rapid spread of his
				  teachings is said to have contributed to the confederation of tribes in the
				  region against white expansionism in the Yakima War of 1855–1856. Precipitated
				  by government plans to confine Native people to small reservations, the war was
				  fought by a coalition of Indians opposed to the assault on their land base and
				  traditional cultures. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">Smohallah1</container><unittitle>Smohallah</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s </unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Snakelum, Charles "Charley" (1855 - November 16,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chief Charles Snakelum was a prominent Skagit tribal leader and
				  Central Whidbey resident. Charlie Snakelum witnessed the signing of the Port
				  Elliott Treaty as a young boy. There are various spellings of the name:
				  Sneatlum, Snatelum, Snatlum, Snatlem, Snetlam, Snaetlum, Sneestum, Sna- ke-lum,
				  Snakelum, S’Neat-lum, Neidlum or Neetlum.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SnakelumC1</container><unittitle> Chief Charles Snakelum with Paul
					 Cunningham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Chief Charles Snacklem and Paul Cunningham
					 on a tribal log. Washington - Whidbey Island. Nina Trumball, Langley, Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sneatlum, Maria Georgina (September 29, 1928 -April 25,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SneatlumMG1</container><unittitle> Maria Georgina "Wyatalute" Sneatlum was born in
					 Tulalip Washington to George and Amelia (Snyder) Sneatlum. She graduated from
					 Marysville High School in 1949 and received a scholarship to study at the New
					 England Conservatory of Music. She performed professionally in Everett and
					 Seattle.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Matue Sneatlum, sister of Lucy. Fenway,
						Boston, Mass. 1951</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Snider, Howard Roy (May 10, 1920 - November 12,
				  2013)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Roy Snider, the son of Arlo V. Snider and May Louise
				  (Phease) Snider, was born in Bellingham, Washington. As a young man, he worked
				  many odd jobs, including long-shoring, working in a general store, as a gandy
				  dancer for the railroad, and in the fish canneries of Alaska. He graduated with
				  a pre-medical degree in 1942 and entered the Marines. He was trained as a pilot
				  and flew B-25s in the Pacific during WW II. During his four years in the
				  Marines, he earned several medals, including the Distinguished Flying Cross.
				  After the war, he was accepted into the University of Oregon Medical School,
				  graduating in 1950. From 1950-1955, Snider practiced medicine at Minneapolis
				  General Hospital, fulfilling his internship and 4 years of Surgical Residency.
				  He went on to practice surgery at the Mankato Clinic for 34 years. His medical
				  society memberships included the Diplomatic American Board of Surgery and the
				  Fellow American College of Surgeons.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH4</container><unittitle>Edwin Adams with Howard Snider, Marine 1st. Lt,
					 Bellingham, Washington, and William R. Tiffany, Signal Corps Sergeant,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Snider, Theo Payne (November 27, 1884 - December 20,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theo Payne was born in Thayer, Kansas. She married Wilbur Grey
				  Snider in 1907; they had six children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SniderWG1</container><unittitle> Wilbur Grey Snider with wife Theo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Wilbur Grey Snider subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Snider, Wilbur Grey (May 24, 1884 - May 9,
				  1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wilbur Grey Snider was born in South Mound, Kansas. He married
				  Theo Payne in 1907; they had six children. He worked as a machinist for the
				  railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SniderWG1</container><unittitle> Wilbur Grey Snider with wife Theo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1943</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Snyder, John Wesley (June 21, 1895 – October 8,
				  1985)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Wesley Snyder was an American businessman and senior
				  federal government official. Snyder was appointed Secretary of the Treasury
				  during the Truman administration and retired from government service in 1953 at
				  the end of Truman's second term.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Soelberg, A. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SoelbergAH1</container><unittitle>A. H. Soelberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Somervell, W. Marbury</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SomervellWM1</container><unittitle>W. Marbury Somervell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sommers, Helen E. (March 29, 1932 – March 7,
				  2017)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Sommer, a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in
				  1971, was an American politician. She served in the Washington House of
				  Representatives from 1972 to 2009, representing the 36th district as a
				  Democrat. At the time of her retirement she was the state's longest serving
				  legislator. Born in New Jersey, she worked as a clerk for Mobil Oil after she
				  graduated from high school. When she was 21, she had the opportunity to take a
				  positing with the company in Venezuela, and she stayed there for more than a
				  decade. While there, a colleague suggested she take a correspondence course
				  from the University of Washington. She eventually earned bachelor’s and
				  master’s degrees in economics from the University. She moved to Seattle in
				  1968, where she was involved with the National Organization for Women and
				  served on the Seattle Women’s Commission. She ran for office in 1972, defeating
				  the Republican incumbent. In Olympia, she chaired several committees,
				  eventually chairing the House Appropriations Committee. She was credited with
				  helping to build a state pension system, wrote budgets, advocated for family
				  planning and worked to recruit women to run for office.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Soule, Ida Fulton (May 24, 1868 -
				  November 19, 1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida Soule, a social and political activist, was an honorary
				  member of and occupied managerial positions in a number of American social
				  organizations. An activist and speaker, she publicly expressed her pro-American
				  political beliefs during World Wars I and II. Kuhn, the daughter of Frances
				  Fensley Soule and Joseph Soule, was born in Illinois in 1869. She graduated
				  from the New York Normal School in Oneonta, New York and received Bachelor of
				  Science (1888) and Master of Science (1895) degrees from the University of
				  Washington. After graduation, she taught school in Hoquiam, Washington. In
				  1903, she became the founder or Organizing Regent of the Robert Gray Chapter of
				  Daughters of the American Revolution organization in Hoquiam, the sixth chapter
				  in the state and the first chapter founded in southwest Washington. Over the
				  years, Kuhn worked at every position available in the DAR. She co-founded the
				  Washington State Chapter of the Mayflower Society as its charter member and
				  historian. She was also a co-founder of the Grays Harbor Chapter of the
				  American Association of University Women, and a member of the Order of
				  Americans of Armorial Descent, Americans of Royals Descent, and the Hoquiam
				  Business and Professional Women's Club. After her divorce from Mr. Howes, she
				  married Albert Henry Kuhn, Washington state pioneer and lumberman.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SouleIF1</container><unittitle>Ida Fulton Soule</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 17, 1888</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">M.S. McClaire, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Soper, LeRoy (February 3, 1924 - Febreuary 2,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>LeRoy Soper was manager of the University Book Store from 1977
				  to 1993. Born in Pomeroy, Washington, Soper began his literary career in the
				  Walla Walla Bookshop where he worked from 1952-1958. After a year in San Jose,
				  California, Soper returned to the Northwest, and worked at the University Book
				  Store from 1959-1969, and again from 1977-1993, with an intervening period
				  spent establishing the book wholesale warehouse, Raymar Northwest Book Company.
				  Soper was one of five people who founded the Pacific Northwest Booksellers
				  Association in 1960. He served as a judge and advisor the Governor's Writers
				  Awards, participated on the advisory board of the University of Washington
				  Press (1988-2004), and was a founding member of the Willard Espy Literary
				  Foundation, which is now called the Espy Foundation, located in Oysterville.
				  Soper also served on Board of Directors for the American Booksellers
				  Association. He was awarded the Nancy Blakenship Award, part of the the
				  Governor's Writers Awards, by Governor Booth Gardner in 1991. His papers are
				  held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger.Signed by Booth Gardner. </p></note><note><p>Filed under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spalding, H. H., Rev.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpaldingHH1</container><unittitle>Reverend H. H. Spalding</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sparkman, James Harold (January 14, 1901 - July 5,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Harold Sparkman was the son of James M. Sparkman. Born in
				  Seattle, he attended Queen Anne High School and the University of Washington.
				  In 1935, he began work in the county assessor's office. He was elected a county
				  commissioner in 1944 and served one term. Sparkman held numerous offices, some
				  of them national and professional real-estate organizations, including director
				  of the Seattle Real Estate Board. He was a charter member of the Washington
				  Chapter, American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers and president of Sparkman
				  and McLean, the real estate firm his father had founded in 1891. The firm
				  evolved into a mortgage brokerage and investment firm. After his death, the
				  company went into receivership when it did not have the funds to repay its
				  investors.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Landon with Harold Sparkman, James M. Sparkman,
					 George Noyes and James. W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1932</unitdate></did><note><p>In the foreground are papers bearing the certified signatures
					 on the initiative petition for the 40 mil tax limit bill. A version of this
					 photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on
					 Sunday, July 10, 1932, indicating that the papers were filed on Friday, July 7,
					 1932.</p><p>Filed under Daniel Landon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sparkman, James M. (August 16, 1859 - November 29,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James M. Sparkman was born in Missouri and came to Seattle in
				  1882. He served on the King County Board of Commissioners and was a city
				  councilman. He founded the real estate firm of Sparkman and McLean with
				  Sutherland McLean in 1891. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Landon with Harold Sparkman, James M. Sparkman,
					 George Noyes and James. W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1932</unitdate></did><note><p>In the foreground are papers bearing the certified signatures
					 on the initiative petition for the 40 mil tax limit bill. A version of this
					 photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on
					 Sunday, July 10, 1932, indicating that the papers were filed on Friday, July 7,
					 1932.</p><p>Filed under Daniel Landon subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sparling, Anna Fletcher (August 23, 1866 - November 23,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Fletcher Sparling was born in Nashville, Tennessee; the
				  family came to Seattle in the 1870s. Her father, Frederick W. Sparling, was a
				  physician who served as King County coroner for many years. Anna Sparling
				  graduated from the University of Washington with a B.S. degree in 1894 and
				  taught school before marrying Charles Baker Hamilton Olmsted in 1900. The
				  couple divorced in 1904. Sparling married Philip Rexford Waughop, a physician,
				  in 1917; he died in 1919.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SparlingAF1</container><unittitle>Anna Fletcher. Sparling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1894</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Moore, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spaulding, H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpauldingH1</container><unittitle>H. Spaulding</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Speaker, Tristam Edgar (April 4, 1888 – December 8,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tristram Edgar Speaker, nicknamed "the Gray Eagle", was an
				  American professional baseball player and manager. He played in Major League
				  Baseball as a center fielder from 1907 to 1928. Speaker debuted with the Boston
				  Red Sox in 1907. He became the regular center fielder by 1909 and led the Red
				  Sox to World Series championships in 1912 and 1915. As player-manager for
				  Cleveland, he led the team to its first World Series title. Considered one of
				  the greatest players in the history of Major League Baseball, he compiled a
				  career batting average of .345. His 792 career doubles represent an MLB career
				  record, and his 3,514 hits are fifth in the all-time hits list. Speaker holds
				  career records for assists, double plays, and unassisted double plays by an
				  outfielder. He held the major league career record for putouts by a center
				  fielder (6,592) until he was surpassed by Willie Mays in 1971. Speaker played
				  with the Washington Senators in 1927 and the Philadelphia Athletics in 1928,
				  then became a minor league manager and part owner. He later held several roles
				  for the Cleveland Indians. Late in life, he led a short-lived indoor baseball
				  league, ran a wholesale liquor business, worked in sales and chaired
				  Cleveland's boxing commission. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame
				  in 1937. He was named 27th in the Sporting News 100 Greatest Baseball Players
				  (1999) and was also included in the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpeakerTE1</container><unittitle>Tristam Edgar "Tris" Speaker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Associated Press, New York</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Accompanying material: Reported manager of Brooklyn Baseball
					 Club. Tris Speaker, who, it has been learned from reliable sources, will soon
					 be appointed manager of the Brooklyn Club of the National League with Wilbert
					 Robinson, president-manager, confining his activities to executive duties.
					 Speaker, former manager of the Cleveland American League Club, managed Newark
					 of the International League in 1929. Robinson for three years has been acting
					 in the dual capacity of President and manager of the Brooklyn Robins.
					 1/2/30.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Speck, Gordon Loren (December 26, 1898 - July 23,
				  1986)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gordon Loren Speck, the son of Loren Speck and Mary Snow Speck,
				  was born in Nebraska. He taught history at Ballard High School in Seattle and
				  was the author of a number of books on Northwest history, including 
				  <emph>Northwest Explorations</emph>, <emph>Samuel Hearne and the Northwest
				  Passage</emph>, and <emph>Myths and New World Explorations</emph>. He was a
				  member of the Washington Historical Society, the Authors Guild, and the Society
				  of American Archivists. He married Lillian Lehman in 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpeckGL1</container><unittitle>Gordon Loren Speck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spector, Ivar (October 13, 1896 - March 11,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ivar Spector was a University of Washington professor from 1931
				  until 1969. Born in Kiev, in what was then Russia, he served in the Russian
				  Imperial Army during World War I and the Russian Revolution. He emigrated to
				  the United States in 1920 and became a citizen seven years later. He earned his
				  M.A. degree from Northwestern University in 1926 and his PhD from the
				  University of Chicago in 1928. Spector established the Slavic Department, the
				  Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, and headed the University’s
				  Far Eastern Studies Department. Acclaimed as an expert in Russian history and
				  literature, he was the author of eighteen books and hundreds of academic papers
				  and newspaper columns. Spector was active in the American Association of
				  University Professors, the American Historical Association, the American
				  Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, and the Middle East
				  Institute. He married Dr. Margaret Marian Mitchell, a University of Washington
				  history professor, in 1937; she preceded him in death in 1977.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpectorI1</container><unittitle>Ivar Spector</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpectorI2</container><unittitle>Ivar Spector with Margaret Marian Spector, Elias
					 Novikow and two unidentified women.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Spector, Dr. Spector and Elias Novikov
					 (sic)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Spector, Margaret Marian Mitchell (October 17, 1904 -
				  July 10, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Marian Mitchell Spector was born in Tweed, Ontario,
				  Canada. She graduated with a B.A. from the University of British Columbia,
				  earned a master’s degree from Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, and a
				  PhD from Columbia University, and became an American citizen in 1939. She
				  taught at Lindenwood College, St. Charles, Missouri, and at Everett Community
				  College before joining the faculty of the University of Washington. She was the
				  author of <emph>The American Department of the British Government,
				  1768-1782</emph>, and co-authored with her husband, Ivar Spector, 
				  <emph>Readings in Russian History and Culture.</emph> An active member of the
				  educational community, she devoted much of her time to the American Association
				  of University Women and was recognized for her service by a fellowship
				  established in her name. She served on the Governor’s Commission of the Status
				  of Women, and was listed in Who’s Who of American Women, One Thousand Women of
				  Distinction, and Women in Washington. She married Ivar Spector in 1937.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpectorI2</container><unittitle>Ivar Spector with Margaret Marian Spector, Elias
					 Novikow and two unidentified women.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mrs. Spector, Dr. Spector and Elias Novikov
					 (sic)</p><p>Filed under Ivar Spector subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Speidel, William Charles (September 9, 1882 - June 17,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Charles Speidel was born in Pennsylvania and came to
				  Seattle in 1900 to attend the University of Washington. He was a graduate of
				  the University and of the University of Chicago Medical School. Speidel was
				  well-known as an athlete and sportsman. He was captain of the University’s
				  first Pacific Coast championship football team in 1903, played varsity
				  baseball, track, and won many awards in golf, tennis and handball. While at the
				  University of Chicago, he also played football. He was president of the
				  University’s Alumni Association in 1917. Speidel practiced medicine in Seattle
				  for 54 years and was a pioneer in blood transfusions. His son, William C.
				  “Bill” Speidel, was a reporter, author, and founder of Seattle’s Underground
				  Tours.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpeidelWC1</container><unittitle>William Charles Speidel in football
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Captain Spidell (sic)</p><p>The photo appeared in the November 11, 1962 edition of the 
					 <emph>Seattle Times,</emph> where Speidell is holding the photo.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpiedelWC2</container><unittitle>William Charles Spiedel in suit and hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname>Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination><note><p>Orignal photo in Asahel Curtis Collection PH Coll 482,
						titled: William C. Speidel, captain of University of Washington football team
						in 1903, charter member of Sigma Chi, graduate 1904. </p></note></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpiedelWC3</container><unittitle>William Charles Spiedel seated at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate><origination><corpname>The Seattle Times</corpname></origination><note><p>The photo appears to have been taken in his office in the
						Cobb Building, Seattle.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spellman, John Dennis (December 29, 1926 – January 16,
				  2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Dennis Spellman was an American politician who served as
				  the 18th governor of Washington US state from 1981 to 1985. Spellman was born
				  in Seattle, Washington. He graduated class valedictorian from Seattle
				  University and earned a law degree from Georgetown University School of Law.
				  Spellman served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and went on to practice
				  law in Seattle for 13 years before beginning his career in public service. He
				  was King County Commissioner from 1967 to 1969 and King County Executive from
				  1969 to 1981. Spellman took office as governor in the midst of a recession in
				  the state, but was able to change the budget shortfall to a surplus with the
				  help of budget cuts and a sales tax increase. He found funding for a new prison
				  and created a new Department of Corrections. He also began a process to provide
				  for additional modern ferries, and won voter approval for bonds to help
				  industrial development and provide jobs. A Housing Finance Commission was
				  created to help low-income families buy homes with the help of federal funds,
				  leading to the investment of millions of dollars in the timber and construction
				  industries. He secured federal Superfund support for cleanup of Tacoma’s
				  Commencement Bay, and he signed the first Interstate Nuclear Waste Compact. He
				  also opposed the construction of an oil pipeline under Puget Sound and over the
				  Cascade Mountains. He served as vice-chair of the National Governors
				  Association’s Committee on Energy and the Environment and was chosen Elected
				  Official of the Year by the Washington Environmental Council. Spellman promoted
				  foreign trade at the state and national level, serving as chairman of the
				  National Governors Association’s Committee on International Trade and Foreign
				  Relations. He was founding co-chair of the Coalition for Employment through
				  Export and a member of the board of the Export-import Bank and the
				  Intergovernmental Advisory Committee to the U.S. Trade Representative. The
				  Washington World Trade Council named him World Trader of the Year. Defeated for
				  reelection, Spellman returned to Seattle, where he went into private
				  practice.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpellmanJD1</container><unittitle>John Dennis Spellman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1980</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spencer, George Albert (February, 1869 - July 1,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Albert Spencer, the son of Horace and Elvira Spencer, was
				  born in West Burlington, Pennsylvania. He was active in Seattle real estate for
				  many years and was vice-president of the Northwest Real Estate Association and
				  director and first vice-president of the Seattle Real Estate Association. He
				  married Gertrude Longworth in Seattle in 1901. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spencer, James (July 7, 1841 - November 25,
				  1914)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Spencer, the son of Thompson Spencer and Catherine Bucey
				  Spenser, was born in Indiana and came to Oregon in 1860. He moved to Cowlitz
				  County where he married Margaret Lindley Huntington in 1865 and established a
				  farm.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">HuntingtonER3</container><unittitle>Edwin Huntington with group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1904?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph was published in the <emph render="italic">Cowlitz Advocate</emph> in Castle Rock, WA on September 8,
					 1904.</p><p>Front row (left to right): Ira C. Conger, John Robin, William
					 Marshall; Middle row (left to right): Peter Moon, Edwin R. Huntington, D. B.
					 Moon, Hiram Jackson; Top row (left to right): N. Burks, James Spencer, Dan
					 Little, J. B. Plowenden [sp?]</p><p>Filed under Edwin Ruthven Huntington subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spencer, Mathew Lyle (July 7, 1881 – February 10,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matthew Lyle Spencer was a writer and professor who served as
				  the president of the University of Washington from 1927 until 1933. He
				  graduated from Kentucky Wesleyan College with an A.B. degree in 1903 and a
				  Master’s degree in 1904. In 1905, he attended Northwestern University where he
				  received an additional A.M. degree. Between 1905 and 1906 and again in 1909,
				  Spencer also served as fellow of English at the University of Chicago, earning
				  his Ph.D. from the university in 1910. He taught at Wofford College
				  (Spartanburg, South Carolina) and at Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin.
				  He also served as reporter and copy reader for the Milwaukee Journal, becoming
				  the chief editor of the paper in 1917. He left that position to enlist in the
				  Army where he became a captain in military intelligence. In 1919 Spencer
				  resumed teaching, accepting a position as Director of the School of Journalism
				  at the University of Washington. He was appointed dean of the school of
				  journalism in 1926 and the following year, became president of the University,
				  succeeding Dr. Henry Suzzallo. When a new governor for the state was elected in
				  1932, Spencer resigned as president of the University. He then taught for one
				  year at the University of Chicago before joining Syracuse University where he
				  was appointed the university’s first dean of the school of journalism. He
				  retired from Syracuse in 1951 as dean emeritus. He received the Columbia
				  Scholastic Press Association's Gold Medal (1946), and Syracuse University's
				  Distinguished Service Medal as well as honorary doctorates from Northwestern
				  University (1928), College of Puget Sound (1932), Kentucky Wesleyan College
				  (1942), and Syracuse University (1951).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">PORXD1</container><container type="item">SpencerML1</container><unittitle>Matthew Lyle Spencer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Leonid Fink, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">35</container><container type="item">SpencerML2</container><unittitle>Matthew Lyle Spencer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Leonid Fink, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spencer, Matthew C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpencerMC1</container><unittitle>Matthew C. Spencer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spiegle, Stanley Sauer (January 2, 1903 - February 12,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Sauer Spiegle was born in Washington and attended
				  Weatherwax High School in Aberdeen where he was a cheerleader. After high
				  school, he worked as a freelance photographer, DJ and radio announcer, working
				  for radio stations KOMO, KXRO and KBKW. Lee Friedlander, photographer and
				  artist, mentions him as an early influence, saying he received tips and odd
				  jobs that started Friedlander's career in photography.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpiegleSS1</container><unittitle>Stanley Spiegle and unidentified man, standing in
					 front of a large tree</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spinning, Charles Hadley (January 23, 1821 - April 1,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Hadley Spinning was born in Franklin County, Indiana. He
				  graduated from the Eclectric Medical College in Cincinnati with a degree of
				  Doctor of Medicine. After teaching for several years, Spinning decided to go
				  west. He was the captain of a wagon train that crossed the plains, arriving in
				  Portland in 1851. Mildred Stewart was one of the members of the wagon train;
				  she married Spinning in 1852. The couple took a land claim in Lewis County,
				  which was the beginning of a series of farms they owned in the Northwest. In
				  1862, Governor Isaac Stevens appointed Spinning the doctor for three tribes,
				  the Nisqually, the Puyallup and the Squaxin. Spinning spoke Chinook, and he
				  traveled by canoe and horseback throughout the territory. He was often the only
				  doctor in Pierce County, serving also as apothecary, dentist and even barber.
				  In 1864, he built the first house in Tacoma and helped John Carr build the
				  first sawmill, which contributed to the growth of the city. After nine years,
				  the Spinnings moved to a claim in Dieringer near Lake Tapps; Spinning continued
				  to serve as the local doctor in emergencies.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpinningCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Hadley Spinning</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spinning, Frank Ruddle (August 6, 1860 -May 6,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Ruddle Spinning, the son of Charles H. and Mildred
				  Spinning, was born in Olympia, Washington. He received his early education in
				  the Puyallup Valley and later attended school in Portland. In 1882, he took up
				  a pre-emption claim just north of Sumner, Washington and then homesteaded east
				  of Puyallup. Always active in public affairs, he served as county commissioner
				  from 1883 to 1887. Spinning was a member of the State legislature for one term,
				  a member of the Sumner school board for eighteen years, director of the Western
				  Washington Fair, which he helped found, and was a member of the inter-county
				  river improvement board. He worked for the State as the superintendent of
				  transportation under Governors Lister, Hart and Hartley. Spinning married Sarah
				  Ryan in 1884; she died in 1927. In 1938, he married Florence Metzler.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpinningFR1</container><unittitle>Frank Ruddle Spinning</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910- 1919</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Oliver P. Scott, Tacoma</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on verso</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spithill, Alexander McDonald (May 24, 1823 - February
				  12, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alexander Spithill, an early Puget Sound pioneer, was born in
				  Greenock, Scotland, the son of John Spithill, a sea captain, and Katherine
				  McCullah Spithill. Shortly before his 17th birthday in 1841, he sailed to sea.
				  He spent the 1840s working on the oceans with his father, and lived for a time
				  in Australia. In March 1849 he arrived in San Francisco during the height of
				  the California gold rush, staying for several years. Between 1854 and 1856, he
				  worked for a Scottish company that was exploring for guano in the North and
				  South Pacific Ocean. Spithill sailed north in the autumn of 1856, arriving in
				  Port Orchard in 1856. He briefly worked as a mail carrier, carrying mail by
				  boat between various Indian reservations and United States military posts. In
				  1861 he started one of the first logging camps in the Marysville area, and
				  later in the 1860s and into the early 1870s worked on the Tulalip Reservation.
				  Spithill moved to Mukilteo in 1877 and farmed there for a dozen years. He
				  permanently relocated to Marysville in 1890, was one of the incorporators of
				  the town in 1891, served on the town council for a number of years, and worked
				  in real estate and timber during his 30 years in Marysville </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpithillAM1</container><unittitle>Alexander McDonald Spithill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910s?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Juleen and Rogers, Everett, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Splawn, John Andrew (1842 - November 6,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Andrew Splawn, the son of Mayberry Splawn and Bethena
				  McHaney Splawn, was born in Missouri in 1842. In 1852, the family started the
				  journey across the plains by wagon train. His father was the captain of train,
				  but died of cholera on the 10th day of the trip. After his death, the other
				  members of the train elected Bethena to be the new team captain. Francis, the
				  eldest son at age 18, helped his mother and the six younger children complete
				  the trip to Oregon. John A. Splawn later moved to Yakima where he had a ranch
				  and served as county treasurer. He married Eldora Johns in 1879.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SplawnJA1</container><unittitle>John Andrew Splawn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spooner, John Coit (January 6, 1843 - June 11,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Coit Spooner was a politician and lawyer from Wisconsin. He
				  served in the United States Senate from 1885 to 1891 and from 1897 to 1907. A
				  Republican, by the 1890s, he was one of the "Big Four" key Republicans who
				  largely controlled the major decisions of the Senate, along with Orville H.
				  Platt of Connecticut, William B. Allison of Iowa, and Nelson W. Aldrich of
				  Rhode Island. Spooner was born in Lawrenceburg, Indiana and graduated from the
				  University of Wisconsin with a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1864. He served
				  in the Union Army during the Civil War. After the war, he studied law with his
				  father, Judge Philip Spooner, and was admitted to the bar in 1867. Spooner was
				  appointed assistant attorney general of Wisconsin, serving from 1869 to 1870.
				  He practiced law from 1870 to 1884, establishing himself in the field of
				  railroad and corporation law. He served as counsel for the West Wisconsin
				  Railway and Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis Railway. He was elected to the
				  Senate in 1885. As a Senator, Spooner was credited with the Sherman Antitrust
				  Act of 1890 provision that enabled the government to prosecute Standard
				  Oil.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpoonerJC1</container><unittitle>Senator John Coit Spooner and party at Puget Sound
					 Navy Yard in Bremerton.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 25, 1905</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Background is proposed athletic field for
						Navy in the Northwest. The smoke is from explosion of blowing out stumps.</p><p>From news sources, the party included Thomas Burke, Robert
						Moran, Cornelius H. Hanford, John H. McGraw, Samuel Piles, and Manson Backus,
						who are pictured. In addition, Jacob Furth, president of Puget Sound National
						Bank; James B. Meikle, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; and attorney Edwin
						H. Guie also accompanied Senator Spooner.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spring, Abraham (December 1, 1855- September 22,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Abraham Spring was a pioneer leader in Jewish religious and
				  educational circles. A native of Krakow, he came to Seattle shortly before the
				  1889 fire, and was one of the first pioneers to go to Alaska for the Klondike
				  gold rush in 1898. During the early days, he served as postmaster at Circle
				  City in Alaska and was one of the leaders in the organization of the city
				  government in Fairbanks. He also served as prosecuting attorney and later mayor
				  of Fairbanks. During the years that he lived in Seattle, he was the legal
				  representative for the Hebrew Immigration Aid Society of New York for eighteen
				  years. Spring was past president of Bikur Cholum Congregation, a member of the
				  B’nai B’rith lodge, and took an active role in the Talmud Torah.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpringA1</container><unittitle>Abraham Spring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spring, Norma Johnson</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpringNJ1</container><unittitle>Norma Johnson Spring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spring, Robert W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpringRW1</container><unittitle>Robert W. Spring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spry, Governor</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">Spry1</container><unittitle>Governor Spry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Spurrell, Jack Martin (December 11, 1910-September 1,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jack Spurrell was president of the Pensioner's Association and
				  headed the project to erect the Longshoremen's statue in Raymond,
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SpurrellJM1</container><unittitle> Lance Graham, Jack Spurrell and Norman Mattson with
					 the Longshoremen's Statue in Raymond, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>In 1937 the International Longshoremen's Association Local
					 38-92 (AFL) became the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union
					 (ILWU) Local 1, the first CIO local of the ILWU chartered in the state of
					 Washington. ILWU Local 1 was based in Raymond, Washington (on Willapa Bay), and
					 existed until it merged with Aberdeen Local 24 in 1976. The Pacific Coast
					 Pensioner's Association was intended to provide union workers with accident or
					 retirement benefits; in 1988, the Pensioner's Association had a statue carved
					 to commemorate the history of shipping industry in the port of Raymond. The
					 statue is a full-length figure of a longshoreman, dressed in overalls and cap.
					 He is standing on a crate, with a rolled object under his right arm.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Squire, Watson</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SquireW1</container><unittitle> Watson Squire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Squire, Watson C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SquireWC1</container><unittitle> Watson C. Squire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Squires, Bernard E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SquiresBE1</container><unittitle>Bernard E. Squires</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stacy, M. V. B.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StacyMVB1</container><unittitle>M. V. B. Stacy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">St. Denis, Ruth (1878-1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth St. Denis was an American dancer and choreographer who was
				  one of the founders of modern dance.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StDenisR1</container><unittitle>Ruth St. Denis in dance costume at a mountain
					 park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph is inscribed to Rev. M. A. Matthews by Ruth St.
					 Denis</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stafford, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StaffordW1</container><unittitle>William Stafford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">St. Germain, Mary Ann</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StGermainMA1</container><unittitle>Mary Ann St. Germain</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Standley, J. E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StandleyJE1</container><unittitle>J. E. Standley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stanley, Edward</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StanleyE1</container><unittitle>Edward Stanley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stanley, Vera B. (May, 1881 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vera B. Stanley was born in Cincinnati and acted on the stage.
				  She appeared in several productions in Seattle in 1910 and 1912, including 
				  <emph render="italic">Prince of Tonight</emph> at the Moore Theater.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StanleyVB1</container><unittitle>Vera B. Stanley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stanton, Elizabeth Cady (November 12, 1815 – October 26,
				  1902)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Elizabeth Cady Stanton was an American social activist,
				  abolitionist, and leading figure of the early women's rights movement. Her 
				  <emph render="italic">Declaration of Sentiments</emph>, presented at the first
				  women's rights convention held in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, is often
				  credited with initiating the first organized women's rights and women's
				  suffrage movements in the United States. She was the co-founder and president
				  of the first Women's Temperance Movement. In 1869, Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
				  founded the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA), an organization
				  dedicated to gaining women's suffrage.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">AnthonySB1</container><unittitle>Group photograph with Susan B. Anthony, Abigail Scott
					 Duniway and Elizabeth Cady Stanton at Anthony's home in upstate New
					 York</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Susan B. Anthony subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stanton, Richard H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StantonRH1</container><unittitle>Richard H. Stanton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stapleton, Mary</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StapletonM1</container><unittitle>Mary Stapleton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Starkey, Herbert Leslie (July 24, 1901 - December 13,
				  1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Herbert Leslie Starkey, the son of Edward and Frances Starkey,
				  was born in Ohio where his father worked as a sailor and lake captain. Herbert
				  worked as a machinist. He married Helen Rice in 1927. His mother later married
				  Henderson Ryan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Starks, E.C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StarksEC1</container><unittitle>E. C. Starks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Starr, Frederick</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StarrF1</container><unittitle>Frederick Starr</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Starrett, George Edwin (October 31, 1855 - July 20,
				  1927)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Edwin Starrett was the change catcher for the Seattle
				  Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington
				  Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. He was born in Maine
				  and came to Seattle in the early 1880s. After marrying Annie Van Bokkelen in
				  1887, he moved to Port Townsend where he worked as a builder and contractor.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steel, George A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteelGA1</container><unittitle>George A. Steel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steele, E. N.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteeleEN1</container><unittitle>E. N. Steele</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Steelman, John Roy (June 23, 1900 – July 14,
				  1999)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Roy Steelman was the first person to serve as "The
				  Assistant to the President of the United States", in the administration of
				  President Harry S. Truman from 1946 to 1953. The office later became the White
				  House Chief of Staff. He holds the record for the longest term as Chief of
				  Staff at six years. After completing his Ph.D., Steelman embarked on a career
				  in academia. He served as an instructor at Harvard University before becoming a
				  professor of sociology at Alabama College. Frances Perkins, then Secretary of
				  Labor, convinced him to join the federal government as a member of the United
				  States Conciliation Service, a Labor Department agency that assisted in
				  settling labor disputes. After three years he became Commissioner of
				  Conciliation. After President Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to a fourth
				  term, Steelman worked for a short time in New York City as a public relations
				  consultant. But when Roosevelt died in 1945 and Vice President Harry Truman
				  became president, Steelman returned to the federal government as an adviser to
				  the Secretary of Labor. Later he became a special assistant to the President,
				  serving as Director of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion. In
				  1946, he became "The Assistant to the President." In 1948, he turned down the
				  post of Secretary of Labor, preferring to stay at the White House, where he was
				  particularly focused on establishing policies on science and higher
				  education.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harry S. Truman subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steinberger, Justus D., Colonel</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteinbergerJD1</container><unittitle>Colonel Justus D. Steinberger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steinbrueck, Victor</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteinbrueckV1</container><unittitle>Victor Steinbrueck</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> between 1931 and 1985?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0132/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steinert, William Joseph (March 7, 1880 - January 20,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Joseph Steinert was born in Versailles, Kentucky. He
				  graduated from Central University in Richmond Kentucky, and in 1905 from the
				  University of Michigan Law School. Before coming to Seattle in 1910, he
				  practiced law in Louisville, Kentucky. During World War I, he was a deputy King
				  County prosecutor and was elected to the King County Superior Court in 1926 for
				  a two-year term. He was elected to a four-year term in 1928. In 1932, he was
				  elected to the State Supreme Court, serving for 17 years until his retirement
				  in 1949. Steinert was chief counsel for Regional Office of Price Stabilization
				  in 1951 and 1952 before entering private practice. He was chair of the Board of
				  Examiners of the Washington State Bar Association, serving for eight years. In
				  1959, he was appointed by Governor Albert Rosellini to a cross-Sound
				  transportation study committee.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteinertW1</container><unittitle>William Steinert</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Steininger, Mable Belle (October 5, 1904 - October 11,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mable Belle Steininger, the daughter of William Henry Steininger
				  and Etta Bowman Steininger, was born in Oregon. She married Eddie Blair in
				  1926.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Steininger, Maude Ellen (November 16, 1895 - June 12,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Ellen Steininger, the daughter of William Henry Steininger
				  and Etta Bowman Steininger, was born in Battle Creek, Nebraska. She married
				  Theodore Ryan in 1921.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RyanH4</container><unittitle>Threshing on Steininger Ranch near Molalla,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1921</unitdate><note><p>Documentation from original postcard: Mr. Shafer on the his
						thresher. First row: Theo Ryan and wife (Maude), Stanley Mason, Kalida McNeill,
						Mrs. (Maude) Steininger, Mrs. Mason, Mrs and Mrs. Conwell, mother Frances Ryan,
						Dad (Henderson) Ryan, Herbert Starkey; Second row: Gladys Ryan; Third row:
						Mable Steininger, Willa (?) Conwell, Phillip Ryan.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephens, Elizabeth</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensE1</container><unittitle>James B. Stephens and Elizabeth Stephens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under James B. Stephens subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephens, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensG1</container><unittitle>George Stephens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephens, James B.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensJB1</container><unittitle>James B. Stephens and Elizabeth Stephens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephens, Philip, Sir</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensP1</container><unittitle>Sir Philip Stephens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephenson, Hattie Bruce (September 2, 1905 - August 20,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hattie Bruce Stephenson, the daughter of Ferdinand William
				  Stephenson and Roberta Bruce Stephenson, was born in San Rafael, California.
				  She married Francis Farrington Owen in 1931 and lived in Whatcom County,
				  Washington after her marriage. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensonHB1</container><unittitle> Hattie Bruce Stephenson with Roberta Florence
					 Stephenson, Roberta Bruce Stephenson and Sarah Stephenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1911</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taylor, San Raphael, California</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephenson, Roberta Bruce (June 22, 1911 - August,
				  1975)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roberta Bruce Stephenson, the daughter of Ferdinand William
				  Stephenson and Roberta Bruce Stephenson, was born in San Rafael, California.
				  She married Frank DuBarry in 1947 and Per Lassen in 1953. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensonHB1</container><unittitle> Hattie Bruce Stephenson with Roberta Florence
					 Stephenson, Roberta Bruce Stephenson and Sarah Stephenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1911</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taylor, San Raphael, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Hattie Bruce Stephenson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephenson, Roberta Florence Marguerite Bruce (February
				  24, 1881 - September 3, 1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roberta Florence Marguerite Bruce, the daughter of Robert Bruce
				  and Sarah Vangues Bruce, married Ferdinand William Stephenson in San Francisco
				  in 1903. She had three daughters: Hattie, Sarah and Roberta.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensonHB1</container><unittitle> Hattie Bruce Stephenson with Roberta Florence
					 Stephenson, Roberta Bruce Stephenson and Sarah Stephenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1911</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taylor, San Raphael, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Hattie Bruce Stephenson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stephenson, Sarah (April 29, 1907 - February 21,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Stephenson, the daughter of Ferdinand William Stephenson
				  and Roberta Bruce Stephenson, was born in San Rafael, California. She married
				  twice, in 1934 and in 1942. After her marriage, she lived in Chelmsford,
				  Massachusetts.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">StephensonHB1</container><unittitle> Hattie Bruce Stephenson with Roberta Florence
					 Stephenson, Roberta Bruce Stephenson and Sarah Stephenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1911</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Taylor, San Raphael, California</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Hattie Bruce Stephenson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steptoe, E. J., Lt. Col.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SteptoeEJ1</container><unittitle>Lieutenant Colonel E. J. Steptoe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sternberg, Sophia</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SternbergS1</container><unittitle>Sophia Sternberg</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sterns, Mary</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SternsTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas H. Sterns and Mary F. Sterns</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Thomas H. Sterns subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sterns, Thomas H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SternsTH1</container><unittitle>Thomas H. Sterns and Mary F. Sterns</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stevens, George Q.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensGQ1</container><unittitle>George Q. Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1910 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Peterson, Tacoma, WA</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Stevens, Hazard (June 9, 1842 – October 11,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hazard Stevens was an American military officer, mountaineer,
				  politician and writer. Stevens was born in Newport, Rhode Island, the son of
				  Isaac I. Stevens and Margaret Hazard Stevens. In 1854, his father became the
				  first governor of the new Washington Territory, and the Stevens family moved to
				  Olympia, Washington. Both father and son volunteered in the Union army during
				  the Civil War and served in the 79th New York Volunteer Infantry. Hazard was
				  wounded and his father, by then a general, was killed in the Battle of
				  Chantilly on September 1, 1862. For his contribution to the capture of Fort
				  Huger, Virginia, Stevens received the Medal of Honor. After the war, Stevens
				  returned to Washington, initially working for the Oregon Steam Navigation
				  Company and as a federal revenue collector in 1868. He met P. B. Van Trump, who
				  was working as the private secretary to Marshall F. Moore, the seventh governor
				  of the territory. Both men were interested in climbing Mount Rainier and on
				  August 17, 1870 they completed the first documented ascent of the mountain.
				  Stevens climbed Mount Rainier a second time in 1905 on a trip organized by The
				  Mazamas, an Oregon mountaineering club. He joined the bar in 1871, representing
				  the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. In 1874, Stevens moved to Dorchester,
				  Massachusetts near Boston; he entered the Massachusetts State Legislature in
				  1885. The Stevens Van Trump Historic Monument along the Skyline Trail in Mount
				  Rainier National Park was erected to commemorate the historic first ascent of
				  the mountain. Nearby Stevens Peak, Stevens Canyon, and Stevens Ridge are named
				  after him. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evelyn Fay Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of a page from a book. The page includes photographs
					 of Philemon B. Van Trump, Hazard Stevens and Helen Holmes.</p><p>Filed under Evelyn Fay Fuller subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, Isaac</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensI1</container><unittitle>Isaac Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, James Floyd</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensJamesF1</container><unittitle>James Floyd Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, John F.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensJohnF1</container><unittitle>John F. Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, Len W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensLW1</container><unittitle>Len W. Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, Rodger</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensR1</container><unittitle>Rodger Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, Sylvain Harlow (June 1, 1875 - May 17,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sylvain H. Stevens was on the first city council of Nome,
				  Alaska. He edited <emph render="italic">The Nome Gold Digger</emph>.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HoxieCE1</container><unittitle>Group photograph of Alaska's first mayor and city
					 council in Nome; Bill McPhee, John Harris, S. H. Stevens, Charlie Hox(s)ie
					 (standing) and George Lewis "Tex" Rickard, Julius Guise (Geise) and Captain W.
					 E. Geiger (seated)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of the original photo from the University of Alaska
					 Fairbanks.</p><p>Filed under Charles E. Hoxie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevens, William Bascom</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensWB1</container><unittitle>William Bascom Stevens</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevenson, Adlai</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensonA1</container><unittitle>Adlai Stevenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stevenson, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevensonG1</container><unittitle>George Stevenson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Stevenson, Harold</unittitle></did><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM1</container><unittitle>Helen Morrill and Harold Stevenson, close to Richmond
					 Beach, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Morrill Wolfle subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM2</container><unittitle>Mount Rainier excursion: Helen Morrill, Harold
					 Stevenson, Warner Chapson, Amelia Nicoles, Gertrude Sennes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Helen Morrill Wolfle subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stevick, Robert D.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Professor of English at the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StevickRD1</container><unittitle>Three views of Professor Stevick with a facsimile of
					 the Book of Kells at the University of Washington Libraries, Special
					 Collections</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steward</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">Steward1</container><unittitle>Steward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stewart, James P.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StewartJP1</container><unittitle>James P. Stewart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stewart, John, Captain &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StewartJ1</container><unittitle>Captain and Mrs. John Stewart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stewart, P. G.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StewartPG1</container><unittitle>P. G. Stewart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stewart, Walter</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StewartW1</container><unittitle>Walter Stewart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stickene, Bill</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StickeneB1</container><unittitle>Bill Stickene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stiles, C. T.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StilesCT1</container><unittitle>C. T. Stiles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stiles, Theodore L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StilesTL1</container><unittitle>Theodore L. Stiles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stillman, Jay</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StillmanJ1</container><unittitle>Jay Stillman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stillwell, William D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StillwellWD1</container><unittitle>William D. Stillwell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stimson, C. D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StimsonCD1</container><unittitle>C. D. Stimson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stimson, Thomas D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StimsonTD1</container><unittitle>T. D. Stimson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stinoon, Ulmen</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StinoonU1</container><unittitle>Ulmen Stinoon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stipp, Agnes Elizabeth Wanek (April 7, 1920 -
				  )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Agnes Elizabeth Wanek attended the University of Nebraska. She
				  married Charles Stipp in 1943.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StippCG1</container><unittitle>Charles Stipp and Agnes Stipp weighing a large
					 fish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford Photographers, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles G. Stipp subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StippCG2</container><unittitle>Charles Stipp with Agnes Stipp and unidentified man
					 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Charles G. Stipp subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stipp, Charles Grant (April 13, 1917 - January 27,
				  2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Grant Stipp was born in Downing, Missouri and graduated
				  from the University of Kansas with both BA and medical degrees. After
				  graduation, he came to Seattle as an intern at Swedish Hospital. He served in
				  the Army Medical Corps during the Second World War and then completed his
				  residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Kansas, with
				  specialty training at Duke University. He returned to Seattle in 1949 and
				  co-founded Seattle Women's Clinic. At Swedish Hospital, he headed the OB
				  Department, and served as Chief of Staff. He was a clinical professor at the
				  University of Washington, a diplomat of the American Board of Obstetrics and
				  Gynecology, member of the Seattle Gynecology Society (president, 1964), member
				  of Pacific Northwest Gynecology Association (president, 1969) and a member of
				  the Pacific Coast Obstetrical Society. He co-founded a movie company in 1952
				  and won a Silver Medal at the Cortina, Italy International Film Festival for
				  his film <emph render="italic">Gossip Goes to Honolulu.</emph> He produced many
				  films to teach medical procedures and has films in the Library of Congress and
				  many local films at the Museum of History and Industry. He was one of the
				  originators of the Tyee Club, and served on its first Board of Trustees. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StippCG1</container><unittitle>Charles Stipp and Agnes Stipp weighing a large
					 fish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Ford Photographers, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StippCG2</container><unittitle>Charles Stipp with Agnes Stipp and unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Stirrat, James Raeside (December 5, 1865 - October 23,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Raeside Stirrat was one of Seattle’s leading general
				  contractors and a major figure in the development of the Jackson Park Municipal
				  Golf Course. He was a partner in the firm Stirrat and Goetz, general
				  contractors. Arriving in Seattle in 1889 from his native Ayrshire, Scotland,
				  Stirrat went to work as a foreman in a local cabinet shop. He later went into
				  business as a contractor and in 1894 became associated with Herman Goetz. Their
				  firm had a prominent role in the reconstruction of the city following the 1889
				  fire, installing the first permanent paving in Seattle and the first water main
				  in the city. During his career as a contractor and businessman, Stirrat was the
				  owner of Seattle Brick &amp; Tile, director of Pioneer Sand &amp; Gravel
				  Company and of the National Steel Rolling Mills; former president of the
				  Superior Portland Cement Company in Seattle and of the Independent Asphalt
				  Paving Company. He was appointed to the Seattle Park Board in 1926 and was
				  responsible to a large extent in the building of the Jackson Park Golf Course.
				  For three years, he was chairman of the greens committee of the Seattle Golf
				  Club and was president of the organization in 1923.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">SavageGMSr1</container><unittitle>George Milton Savage Sr., with William Russell
					 Nichols, James R. Stirrat, Herman Goetz and Fred T. Sherman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph; original in Lawton Gowey Street Railroad
						Photograph Collection, PH Coll. 209.</p><p>Filed under George Milton Savage Sr. subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stoddard, George W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoddardGW1</container><unittitle>George W. Stoddard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stojack, Frank</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StojackF1</container><unittitle>Frank Stojack</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stokes, Charles (February 1, 1903 - November 25,
				  1996)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Stokes was born in Fredonia, Kansas and earned a law
				  degree from Kansas University in 1931. He practiced law in Kansas and was the
				  first Black vice chair of the Young Republican National Federation. He was
				  assistant attorney in the State of Kansas Commission of Revenue and Taxation.
				  Stokes moved to Seattle in 1943 to practice law. He ran for a legislative seat
				  in 1950 and won, subsequently serving three terms. He was only the second black
				  legislator in Washington State history; the first was Owen Bush, 1889-90, son
				  of Southwest Washington pioneer George Washington Bush. In 1952, he spoke from
				  the platform of the Republican National Convention on behalf of the candidacy
				  of Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was appointed Seattle district judge in 1968 and
				  served until his retirement in 1978. He continued to serve occasionally as
				  judge pro tem in King County District Court. As a judge, he spoke at civil
				  rights gatherings throughout the Northwest. He married Josephine Stratman in
				  1951.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG2</container><unittitle>Martin G. Johanson with Reverend Floyd Green, Father
					 Paul Luger, Judge Charles Stokes and Rabbi Raphael Levine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stokes, Dean</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StokesD1</container><unittitle>Dean Stokes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stoopes, Glen</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoopesG1</container><unittitle>Glen Stoopes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Storey, Ellsworth</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoreyE1</container><unittitle>Ellsworth Storey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Storhow, M. L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StorhowML1</container><unittitle>M. L. Storhow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stoughton, John A., Mr. &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoughtonJA1</container><unittitle>Mr. and Mrs. John A. Stoughton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stoughton, William (1631 – July 7, 1701)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Stoughton was a colonial magistrate and administrator in
				  the Province of Massachusetts Bay. Stoughton graduated from Harvard College in
				  1650 with a degree in theology and continued his studies in New College,
				  Oxford, graduating with an M.A. in theology in 1653. Stoughton returned to
				  Massachusetts in 1662. He preached on several occasions at Dorchester and
				  Cambridge, but refused offers of permanent ministerial posts. He instead became
				  involved in politics and land development, serving on the colony's council of
				  assistants, serving as a magistrate, and representing the colony in the New
				  England Confederation. He was in charge of what have come to be known as the
				  Salem Witch Trials, where he accepted spectral evidence based on supposed
				  demonic visions. Unlike some of the other magistrates, he never admitted to the
				  possibility that his acceptance of such evidence was in error. Stoughton was
				  also involved in overseeing the colonial response to King William's War, which
				  broke out in 1689. Stoughton served as acting governor until 1699, while still
				  also serving as chief justice. He remained lieutenant governor during the brief
				  tenure of the Earl of Bellomont as governor, and again became acting governor
				  on the latter's departure in 1700. The town of Stoughton, Massachusetts is
				  named in his honor, as is one of the Harvard College dormitories in Harvard
				  Yard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoughtonW1</container><unittitle>William Stoughton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Robert Babson</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Printed on front: Eng(raving) at(tributed) J(oseph) Andrews by
					 R. Babson.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stout, Jonathan L. (October 23, 1820 - May 2,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jonathan L. Stout was born in Ohio and moved with his family to
				  Illinois at an early age. While in Illinois, he learned the trade of a cooper.
				  He married Abigail E. Beckwith (1824-1858). For years, his wife and children
				  suffered from malaria, his two oldest children dying from the disease. Times
				  were hard, and having heard of the gold in California, he crossed the plains in
				  April 1850 with a train of oxen. He reached Placerville early in August. Stout
				  was not long in the mines before he was taken sick; and his gold-digging
				  aspirations were cut short. He took passage for Oregon with the hope of
				  recovering his health. He returned east, and then crossed the plains in1852
				  with his family. In 1853 he went into Clackamas County, taking up a Donation
				  claim some twelve miles from Oregon City, where he remained for five years. But
				  his wife’s health failing, he moved back to the city to be in reach of a
				  physician. His wife died two years later. Making his home in Astoria, he
				  married Annie Gearhart of Clatsop Plains, and removed to Oysterville on
				  Shoalwater Bay, engaging in oystering. He was fairly successful a number of
				  years until a high tide swept away his home and property. He moved to the head
				  of Baker’s Bay and established a home where he was named postmaster. The place
				  was named Unity, later to be re-named Ilwaco. Stout acquired additional land
				  and built a hotel which he christened “Bay View.” He was the first to put into
				  operation the plan of drawing seaside travel to the North Beach area.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoutJL1</container><unittitle>Jonathan L. Stout</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stover, Henry (October 8, 1846- August 21,
				  1890)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Stover was born October 8, 1846, in Lancaster County,
				  Pennsylvania. When a boy, he moved with his parents to Freeport, Illinois, and
				  afterward to Lawrence, Kansas. At the time of the Pike Peak gold rush in 1858,
				  he went to Colorado, where he remained four years and engaged in mining. Stover
				  went to Umatilla County, Oregon, in 1862. In 1870 he married Mary Ellen Bowman;
				  they had two sons, Charles and Edward. Stover chiefly engaged in stock raising,
				  in addition to a freighting business in the early days, and he was also
				  interested in mining, in the Pendleton Manufacturing Company, and other
				  enterprises. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StoverH1</container><unittitle>Henry Stover</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Stowe, Harriet Beecher (June 14, 1811 – July 1,
				  1896)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harriet Elisabeth Beecher Stowe was an American author and
				  abolitionist who became best known for her novel <emph>Uncle Tom's
				  Cabin</emph>(1852), which depicts the harsh conditions experienced by enslaved
				  African Americans. The book reached an audience of millions as a novel and
				  play, and became influential in the United States and in Great Britain,
				  energizing anti-slavery forces in the American North, while provoking
				  widespread anger in the South. Stowe wrote many other books, including novels,
				  three travel memoirs, and collections of articles and letters. She was
				  influential both for her writings and for her public stances and debates on
				  social issues of the day.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StoweHB1</container><unittitle>Harriet Beecher Stowe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1850 and 1859?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Ritchie after a portrait by Richmond from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strachan, Margaret Pitcairn (November 13, 1908 - March
				  19, 1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Pitcairn was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania. She
				  dreamed of becoming a writer; however, her parents wanted her to become a
				  nurse. She left nursing school to marry Jack Strachan and start a family. They
				  lived in a cabin in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and she sold eggs door-to-door,
				  before eventually finding work with an abrasives firm that brought the family
				  to Seattle in 1941. She began to write magazine articles and then landed a
				  freelance job with <emph>The Seattle Times.</emph> The freelance work turned
				  into a reporter's job and, finally a position as feature writer. In 1944, she
				  wrote a weekly article on Seattle’s early mansions; the 52 articles provided an
				  important resource for understanding Seattle’s history. By 1947 she was helping
				  run her Woodinville farm, working weekdays at the newspaper, and writing books
				  for young readers. The sale of her books began to make up a significant share
				  of the family income. Widowed in 1958, Strachan spent a year in Europe getting
				  ideas for novels. Back in Seattle, she married Jack Alexander, a lumber broker,
				  in 1963 and moved to Whidbey Island. She became a board member of the Mystery
				  Writers of America, and earned the "Letters Award" from the National Pen
				  Women's Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrachanMP1</container><unittitle> Margaret Strachan at a book signing, holding a copy
					 of <emph render="italic">Mennonite Martha</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrachanMP2</container><unittitle> Margaret Strachan at a book signing, holding a copy
					 of <emph render="italic">Mennonite Martha</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strahan, Reuben Scott (January 1, 1835 – July 21,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reuben Scott Strahan was an American politician and judge in
				  Oregon. He was the 15th Chief Justice of the state's Supreme Court where he
				  served for one term from 1886 until 1892, and prior to the bench, served in the
				  Oregon Legislature. The son of John Strahan and Selah Canterbury Strahan, he
				  was born in Lawrence County, Kentucky and received his education in Missouri.
				  He studied law in Kentucky and passed the Kentucky bar in 1858. Strahan then
				  moved to Missouri where he became a probate judge for Sullivan County, serving
				  from 1860 until 1864. He married Sarah H. Wilson in 1861.In 1865, Strahan and
				  his family moved to Corvallis, Oregon where he established a law practice. He
				  was district attorney for Benton County from 1868 to 1870. In 1870, he was
				  elected to the Oregon State Senate and won re-election in 1872. In 1884,
				  Strahan supported the movement to raise money for the Oregon Agricultural
				  College in Corvallis, and would later serve as a regent for the school.
				  Following his time in the legislature, he resumed private law practice in
				  Albany, before winning election to the Oregon Supreme Court in 1886. Strahan
				  only served one six-year term on the bench, but did serve as chief justice from
				  1890 to 1892, leaving the court when his term expired. He worked as legal
				  counsel for the Oregon Pacific Railroad, and helped organize the Farmers and
				  Merchants Fire Insurance Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrahanRS1</container><unittitle>Reuben Scott Strahan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strange, Ferdinand Gresham (September 28, 1848 - October
				  10, 1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ferdinand Gresham Strange was born in Chattooga County, Georgia
				  and lived in Tennessee and Illinois in his early years. He attended Blackburn
				  College and graduated from Lane Theological Seminary, and was ordained a
				  minister in the Presbyterian Church in 1874. He was a minister in Illinois,
				  Missouri and Kansas for several years. In 1883, he began his first work in the
				  Pacific Northwest when he was elected pastor of the First Presbyterian Church
				  of Seattle, succeeding Dr. Mark A. Mathews, who had been the pastor there for
				  thirty years. He was pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Ashland, Oregon
				  for fourteen years, after which he served churches in Marshfield, Oregon; Kent,
				  Washington; Sedro-Woolley, Washington; and Mukilteo, Washington. He was
				  moderator of the synod of Oregon in 1889 and permanent clerk of the synod for
				  six years. Strange took part in the ceremonies of the driving of the golden
				  spike, commemorating the completion of the Union Pacific Railroad. The degree
				  of doctor of divinity was conferred on him by Whitworth College in 1904. He
				  retired in 1920. At the time of his death, he was the oldest Presbyterian
				  minister in Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrangeFG1</container><unittitle>Ferdinand Gresham Strange</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904-1918</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Postcard is printed on AZO paper with four triangles pointed
						up.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stratton, Howard Whittlesey (September 9, 1833 - August
				  23, 1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Whittlesey Stratton was ordained to the Presbyterian
				  ministry in 1866 in Ohio, after which he began preaching in Kansas. He left for
				  Oregon in 1871, where he ministered to the Presbyterian and Congregational
				  churches in Albany, Oregon. Beginning in 1877, while serving as the Columbia
				  synodical missionary, Stratton organized the first Presbyterian churches west
				  of the Cascades in Weston, Oregon and Walla Walla, Washington Territory. During
				  the winter of 1878-1879, he established the first Presbyterian church at Boise
				  City, Idaho Territory. In 1879, Stratton started a small Sunday school in
				  Spokane Falls, which was the forerunner of the First Presbyterian Church in
				  Spokane Falls. His diaries (1853-1888) are held at the Eastern Washington State
				  Historical Society (Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrattonHW1</container><unittitle>Howard Whittlesey Stratton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strauss, Alfred Adolph (May 29, 1881 -April 1,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born in Germany in 1881, Alfred Strauss came to Colville,
				  Washington at the age of ten. An honor graduate of the University of Washington
				  in 1904 and an outstanding member of the Alumni Association, he received the
				  singular honor of the Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus in 1951. Dr. Strauss was a
				  football star as an undergraduate, and in 1981, he was elected to the Husky
				  Hall of Fame. He received his MD at Rush Medical College in 1908, graduating
				  first in his class. He interned for two years at Michael Reese Hospital in
				  Chicago and completed a brief period of study in Heidelberg, Germany. He then
				  returned to Chicago, where he spent his entire medical career. He was
				  intimately involved with many “firsts” in the advance of medicine. He devised
				  an operation for pyloric stenosis in newborns, pioneered an operation for
				  duodenal ulcers, and developed a new method for blood transfusions. Dr. Strauss
				  and his two physician brothers, Herman and Siegfried, also University of
				  Washington undergraduate alumni, founded Weiss Memorial Hospital (1953) in
				  Chicago, and the Alfred and Hilda Strauss Oncology Center. The hospital was the
				  culmination of his lifelong interest in cancer research and treatment. He is
				  also remembered for his influence in founding the School of Medicine at the
				  University of Washington in 1946, and he sponsored a surgical lectureship in
				  1950 for the Department of Surgery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StraussAA1</container><unittitle>Alfred Adolph Strauss in football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Alfred Strauss, age 21, weight 172, left
						halfback</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StraussAA2</container><unittitle>Alfred Adolph Strauss</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Boyd, Seattle</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: Alfred Strauss, UW halfback, 1903-1904</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StraussAA3</container><unittitle>Alfred Adolph Strauss in cap and gown, receiving the
					 Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus at the 1951 commencement</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, UW, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Street, Bessie (January 17, 1878 - March 25,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bessie Street, the daughter of Samuel Street and Maude Alpine
				  Street, was born in Three Rivers, Michigan and came to Seattle in 1889. She
				  attended the Seattle Female Academy in Ravenna Park, Seattle, and the
				  University of Washington, and later worked as a nurse. She married Richard
				  Sather (1888-1949), a hotel manager who managed hotels in California and
				  Seattle, including the Wilsonian Apartments. In the 1900 edition of <emph>The
				  Tyee</emph>, she was mentioned as the best all-around athlete by the Women's
				  Athletic Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StreetB1</container><unittitle>Bessie Street wearing dress with leg o' mutton
					 sleeves</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Street, William Sherman (September 30, 1904 - April 2,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Sherman Street was an executive with Marshall Field
				  &amp; Company who later took over Frederick &amp; Nelson, a Seattle department
				  store, guiding Fredericks through the Great Depression, World War II, and the
				  post-war economic boom. Born in Oakland, he attended the University of
				  California, Berkeley before leaving college in 1924 to work at Hale Bros.
				  stores in San Francisco and Los Angeles. In 1938 he became general merchandise
				  manager and assistant general manager of Frederick &amp; Nelson, part of
				  Chicago's Marshall Field and Co. In 1943, he became company president and
				  general manager and then was appointed a vice president of Marshall Field. He
				  returned to Frederick &amp; Nelson as president in 1946. He retired from the
				  company in 1962 to chair the 1962 Century 21 Exposition and played a role in
				  making the Seattle World’s Fair a success. In 1963 he became president of
				  United Pacific (later Univar), which had interests in real estate, chemicals
				  and other areas, then served as a board member. He also served on boards of
				  Seafirst and Washington Mutual banks. Every other year from 1962 to 1977, he
				  and his wife, Jane Kergan Street, led an expedition funded by Chicago's Field
				  Museum of Natural History to countries such as Iran, Nepal, Peru and Australia.
				  They shipped everything they acquired, even parasites, to the museum. A room at
				  the museum is named for the Streets.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StreetWS1</container><unittitle>William Sherman Street</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1946</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: William S. Street, for the past three
						years General manager of Marshall Field &amp; Company in Chicago, who has been
						appointed President of Frederick &amp; Nelson, Seattle division of Marchall
						Field &amp; company.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strehlaw, Betty</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrehlawB1</container><unittitle>Betty Strehlaw</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stretton, Stanley Edward (December 14, 1894 - July 30,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Stanley Edward Stretton, the son of Charles and Margaret
				  Stretton, was born in St. Louis, Missouri. After early business careers as a
				  miner, goldsmith, teamster, clerk and salesperson, he began his career with
				  Standard Oil Company in 1918 after service in World War in France. Stretton was
				  named sales manager for PasoTex Petroleum in 1928 and served as district
				  manager for Standard Oil in Santa Barbara, California and Oakland, California
				  before coming to Seattle in 1938 as district manager. He became regional
				  manager in 1954. Stretton was active in civic, business and social affairs,
				  servicing as vice president of Pacific Northwest Trade Association. He was a
				  member of the executive commission of Greater Seattle and a board member of the
				  Seattle-King County Safety Council He was also a director for the United Way,
				  Seafair, and a member of the Selective Service Board. During World War II, he
				  served as coordinator of petroleum for the Northwest and Alaska. He married
				  Cecile Mullen (1895-1989) in 1919.stuhrmanaw1</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrettonSE1</container><unittitle>Stanley Edward Stretton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roger Dudley, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: W. (sic) E. Stretton, Standard Oil
					 Company</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stringer, Susan Mary (December 27, 1840 - August 31,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Susan Mary Murphy, the daughter of William Murphy and Anna Hoar
				  Murphy, was born in Wexford, Ireland. She came to the United States in 1857 and
				  married Robert John Stringer in Iowa the same year. After the Civil War, they
				  traveled to San Francisco via Panama and then to Walla Walla. They had a
				  homestead on the Tucannon River.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StringerSM1</container><unittitle>Susan Mary Stringer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">E. H. Eggers, Walla Walla, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Strong, Anna Louise (November 24, 1885 – March 29,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Louise Strong was a journalist, world traveler, observer of
				  revolutions and author of over 30 books and countless articles. She was the
				  daughter of a Congregationalist minister, Sydney Strong, who was a pacifist and
				  practitioner of the social gospel. She was educated at Oberlin College, Bryn
				  Mawr and University of Chicago, where she earned a Ph.D. After finishing her
				  education, Strong joined the National Child Labor Committee and organized child
				  welfare exhibits throughout the country from 1910-1912. When she brought it to
				  Seattle, in May 1914, 6,000 people came to visit it every day, culminating with
				  an audience, on May 31, of 40,000 people. She returned to Seattle to live with
				  her father, then pastor of Queen Anne Congregational Church, in 1916. She began
				  her journalism career in Seattle and wrote for the <emph> Seattle Union
				  Record</emph>. In 1916, Strong ran for the Seattle School Board and won easily
				  due to the support she garnered from women's groups and organized labor and to
				  her work on child welfare. She was subsequently recalled because of her
				  association with the Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W.) and pacifist
				  causes. In the wake of these events, Strong went elsewhere in search of
				  socialism in practice. She went first to the Soviet Union, where she was based
				  from 1921 until 1940, returning to the United States for lecture tours. Strong
				  became one of the earliest journalists to cover the Communist revolution in
				  China. She visited China first in 1925 and returned frequently until 1947.
				  During the course of her visits, she met and interviewed the Chinese Communist
				  leaders, including Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung. Strong's enthusiasm for the
				  Chinese revolution may have led to her arrest, imprisonment and expulsion from
				  the Soviet Union in 1949. After these events, she was cut off from the Soviet
				  Union, shunned by American Communists and denied a passport by the United
				  States government. She settled for a time in California, where she wrote,
				  lectured and invested in real estate. She was cleared finally of the Soviets'
				  charges against her in 1955. When her passport was restored in 1958, she made
				  her way back to China, where she remained until her death in 1970. Strong's
				  papers are held at the University of Washington Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StrongAL1</container><unittitle>Anna Louise Strong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><origination><persname role="photograph">Kneisle, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>copy of original</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StrongAL2</container><unittitle>Anna Louise Strong, wearing a hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1913</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StrongAL3</container><unittitle>Anna Louise Strong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1964</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StrongAL4</container><unittitle>Anna Louise Strong with Chee Teh, wife and
					 child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Anna Louise Strong with Chee Teh &amp;
						wife &amp; "small daughter of Mao"</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strong, Annie Hall (September 7, 1870 - April 23,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Anna Hall Strong, the daughter of Wilkes Hall and Sarah Delaope
				  Hall, was born in California and attended Denny School in Seattle in 1883. She
				  taught music at the University of Washington when it was located in the
				  Metropolitan Tract in downtown Seattle. In 1896, she married John Franklin
				  Alexander Strong and went with him to the Klondike Gold Rush in 1897. He
				  founded several newspapers, including <emph>Juneau Empire</emph>, the 
				  <emph>Iditarod Pioneer</emph> and the <emph>Katalla News</emph>. She wrote
				  articles, sold ads, set type and helped run the presses. She later wrote about
				  the Alaska Gold Rush and gave lectures about her travels in Russia, Germany,
				  France, India and South America.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">StrongAH1</container><unittitle>Annie Hall Strong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1913</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesOS3</container><unittitle>Group photo of school children with teacher, Orrin S.
					 Jones, on the steps of the Sixth Street School, located at 6th and
					 Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1883</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Class of 1883, including Annie Hall (Strong)
					 and Margaret H. Yarno with Professor O. S. Jones.</p><p>Front Row (left to right): Willetta Robertson, who was the
					 granddaughter of Captain Renton, the lumberman who was prominent with the
					 Blakely Mills; Allie Whalie; Minnie Reeves, whose father was a member of the
					 banking firm of Reeves and Mackintosh; Callie Gillette; Frank Copp, civil
					 engineer; Julius Shults; Charlie Wilson, at one time in the theatrical business
					 and identified with the Primrose and Dockstader Minstrels; Juston Houghton.
					 </p><p>Second Row (left to right): Kate Orth; Anna Hall, who married
					 Major J. F. A. Strong, who later became governor of Alaska; Edna Morrison;
					 Annie Christ; George Parker, whose father, Isaac Parker, built the first brick
					 building in Seattle; Walter Piper, one of the founder of Piper &amp; Taft; Ray
					 Coombs, the artist who painted the original picture of Chief Seattle; Ralph
					 Andrews, engineer; Randolph Kalberg.</p><p>Third Row (left to right): Sophie Lider; Barbara Wander; Mamie
					 Keezer; Annie Rinehart, now Mrs. John E. Chilberg; Alvie Curtis; Barton
					 Robinson; Frank Stanz.</p><p>Fourth Row (left to right): Hattie Morse, sister of Major
					 Chester Morse, engineer; Annie Troxil; Margaret Yarno, whose father built many
					 of the early ships on Puget Sound; Clara Hinkley, who married Sherman
					 Moran.</p><p>Fifth Row (left to right): Kate Howes, who married John Eyler;
					 Brittie Scott; Hattie Kalberg, who married Henry Frankland; May Hoyt; Ray
					 Giddings; George Newell, whose father owned Newell’s Mill; Carl Jones.</p><p>Top Row (left to right): Bertha Robertson; Melissa Megonnigle;
					 Edson Weeks; Martin Mindelstat; Charlie Harrison; ? (no first name given)
					 Smith; Bert Huntoon, brother of Richard Huntoon, Seattle attorney.</p><p>Filed under Orrin S. Jones subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA1</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong with wife
					 Anna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under John Franklin Alexander Strong subseries.</p></note><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Strong, Charles Monroe (February 18, 1871 - March 31,
				  1928)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Monroe Strong was an instructor in Spanish at the
				  University of Washington beginning in 1906. He received his A. B. from the
				  University of Missouri in 1897 and his A. M. in 1900. He was a Fellow in
				  German, University of Missouri, 1899-1900;and professor of German, French and
				  Spanish at St. John's Military Academy, Delafield, Wisconsin, 1900-1901. He did
				  newspaper work in the United States and Cuba from 1902 until 1906, when he
				  joined the University of Washington. In 1910, he studied the folklore, customs
				  and religions of the Pueblo tribes with the information to be used in the
				  compilation of E. S. Curtis’ work. In 1911, he held a summer school in Madrid
				  for UW students studying Spanish language and literature. He joined the faculty
				  of Boston University in 1920 as an assistant professor of business
				  administration. Strong also taught at the University of Havana, teaching
				  foreign trades, markets and Spanish.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strong, John Franklin Alexander (October 15, 1856 – July
				  27, 1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Franklin Alexander Strong was born in New Brunswick,
				  Canada. After graduation from Brunswick Normal School, he spent the next
				  fourteen years working as a store owner and teacher throughout the province. On
				  December 31, 1879, he married Elizabeth A. Aitkens of New Brunswick, and the
				  couple had three children. In 1896, he married Anna Hall of Tacoma, Washington
				  before divorcing his first wife. Strong joined the Klondike Gold Rush in 1897,
				  working at newspapers in Dawson City, Skagway, and Nome, Alaska. In 1905, he
				  established the <emph render="italic">Nome Nugget</emph> and acquired the 
				  <emph render="italic">Nome News</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Anchorage
				  Daily Express</emph>. He left Alaska in 1906 to work as an editor in Nevada and
				  California. He returned to Alaska in 1910, founding several other newspapers.
				  President Woodrow Wilson nominated him to become Governor of the Alaska
				  Territory in 1913; he served until 1918. During his time in office, he signed
				  laws implementing workers compensation, old age pensions, authorization of a
				  territorial university, the creation of a Board of Education and authorization
				  for the construction of the Alaska Railroad, and the creation of Mount McKinley
				  National Park. President Wilson dismissed him from the governorship when he was
				  informed that Strong was still a Canadian citizen. After leaving office, he
				  settled in Seattle, Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA1</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong with wife
					 Anna</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA2</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong seated at a
					 desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="phtographer">Curtis &amp; Miller, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA3</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong and unidentified
					 man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA4</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong taking the oath of
					 office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 31, 1913</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongJFA5</container><unittitle>John Franklin Alexander Strong on the steps of Juneau
					 Court Building at his inauguration</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 31, 1913</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">William Howard Case</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strong, Orno Dale (October 2, 1878 - December 16,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Orno Dale Strong was born in Nashville, Michigan. He graduated
				  from the University of Michigan and moved to Spokane in 1900 where he was the
				  editor of the <emph>New West Trade</emph>, a trade paper/ The paper had been
				  established in 1897 by his father, Orno Strong. After retirement, Orno Dale
				  Strong was active as a reporter and as a teacher. Strong was active in the
				  Chamber of Commerce and the Spokane Advertising and Sales Association. He
				  married Florence Lydia Denny in 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongOD1</container><unittitle>Orno Dale Strong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Arthur French, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Copy of original; original in Collection 334 French</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strong, William (July 15, 1817 – April 10,
				  1887</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Strong was an American attorney and jurist in the
				  Pacific Northwest. He was born in St. Albans, Vermont, and attended Yale
				  University. He served as a teacher and principal at schools in Ithaca, New
				  York, and Cleveland, Ohio, before coming to Oregon by sea in 1850. Strong was
				  the 4th justice of the Oregon Supreme Court when the region was still the
				  Oregon Territory. He also served in the legislature of Washington Territory and
				  on the Washington Supreme Court. He lived in Cathlamet, Washington and later
				  settled in Portland. His son, Portland lawyer Thomas Nelson Strong, was the
				  author of <emph>Cathlamet on the Columbia </emph>(1930).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrongW1</container><unittitle>William Strong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Strowbridge, Joseph Alfred (December 1, 1835 - June 30,
				  1903)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Alfred Strowbridge, one of the leading business men and
				  philanthropists of Portland, Oregon, was born in Pennsylvania and at an early
				  age, moved to Ohio with his parents. He and his family crossed the plains to
				  Oregon starting in 1851; his father died soon after they reached Portland in
				  1852. Strowbridge began buying fruit and encouraging farmers to plant apple
				  orchards, and became one of the first to ship fresh fruit. By 1860, the total
				  shipments of apples from Oregon amounted to over one hundred thousand boxes. In
				  the 1870s, he started in the retail trade of leather goods and shoes and began
				  investing in real estate. He supported schools and churches, and was one of the
				  first members of the Portland Volunteer Fire Department. Strowbridge was a
				  member of the Portland Board of Trade since its first organization and was one
				  of the incorporators of the Lone Fir Cemetery. He was a member of the Boys and
				  Girls Aid Society, a director in the Pacific Fire Insurance Company, a member
				  of the board of trustees of the First Congregational Church, and was one of the
				  first members of the Portland Library. In 1888, he was elected to the state
				  legislature as a representative of Multnomah County. He married Mary H. Bodman
				  in 1864. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StrowbridgeJA1</container><unittitle>Joseph Alfred Strowbridge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Stuart, Elbridge Amos (September 10, 1856 - Habyart 14m
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elbridge Amos Stuart was the founder of the Carnation Milk
				  Company and head of the company from 1899 until 1944. He was born in Gulford,
				  North Carolina and lived in Kansas and Indiana. He moved to El Paso, Texas at
				  the age of 23 to run a general store, which he developed into the town’s
				  largest mercantile business. He continued in the wholesale grocery business in
				  Los Angeles and San Francisco. In 1899, he and a partner, T. E. Yerza, bought a
				  small canned milk plant in Kent, Washington. Yerza sold out after two years,
				  but Stuart stayed and found his business expanding with the Gold Rush. He
				  enlarged his Kent plant, initially naming it Pacific Coast Condensed Milk
				  Company, and later renaming it Carnation Company. In 1912, he purchased 1,600
				  acres near Tolt (now Carnation), Washington and established a research center
				  and a dairy cow breeding facility. In 1926, Carnation branched into the fresh
				  milk and ice cream product field and expanded nationally and internationally.
				  The firm is was purchased by Nestlé in 1984. Stuart was a member of the Seattle
				  Chamber of Commerce, the Arctic Club, and a vice president of the Pacific
				  Steamship Company and of the Metropolitan Building Company. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StuartEA1</container><unittitle>Elbridge Amos Stuart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Stuart, John, 3rd Earl of Bute (May 25,
				  1713 – March 10, 1792)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Stuart, Lord Mount Stuart before 1723, was a Scottish
				  nobleman who served as Prime Minister of Great Britain (1762–1763) under George
				  III. He was the first Prime Minister from Scotland following the Acts of Union
				  in 1707. Lord Bute played a significant role in the politics of the British
				  empire that spawned the American Revolution. Bute, as an advisor to the king,
				  worried that the tremendous expense of the war in North America and around the
				  world would drive Britain to bankruptcy. William Pitt, whose military strategy
				  and political finesse had transformed the American branch of the war, known as
				  the French and Indian War, from disaster to triumph, argued for a preemptive
				  strike against Spain in 1761 to prevent them from aligning with France. The
				  king, with Bute's guidance, not only rejected Pitt's idea, but forced him to
				  resign. In January 1762, Spain joined the war on the side of France, as Pitt
				  predicted. Despite a resounding victory in North America, the king followed
				  Bute's advice to end the war on other fronts as quickly as possible, returning
				  substantial portions of land. Lambasted by the British press for his poor
				  decision-making, Bute finally lost the king's trust and resigned upon the
				  signing of the Treaty of Paris in February 1763. After resigning as Prime
				  Minister, he remained at his estate in Hampshire where he continued his pursuit
				  of botany and became a major literary and artistic patron. Among his
				  beneficiaries were Samuel Johnson, Tobias Smollett, Robert Adam, William
				  Robertson and John Hill. He also gave considerably to the Scottish
				  universities. His botanical work culminated in the publication of 
				  <emph render="italic">Botanical Tables Containing the Families of British
				  Plants</emph> in 1785. The flowering plant genus Stuartia is named after
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StuartJ1</container><unittitle>John Stuart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of an engraving by Richard Purcell after a painting
					 by Allen Ramsay. Photograph copyrighted by Walker and Cockerill.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Struve, Frederick Karl (June 17, 1872 -June 9,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Karl Struve, the son of Henry G. and Lascelle Struve,
				  was associated with many of the financial institutions that aided in the
				  development of Seattle. He was a director of the Peoples Bank &amp; Trust
				  Company, a director of Puget Sound Power &amp; Light Company, and a director of
				  the Northern Life Insurance Company. He was president of the Seattle National
				  Bank and a partner in John Davis &amp; Company, a real estate firm. He was born
				  in Vancouver, Washington and came to Seattle when he was seven years old. He
				  was educated in the Seattle public schools, the Territorial University (now the
				  University of Washington), and the University of Michigan. Starting as a
				  messenger at Boston National Bank of Seattle, he became president of the
				  Seattle National Bank, then the largest financial institution in the state,
				  when he was 42. During the First World War, he served on the advisory board of
				  the Seattle Red Cross and on the executive committee of the Liberty Loan
				  drives. He was also active in the Seattle Community Fund. He married Anna Clair
				  Furth in 1897.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StruveFK1</container><unittitle>Frederick Karl Struve</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StruveFK2</container><unittitle>The drawing room of the home of Frederick K.
					 Struve</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>The First Hill mansion was built in 1907 at 1212 Minor
						Avenue for Frederick K. Struve and was demolished in 1958. Copy of original
						photograph.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StruveFK3</container><unittitle>A room in the home of Frederick K. Struve, possibly
					 the library</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>The First Hill mansion was built in 1907 at 1212 Minor
						Avenue for Frederick K. Struve and was demolished in 1958. Copy of original
						photograph.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StruveFK5</container><unittitle>A room in the home of Frederick K. Struve, possibly
					 the dining room</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>The First Hill mansion was built in 1907 at 1212 Minor
						Avenue for Frederick K. Struve and was demolished in 1958. Copy of original
						photograph.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Struve, Henry G. (November 17, 1837 - June 13,
				  1905)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry G. Struve, a German immigrant, was a lawyer, journalist,
				  and businessman who played a key role in Seattle's political, social, and
				  economic life in the 1880s and 1890s. He served two terms as mayor, overseeing
				  more than $500,000 in public improvements, including the grading of the
				  streets. He was a regent of the Washington University (predecessor of the
				  University of Washington), a charter member of the Rainier Club, and an
				  organizer of the city's cable car system. He helped write a new city charter
				  for Seattle in 1890 and also served as judge advocate general of Washington
				  Territory. Struve was deeply involved in state politics during the 1860s and
				  1870s, as a member of the state legislative assembly, the legislative council,
				  and numerous legislative committees. He moved to Olympia in 1871, where he
				  briefly owned the <emph>Puget Sound Daily Courier.</emph> He sold the paper
				  before the end of the year, when President Ulysses Grant appointed him
				  secretary of Washington Territory. He held that office until the end of Grant's
				  administration in 1877. After moving to Seattle in 1879, Struve established a
				  private law practice with attorney John Leary. He and his wife, Lascelle, had
				  four children, one of whom, Frederick K. Struve, became a leading financier in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StruveHG1</container><unittitle>Henry G. Struve</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Stuhrman, Augustus W. (1863? - February 17,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Augustus W. Stuhrman, the son of John and Anna Stuhrman, was
				  born in Santa Claus, Indiana. He came to Washington State in 1889. A
				  schoolteacher by profession, he was the first teacher at the Rosedale School,
				  which was located between Eatonville and Elbe, Washington, and served students
				  ages 5 through 16. Stuhrman was educated in Germany, which prepared him for
				  Rosedale, where many of the students spoke German. He also edited the 
				  <emph>Spanaway Sentinel</emph>, a newspaper in Spanaway, Washington, in the
				  early 1900s. He was a member of the Washington State legislature in the 1890s
				  and was chair of the Committee on Federal Relations in 1897. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">StuhrmanAW1</container><unittitle>Augustus W. Stuhrman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1897</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Conrad Lindahl, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph, which is held in PH Coll. 334
					 (Lindahl), UW Special Collections.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sturdevant, Robert Franklin (November 18, 1841 - June
				  27, 1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Franklin Sturdevant was known as the pioneer lawyer of
				  Dayton, Washington. The son of James and Mary Ann Sturdevant, he was born in
				  Sugar Grove, Pennsylvania and grew up in Iowa and Wisconsin. He attended school
				  in Wisconsin and began the study of law in 1860. He enlisted in the Wisconsin
				  Infantry in 1861 and was discharged for disability in 1863. After his
				  discharge, he returned to Wisconsin, where he completed his studies and began
				  the practice of law. He married Mary Jane Tousley in 1866. In 1873, the family
				  moved to Washington Territory, first to Olympia and then to Dayton, Washington
				  where he was the first attorney in the town. In 1875, when Columbia County was
				  organized, he was elected as the first probate judge, making him a pioneer of
				  the bench as well as the bar. In 1878, Sturdevant was elected prosecuting
				  attorney for the Third Judicial District of the territory, which comprised all
				  of the state east of the Cascades. He served in that office for two years. He
				  also served as mayor of Dayton and was a member of the Constitutional
				  Convention of Washington. When Washington was admitted to statehood, he was
				  elected as the first Supreme Court judge of Garfield, Asotin and Columbia
				  Counties, serving until 1897. He remained in Dayton until 1908, when he moved
				  to Olympia to establish the Troy &amp; Sturdevant law firm. He was president of
				  the Thurston-Mason County Bar Association.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SturdevantRF1</container><unittitle>Robert Franklin Sturdevant</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Suhonen, Irja-Leena</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1994</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Irja-Leena Suhonen was the head of the bibliographic department
				  of the Finnish National Bibliography at Helsinki University Library. She was a
				  visitor to the UW Libraries in the spring of 1994.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuhonenI1</container><unittitle>Irja-Leena Suhonen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1994</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sullivan, John Joseph "Jack" (February 8, 1885 -
				  November 28, 1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Joseph Sullivan was born in Worcester, Massachusetts and
				  came to Seattle in 1907. He graduated from the University of Washington Law
				  School in 1909, where he was president of Senior Law and the Newman Club. He
				  was admitted to the bar the same year, and was admitted to practice before the
				  Supreme Court of the United States in 1918. He began his military career as a
				  private in World War I, and served as a lieutenant colonel in World War II as
				  chief of the intelligence and security division in the office of the Army chief
				  of transportation. He was discharged in 1945 and returned to his Seattle
				  practice. He was an assistant to the United States attorney and special
				  assistant to the state attorney general. Sullivan was one of the founders of
				  the American Legion and was nominated to be the first national commander of the
				  organization but declined the nomination; he was unanimously elected vice
				  commander. He was a past commander of the Seattle Chapter of the Military Order
				  of World Wars and a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He was past grand
				  knight of the Seattle Council of the Knights of Columbus, past president of the
				  101 Club, the Newman Club at the University of Washington, and the Last Man’s
				  Club, and a member of the Arctic Club. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SullivanJJ1</container><unittitle>John Joseph "Jack" Sullivan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward S. Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on front: To Big Little "Chief" from Jack
						Sullivan</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sullivan, John Lawrence (October 15, 1858 – February 2,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Lawrence Sullivan was an American boxer who is recognized
				  as the first heavyweight champion of gloved boxing, reigning from February 7,
				  1882 until September 7, 1892. He is also generally recognized as the last
				  heavyweight champion of bare-knuckle boxing under the London Prize Ring Rules.
				  He was a cultural icon of late 19th century America, and arguably the first
				  boxing superstar and one of the world's highest-paid athletes of his era.
				  Newspapers' coverage of his career, with the latest accounts of his
				  championship fights often appearing in the headlines, and as cover stories,
				  gave birth to sports journalism in the United States and set the pattern
				  internationally for covering boxing events in media, and photos documenting the
				  prizefights. Sullivan was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame
				  in 1990.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SullivanJL1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of John L. Sullivan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Apeda Studio, New York</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on front: Yours truly, John L. Sullivan to Edmond
						Meany, Jr.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SullivanJL2</container><unittitle> John L. Sullivan in top hat, holding a
					 cane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Apeda Studio, New York</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on front: Compliments of John L. Sullivan to Edmond
						Meany, Jr.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sumner, Charles (January 6, 1811 – March 11,
				  1874)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Sumner was an American statesman and United States
				  Senator from Massachusetts. As an academic lawyer and a powerful orator, Sumner
				  was the leader of the anti-slavery forces in the state and a leader of the
				  Radical Republicans in the U.S. Senate during the American Civil War. During
				  Reconstruction, he fought to minimize the power of the ex-Confederates and
				  guarantee equal rights to the freedmen. He fell into a dispute with President
				  Ulysses Grant, a fellow Republican, over the control of Santo Domingo, leading
				  to the stripping of his power in the Senate and his subsequent effort to defeat
				  Grant's re-election.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SumnerC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Sumner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1850 and 1860?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall after a photograph by Warren from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SewardWH2</container><unittitle>Illustration showing Russian and American diplomats as
					 they sign the Treaty of Cession whereby the United States bought Alaska from
					 the Russian Empire, Washington, DC, March 30, 1867. Present are (left to right)
					 American diplomat Robert Smith Chew (1811 - 1873), American Secretary of State
					 William Henry Seward (1801 - 1872), American diplomat William Hunter Jr. (1805
					 - 1886), secretary of the Russian mission Waldemar de Bodisco (d. 1878),
					 Russian ambassador Eduard de Stoeckl (1804 - 1892), American senator Charles
					 Sumner (1811 - 1874), American Assistant Secretary of State, and son of the
					 Secretary of State, Frederick William Seward (1835 - 1915).</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><note><p>The illustration is after a painting by Emanuel Leutze. Copy
						of original.</p><p>Filed under William Henry Seward subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sundborg, Vilma Leonkine (May 28, 1875 - July 1,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vilma Leonkine Sundborg was born in Varmland, Sweden and moved
				  to Stockholm, probably as a child. She studied drama at Ludvig Josefson's
				  Theatre School, which Greta Garbo also attended. Sundborg was a member of
				  Froberg's Theatre company and other theatre groups. In the late 1890s, she
				  immigrated to the U.S., living in New York, Chicago and Minneapolis after her
				  arrival. Sundborg was a popular actress in the Swedish-American theater; she
				  also performed in English in plays by Shakespeare, Strindberg, and Ibsen.
				  Sundborg wrote poetry, as well as some short stories, radio-serials, and
				  several one-act plays, writing in both Swedish and English; some were published
				  in Swedish-American newspapers. She wrote the lyrics for several songs under
				  the pseudonym Ray Hope (circa 1930-1932). When she moved to Seattle after 1926,
				  she gave lessons in speech-technique, drama and song.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundborgVL1</container><unittitle>Vilma Leonkine Sundborg wearing hat and holding a
					 Persian lamb muff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s - 1900s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundborgVL2</container><unittitle>Vilma Leonkine Sundborg wearing hat and holding a
					 Persian lamb muff</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s - 1900s</unitdate><note><p>Studio portrait, taken at the same time as the previous
						photograph (SundborgVL1), with a different background.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundborgVL3</container><unittitle>Vilma Leonkine Sundborg wearing hat and holding a
					 purse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s </unitdate><note><p>Photograph was taken in New York, N. Y. </p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Sundquist, Beulah Eades (January 24, 1893 - November 26,
				  1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Beulah Eades was born in Oklahoma and came to Franklin County,
				  Washington with her parents in 1901. Her parents had a farm and later moved to
				  Seattle. She married Richard N. Sundquist in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA2</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist, Beulah
					 A. Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist. Beulah and Richard Sundquist are wearing
					 fur parkas.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Johnson (December 1, 1871 -
				  November 6, 1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Mathilda Johnson was born in Sweden and came to the United
				  States in 1889. She married Lars A. Sundquist in Chicago in 1893. In 1900, she
				  moved to Alaska with her husband and son, Richard, where Lars had a mine. They
				  lived in Alaska until Lars retired from mining in the 1930s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA1</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and his wife, Helen Mathilda
					 Sundquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA2</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist, Beulah
					 A. Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist. Beulah and Richard Sundquist are wearing
					 fur parkas.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA3</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist and son
					 Richard Sundquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1923</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Winter Camp #19 above Candle Creek,
						1923.</p></note><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA4</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist
					 leaving Candle for mine by dog team.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA8</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist in
					 front of Candle Creek mine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: L. A. Sundquist &amp; Mrs. mining
						operation, 1907-1908, Candle Creek</p></note></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA11</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 25, 1943</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sundquist, August Algot (April 14, 1885 - September 8,
				  1970)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>August Algot Sundquist was born in Brändö, Åland, Finland. He
				  came to the United States in 1904 and married Hilma Carlson in Seattle in 1910.
				  He moved to Oregon in 1922 and was a member of Carpenters Union 1020 for 57
				  years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistGA1</container><unittitle>August (Gust) A. Sundquist hydraulicking on No. 19
					 above Candle Creek</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sundquist, Lars Anton (December 8, 1869 - January 25,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Lars Anton Sundquist, the son of Lars Peter Sundquist and Maria
				  Katharina Nordlund Sundquist, was born in Yttermorjärv, Norrbotten, Sweden. He
				  came to the United States in 1891. Sundquist married Helen Mathilde Johanson in
				  Cook, Illinois in 1893. He and Mathilda moved to Seattle and later lived in
				  Alaska where he had a mine on Candle Creek.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA1</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and his wife, Helen Mathilda
					 Sundquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA2</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist, Beulah
					 A. Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist. Beulah and Richard Sundquist are wearing
					 fur parkas.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA3</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist and son
					 Richard Sundquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1923</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Winter Camp #19 above Candle Creek,
						1923.</p></note><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA4</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist
					 leaving Candle for mine by dog team.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA5</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist panning for gold, Richard
					 Sundquist standing in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA6</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist with group of unidentified men,
					 women and children</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Sundquist and Eskimos in Native Costume,
						Kotzebue, Alaska, 1929</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA7</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist after
					 retiring from mining</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1938</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA8</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist in
					 front of Candle Creek mine</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: L. A. Sundquist &amp; Mrs. mining
						operation, 1907-1908, Candle Creek</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA9</container><unittitle>Mining operation on No. 18 above Candle Creek during
					 the winter of 1907-1908</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1908</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA10</container><unittitle>First gold dredge on Candle Creek</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1912</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: First gold dredge on Candle Creek built by
						Walter Johnson for L. A. Sundquist, Ivor Johnson, et. al.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA11</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Helen Mathilda Sundquist on
					 their 50th wedding anniversary</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 25, 1943</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sundquist, Richard Nathaniel (April 5, 1896 - August 4,
				  1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Richard N. “Dick” Sundquist was born in Chicago, Illinois in
				  1896. He moved to Candle, Alaska with his parents, Lars A. and Helen Sundquist,
				  when he was seven. He attended school in Nome and served in the U. S. Army
				  during World War I. After his discharge, he joined his father in the mining
				  camp at Candle Creek, Alaska. Sundquist was a Republican member of the Alaska
				  Territorial House of Representatives from 1925-1929 and served in the
				  Territorial Senate from 1929-1933, representing Candle. He moved to Seattle in
				  1939 and operated several apartment buildings. he joined the Alaska Yukon
				  Pioneers in 1942 and was elected president in 1944. He served as international
				  president of the organization in 1952. He married Beulah A. Eaden of Issaquah,
				  Washington in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA2</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist, Beulah
					 A. Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist. Beulah and Richard Sundquist are wearing
					 fur parkas.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA3</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist, Helen Mathilda Sundquist and son
					 Richard Sundquist</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1923</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Winter Camp #19 above Candle Creek,
						1923.</p></note><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA5</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist panning for gold, Richard
					 Sundquist standing in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SundquistLA7</container><unittitle>Lars Anton Sundquist and Richard N. Sundquist after
					 retiring from mining</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Lars Anton Sundquist subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Surber, William Harvey (November 7, 1834 - July 1,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Harvey Surber, the son of John and Elizabeth Surber, was
				  born on a farm in Madison County, Indiana. In 1857, he crossed the plains to
				  the California gold fields. He worked on a ranch for nine months before sailing
				  to Victoria, British Columbia and then on to the Fraser River gold fields.
				  Finding little success, he traveled to Seattle in 1859 where he worked as a
				  carpenter and served as second engineer on the steamer <emph>J. B.
				  Libby</emph>. In the fall of 1863, he bored the logs used for conveying water
				  to the old university, a distance of about seven blocks from the waterfront. In
				  1861, Surber took up a homestead on the north side of Union Bay, but he
				  abandoned the homestead and bought the same acreage on property overlooking
				  Lake Washington. He was chosen the first chief of police of the city in 1866
				  and served for two years. He then spent the next thirty-five years in
				  construction. He was known for his hunting prowess in a time when deer, bears
				  and elk could be found in the city.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SurberWH1</container><unittitle>William Harvey Surber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Suzzallo, Edith Moore (April 15, 1885 - September 24,
				  1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edith Moore was born in Peoria, Illinois and married Henry
				  Suzzallo in Chicago on February 8, 1912. She died in San Diego in 1969.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloEM1</container><unittitle>Edith Moore Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1912</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloEM2</container><unittitle>Edith Moore Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1926</unitdate><origination><persname>Wayne Albee, McBride Studio, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH3</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Oscar A. Fechter, Maud Fechter,
					 Riley Harris Allen, and Edith Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Taken in Honolulu on a trip to the South
						Seas, Australia and New Zealand, made by the Fechters and the Suzzallos in
						1927.</p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Suzzallo, Henry (August 22, 1875 – September 25,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Suzzallo was president of the University of Washington
				  from 1915 to 1926; president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
				  Teaching from 1930 to 1933; arbitrator of the National War Labor Policies
				  Board; and chairman of the Washington State Council of Defense from 1917 to
				  1918. He also worked toward the adoption of better living and working
				  conditions for loggers in the lumber industry. He began college at the State
				  Normal School in his home town of San Jose, California. He graduated after two
				  years and began teaching in a two-room school in Alviso, California before
				  being admitted to Stanford. He graduated from Stanford with an undergraduate
				  degree in 1899 and attended Columbia University where he received his Master’s
				  degree in 1902 and his Ph.D. in 1905. He also received LL. D. degrees from the
				  University of California in 1905 and the University of British Columbia in
				  1925. Prior to becoming President of the University of Washington, Suzzallo
				  served as the deputy superintendent of city schools in San Francisco, assistant
				  professor of education at Stanford University, and adjunct professor of
				  educational sociology at Columbia University. In 1915 the University of
				  Washington offered Suzzallo the Presidency of the University of Washington.
				  Suzzallo remained President of the University until 1926. In one decade,
				  Suzzallo added eight permanent campus buildings including a new library that
				  would eventually bear his name. Disagreements with Governor Roland Hill
				  Hartley, who ran on a platform of curbing government spending, and issues of
				  independence for the state's colleges and universities led to Suzzallo’s
				  dismissal in 1926. He became President of the Carnegie Foundation for
				  Advancement of Teaching in 1930 and remained affiliated with the Carnegie
				  Foundation until his death.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH1</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo as a student at San Jose High
					 School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Columbia Art Gallery, San Jose, California</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH2</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with two unidentified friends in Kyoto,
					 Japan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Henry Suzzallo with two friends in Kyoto,
						Japan. This was during a trip around the world made by Mr. &amp; Mrs. Suzzallo
						in 1913.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH3</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Oscar A. Fechter, Maud Fechter,
					 Riley Harris Allen, and Edith Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Taken in Honolulu on a trip to the South
						Seas, Australia and New Zealand, made by the Fechters and the Suzzallos in
						1927.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH5</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo and Alfred A. Upham, President of the
					 University of Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 13 of the <emph>Seattle
						Daily Times</emph>. Dr. Upham was on the University of Washington campus to
						give the commencement day address.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH6</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo and unidentified man</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH7</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo wearing hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1920</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jacobs Photo Shop, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Glass plate negative; original located in
						combined negative Box XGB2; includes cardboard folder.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH8</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo in suit and tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH9</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo wearing academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH10</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo seated at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH11</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with Governor Ernest Lister; Dr.
					 Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; and Dr. Ernest O.
					 Holland, president of Washington State College, taken on the day of President
					 Suzzallo's inauguration.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 21, 1916</unitdate><note><p>The photograph appears on page 14 of the 1916 edition of 
						<emph>The Tyee.</emph></p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH12</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo, in profile, wearing academic
					 robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH13</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH14</container><unittitle>Painting of Henry Suzzallo wearing academic
					 robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932</unitdate><origination><persname role="painter">Leopold Seyffert, New York</persname></origination><note><p>Photograph of the painting of Henry Suzzallo. Printed on
						front: Portrait of Henry Suzzallo, painted in 1932 in New York by Leopold
						Seyffert. Presented to the University of Washington by Mrs. Suzzallo in
						1933.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH15</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo, facing right</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>Possibly taken at the same time as SuzzalloH16</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH16</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo, facing left</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>Possibly taken at the same time as SuzzalloH15</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH17</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1926</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wayne Albee, McBride Studio, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH18</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo wearing academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916-1926</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Merrihew, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Swan, Charles Herbert (August 17, 1842 - April 17,
				  1899)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Herbert Swan, the son of James Gilchrist Swan and
				  Matilda Loring Swan, was born in Boston in 1842 and educated in the Boston
				  public schools, the Boston Latin School and the Lawrence Scientific School at
				  Cambridge. For many years, he was an assistant to the city engineer of
				  Providence, occupied first on the water works and later on the sewage disposal
				  of that city. He traveled to Europe in 1884 to study European sewage works and
				  wrote a report on his findings. He later worked in and around Boston, and was
				  employed by the Metropolitan Sewerage Commission during the construction of the
				  North Metropolitan, Charles River and Neponset Valley sewers. Swan was one of
				  the assistant engineers of the transit commission during the construction of
				  the subway, and in 1898, he investigated and reported on the sewer systems of
				  Salem and Peabody. His last work was with the Metropolitan Sewerage Commission
				  in connection with the proposed high- level sewer. He was a member of both the
				  Boston Society of Civil Engineers and the American Society of Civil Engineers.
				  He married to Caroline Cheney circa 1871; they had four sons. He died of
				  diptheria in 1899.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanMWL1</container><unittitle>Matilda Loring Swan with her children, Charles Herbert
					 Swan and Ellen Matilda Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph</p><p>Filed under Matilda Winchell Loring Swan subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Swan, Ellen Matilda (April 9, 1845 - 1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ellen Matilda Swan, the daughter of James Gilchrist Swan and
				  Matilda Loring Swan was born in Boston in 1845 and died in Boston in 1926. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">SwanEM1</container><unittitle>Ellen Matilda Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1879</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Manchester Brothers, Providence, Rhode Island</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ellen Matilda Swan, Boston Mass. Presented
					 by her father, James G. Swan, as a memento of his 61st birthday, January 11,
					 1879 to Mrs. Charl. Willoughby, Neah Bay, Indian Agency, W. T., Jan, 17,
					 1879.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanMWL1</container><unittitle>Matilda Loring Swan with her children, Charles Herbert
					 Swan and Ellen Matilda Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p><p>Filed under Matilda Winchell Loring Swan subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Swan, Horace Cheney (June 29, 1874 - March 1,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Cheney Swan, the son of Charles Herbert Swan and Caroline
				  Cheney Swan, was born in Rhode Island in 1874. He graduated from Tufts
				  University Medical School in 1903 and taught physiology at Harvard University
				  (1903-1905) before joining Trinity College, Hartford, where he taught
				  physiology and was the medical director for many years. He married Bertha
				  Koenig in 1903.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">SwanHC1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Horace Cheney Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1885</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hugh Macorquodale, Boston</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: 3rd grandson of J. G. Swan</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Swan, James Gilchrist (January 11, 1818-May 18,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Gilchrist Swan, an anthropologist, judge, political
				  advisor, artist, schoolteacher, and promoter of Port Townsend who held many
				  important territorial positions. He was a teacher for the Makah Indian
				  Reservation, probate judge of Jefferson County, first agent for the United
				  States Fish Commission, Hawaiian consul for Puget Sound, and Puget Sound Pilot
				  Commissioner. He is known for his work collecting artifacts and for writing the
				  first ethnography of the Makah tribal group, among whom he lived. He learned
				  the Chinook language, and this knowledge led Washington Governor Isaac Stevens
				  to pick Swan as one of several translators for treaty negotiations with the
				  Indians of Western Washington during 1854 and 1855. Swan then returned east and
				  wrote a book, <emph render="italic">The Northwest Coast; or, Three Years'
				  Residence in Washington Territory.</emph> He later worked as Isaac Stevens's
				  personal secretary when Stevens served his first term as the Washington
				  Territory's delegate to the U.S. Congress in 1857 and 1858. Swan married
				  Matilda Winchell Loring in 1841; they had two children, Ellen and Charles. His
				  papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of James Gilchrist Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880-1889</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Spencer &amp; Hastings, Victoria, B.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on verso: James G. Swan</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG2</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 11, 1899</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Edward H. Swan, Esq., with the compliments
					 of James G. Swan, 81 years old January 11, 1899.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG3</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG4</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan in formal dress with badge and
					 gavel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1891</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McMurry, Port Towsend, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: James G. Swan, Hawaiian Counsel and vice
					 president, Washington Pioneer Association, at reunion (?) on June 2 &amp; 3,
					 1891 in Port Townsend.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG5</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Allen &amp; Rowell, Boston</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Signed on front: James G. Swan, born Jan. 11, 1818. Written on
					 verso: James G. Swan, Washington pioneer, 76 years old, Jan. 11, 1893.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG6</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan and Johnny Kit Elswa, a Haida
					 artist. with small carved pole and canoe paddles, taken after their return from
					 Queen Charlotte Island B.C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October,1883</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Spencer &amp; Hastings, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: James G. Swan and his interpreter,
					 Johnnie.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG7</container><unittitle>Publicity announcement from the Museum of the
					 Washington State Historical Society for <emph>Almost out of the world: Glimpses
					 of life in Washington Territory,</emph>a collection of dispatches Swan wrote
					 for Boston, San Francisco and Olympia newspapers.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1971</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanJG8</container><unittitle>James Gilchrist Swan in front of the building where he
					 had his office in Port Townsend</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stephen Allen Spencer, Victoria. B. C.</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Original filed in PH1295
					 Washington localities.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Swan, Matilda Winchell Loring (November 3, 1819 -
				  December 2 1863)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Matilda Winchell Loring, the daughter of James Loring and Mary
				  Cushing Loring, was born in Boston and attended Charlestown Female Seminary.
				  She married James Gilchrist Swan in Boston on September 23, 1841. They had two
				  children, Charles and Ellen. Her husband left the family to seek his fortune in
				  the Pacific Northwest, became an agent for what evolved into the Bureau of
				  Indian Affairs and wrote an early history of the Northwest territory in 1857.
				  He never returned to his family, but is said to have supported them
				  financially. Matilda died of tuberculosis in 1863. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwanMWL1</container><unittitle>Matilda Loring Swan with her children, Charles Herbert
					 Swan and Ellen Matilda Swan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Swanson, Carl Rubert (March 27, 1872 - January 19,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Carl Rubert Swanson, the son of Andrew Gustaf and Britta
				  Christina Swanson, was born in Alvsborg, Sweden in 1872 and came to the United
				  States in 1880. He graduated from the Augustana Theological Seminary in Rock
				  Island, Illinois in 1905 and was ordained the same year. He served in
				  Vancouver, B.C. before becoming the pastor of Gethsemane Lutheran Church in
				  Seattle on February 10, 1915. He resigned his post on February 10, 1939, his
				  24th anniversary, to become home missions field secretary for the Augustana
				  Synod of the Lutheran Church, with a territory of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and
				  British Columbia. With the exception of 1 ½ years in Boston, he conducted his
				  ministry on the Pacific Coast. He also established the Columbia Conference Home
				  for the Aged in 1921 and the Lutheran Hospice. He married Malinda Augusta
				  Nelson (1879 – 1937) in 1905 and Effie Frissell (1892-1964) in 1939. His son,
				  Roland, also graduated from the Augustana Theological Seminary and became a
				  minister.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwansonCR1</container><unittitle>Carl Rubert Swanson with a group of students holding
					 certificates</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Nordlund Foto Co., Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Swanstrom, Catherine Ethellyn Ball (July 11, 1888 -
				  December 6, 1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Catherine Ethellyn (Ethel) Ball was born in Lanark, Ontario,
				  Canada. Her family moved to Minnesota in 1890. She married Henry Swanstrom
				  (1889 - 1938) in St. Paul on September 4, 1918 and Arthur Auguston on August
				  25, 1943.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HopkinsRS1</container><unittitle>Group photo including Ralph Hopkins, Charles Cleary
					 (Clary), Jessie Graves, Gertrude Clark, Millie Hausard, Helen Lawrence Foster
					 Fraser, Elaine Hauford Haynes, Ethel Semple (?) Swanstrom and one other not
					 identified</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1909?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Braas, Seattle WA</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Ralph S. Hopkins subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sweeney, Alice Boyce (August 22, 1860 - February 4,
				  1943)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Boyce was the first non-Indigenous child born on San Juan
				  Island. Her parents, Steven and Lucinda Boyce, arrived at Victoria, B.C. by
				  sailing vessel in 1858 and two years later settled on San Juan Island. Alice
				  was born there on August 22, 1860. Her father helped build the first church on
				  the island. Alice married Joseph Sweeney, a pioneer San Juan merchant, in 1880.
				  When the young couple moved to Friday Harbor there were only three other
				  residents there. She moved to Seattle in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SweeneyAB1</container><unittitle> Alice Boyce Sweeney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sweeney, Joseph (December 9, 1841 - August 4,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Sweeney, the son of Jeremiah and Ellen Sweeney, was born
				  in Petites Roches, New Brunswick in 1841. Joseph went to Wisconsin in 1865 to
				  work in the lumber business. In 1868, he went west to Port Ludlow, Washington
				  Territory. In 1878, he moved to Friday Harbor on Orcas Island where he operated
				  a general store and served as post master. He married Alice Boyce in 1880.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SweeneyJ1</container><unittitle>Joseph Sweeney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sweet, Lester Otis (November 28, 1880 - May 20,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lester Otis Sweet, the son of Hiram and Alice Sweet, was born in
				  Winona, Minnesota. He briefly taught school in Excelsior, Washington before
				  graduating from the University of Washington in 1906 with a B.A. in English. He
				  was a member of the Badger Debate Club and was a member of the team that won a
				  debate against the University of Oregon. The debate, which took place on May
				  20, 1903, was on the question of the national control of trusts, with Oregon
				  having the affirmative and Washington the negative. After graduation, he had a
				  farm and managed a summer resort in Elwha, Washington. He married Anna Edith
				  Corey (1880-1973) in 1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SweetLO1</container><unittitle>Lester Otis Sweet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Benjamin Lawson, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: leader of Washington debate team vs U. of
					 O.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Swift, Allan Byron (September 12, 1935 – April 20,
				  2018)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Allan(Al) Byron Swift was an American Emmy award–winning
				  broadcaster and politician who served as a member of the United States House of
				  Representatives for eight terms from 1979 to 1995. He represented the Second
				  Congressional District of Washington as a Democrat. Swift was born in Tacoma,
				  Washington, in 1935 and studied for two years at Whitman College. He received a
				  bachelor's degree from the Central Washington College of Education in 1957.
				  Prior to his sixteen years in Congress, Swift was a broadcaster in several
				  stations throughout Washington State in the towns of Walla Walla (KUJ),
				  Ellensburg (KXLE) and Bellingham (KVOS-TV). At KVOS, he was director of News
				  and Public Affairs, producing a series of weekly public interest programs and
				  documentaries and earning an Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts
				  and Sciences. He was first elected to the House in 1978, replacing the retiring
				  Lloyd Meeds, for whom Swift had served as an administrative assistant. Swift
				  served on the Energy and Commerce Committee, and was chair of the subcommittee
				  on Transportation and Hazardous Materials. He also chaired the Subcommittee on
				  Elections of the House Administration Committee. Among his accomplishments was
				  authorship of Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, which was
				  designed to support emergency planning regarding Superfund sites. Swift also
				  authored and led the passage of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,
				  otherwise known as motor-voter, which expanded voter registration options
				  nationwide including drivers’ license offices and mail-in registration. He
				  retired and did not run for re-election in 1994. Following his final term in
				  Congress, Swift was Vice President of Governmental Affairs with Burlington
				  Northern Railroad until its merger with Santa Fe Railroad in 1996 and was later
				  a principal with the Washington, D.C., political strategy firm Colling, Swift
				  &amp; Hynes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwiftAB1</container><unittitle>Allan Byron (Al) Swift in dark suit and striped
					 tie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1980-1995</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwiftAB2</container><unittitle>Allan Byron (Al) Swift in dark suit and
					 glasses</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1980-1995</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Swift, George Wilkins (August 31, 1882 - December 16,
				  1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Wilkins Swift was the son of Captain James Henry Swift
				  and Emily C. Wilson Swift; his father had settled on Whidbey Island in 1859 and
				  was a member of the territorial legislature. His parents died when he was
				  young, and he went to live with his older sister, Hattie, whose husband Puget
				  Race, ran the drug store in Coupeville, Washington. Swift graduated from the
				  University of Washington School of Pharmacy in 1901 and worked for two years as
				  a pharmacist before entering Northwestern Medical School in 1903. After
				  graduation in 1907, he served an internship in the Illinois Charitable Eye
				  &amp; Ear Infirmary, continued as an assistant eye surgeon for two more years,
				  and did post graduate studies in Vienna. He returned to Seattle to practice,
				  forming a partnership with Dr. Allison T. Wanamaker. When the U.S. entered
				  World War I, he was in a group of surgeons who were trained by the government
				  to specialize in head injuries. After the war, he devoted his surgical practice
				  to neurosurgery. He was one of the founders of the Pan-Pacific Surgical
				  Association and served as its president in 1936. Swift devoted time to disease
				  prevention and the conservation of health, and was one of the founders of the
				  Public Health League in 1923. He was one of the early members of the American
				  College of Surgeons and served on its Board of Governors. He had a leading role
				  in the establishment of Harborview Hospital in Seattle and was the first chief
				  of the department of neurosurgery there. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SwiftGW1</container><unittitle>George Wilkins Swift in academic robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Photograph of the original</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sylvester, Albert Hale (May 25, 1871 – September 14,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Albert Hale Sylvester was a pioneer surveyor, explorer, and
				  forest supervisor in the Cascade Range of the state of Washington. He was a
				  topographer for the United States Geological Survey (USGS) in the Snoqualmie
				  Ranger District between 1897 and 1907. From 1908 to 1931, he served the United
				  States Forest Service as the first forest supervisor of Wenatchee National
				  Forest. His work involved the first detailed surveying and mapping of large
				  portions of the Cascade Range in Washington, over the course of which he gave
				  names to over 1,000 natural features. The surveying work often required placing
				  cairns and other survey targets on top of mountains. He made the first ascents
				  of a number of mountains in Washington. Over the course of his career, he
				  explored areas previously unknown to non-indigenous people. One such area,
				  which Sylvester discovered, explored, and named, is The Enchantments. In 1944,
				  while leading a party of friends to one of his favorite parts of the mountains,
				  Sylvester died of injuries sustained when thrown from a horse on the Lake Mary
				  mountain trail. In addition to the many place names established by Sylvester,
				  there are places named for him. Sylvester Lake, is located at the head of
				  Grindstone Creek near Alice Lake, which Sylvester had named for his wife. A
				  creek on the upper Green River in King County was renamed from Forsythe Creek
				  to Sylvester Creek.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SylvesterAH1</container><unittitle>Albert Hale Sylvester</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Symons, Thomas Williams (February 7, 1849 - November 23,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas William Symons, Jr. was an American army officer and
				  engineer who was known for his work on canals, lighthouses and breakwaters.
				  Born in Keeseville, New York, his family soon moved to Flint, Michigan. Upon
				  completing high school, Symons applied to the U.S. Military Academy at West
				  Point and graduated at the top of the Class of 1874. After West Point, Symons
				  was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Army Corps of Engineers and
				  served at Willett’s Point for his first two years in the army. In 1876, Symons
				  was reassigned to the Wheeler Expedition, which was one of the four major
				  expeditions that formed the nucleus of the U.S. Geological Survey. By 1880,
				  Symons had been promoted to Captain and was in charge of studying the area
				  referred to as the ‘Inland Empire of the Pacific Northwest,’ focusing on the
				  upper Columbia River and its tributaries. Other than exploring and mapping the
				  region, Symons chose locations for new army outposts, built roads, and carried
				  out other military duties. Over the course of the following years, Symons
				  worked on the Mississippi River Commission, led the U.S. side of the joint
				  boundary commission redefining the border with Mexico, and worked on several
				  city projects in Washington, D.C. including the water supply, sewage system,
				  and pavements. In 1895, Symons returned to New York where he was charged with
				  planning and designing the river and harbor works at Buffalo. He was also named
				  engineer of the 10th Lighthouse District, which encompassed all the waterways
				  and lighthouses from Detroit, Michigan, to Ogdensburg, New York. In 1897
				  Congress commissioned a report researching the possibility of a ship canal
				  spanning New York State. Symons stated in his report that a barge canal, not a
				  ship canal, was the best option. In 1898, then Governor of New York Theodore
				  Roosevelt enlisted the help of Symons to further study the canal project, and
				  through this additional work succeeded in convincing Congress that this was
				  indeed the best option. Roosevelt was elected President of the United States in
				  1902, and named Symons as his top military aide in early 1903. In D.C., Symons
				  was officially the officer in charge of Public Buildings and Grounds of the
				  District of Columbia, a post which was accompanied by a promotion to the rank
				  of Colonel of Engineers. As Roosevelt’s top military aide, Symons was the
				  Master of Ceremonies for all White House functions, planning, coordinating and
				  executing every appearance by Roosevelt, who was also a personal friend. He was
				  also the paymaster general of the White House, ensuring that all funds
				  appropriated for expenses were properly spent. Symons was allowed, by the
				  authority of a special act of Congress, to help with the creation of New York’s
				  barge canal while in office. Symons left the White House after Roosevelt’s
				  first term in order to focus on the canal. After 37 years of service, the post
				  of Chief Engineer of the Army Corps was going to open up in 1908, and President
				  Roosevelt advocated for Symons to accept the position; however, Symons elected
				  to submit his name for the retirement list instead. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SymonsTW1</container><unittitle>Thomas William Symons, Jr. in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1905</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SymonsTW2</container><unittitle>Thomas William Symons, Jr. wearing a white suit and
					 standing in front of the portico of the White House.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SymonsTW3</container><unittitle>Thomas William Symons, Jr. in civilian
					 clothes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">SymonsTW4</container><unittitle>Thomas William Symons, Jr. in uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1904</unitdate></did><note><p>Included with the photograph are a copy of a newspaper article
					 about the Senate approval of a bill allowing Symons to serve on the Canal Board
					 and a copy of Symons' biography published in <emph>Who's Who. </emph></p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>T</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taft, William Howard (September 15, 1857 – March 8,
				  1930)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Howard Taft served as the 27th president of the United
				  States from 1909 to 1913 and the tenth chief justice of the United States from
				  1921 to 1930. He is the only person to have held both offices.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaftWH1</container><unittitle>William Howard Taft</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BallingerRA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Photograph of cartoon of Richard
					 Ballinger on a seesaw with President Taft and Gifford Pinchot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard A. Ballinger subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GlavisLR4</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Political cartoon with Louis Glavis
					 as Quixote and President Taft as a windmill</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 21, 1909</unitdate><origination><persname role="illustrator">John "Dok" Hager, Seattle Times cartoonist, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Louis R. Glavis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talbot, Frederic Hovey (February 26, 1819 - December 20,
				  1907)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederic Hovey Talbot was an American businessman, and one of
				  the founders of the Pope &amp; Talbot, Inc. lumber company. He was born in East
				  Machias, Maine, the son of Peter Talbot III and Eliza Chalon, and attended
				  Washington Academy. His family had been in the lumber business for generations.
				  In 1849, he travelled to San Francisco to form a business with Andrew Jackson
				  Pope, whom he had known from childhood. In addition to lumber, he was involved
				  in ship lighterage. The lumber company was very successful, with the high
				  demand of the 1849 Gold Rush. After his departure from California in 1850, he
				  was in business in New York City and in Providence, Rhode Island.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotM2</container><unittitle>Martha Talbot at a family gathering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1892</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Picture taken East Machias. Edgar Davis,
					 Mrs. P. S. Talbot, Sam V. Cole, Stephen C. Talbot, Leonora Harris Balkane,
					 George F. Talbot, James R. Talbot, Samuel Harris, Frederic Talbot, Mr. Balkane,
					 William J. Pope, Micah Jones Talbot, Mrs. M. J. Talbot, Mrs. Austin Harris
					 (Emily Pope), P. S. Talbot, John C. Talbot, Mrs. J. C. Talbot, Austin Cary,
					 Hattie Caldwell Murchie, Mrs. Edgar Davis (Mina Talbot), Mrs. Helen Talbot
					 Eager, Mrs. J. R. Talbot (Lennie ? Burrall), Mrs. F. Talbot, Susie G. Talbot,
					 Florence Harris, Mrs. Loring Talbot, Mrs. C. H. Talbot, Mabel Harris, Edna
					 Pettigrew Talbot (Mrs. Frank T.), Alice W. Pope, Austin Harris, Frank Talbot,
					 Bessie Pope Hawley, Rebecca Talbot (James R's), Bessie Salmon, Emily Harris,
					 Lillian Hawley, Miriam Hawley, Herbert Harris, Henry Talbot. Balance of the
					 cousins off walking. Names written by Andrew Pope Talbot, son of Charles.
					 Picture taken East Machias (Maine).</p></note><note><p>Filed under Martha Talbot subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talbot, Martha (March 20, 1859 - August 2,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martha Talbot was the daughter of Frederic Hovey Talbot and
				  Susan Gardner Sanborn Talbot.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TalbotM1</container><unittitle>Martha Talbot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880 -1890?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Thomas (?) Instantaeneous Photographs, San Francisco</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotM2</container><unittitle>Martha Talbot at a family gathering</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 18, 1892</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Picture taken East Machias. Edgar Davis,
					 Mrs. P. S. Talbot, Sam V. Cole, Stephen C. Talbot, Leonora Harris Balkane,
					 George F. Talbot, James R. Talbot, Samuel Harris, Frederic Talbot, Mr. Balkane,
					 William J. Pope, Micah Jones Talbot, Mrs. M. J. Talbot, Mrs. Austin Harris
					 (Emily Pope), P. S. Talbot, John C. Talbot, Mrs. J. C. Talbot, Austin Cary,
					 Hattie Caldwell Murchie, Mrs. Edgar Davis (Mina Talbot), Mrs. Helen Talbot
					 Eager, Mrs. J. R. Talbot (Lennie ? Burrall), Mrs. F. Talbot, Susie G. Talbot,
					 Florence Harris, Mrs. Loring Talbot, Mrs. C. H. Talbot, Mabel Harris, Edna
					 Pettigrew Talbot (Mrs. Frank T.), Alice W. Pope, Austin Harris, Frank Talbot,
					 Bessie Pope Hawley, Rebecca Talbot (James R's), Bessie Salmon, Emily Harris,
					 Lillian Hawley, Miriam Hawley, Herbert Harris, Henry Talbot. Balance of the
					 cousins off walking. Names written by Andrew Pope Talbot, son of Charles.
					 Picture taken East Machias (Maine).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotM3</container><unittitle>Martha Talbot and family in carriages</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 26, 1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Went to see the "Guns" (?), July 26, 1900,
					 East Machias, Maine. Fred Hovey (Talbot), Frank Sanborn, Aunt Mary (?), (?)
					 Clifton, Martha Talbot, Sophia Vance, Emily Walker; Fred Hovey's cart: W.
					 Talbot, (?) Talbot, Sarah (?) Sanborn.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talbot, Peter (March 29, 1783 - July 21,
				  1875)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Peter Talbot was born in East Machias, Maine. His grandfather,
				  Peter Talbot, fought in the Revolutionary War, and his father, also named Peter
				  Talbot, was a representative to the Massachusetts General Court and had lumber
				  and shipping interests. Peter Talbot III held many town offices and was a
				  trustee at Washington Academy. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotP1</container><unittitle>Peter Talbot</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870-1875?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Manchester Brothers, Providence, R. I.</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotP2</container><unittitle>Peter Talbot with eight of his grandchildren,
					 including Mary Dutton and Charles Francis Adams Talbot.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TalbotP3</container><unittitle>Photograph of three white houses with men, carriages
					 and cattle standing in front of them. One of the houses is Peter Talbot's
					 original home.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso by Peter Talbot: This house was moved to
					 present place 42 years ago. This picture taken for small [?]. Must have been
					 many years before it was moved. The man in carriage white horse Hammond Talbot.
					 The man with leather apron marked X Cyrus Sanborn, Aunt Mary’s father.The man
					 marked O is Cyrus Fisham (?), Post Master. The window showing on the 3rd floor.
					 No room there. Just rough boards. There first some delay, then not moved. Just
					 another (?) memory but never finished inside or out. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talcott, Addie Jane Chambers (March 2, 1858 - February
				  2, 1938)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Addie Jane Chambers was the daughter of Andrew J Chambers and
				  Margaret White Chambers, who came to Washington Territory in 1847. She was
				  married to George Noyes Talcott.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotAJC1</container><unittitle>Addie Jane Chambers Talcott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talcott, Charles Ransom (August 13, 1854 - December 19,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Ransom Talcott was born in Pittsfield, Illinois and came
				  to Olympia, Washington Territory in 1872. The firm of Talcott Brothers, dealers
				  in watches, diamonds, jewelry, silver, optical goods, and other merchandise,
				  was established that same year. George Noyes Talcott joined the firm in 1882,
				  and a third brother, Lucius Grant Talcott in 1890. Charles designed the first
				  state seal of Washington. Lucius Grant Talcott lettered the words, "The Seal of
				  the State of Washington, 1889," and George Noyes Talcott cut the printing die.
				  </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotCR1</container><unittitle>Charles Ransom Talcott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Talcott, George Noyes (December 28, 1858 - April 7,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Noyes Talcott was born in Pittsfield, Illinois and came
				  to Olympia, Washington Territory in 1882 to join his brother, Charles in the
				  firm of Talcott Brothers, dealers in watches, diamonds, jewelry, silver,
				  optical goods, and other merchandise. Charles designed the first state seal of
				  Washington. Lucius Grant Talcott lettered the words, "The Seal of the State of
				  Washington, 1889," and George Noyes Talcott cut the printing die. George was
				  also a volunteer firefighter in Olympia and was a curator with the Washington
				  Historical Society.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TalbotGN1</container><unittitle>George Noyes Talcott</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tarte, Clara Gano Ludlow (January 5, 1863 - June 11,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Clara Gano Ludlow, the daughter of Rev. James and Ellen Ludlow,
				  was born in Rochester, New York. She married James W. Tarte in 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TarteCGL1</container><unittitle>Clara Gano Ludlow Tarte</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1890s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Hann, Bellingham, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Signed: Yours Sincerely, Clare Ludlow Tarte. Written on
						verso: Great Great Granddaughter of John Gano, the fighting Parson of the
						Revolutionary War.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tarte, James Wright McKnight (January 11, 1849 -
				  February 7, 1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Wright McKnight Tarte was one of the earliest mariners on
				  Puget Sound, arriving at Sehome, now part of Bellingham, in 1869. Born in
				  England, he came to Puget Sound in 1863. His first marine service was on a ship
				  carrying passengers between Victoria, B. C. and Esquimalt, B.C. He continued in
				  that service until he arrived in Bellingham with his father and other members
				  of his family. In Bellingham, he joined the crew of the schooner <emph>General
				  Harney.</emph> Later, he was a mate on other steamers on the Sound, operating
				  between Seattle, Victoria and Port Angeles. He left that route to carry mail
				  between Whatcom and Blaine. His last command was on the steamer 
				  <emph>Bessie</emph>of the State Fisheries Department. He served as both captain
				  and deputy fish commissioner. He married Clara Ludlow in 1884. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TarteJWM1</container><unittitle>James Wright McKnightTarte</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: Yours Truly, J. W. Tarte.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tarter, Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">Tarter1</container><unittitle>Dr. Tarter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Arthur Jackson (August 18, 1857 - August 4,
				  1915)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Arthur Jackson Taylor, the son of John and Mary Taylor, was born
				  in England and came to the United States as a young man. He settled in Shelton,
				  Washington where he had a farm. He was appointed postmaster in 1888. He later
				  worked as an assayer and had a farm in Skagit Valley. He married Mayme Evans in
				  1906; they had two sons, Rodney and Clarence.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorAJ1</container><unittitle>Arthur Jackson Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Charles Alonzo (January 20, 1864 - March 19,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Alonzo Taylor was an American playwright and theatrical
				  producer who later turned to film production. Among his plays were <emph>Held
				  for Ransom,</emph><emph>Rags to Riches,</emph> and <emph>Yosemite.</emph>His
				  films include <emph>The Whirlpool</emph> starring Ethel Barrymore. He married
				  Laurette Taylor, the actress, in 1901; their son, Dwight Taylor, was a noted
				  author, playwright and screenwriter.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorCA1</container><unittitle>Charles AlonzoTaylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906</unitdate></did><note><p>Guy Bates Post's photograph is on the reverse of Charles
					 Alonzo Taylor's photograph. See also Guy Bates Post.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Ester D’Armond (July 17, 1823 - October
				  23,1897)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Esther D’Armond was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania and married
				  Colonel James Taylor in Kalida, Ohio in 1839. In 1845, they crossed the plains,
				  arriving in Oregon City, Oregon Territory. After the Cayuse War, the family
				  moved to the Clatsop Plains north of Tillamook head and across from Astoria on
				  the Columbia River. In time, they moved into Astoria and built another home.
				  Esther and James had 7 children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorJ1</container><unittitle>Colonel James Taylor and Ester D'Armond
					 Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Colonel James Taylor subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, George Edward (December 13, 1905 - April 14,
				  2000)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Edward Taylor was a prolific and influential scholar of
				  Chinese studies, professor at University of Washington, Seattle from 1939 to
				  1969, and director of the Far Eastern and Russian Institute (later the Henry
				  Jackson School) at the University of Washington from 1946 to 1969.Taylor was
				  born in Coventry, England and received degrees in history and politics from the
				  University of Birmingham before coming to the United States in 1928 on a
				  Commonwealth Fund fellowship. After study at Johns Hopkins University and
				  Harvard University, he studied in Beijing from 1930 to 1932 on a fellowship
				  from the Harvard-Yenching Institute. From 1933 to 1936, he was professor of
				  international relations at the Central Political Institute in Nanking, then
				  moved to teach at Yenching University in Beijing. After war broke out in 1937,
				  Taylor spent the summer of 1938 traveling with the Chinese Communist Eighth
				  Route Army, and smuggled medical supplies to them. These experiences were the
				  basis of his book, <emph>The Struggle for North China.</emph> In 1939, Taylor
				  became chair of the Department of Oriental Studies at the University of
				  Washington, Seattle. He took leave in 1942 to become deputy director of the
				  United States Office of War Information in charge of Pacific operations. After
				  the war, he was director of the Office of War Information at the United States
				  State Department. He returned to Seattle in 1947. As the Chinese Communists
				  gained the upper hand in China, Taylor was among the strongest voices
				  condemning American policy and opposing diplomatic recognition of the new
				  government. Taylor co-authored a standard survey text, <emph>The Far East in
				  the Modern World,</emph> which went through three editions. In the 1960s he was
				  a strong supporter of American policies in the Vietnam War. He retired from the
				  University of Washington in 1969, but turned to the promotion of trade, serving
				  as president of the Washington Council on International Trade from 1976 to
				  1987. He was the author, the co-author or the editor of more than 12 books.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorGE1</container><unittitle>George Edward Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s - 1940s?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorGE2</container><unittitle>George Edward Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s - 1940s?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorGE3</container><unittitle>George Edward Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s-1970s?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">John A. Moore, Office of Information Services, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Horace Adolphus (May 24, 1837 – August 5,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Horace Adolphus Taylor was born in Norfolk, New York and moved
				  to River Falls, Wisconsin in 1855. He founded the <emph>River Falls
				  Journal</emph>with his brother Lute Taylor in 1857. In 1860, he moved to
				  Hudson, Wisconsin, where he purchased the <emph>Hudson Chronicle. </emph>Taylor
				  later moved to Madison, Wisconsin, in 1890, where he purchased and edited the 
				  <emph>Wisconsin State Journal.</emph> Taylor was a delegate to the Republican
				  National Convention in 1876 and 1884 and was Chairman of the Republican Party
				  of Wisconsin from 1883 to 1887. From 1881 to 1883, he was U.S. Consul in
				  Marseille, France. Taylor served in the State Senate in 1889. In the same year,
				  he was appointed United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and remained
				  in the position until 1906. He unsuccessfully campaigned for governor of
				  Wisconsin in 1888 and 1896.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">FairbanksCW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Fairbanks with group at Lewis
					 and Clark Centennial Exposition, Portland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate></did><note><p>A caption on the back identifies the Assistant Secretary of
					 the Treasury Horace A. Taylor and H.W. Goode, the exposition president.</p><p>Filed under Charles W. Fairbanks subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Howard Dickson (March 8, 1878 – September 14,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Dickson Taylor was an American politician in the state of
				  Washington. He was born in Independence, Iowa and came to Washington in 1895
				  where he was employed by the Page Lumber Company. He later became president of
				  the company and served in that position until the company was sold in 1923. He
				  was a member of the Washington House of Representatives (1907-1913) and served
				  several terms in the Washington State Senate. From 1911 to 1915, he was Speaker
				  of the Washington House.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorHD1</container><unittitle>Howard Dickson Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1913 - 1915</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, James (March 9, 1809 - December 8,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Taylor, the son of William and Jane Taylor, was born in
				  Bradford, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Mansfield, Ohio in 1823. In 1830,
				  James taught school and began practicing law before establishing a trading post
				  with his brother, William. He took part in the conflicts between settlers and
				  Native American tribes in the 1830s, and was made a colonel for his service. In
				  1843, he was register of the United States Land Office, which necessitated his
				  move to Lima, Ohio. He and his family crossed the plains to Oregon in 1845 and
				  established a land claim in the Clatsop Plains. During the Cayuse War of
				  1847-1848, Taylor was quartermaster at Fort Waters, located on the site of the
				  former Whitman Mission. He went to the California gold fields in 1849 before
				  returning to Oregon City where he operated a sawmill. He was treasurer of the
				  Provisional Government during the 1848-1849 legislative session and then became
				  director of the state mint. Taylor returned to Clatsop in 1851, where he
				  engaged in farming and cattle raising. He and his family moved to Astoria in
				  1855, where he built a home on the site of the former Astor fort. When the
				  Clatsop County Equal Rights Association organized in May 1874 he was appointed
				  as the group’s first president. Taylor married Ester D’Armond in 1839; they had
				  seven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorJ1</container><unittitle>Colonel James Taylor and Ester D'Armond
					 Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Joseph Marion (June 3, 1854 - September 22,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph M. Taylor was a professor of mathematics and astronomy.
				  He designed and constructed the first astronomical observatory at the UW in
				  1891, and was the director of the observatory. When he died, he left a library
				  of over 3,000 volumes.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorJM1</container><unittitle>Joseph Marion Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1886</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Theodore E. Peiser, Seattle, Washington Territory</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorJM2</container><unittitle>Joseph Marion Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Laurette (April 1, 1883 - December 7,
				  1946)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laurette Taylor (born Loretta Helen Cooney) was an American
				  stage and silent film star who was perhaps best known for her roles in plays
				  written by her second husband, J. Hartley Manners. She originated the role of
				  Amanda Wingfield in the first production of Tennessee Williams's play<emph> The
				  Glass Menagerie</emph>in 1944.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorL1</container><unittitle>Laurette Taylor in the title role of 
					 <emph>Thelma.</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stanford, San Francisco</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Samuel K. (June 17, 1835 - August 27,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Samuel K. Taylor was born in Orleans, Barnstable, Massachusetts
				  and went to California in 1853. He went north to Oregon in 1858 before settling
				  in Shelton, Washington in 1860. He was active in the culitvation and
				  development of the Olympia oyster industry.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorSK1</container><unittitle>Samuel K. Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, William Henry (December 26, 1851 - August 17,
				  1913)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry Taylor was born in Leicester, England. His parents
				  came to the United States when he was five years old, and he was raised and
				  educated in Wisconsin. He learned the trade of a machinist and was employed by
				  the Milwaukee Harvesting Machine Company for seventeen years. In 1899, he went
				  to Latah, Washington where he organized and became manager of W. H. Taylor
				  Hardware, a general hardware business, which was the only store in Latah to
				  deal exclusively in hardware. He married Ellen Lever in 1880. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Taylor, Zachary (November 24, 1784 – July 9,
				  1850)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Zachary Taylor was an American military leader who served as the
				  12th president of the United States from 1849 until his death in 1850. Taylor
				  was a career officer in the United States Army, rising to the rank of major
				  general and becoming a national hero as a result of his victories in the
				  Mexican–American War. He won election to the White House despite his vague
				  political beliefs. His top priority as president was preserving the Union. He
				  died sixteen months into his term, having made no progress on the most divisive
				  issue in Congress, slavery. After his death, Vice President Fillmore assumed
				  the presidency and completed Taylor's term, which ended on March 4, 1853. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TaylorZ1</container><unittitle>Zachary Taylor in officer's uniform`</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TaylorZ2</container><unittitle>Zachary Taylor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1845 and 1850?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">H. B. Hall, Jr</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall, Jr. from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia
					 of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tedcastle, Charles Butler (April 26, 1852 - May 29,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Butler Tedcastle was the president of the New England
				  Terminal Railroad and served as treasurer of the Oregon Improvement
				  Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCJ4</container><unittitle>Charles Jackson Smith, Lord Thomas Brassley, Benjamin
					 F. Bush, Charles B. Tedcastle and Andrew F. Burleigh.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Company, Victoria B.C</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Charles Jackson Smith subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Temple, Henry Clay (September 18, 1833 - December 28,
				  1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Clay Temple was born in Macomb, Illinois in 1833. At the
				  age of 19, he went west to the Puget Sound area and prospected for three years.
				  He returned to the east by way of the Isthmus of Panama in 1855. In 1862, he
				  returned to the west coast with his wife and son, stopping in Hood Canal and
				  Seattle. In 1868, they settled in Puyallup Valley, where they lived until 1886.
				  They then became one of the first families to settle in the Tilton River
				  Valley, having first homesteaded in 1884 near present day Morton, Washington.
				  Temple was appointed postmaster in Morton in 1906. He married Elizabeth
				  Connelly(1838 – 1917) in 1856; they had eleven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TempleHC1</container><unittitle>Henry Clay Temple</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tenny, Louis Horton (February 8, 1841 - April 8,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Louis Horton Tenny was a Seattle pioneer and one of the city’s
				  earliest industrialist leaders. Tenny, a native of New York, served in the
				  Civil War in Battery M of the First New York Heavy Artillery and took part in
				  Sherman’s March to the Sea. On arrival in Seattle in 1875, Tenny became
				  associated with W. W. White in the purchase of the Uuget foundry, later selling
				  his interest to Albert Kellogg. Tenny then purchased what had been an old apple
				  orchard at Second South and Jackson, where he and J. M. Frink established the
				  Washington Iron Works, which was rebuilt after the fire of 1889. He later
				  founded Vulcan Iron Works. On July 4, 1885, while firing the Independence Day
				  salute, Tenny was blown fifteen feet by the cannon’s premature discharge,
				  losing his left hand in the accident. He married Lydia Ann Bumpus (1845 – 1899)
				  in 1866.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TennyLH1</container><unittitle>Louis Horton Tenny</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terrace, Frank (March 5, 1853 - November 3,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank Terrace was born on the Island of Guernsey in the English
				  Channel. At the age of ten, he was left an orphan and worked as a seaman until
				  his early 20s. Arriving in Puget Sound in 1880, he first worked as a laborer in
				  the Newcastle mines and later bought a farm in Orillia. On a visit back to
				  England, he saw the stream of traffic on the Great North Road and resolved that
				  he was going to campaign for better roads in the United States. Working with
				  Samuel Hill, R. H. Thomson and others, he formed the Washington State Good
				  Roads Association. The association favored a highway system built and
				  maintained by the state rather than uncoordinated efforts by separate counties
				  and led the efforts to develop and improve a system of roads in the United
				  States. Hill and Terrace even traveled 22,000 miles across the country with a
				  farm wagon and a team of mules crusading for better roads. Despite opposition
				  by some county politicians, the Washington state highway department was
				  established in 1913 with an appropriation of $2,000,000. He and Hill helped
				  promote the Peace Arch in Blaine, Washington, one of the first peace portals in
				  the world, as well as the Columbia River Highway, the first designated scenic
				  highway in the United States. Terrace received a gold medal from the National
				  Good Roads Association, and was awarded many trophies from across the nation
				  for his efforts in promoting better roads. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TerraceF1</container><unittitle>Frank Terrace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TerraceF2</container><unittitle>Frank Terrace and unidentified in a wagon, pulled by
					 two mules and a donkey.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Members of the Old Guard have carried the
					 message of good roads to many other states and to foreign lands for they
					 thought that what was good for us would be equally good for all. Frank Terrace
					 returning from a 22,000 mile trip through the southern states with the famous
					 mules and a donkey.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithSE1</container><unittitle>Stewart Ellsworth Smith and a group of men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Stewart E. Smith; C. A. (Charles) Prouty;
						Frank Terrace (Orillia); Bush (Fall City); Davis (Black Diamond); Legg
						(Issaquah); Richards (Fall City); David Hayes, (desceased); Gilliland; George
						B. Gregor (North Bend); Julian (Georgetown); Boice (Kirkland); Sinnott.</p><p>Two men are not identified. Bush of Fall City is probably
						Andrew Jackson Bush. Legg of Issaquah is probably Robert Legg.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Stewart Ellsworth Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terrell, Margaret Elma (March 17, 1900 - August 19,
				  1998)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Elma Terrell was born in Oskaloosa, Iowa, and grew up
				  there and in Eudora, Kansas. She earned a bachelor’s degree in home economics
				  and English with a minor in education at William Penn College in 1923. She
				  taught elementary school, then earned a master’s degree in institutional
				  management at the University of Chicago. She graduated from Yale with a
				  doctorate in science and joined the University of Washington faculty in1928.
				  She worked at the University of Washington for 42 years where she was a
				  professor of home economics and the program director for administrative
				  dietetics. She received national recognition for her work in institutional
				  management and worked as a consultant for the American School of Food Services.
				  Terrell designed food systems for the UW dining halls and residences, Safeco,
				  and Weyerhauser, among others. To offer students experience, she set up Terrell
				  Dining Services for restaurants such as the Persian Room in the Northern Life
				  Tower. She earned awards for her work and published many papers and two books, 
				  <emph render="italic"> Large Quantity Recipes</emph>, and with Dr. Lendal
				  Kotschwar, a former student, <emph render="italic">Food Service Planning,
				  Layout and Equipment.</emph> She retired from the UW in 1970.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TerrellME1</container><unittitle>Margaret Elma Terrell standing at a large coffee urn
					 in an industrial kitchen, with unidentified food service workers behind
					 her.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1959?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terry, Charles Carroll (September 20, 1828 - February
				  17, 1867)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Carroll Terry was born in Waterville, N.Y. He sailed for
				  California in 1849, crossing the Isthmus of Panama by mule train and heading
				  north to the California gold rush. Two years later, he went to Portland where
				  he met members of Arthur and David Denny’s party; he sailed with them on the
				  ship <emph render="italic">Exact</emph> to Elliott Bay. The Denny Party landed
				  at Alki Point on November 13, 1851, and platted a settlement. John Low and
				  David Denny had preceded the Denny Party in order to explore the area; along
				  the way they were joined by Leander "Lee" Terry, Charles Terry’s brother.
				  Within a year of their arrival, the Terry brothers and John Low had established
				  claims on Alki, and Charles Terry opened a store. In 1853, John Low sold his
				  property to Terry and moved his family to Olympia, and Lee Terry returned to
				  New York and left his claim for his brother. Terry also acquired land in
				  downtown Seattle. He opened the first bakery, built the first cracker mill, and
				  was one of the first trustees of Seattle. When he learned that Arthur Denny's
				  donation of land for the original University of Washington campus was short
				  nearly two of the 10 acres needed, he quickly gave the difference from adjacent
				  property that he and Judge Edward Lander owned. He died in 1867, possibly of
				  consumption. Terry Avenue in Seattle is named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TerryCC1</container><unittitle>Charles Carroll Terry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1867?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terry, Charles Tilton (November 18, 1865 - December 19,
				  1931)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Tilton Terry was a member of one of Seattle’s earliest
				  pioneer families. His father was Charles C. Terry and his brother was Edward L.
				  Terry, for many years the city treasurer of Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TerryCTI1</container><unittitle>Charles Carroll Terry wearing a top hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Morton S. McClaire, Seattle, Washington Territory</persname></origination></did><note><p>Photocopy of cabinet card. Original in PH Coll 0334 Early
					 Photographers Collection</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Terry, Charles Townsend (February 26, 1835 – July 6,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Townsend Terry was an American politician in the state
				  of Washington who served in the Washington House of Representatives from 1895
				  to 1897. He was born in Onondoga County, New York. In 1852, in the company of
				  Dr. John Coe Kellogg, he crossed the plains to the Pacific Coast. Early in the
				  spring of 1853, he went to Olympia, Washington Territory, and secured a
				  position in a surveying party. He then went to Whidbey Island and took up 160
				  acres of land, which he cultivated until 1858. With the news of gold
				  discoveries in the Fraser River area, he tried his luck in the mines; however,
				  he was not successful and returned to Whidbey Island. He married Georgianna
				  (Georgia) Pearson, a Mercer Girl, in 1867. After her death, in 1881, he married
				  Emma Comstock.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">TerryCTO1</container><unittitle>Charles Townsend Terry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1907-1908?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. B. Meyers, Everett, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terry, Edward Lander (May 18, 1862- March 3,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Lander Terry, the son of Seattle pioneers Charles and
				  Mary Terry, was a graduate of the Territorial University, now the University of
				  Washington. He invested in real estate and banking, but lost most of his wealth
				  during the economic depression of 1893. Hearing of the news of the Alaska gold
				  rush, he spent several years in Alaska before returning to Seattle. Upon his
				  return, he was associated with Fred. S. Stimson as treasurer for Stimson's
				  railroad company. He served as Seattle City Treasurer from 1910 until his death
				  in 1929. As city treasurer, he instituted many economic reforms. Terry married
				  Jennie Furth in 1887; her father, Jacob Furth, founded on of Seattle's first
				  banks and the Puget Sound Electric Railroad.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TerryEL1</container><unittitle>Edward Lander Terry and Mary Carroll Terry in 18th
					 century costumes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Terry, Mary Carroll (February 17, 1867 - February 11,
				  1933)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Carroll Terry was the daughter of Seattle pioneers Charles
				  and Mary Terry. She married George B. Kittinger, a state legislator and real
				  estate investor, in 1887.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TerryEL1</container><unittitle>Edward Lander Terry and Mary Carroll Terry in 18th
					 century costumes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1885</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edward Lander Terry subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tesreau, Elmer Lee (January 22, 1905 - September 27,
				  1955)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer Lee Tesreau was an American college football player, best
				  known as a prominent fullback at the University of Washington during the 1920s.
				  Tesreau was born in Missouri, moved to Chehalis, Washington, when young, and
				  graduated from high school there. He then played for the Washington Huskies
				  football program, first on the freshman team in 1922, then on the varsity
				  squads in 1923, 1924, and 1925, in the same backfield as Wildcat Wilson. The
				  1923 Huskies went 10–1 during the regular season, losing only to Cal, then
				  faced Navy in the 1924 Rose Bowl. Tesreau played through a knee injury in the
				  14–14 tie, and discovered after the game that he had broken a leg. The 1924
				  Huskies compiled an 8–1–1 record, but did not play in any of the limited bowl
				  games of the era. Tesreau was captain of the 1925 Huskies. The team was
				  undefeated during the regular season (10 wins, and a tie against Nebraska), and
				  suffered a 20–19 loss to Alabama in the 1926 Rose Bowl. Tesreau was also a
				  pitcher for the Washington Huskies baseball team. He graduated as a member of
				  the class 1926, then took an executive position with a surety company. He
				  married Virginia Akin in November 1927. They had one daughter, and were
				  divorced in 1933. Tesreau died in Seattle in September 1955, aged 50. He was
				  posthumously inducted to the Husky Hall of Fame at the University of Washington
				  in 1985.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TesreauEL1</container><unittitle>Elmer Lee Tesreau</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tesreau, Thomas Louis (December 7, 1903 - September 26,
				  1958)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Louis Tesreau was a halfback on the UW football team in
				  the 1920s. He was one of three brothers who played football at the University.
				  His older brother, Elmer, was a fullback and captain of the1926 Rose Bowl
				  football team. A younger brother, Jeff, was a squad member, but did not make
				  the varsity team; he was later killed in action in Normandy during World War
				  II. Louis Tesreau was a member of the Teamsters Union.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TesreauTL1</container><unittitle>Thomas Louis Tesreau</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thayer, Andrew Jackson (November 27, 1818 - April 28,
				  1873)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Andrew Jackson Thayer, the son of Gideon and Anne (Dodge)
				  Thayer, was born in Lima, New York, in 1818. He received an academic education
				  at Wesleyan Seminary, afterwards Wesleyan University, and studied law in the
				  office of Doolittle &amp; Thayer, the latter being his cousin. He married
				  Melissa D. Chandler in 1842. He was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of
				  New York in 1849, and entered into partnership with his brother, Edward Thayer,
				  in Buffalo. On March 28, 1853, he and his wife started for Oregon, crossing the
				  plains to Oregon, and arriving at Salem August 28, 1853. From Salem, they
				  settled on a farm three miles north of Corvallis. Upon the admission of Oregon
				  into the Union in 1859, President Buchanan appointed Thayer as the first United
				  States district attorney, a position he held for six months, when he resigned,
				  giving as a reason that he would much rather defend than prosecute a criminal.
				  In 1860 a question arose in Oregon as to the proper time of holding the
				  congressional election, the portion of the party to which Thayer belonged
				  contending that it should be held in November, and that the election in June
				  was illegal. Thayer was elected representative of Oregon in the Thirty-seventh
				  Congress in 1860. He was admitted to the seat at the extra session in July,
				  1861, which he held till the close of the session, when it was awarded to
				  George K. Shiel, who was elected in June. In 1862, Thayer was district attorney
				  for the second judicial district of Oregon, an office he held two years. In
				  1870, he was elected associate justice of the Supreme Court, an office he held
				  at the time of his death on April 28, 1873. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThayerAJ1</container><unittitle>Andrew Jackson Thayer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860-1869</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Thayer, Melissa Chandler (November 13, 1821 - April 23,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Melissa Chandler, the youngest child of Moses and Clara (White)
				  Chandler, was born in Hartford, New York in 1821. She married Andrew Jackson
				  Thayer in 1842. She and her husband crossed the plains to Oregon in 1853 and
				  established a farm outside of Corvallis. After his death in 1873, she and her
				  four children moved to Portland.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThayerMC1</container><unittitle>Melissa Chandler Thayer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1860-1869</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Andrew Jackson Thayer subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thein, Joseph Walter (December 15, 1878 - December 19,
				  1966)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Walter Thein was born and educated in Minnesota and came
				  to Washington State as a young man. He owned a dairy in Aberdeen and served on
				  the Aberdeen City Council before being elected to the Washington State Senate
				  in 1932.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD2</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with group signing SB 151 creating a
					 division for the blind in the State Department of Social Security, making
					 appropriations and providing for the blind and the prevention of
					 blindness</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 15, 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. C. Gerard</persname></origination></did><note><p>Standing (L-R): State Representative George Twidwell, State
					 Representative Victor Skinner, John Nelson with his seeing-eye dog, State
					 Senator Joseph Walter Thein.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Theorell, Axel Hugo Theodor (July 6, 1903 – August 15,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Axel Hugo Theodor Theorell was a Swedish scientist and Nobel
				  Prize laureate in medicine. Theorell, who dedicated his entire career to enzyme
				  research, received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1955 for
				  discovering oxidoreductase enzymes and their effects. His contribution also
				  consisted of the theory of the toxic effects of sodium fluoride on the
				  cofactors of crucial human enzymes. Dr. Theorell was in Seattle in March, 1956,
				  to visit Dr. Hans Neurath, head of the Department of Biochemistry at the
				  University of Washington. While in Seattle, he delivered a lecture to the
				  students at the UW School of Medicine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">TheorellAHT1</container><unittitle>Axel Hugo Theodor Theorell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thime, Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">Thime1</container><unittitle>Dr. Thime</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomas, George Henry (July 31, 1816 – March 28, 1870)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Henry Thomas was an American general in the Union Army
				  during the American Civil War, one of the principal commanders in the Western
				  Theater. Thomas served in the Mexican–American War and later chose to remain
				  with the U.S. Army for the Civil War as a Southern Unionist, despite his
				  heritage as a Virginian, a state which would join the Confederate States of
				  America. He won one of the first Union victories in the war at Mill Springs,
				  Kentucky and served in important subordinate commands at Perryville and Stones
				  River. His defense at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863 saved the Union Army
				  from being completely routed, earning him his most famous nickname, "the Rock
				  of Chickamauga." He followed soon after with a dramatic breakthrough on
				  Missionary Ridge in the Battle of Chattanooga. In the Franklin–Nashville
				  Campaign of 1864, he achieved one of the most decisive victories of the war,
				  destroying the army of Confederate General John Bell Hood, his former student
				  at West Point, at the Battle of Nashville. Thomas had a successful record in
				  the Civil War, but he failed to achieve the historical acclaim of some of his
				  contemporaries, such as Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman. He developed a
				  reputation as a slow, deliberate general who shunned self-promotion and who
				  turned down advancements in position when he did not think they were justified.
				  After the war, he did not write memoirs to advance his legacy. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><container type="item">ThomasGH1</container><unittitle>General George Henry Thomas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall Jr. after a portrait by Frederick
					 Gutekunst from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thomas, G. L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomasGL1</container><unittitle>G. L. Thomas in military uniform and
					 greatcoat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1919?</unitdate><note><p>Signed on front: "That'll do! That'll do! Yours Very Truly,
						G. L. Thomas, U.S.C &amp; G Retired, Late of the USS (?), This and many thanks
						(illegible) to make the Commodore.(?)"</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thomas, Harlan (January 10, 1870 – September 4,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harlan Thomas was born in 1870 in Des Moines, Iowa. His family
				  moved to Fort Collins, Colorado in 1879. Thomas entered the Colorado State
				  College at Fort Collins in 1885, but after the death of his father the
				  following year, he was forced to drop out and apprenticed as a carpenter. In
				  1889 he took a job as a draftsman for a Denver architect, a position he held
				  for two years. In 1891 he returned to Colorado State College, and graduated in
				  1895 with a Bachelor of Science degree. After a year in Denver working as an
				  architect, Thomas married and then spent sixteen months in Europe studying in
				  Paris. Thomas returned to Denver and practiced as an architect in the city for
				  the next decade before moving to Seattle in 1906. He quickly achieved success,
				  winning the commissions for the Chelsea Hotel in the Queen Anne neighborhood
				  and the Sorrento Hotel near downtown. In the next few years, his firm
				  prospered, and he received commissions for several schools in western
				  Washington. About 1910, Thomas entered into the first of several partnerships.
				  Among the best known of the projects of these partnerships are the Corner
				  Market Building (1911–12) in the Pike Place Market, several branch libraries in
				  Seattle, including the Queen Anne, Columbia, and Henry L. Yesler (now
				  Douglass-Truth) libraries, and the Art Deco-influenced Harborview Hospital
				  (1929–31). Thomas served as president of the Washington State Chapter of the
				  American Institute of Architects from 1924 to 1926. He was elected a Fellow in
				  the AIA in 1935. In 1926, he was appointed as the chair of the Department of
				  Architecture at the University of Washington succeeding Carl F. Gould. Like
				  Gould, he held the position on a half-time basis and continued to maintain an
				  active architectural practice. Thomas served as head of the program through the
				  early 1940s. In 1941, after Thomas's retirement from day-to-day direction of
				  the architecture school, he was elected Director of the Western Mountain
				  District, American Institute of Architects. He completely retired from practice
				  in 1949. Thomas was also a watercolorist, noted for his meticulous
				  technique.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomasHarlan1</container><unittitle>Harlan Thomas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934</unitdate><note><p>Written on front: To Professor Harlan Thomas, whose
						leadership and understanding direction of the Department of Architecture of the
						University of Washington for the past eight years has won him the sincere
						admiration and friendship of the many students with whom he has worked, this
						nineteen hundred and thirty-four year book, commemorating the twentieth
						anniversary of the department, is dedicated.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thomas, John Mitchelltree (July 8, 1829 - March 3,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Mitchelltree Thomas was born in Kentucky and arrived in
				  Oregon in 1852. He married Nancy Russell at Alki Point, Washington Territory,
				  in 1853. In 1854, they built a cabin not far from the Indigenous village of
				  Pop-sholku, near the future town of Auburn, becoming the first non-Indigenous
				  settlers in the valley. The area was named Pialschie by the settlers. Thomas
				  later built a hotel, and in 1887, he became the first postmaster of the town,
				  distributing mail from the hotel. The town’s name was changed to Thomas in
				  1907. Decades later, a train station would be constructed in Thomas for
				  passengers on the interurban railroad commuter line that ran through the valley
				  between Seattle and Tacoma. The community would also be called Thomas Station,
				  Lewisville, and just plain Washington. Nancy, who had traveled overland from
				  Ohio, wrote about her experiences, “Nancy Russell Thomas’ Story: Walked across
				  the plains and over the mountains to the Pacific Slope.”</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomasJM1</container><unittitle>John Mitchelltree Thomas</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Charles Hayden (August 9, 1892 - December 24,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Hayden Thompson, the son of Charles James Thompson and
				  Enna Marie DeShaw Thompson, was born in Suquamish, Washington. His mother was
				  the daughter of Princess Angeline, the daughter of Chief Seattle. Thompson
				  worked as a longshoreman and served in the Army during World War I. He married
				  Hattie Agnes Pratt in 1942.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Hayden Thompson and Hattie Pratt Thompson with
					 their dogs at their home on Agate Pass.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate><note><p>Accompanying material: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson, heirs
						of the Big John estate. Charles Thompson, seated here at his home on Agate
						Pass, is a direct descendent of Chief Seattle through his mother, the
						great-grandaughter of the famous chief. Mrs. Hattie Thompson , his wife, is
						half-Suquamish through her mother who married George Harmon, a sailor on the 
						<emph>U.S.S. Decator</emph> when that vessel shelled the Indians during the
						Battle of Seattle.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Emma Mary Juker (August 5, 1852 - November 9,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Emma Mary Juker, was born in New York and came around Cape Horn
				  in 1852 with her parent, James and Catherine Juker, on the 
				  <emph>Fredonia</emph>. The family first settled at The Dalles, where her father
				  was a sergeant in the United States Army. She married Lewis Cass Thompson, an
				  Oregon pioneer, rancher and businessman, in 1870. She and her husband were
				  prominent in public and lodge affairs in both Carlton and McMinnville, Oregon.
				  They had five children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonEMJ1</container><unittitle> Emma Mary Juker Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Everett Voorhees (August 23, 1885 - March 30,
				  1910)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Everett Voorhees Thompson, the son of August Bazley Thompson and
				  Ruth Johnson Thompson, was born in Dayton, Washington and graduated from the
				  University of Washington in 1910. While at the UW, he was the coxswain for the
				  1908 championship varsity crew.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">25</container><container type="item">MeadAE4</container><unittitle>Albert Edward Mead on the UW campus with University
					 President Thomas F. Kane, Professor Edmond S. Meany and Everett Voorhees
					 Thompson, orderly of the day.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert Edward Mead subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Hattie Agnes Pratt (June 16, 1886 - May 10,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hattie Agnes Pratt, the daughter of George Harmon and Jenny
				  Kelly Harmon, was born in Harper, Washington. She married Charles Hayden
				  Thompson, a descendent of Chief Seattle, in 1942.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonCH1</container><unittitle>Charles Hayden Thompson and Hattie Pratt Thompson with
					 their dogs at their home on Agate Pass.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate><note><p>Accompanying material: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson, heirs
						of the Big John estate. Charles Thompson, seated here at his home on Agate
						Pass, is a direct descendent of Chief Seattle through his mother, the
						great-grandaughter of the famous chief. Mrs. Hattie Thompson , his wife, is
						half-Suquamish through her mother who married George Harmon, a sailor on the 
						<emph> U.S.S. Decator</emph> when that vessel shelled the Indians during the
						Battle of Seattle.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Charles Hayden Thompson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Jan Newstrom</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jan Newstrom Thompson is a Seattle artist and arts patron who
				  was acquainted with members of the Northwest School of Art, especially Morris
				  Graves, Mark Tobey, and Kenneth Callahan.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">15</container><container type="item">GravesM1</container><unittitle>Jan Thompson, Morris Graves, and Zoe Dusanne at the
					 Seattle Art Museum</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of the original.</p><p>Filed under Morris Graves subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Hugh</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonH1</container><unittitle>Hugh Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, John Rex (May 8, 1855 - September 4,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Rex Thompson was born in Black Hill, England and came to
				  the United States in the 1880s. A pioneer Puget Sound steamboat owner and
				  master, he owned the Thompson Steamship Company with his brothers. His fleet
				  was purchased by Joshua Green, head of the Puget Sound Navigation Company in
				  1901. The next year, he began development of the Bellingham Bay Transportation
				  Company to increase service between Seattle and Whatcom County. Thompson was a
				  member of the Knights Templar, Royal Arch Masons and Woodmen of the World, and
				  was a presiding officer of most of the branches of the York and Scottish Rite
				  Masonry. He married Harriett Blewitt in 1877.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonJR1</container><unittitle>Captain John Rex Thompson and the fleet of the
					 Thompson Steamboat Company</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><note><p>Included in the photograph are the steamships 
						<emph>Prosper,</emph><emph>Lydia Thompson,</emph><emph>Majestic,</emph><emph>Garland,</emph><emph>Evangel,</emph> and<emph>Alice Gertrude.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Levant Frederick (December 6, 1827 – May 27,
				  1894)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Levant Frederick Thompson was a pioneer, hop grower, banker, and
				  American politician in the state of Washington who served in the Washington
				  State Senate from 1889 to 1893. Thompson was born in Jamestown, New York, the
				  fourth child of Harvey Thompson and Laura Cole, and the only son. After
				  realizing he did not have the means to attend college, he left home in 1848 to
				  seek his fortune. He made his way from Jamestown to Placerville, California,
				  working various jobs and traveling by steamboat, train, stage, team and wagon,
				  horseback, and on foot. He came to Pierce County, Washington Territory in the
				  early 1850s. In addition to serving in the State Senate, he served with the
				  Indian Department and was the incorporator of the Merchants National Bank of
				  Tacoma, serving as its director. He was a director of the Washington National
				  Bank and became president of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of King County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonLF1</container><unittitle>Levant Frederick Thompson </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Luella "Lulu" (October 1, 1870 - November 28,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Luella "Lulu" J. Thompson, the daughter of Aaron and Mariam
				  Thompson, was born in Petersburg, Illinois. She graduated from the University
				  of Washington in 1890 with a degree in education. She taught at the Meany
				  School in Seattle for several years before moving back to Illinois. She married
				  George Hardin Codington in 1900 in Chicago.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonLJ1</container><unittitle>Luella "Lulul" J. Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">LaRoche &amp; Company, Seattle</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Margaret Myrtle May Hollinshead (September 16,
				  1892 - January 30, 1969)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Myrtle May Hollinshead, the daughter of George
				  Hollinshead and Adelia Fisk Hollinshead, graduated from the University of
				  Washington in 1936 with a degree in education. She was the superintendent of
				  the Benton County School System from 1950 until her retirement in 1963. She
				  also wrote a number of books, including<emph> Space for living: a novel of the
				  Great Coulee and Columbia Basin</emph>,<emph>High Trails of Glacier National
				  Park</emph>, <emph>The Conservation of Northwest Resources</emph>, and<emph> On
				  the trail with Marcus Whitman</emph>. She married William 'Otto' Thompson in
				  1918.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonMMMH1</container><unittitle>Margaret Myrtle May Hollinshead Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Thomas Gordon (November 28, 1888 – August 10,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Gordon Thompson, an American chemist and oceanographer,
				  received his bachelor's degree from Clark University at Worcester,
				  Massachusetts, in 1914. With the support of a scholarship from the British Iron
				  and Steel Institute, he then began graduate studies at the University of
				  Washington and received a doctorate in chemistry in 1918. During World War I,
				  Thompson served in the United States Army in the Ordnance and Chemical Warfare
				  Branch, rising to the rank of captain. Returning to the University in 1919, he
				  was promoted to associate professor in 1923 and to full professor in 1929.
				  Thompson, the first American chemist to devote his major efforts to
				  investigating the chemistry of sea water, founded the University of
				  Washington's oceanographic laboratories in 1930. This was an interdepartmental
				  institution that drew its staff from the departments of physics, chemistry,
				  bacteriology, botany and zoology. Two years later, as a result of Thompson's
				  guidance, the University placed a small research vessel, <emph>Catalyst,</emph>
				  in service to perform inshore oceanographic work in the Pacific Northwest. Over
				  the years, Thompson developed methods for the quantitative determination of
				  many elements and ions in sea water. His main interest lay in determining the
				  relationship between the chemical and physical properties of sea water. He
				  participated in international geographic and oceanographic ventures, serving on
				  or chairing committees and co-authoring studies of specific oceanographic
				  matters. During World War II, he again served in the United States Army,
				  eventually rising to the rank of colonel. In 1945, Thompson purchased McConnell
				  Island off Washington State, financed through the sale of his valuable stamp
				  collection. In 1951, his efforts in the field of oceanography were rewarded
				  when the University of Washington established a department of oceanography.
				  Thompson was recognized as one of the world's leading oceanographers and one of
				  the pioneers of our understanding of the chemistry of the sea. Late in his life
				  he was promoted to professor emeritus. Two oceanographic research ships have
				  been named <emph>Thomas G. Thompson </emph>n his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonTG1</container><unittitle>Thomas Gordon Thompson, with an unidentified man,
					 holding a metal bottle used for sampling ocean waters.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1937</unitdate></did><note><p>A photograph that appears to have been taken at the same time
					 was published in the June 13, 1937 <emph>Seattle Times.</emph> Dr. Thompson was
					 on board the<emph> Catalyst</emph> preparing to send down a metal bottle to
					 sample ocean waters</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, Tommy Kuni (1864? -April 12, 1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tommy Kuni Thompson served as the headman of Wyam, also called
				  Celilo Village, and was the salmon chief at Celilo Falls during the final
				  decades of the traditional Indigenous fishery there. Thompson assumed the role
				  of salmon chief around 1900, following the death of his uncle, Chief Stocketly.
				  As salmon chief, he oversaw the annual first-salmon ceremony, regulated fishing
				  seasons, and enforced spiritual practices integral to the Waashat religion. He
				  was a lifelong advocate not only for his community, but also for mid-Columbia
				  Indian treaty fishing rights and the way of life and the natural resources they
				  protected, standing against construction of The Dalles Dam which ultimately
				  submerged Celilo Falls in 1957, displacing communities and disrupting
				  traditional fishing practices.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonTK1</container><unittitle>Tommy Kuni Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, William Francis (April 3, 1888 - November 7,
				  1965)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> William Francis Thompson was an American ichthyologist and
				  fisheries scientist who researched the exploitation and management of the
				  stocks of Pacific halibut for the fisheries department in British Columbia in
				  the early 20th century, as well as the restoration Fraser River sockeye salmon
				  run in the mid twentieth century. He attended the University of Washington for
				  three years, and received his bachelor of arts degree from Stanford in 1911. He
				  received a doctorate from Stanford in 1930, completing the research for his
				  dissertation at the Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, California. From
				  1917 to 1924, he was a scientist and director of the California State Fisheries
				  Laboratory. He joined the University of Washington School of Fisheries in 1930.
				  Four years later, he became director of the University’s then department of
				  Fisheries, which he headed until 1947 when he became founder and the first
				  director of the Fisheries Research Institute on campus. He was the founder and
				  first president of the American Institute of Fishery Research Biologists.
				  Between 1937 and 1943, he was the director of the international Pacific Salmon
				  Commission working in Canada and Alaska. Thompson retired in 1958 at the age of
				  70. He was often called the father of American fisheries biology, developing
				  the theory of conservation of fish through fisheries management and
				  regulation.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonWF1</container><unittitle>William Francis Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s-1940s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Kennell-Ellis, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thompson, William Henry (March 10, 1848 - August 10,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Henry "Will" Thompson was born in Calhoun, Georgia and
				  graduated from Calhoun Academy and the Georgia Military Academy. In 1863, he
				  joined the Confederate Army, serving with the 4th Georgia Infantry. He
				  participated in the campaign of the Wilderness, at Spotsylvania Court House,
				  Cold Harbor and other battles. His service was as a private, the title of
				  colonel he later used was honorary. After the war, he was a civil engineer in
				  Indiana before being admitted to the bar in 1872. He came to Seattle in 1889
				  and formed the law firm of Thompson, Edsen &amp; Humphries, continuing with
				  that firm until 1896 when he was appointed general Western counsel for the
				  Great Northern Railroad. He remained with Great Northern until 1904. He
				  attained a national reputation as an author and poet, and was a frequent
				  contributor to magazines. He also wrote the libretto for a comic opera, 
				  <emph>The Lion Heart,</emph> that was accepted by Victor Herbert. Thompson was
				  the author, along with his brother Maurice, of <emph>How to Train in
				  Archery.</emph> He was an enthusiastic archer and as the organizer of the
				  American National Archery Association, was known as the father of archery in
				  America. He was the national archery champion from 1878 to 1884.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThompsonWH1</container><unittitle>William Henry Thompson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thomson, David (February 21, 1871 - October 25,
				  1953)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Thomson was a professor of Latin at the University of
				  Washington. In a career of more than 50 years at the University, he had held
				  most of the important campus posts. He had been acting president, vice
				  president, dean of the College of Arts &amp; Sciences, dean of faculties, dean
				  of academic guidance, and a professor of Latin. David Thomson Hall was named in
				  his honor in 1948. Dean Herbert T. Condon once said of him that no man had
				  served in so many campus activities. A native of Orillia, Ontario, Canada, he
				  graduated from the University of Toronto in 1892. He was a student at the
				  University of Chicago for three years and was assistant professor of Latin
				  there until 1902 when he joined the University of Washington. In 1908 and 1909,
				  he went to Munich, Germany for additional studies. He became dean of the
				  College of Liberal Arts in 1917 and was dean of faculties from 1927 until 1931.
				  In 1926, he was named acting president. A year later, he was offered the
				  permanent position as president but declined. He was vice president from 1931
				  to 1934, and dean of academic guidance from 1934 to 1937. From 1937 until his
				  retirement in 1947, he was vice dean of the College of Arts &amp; Sciences.
				  During his last years on campus, he served as an advisor to pre-law
				  students.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD1</container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: David Thomson, Professor Latin, Dean of
						the College of Arts and Scieces and vice-presidents. (sic)</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD2</container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1911</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: With love and good wishes, Seattle, Sept.
						10, 1911</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD3</container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD4</container><unittitle>David Thomson sitting in a chair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><note><p>Photograph appears to have been taken at the same time as
						previous photo ThomsonD3</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD5</container><unittitle>David Thomson sitting in a car, Herbert T. Condon
					 standing next to the car, in front of Thomson Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: "The best of success to you! Give us a
						thought while you are gone. Your old friends here will be having you in mind,
						you may be sure." David Thomson; "While away, will (?) never forget your old
						friends. " Herbert T. Condon</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD6</container><unittitle>David Thomson sitting in a car</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD7</container><unittitle>David Thomson , Maude Thomson, Herbert T. Condon and
					 Nelson Wahlstrom sitting in a 1947 or 1948 Dodge convertible by Thomson
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Dedication Thomson Hall, June 6, 1948</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD8</container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD9</container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: David Thomson, 17th pres. of UW</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD10 </container><unittitle>David Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920-1929</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Thomson, Maude A. (May 2, 1869 - August 20,
				  1959)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Maude Mair was born in Perth, Ontario, Canada, the youngest
				  daughter of Richard Holmes Mair and the niece of Charles Mair, a well-known
				  Canadian poet and writer. She moved to Winnipeg , Manitoba where she married
				  Augustus Clark Archibald in 1891; Archibald died in 1904. She married David
				  Thomson, University of Washington professor, in 1911, moving to Seattle the
				  same year. She was very active in the social life of the University and in the
				  University Faculty Wives’ Club, the Red Cross and the University Congregational
				  Church. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">37</container><unittitle>Maude A. Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Walters, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD7</container><unittitle>David Thomson , Maude Thomson, Herbert T. Condon and
					 Nelson Wahlstrom sitting in a 1947 or 1948 Dodge convertible by Thomson
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Dedication Thomson Hall, June 6, 1948</p><p>Filed under David Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thomson, Reginald Heber (March 20, 1856 - January 1,
				  1949)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Reginald Heber Thomson, a self-taught American civil engineer,
				  was born in Indiana and graduated from Hanover College in 1877. He arrived in
				  Seattle in 1881 and worked as a surveyor. He became city engineer in 1892 when
				  the post was created and held the position for two decades. Among his
				  achievements were the railway route through Snoqualmie Pass, the Lake
				  Washington Ship Canal, much of the paving of Seattle's roads and sidewalks,
				  numerous bridges over rivers and valleys, and major improvements to Seattle's
				  sewer system, as well as straightening and deepening the Duwamish River and
				  developing the Cedar River watershed, now one of Seattle's major sources of
				  drinking water. He was also responsible for much of the re-grading of Seattle,
				  taking down hills and filling in the tide flats, and played a major role in the
				  creation of Seattle City Light (the public electric utility), the Port of
				  Seattle, and the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks. Elsewhere, Thomson consulted on
				  projects such as the Rogue River Valley Irrigation Canal, water development for
				  Bellingham, Washington, and power plants in Southeastern Alaska. Overlapping
				  his tenure as city engineer, he was president of the University of Washington
				  board of managers (1905–1915). Broadview-Thomson Elementary School is named for
				  him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Reginald Heber Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><note><p>Signed on front: Reginald H. Thomson for Jean</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH2</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><note><p>Copy of photograph</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH3</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson seated at a desk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1939</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. </p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH5</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson walking in Seattle on Third
					 Avenue near Pike Street</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930s-1940s?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH6</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 20, 1926</unitdate><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH8</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson at the 48th annual meeting of
					 the Washington Good Roads convention in Bellingham in September, 1946; Thomson
					 and Lee Monohan are seated in the front row.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1946</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH9</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1942</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Reginald H. Thomson, 1942, (age 86), taken
						at the time he was consulting engineer for the Toll Bridge Authorities.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH10</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson with Lee Monohan and Mr.
					 Putnam during the 48th annual meeting of the Washington Good Roads convention
					 in Bellingham in September, 1946.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1946</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Lee Monohan and R. H. Thomson questioning
						a paper in Mr. Putnam's hands.</p><p>Mr. Putnam may be Charles Edgar Putnam (1881-1952), former
						assistant state highway engineer and the design engineer for the Ross Dam
						Project.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH11</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson, William H. Murphy and Ellis
					 Morrison on a trip to study locations for a power house.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Reginald H. Thomson, (center), on a trip
						to study location for a power house, 1902. City Councilmen William H. Murphy
						(left) and Ellis Morrison accompianed him.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH12</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson standing on a flag and bunting
					 draped platform with a group of unidentified men.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1930</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: "To my friend, R. H. Thompsom, August 27,
						1930. Frank Gates"</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH13</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1926</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH14</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of unidentified
					 men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edward A. Bromley, staff photographer Minneapolis Times</persname></origination><note><p>The newspaper, the <emph>Minneapolis Times</emph>, was
						published from 1889 until 1901.</p><p/></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">10</container><container type="item">DonovanJJ2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Donovan with group at
					 convention</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: The old guard as they appeared at the
					 Bellingham Convention. The only one not present is H. W. Parry. It is
					 remarkable that this group of road builders, active leaders in the state, each
					 in his chosen work should have lived to a ripe old age and that five of them
					 are still living and with us today. The bottom row: J. J. Donovan, R. L. Kline,
					 Frank Terrace, (Leander) Lee Monohon, Claude Ramsay. The second row: W. A.
					 Bolinger, Sam Hill, W. P. Perrigo, A. L. Rodgers. Top row: Judge Cornelius
					 Hanford, Eli Rockey, R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman.</p><p>A. L. Rogers' name is spelled as "Rodgers" on the photo.</p><p>Filed under John Joseph Donovan subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thornell, William Raven (1855 - April 27,
				  1895)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Raven Thornell was born in New York and graduated from
				  College of the City of New York. He worked for the American Fire Insurance
				  Company and the Phoenix Assurance Company before moving to Colorado to work for
				  the Denver &amp; Rio Grande Railroad. In 1883, he came to Seattle to work for
				  the Northern Pacific Railroad as an engineer. He was the superintendent,
				  secretary and treasurer of the Columbia &amp; Puget Sound Railroad and the
				  manager of the Seattle, Lake Shore &amp; Eastern Railroad. He was the assistant
				  treasurer of the Seattle Iron Corporation in 1888. Thornell married Cora Louise
				  Taylor in 1886; she and their daughter, also named Cora, died in May 1888. In
				  1884, he was the secretary and played left field for the Seattle Reds baseball
				  club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington Territory and
				  British Columbia). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thornton, Augustus Willoughby (April 6, 1833 - October
				  27, 1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Augustus Willoughby Thornton was born in Ireland in 1833 and
				  graduated from Trinity College, Dublin at the age of eighteen. After completing
				  his medical studies, he acted as surgeon on one of the Cunard steamers sailing
				  between Liverpool, England, and New York City. He later built and operated a
				  hospital in Muswellbrook, Australia, spending several years in that country
				  before coming to the United States in 1867. After several years in California,
				  he moved to Ferndale, Whatcom County, Washington where he opened a practice and
				  a drug store. After retiring from his medical practice, he devoted his
				  attention to agricultural pursuits. He was the first to glimpse the
				  possibilities of the dairy industry, introducing many new grasses, including
				  flax, to the region. He introduced the first orchards in this section of the
				  country and introduced the eucalyptus tree to California, in cooperation with
				  the University of California horticultural department. He devised a method of
				  arresting the progress of the sheep scab which was destroying the flocks of
				  California, and introduced the California pepper trees to Australia. He wrote
				  several books, including European System of Flax Culture, Americanized and
				  Adapted to the local conditions of the U.S.A, especially Puget Sound and
				  Suburbanite handbook of dwarf fruit tree culture. In 1855, Thornton married
				  Annette Callahan, of Dublin, Ireland; they had eleven children. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorntonAW1</container><unittitle>Augustus Willoughby Thornton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1887</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Written on verso: Father, 1887</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thornton, Harrison Robertson (January 22, 1858 - August
				  20, 1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harrison Roberton Thornton, the son of John and Martha Thornton,
				  was born in Virginia. He and his wife, Neda, were missionaries in Cape Prince
				  of Wales, Nome, Alaska, where they operated a school for the American
				  Missionary Association. They taught English and Christianity; however, serious
				  disputes began to develop between Thornton and the Indigenous population. He
				  was killed when three young boys fired a whaling gun through the door of his
				  house.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorntonHR1</container><unittitle>Harrison Robertson Thornton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s-1893?</unitdate><note><p>Copy of a photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thorp, Fielden Mortimer (April 13, 1822 - February 11,
				  1893)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Fielden Mortimer Thorp was born in Missouri. He married Margaret
				  Bounds in 1842. In 1844, they crossed the plains to Oregon, following the same
				  route traveled by the American Board missionaries of 1836, reaching the
				  Willamette Valley where they initially settled. They arrived in the Yakima
				  Valley in 1858 to graze cattle. In 1860, Thorp moved again, taking a herd of
				  more than 250 Durham cattle and 60 horses into the Moxee Valley. The Thorps
				  were briefly the only non-Native settlers in the area. Thorp, an unincorporated
				  community and census-designated place in Kittitas County, Washington, is named
				  for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorpFM1</container><unittitle>Fielden and Margaret Thorp</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thorp, Leonard Lycurgus (October 16, 1845 - October 2,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Leonard Lycargus Thorp, the son of Fielden and Margaret Thorp,
				  was born in Independence, Polk County, Oregon in 1845. He moved with his family
				  to Yakima, Washington and then to the Moxee Valley. In 1866, he drove 160 head
				  of beef cattle to the British Columbia and Montana mines. He married Philena
				  Henson in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorpLL1</container><unittitle>Leonard Lycurgus Thorp and Philena Henson
					 Thorp</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thorp, Margaret Bounds (January 30, 1822 - April 30,
				  1888)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Bounds, the daughter of John Bird Bounds and Elizabeth
				  Lovelady Bounds, was born in Tennessee. She married Fielden Thorp in 1842. In
				  1844, they crossed the plains to Oregon, where they initially settled in the
				  Willamette Valley. They moved to the Yakima Valley in 1858 and later to the
				  Moxee Valley. The couple had thirteen children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorpFM1</container><unittitle>Fielden and Margaret Thorp</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Fielden Mortimer Thorp subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thorp, Philena Henson (May 28, 1852 - October 2,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philena Henson was the daughter of Alfred Henson and Martha
				  Bounds Henson. The family crossed the plains to Oregon when Philena was six
				  weeks old. She married Leonard Lycurgus Thorp in Yakima in 1869.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThorpLL1</container><unittitle>Leonard Lycurgus Thorp and Philena Henson
					 Thorp</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Filed under Leonard Lycurgus Thorp subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Three Feathers (Me-tat-ueptas)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Three Feathers (Me-tat-ueptas) was a member of the Nez Perce
				  Tribe who was a signatory to the Treaty of Peace and Friendship between the
				  United States and Nez Perce Tribe on August 6, 1855, as well as the treaties of
				  October 17, 1855 and June 9, 1863.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThreeFeathers1</container><unittitle>Three Feathers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Throssell, Mary Letitia (April 23, 1848 - January 13,
				  1917)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Letitia Birston was born in Glencoe, Oregon in 1848. Her
				  parents, Alexander and Janet (Tate) Birston arrived in Oregon in 1841 with a
				  party of relatives and neighbors from what is now Manitoba; most of the men in
				  the party had been employees of Hudson’s Bay Company. The family moved to
				  Vancouver, Washington in 1860. In 1867, she married Thomas Throssell, who had
				  arrived in Oregon in the 1850s. In 1871, the couple moved to Waitsburg,
				  Washington; Thomas managed a flour mill in Marengo, Washington and moved his
				  family there in 1873. They lived in Marengo until moving to Roy, Washington.
				  Thomas was died in 1902. The couple had seven children.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThrossellML1</container><unittitle>Mary Throssell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1916</unitdate><note><p>The photograph, which has been re-touched, appeared in the
						May 3, 1916 edition of the<emph>Seattle Post-Intelligencer.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thurlow, Alfred Eugene (May 3, 1859-April 8,
				  1957)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Eugene Thurlow, the son of Alfred E. Thurlow and Sarah
				  Britton Thurlow, was born in Peoria, Illinois and came west with his parents in
				  1872, first to San Francisco and then to Seattle by sailing ship. He lived in
				  Semiamoo Bay near Bellingham before returning to Seattle in 1881 to learn the
				  foundry trade. In 1883, he cast the wheels for the first horse drawn streetcar
				  in the city. He later set up a nail foundry in Port Townsend. In 1896, he
				  returned to Seattle and became the proprietor of the Enterprise Brass and
				  Foundry. Thurlow also worked as a boat builder and steamship captain. He
				  piloted <emph>The Beaver,</emph> the first steamship on the west coast.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurlowAE1</container><unittitle>Alfred Eugene Thurlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1919?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thurlow, Edward (December 9, 1731- September 12,
				  1806)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Thurlow, 1st Baron Thurlow, was a British lawyer and Tory
				  politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1765 to 1778 when he was raised
				  to the peerage as Baron Thurlow. He served as Lord High Chancellor of Great
				  Britain for fourteen years and under four Prime Ministers.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurlowE1</container><unittitle>Lord Edward Thurlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1806</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Baron Edward Thurlow, Lord Thurlow, for whom
					 Thurlow Islands were named. From the painting by T.(Thomas) Phillips, now in
					 the National Portrait Gallery, London.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurlowE2</container><unittitle>Lord Edward Thurlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1806</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Lord Thurlow From the painting by T.(Thomas)
					 Phillips, now in the National Portrait Gallery, London. Photograph copyrighted
					 by Walker &amp; Cockrill. Rights secured for this work in England and
					 America.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurlowE3</container><unittitle>Lord Edward Thurlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1806</unitdate></did><note><p>From a painting by T.(Thomas) Phillips, now in the National
					 Portrait Gallery, London. Photograph copyrighted by Walker &amp; Cockrill.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thurlow, Sarah Britton (December 2, 1838 - August 4,
				  1919)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Britton Whitton was born in England. She married Alfred E.
				  Thurlow in Peoria in 1858. They came west in 1872, first to San Francisco and
				  then to Seattle by sailing ship. Her husband became a pioneer boatbuilder in
				  Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurlowSB1</container><unittitle>Sarah Britton Thurlow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appears in the May 9, 1908 edition of the 
						<emph>Seattle Daily Times.</emph></p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thurman, Howard Washington (November 18, 1899 – April
				  10, 1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Howard Washington Thurman was an American author, philosopher,
				  theologian, Christian mystic, educator, and civil rights leader. A prominent
				  religious figure, he played a leading role in many social justice movements and
				  organizations of the twentieth century. Thurman's theology of radical
				  nonviolence influenced and shaped a generation of civil rights activists, and
				  he was a key mentor to leaders within the civil rights movement, including
				  Martin Luther King Jr. In 1944, he co-founded, along with Alfred Fisk, the
				  Church of the Fellowship of All People, the first major interracial,
				  interdenominational church in the United States. Thurman was born in Daytona
				  Beach, Florida. After completing eighth grade, Thurman attended the Florida
				  Baptist Academy in Jacksonville, Florida. One hundred miles from Daytona, it
				  was one of only three high schools for African Americans in Florida at the
				  time. In 1923, Thurman graduated from Morehouse College as valedictorian. In
				  1925, he was ordained as a Baptist minister at First Baptist Church of Roanoke,
				  Virginia, while still a student at Rochester Theological Seminary (now Colgate
				  Rochester Crozer Divinity School). He graduated from Rochester Theological
				  Seminary in May 1926 as valedictorian. From June 1926 until the fall of 1928,
				  Thurman served as pastor of Mount Zion Baptist Church in Oberlin, Ohio. In the
				  fall of 1928, he moved to Atlanta, Georgia, where he had a joint appointment to
				  Morehouse College and Spelman College in philosophy and religion. Thurman
				  served as dean of Rankin Chapel at Howard University from 1932 to 1944 and as
				  dean of Marsh Chapel at Boston University from 1953 to 1965. After leaving
				  Boston University in 1965, Thurman continued his ministry as chairman of the
				  board and director of the Howard Thurman Educational Trust in San Francisco.
				  Thurman was a prolific author, writing twenty books on theology, religion, and
				  philosophy. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThurmanHW1</container><unittitle>Dr. Howard Thurman speaking at the University of
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Tyee Photo Lab</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the 1953 edition of the 
					 <emph>Tyee</emph> with the caption, "Dr. Thurman headlined the Religious
					 Emphasis Week program by speaking daily on "The Quest for Life."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Thyne, Josiah M. (March 29, 1903 - February 19,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Josiah M. (Cy) Thyne was born in Boston. He worked for F.E.
				  Company on hydraulic mining in Fairbanks, Alaska ca. 1930s - ca. 1950s. His
				  papers are held at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">ThyneJM1</container><unittitle>Josiah M. Thyne with friends at Pike St. Senior Hotel
					 bar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1980 and 1989?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Josiah M. Thyne with friends at Pike St.
					 Senior Hotel (bar). Uncle Cy -center.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tibbals, Harry Lewis Tibbals (December 18, 1828 - April
				  22, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Captain Harry Lewis Tibbals was born in Middletown, Connecticut.
				  He went to sea as a boy, rising until, at the age of twenty, he was master of a
				  brig running to the West Indies. In 1853, he tested the first diving bell built
				  in the United States. He subsequently fitted out the bark, <emph>Emily
				  Banning,</emph> and spent several years on the Spanish Main working on sunken
				  ships and pearl fishing. He explored the wreck of the Spanish frigate <emph>San
				  Pedro</emph>, which went down in 1814 with over $3 million in treasure and
				  recovered $68,000 before he was ordered away by the Mexican government. He
				  fished for pearl oysters for several years in Panama and off the coast of
				  Acapulco before shipping as the master of the clipper <emph>What Cheer</emph>,
				  sailing between San Francisco and Sydney, Australia. Tibbals joined the revenue
				  cutter <emph>Jeff Davis</emph> as master and proceeded to Port Townsend in 1856
				  before finally settling ashore. For years, he was the Puget Sound pilot of the
				  Pacific Coast Steamship Company; he became their agent in 1871 and built the
				  Union Dock, the principal dock in Port Townsend. He served as a member of the
				  territorial legislature, and as sheriff, county commissioner, postmaster and
				  councilman. His son, Henry Lewis Tibbals, served several terms as mayor of Port
				  Townsend. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TibbalsHL1</container><unittitle>Captain Harry Lewis Tibbals</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tibbetts, George Washington (January 22, 1845 - March 8,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Tibbets, a native of Maine, enlisted in Company F, Fourth
				  New Hampshire Infantry, at the age of 15 and served throughout the Civil War,
				  including seven months spent in a Confederate military prison in North Carolina
				  during the winter and spring of 1865. He married Rebecca Wilson on March 11,
				  1868. The couple lived in Missouri for several years after the war, where
				  George had business ventures and did some farming. They then homesteaded in
				  Oregon in 1871 before moving to Washington in 1873 where they settled in
				  Issaquah along the creek that bears his name. As he began his many successful
				  business ventures, including a farm, a store, a hotel, and a coach line,
				  Tibbetts also helped organize the first of the nearly one hundred GAR posts
				  that would eventually form around the state. He was elected to the Territorial
				  Legislature, and was a brigadier general in the National Guard of Washington
				  during the early days of that organization. He was later commander of the Old
				  Soldiers’ Home in Port Orchard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TibbettsGW1</container><unittitle>George and Rebecca Tibbetts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tibbetts, Rebecca Ann Wilson (August 15, 1849 - July 29,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rebecca Ann Wilson, the daughter of Solomon and Sarah Wilson,
				  was born in Missoula, Montana. She married George Washington Tibbetts in 1868
				  and moved west to Oregon in 1871 before eventually settling in Issaquah,
				  Washington. She was a charter member of the Stevens Post of the Women's Relief
				  Corps.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TibbettsGW1</container><unittitle>George and Rebecca Tibbetts</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1909?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">James &amp; Bushnell, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Washington Tibbetts subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ticknor, Ida Fuller (July 9, 1846 - January 2,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ida Fuller was born in New York. She married Seth F. Ticknor in
				  1867. The Ticknors, accompanied by a party of eight, came to Seattle from
				  Albion, New York in the spring of 1877. They crossed the continent by railroad
				  to San Francisco and then sailed to Seattle on the steamship 
				  <emph>Dakota</emph> of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TicknorIF1</container><unittitle>Ida and Seth Ticknor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the <emph>Seattle
					 Post-Intelligencer</emph> on February 25, 1917 and again on March 9, 1922.The
					 photograph has been retouched.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ticknor, Seth Frederick (October 4, 1836 - March 23,
				  1924)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Seth Frederick Ticknor was born in Yates, New York. He entlisted
				  in the Union Army on March 17, 1863 and was mustered into A Company of the New
				  York 8th Heavy Artillery, serving until the end of the war. He married Ida
				  Fuller in 1867. The Ticknors, accompanied by a party of eight, came to Seattle
				  from Albion, New York in the spring of 1877. They crossed the continent by
				  railroad to San Francisco and then sailed to Seattle on the steamship 
				  <emph>Dakota</emph> of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. They bought several
				  lots located on the northeast corner of Pike and 8th from Arthur Denny. Seth
				  worked as a carpenter.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TicknorIF1</container><unittitle>Ida and Seth Ticknor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1917</unitdate></did><note><p>The photograph appeared in the <emph>Seattle
					 Post-Intelligencer</emph> on February 25, 1917 and again on March 9, 1922. The
					 photograph has been retouched.</p><p>Filed under Ida Ticknor subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tiffany, William Robert (June 20, 1920-December 12,
				  1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Robert Tiffany served in the Signal Corps during World
				  War II and was a professor of speech and hearing at the University of
				  Washington after the war. He was in charge of the hearing center at the
				  University.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AdamsEH4</container><unittitle>Edwin Adams with Howard Snider, Marine 1st. Lt,
					 Bellingham, Washington, and William R. Tiffany, Signal Corps Sergeant,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1940 and 1949?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Edwin H. Adams subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tikhon, Archbishop (January 21, 1865 - April 7,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Tikhon of Moscow, born Vasily Ivanovich Bellavin, was a bishop
				  of the Russian Orthodox Church. From 1878 to 1884, Bellavin studied at the
				  Pskov Theological Seminary. In 1888, at the age of 23, he graduated from the
				  Saint Petersburg Theological Academy as a layman. He then returned to the Pskov
				  Seminary and became an instructor of Moral and Dogmatic Theology. In 1891, at
				  the age of 26, he took monastic vows and was given the name Tikhon in honor of
				  St. Tikhon of Zadonsk. Tikhon was consecrated Bishop of Lublin on October 19,
				  1897. On September 14, 1898, he was appointed Bishop of the Aleutian Islands
				  and Alaska. He went to the United States, and eventually became a naturalized
				  American citizen. He visited emerging Orthodox emigrant communities in various
				  American cities, including New York City, Chicago and the coal-mining and
				  steel-making cities in Pennsylvania and Ohio. On November 5, 1917, he was
				  selected the 11th Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia. He was canonised as a
				  confessor by the ROC in 1989.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">Tikhon1</container><unittitle>Archbishop Tikhon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1898s?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tilley, Jerry David (December 29, 1941 - March 26,
				  2016)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jerry David Tilley, the son of Frank E. Marlow, enlisted in the
				  Air Force on September 16, 1959 and served until 1967. He was selected for
				  technical training as a communications operation specialist while in the
				  service. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TilleyJD1</container><unittitle>Jerry David Tilley in Air Force uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Frank E. Marlow collection. Jerry D.
						Tilley, USAF</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tilton, James (August 10, 1819– November 23,
				  1878)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James Tilton was the first Surveyor General of the Washington
				  Territory, serving from August 1, 1854 until July 17, 1861. He was also a
				  soldier and a politician. He was born in Wilmington, Delaware, to Dr. James and
				  Frances Gibson Tilton. The family moved to Indiana in 1827. He studied to
				  become a surveyor, joined the United States Navy and was wounded twice in the
				  Mexican–American War. As a politician, Tilton campaigned vigorously in Indiana
				  for presidential candidate Franklin Pierce, and was rewarded with the position
				  of Surveyor General of the Washington Territory. He traveled to Olympia,
				  Washington, arriving in the spring of 1855. Tilton tried to establish a
				  principal meridian for the Washington Territory, as the pre-existing
				  Oregon-based Willamette Meridian was not convenient for his purposes, but his
				  proposal was rejected by his superior. Tilton continued to live in Olympia for
				  some years after his term as Surveyor General ended in 1861, when he was
				  succeeded by Anson G. Henry. After his defeat in an election for territorial
				  delegate, he returned briefly to Indiana and then to the family home in
				  Wilmington, before returning to the Pacific Northwest to work for the Northern
				  Pacific Railroad Company. As "railroad surveyor James Tilton," he is credited
				  with being the first to climb Denny Mountain in 1867. He eventually returned
				  east and died in Washington, D.C., in 1878. The Tilton River and Fort Tilton,
				  near what is now Fall City, Washington, are both named in his honor.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TiltonJ1</container><unittitle>James Tilton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1850s</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: James Tilton, First surveyor general
						appt'd 1853.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tindal, Mr. &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">Tindal1</container><unittitle>Mr. and Mrs. Tindal with two young girls in 1910
					 Mitchell automobile in Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tinker, Joseph Bert (July 27, 1880 – July 27,
				  1948)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Bert Tinker was an American professional baseball player
				  and manager who played from 1902 through 1916 for the Chicago Cubs and
				  Cincinnati Reds of Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Chicago Whales of the
				  Federal League. Born in Muscotah, Kansas, Tinker began playing
				  semi-professional baseball in Kansas in the late 19th century, first in Kansas
				  City, then in Parsons. He began his professional career in 1900 in minor league
				  baseball, initially in Denver then with Portland in the Northwestern League. He
				  made his MLB debut with the Cubs in 1902. Tinker was a member of the Chicago
				  Cubs dynasty that won four pennants and two World Series championships between
				  1906 and 1910. After playing one season with Cincinnati in 1913, he became one
				  of the first stars to jump to the upstart Federal League in 1914. After leading
				  the Whales to the pennant in 1915, he returned to the Cubs as their
				  player-manager in 1916, his final season in MLB. Tinker returned to minor
				  league baseball as a part-owner and manager for the Columbus Senators before
				  moving to Orlando, Florida, to manage the Orlando Tigers. While in Orlando,
				  Tinker developed a real estate firm, which thrived during the Florida land boom
				  of the 1920s. However, the 1926 Miami hurricane and Great Depression cost
				  Tinker most of his fortune, and he returned to professional baseball in the
				  late 1930s. With the Cubs, Tinker was a part of a great double-play combination
				  with teammates Johnny Evers and Frank Chance that was immortalized as
				  "Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance" in the poem "Baseball's Sad Lexicon". Tinker was
				  elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1946, the same year as Evers
				  and Chance. He has also been honored by the Florida State League and the city
				  of Orlando.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TinkerJB1</container><unittitle>Joseph Bert Tinker in Jersey City Club baseball
					 uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 12, 1930</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Associated Press Photo, New York</corpname></origination><note><p>Material with photograph: Famous shortstop manager of the
						Jersey City Club. Joe Tinker, famous member of the "Tinker to Evers to Chance"
						trio of the old Chicago Cubs, as he appeared in a Skeeter uniform August 12,
						when he took over the managerial reins of the Jersey City, New Jersey
						International League club. Tinker, one of the smartest players that ever wore a
						National League uniform and a splendid judge of talent, succeeds Nick Allen. In
						1913 he manager (sic) the Cincinnati Reds and later piloted the Chicago Federal
						League team for two years Since then he was a minor league manager and scout
						for the Chicago Cubs.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tobey, Mark George (December 11, 1890 – April 24, 1976)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mark George Tobey was an American painter whose densely
				  structured compositions, inspired by Asian calligraphy, resemble Abstract
				  Expressionism, although the motives for his compositions differ philosophically
				  from most Abstract Expressionist painters. His work was widely recognized
				  throughout the United States and Europe. Along with Guy Anderson, Kenneth
				  Callahan, Morris Graves, and William Cumming, Tobey was a founder of the
				  Northwest School. Senior in age and experience, he had a strong influence on
				  the others; friend and mentor, Tobey shared their interest in philosophy and
				  Eastern religions. Similar to others of the Northwest School, Tobey was mostly
				  self-taught after early studies at the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1921, Tobey
				  founded the art department at The Cornish School in Seattle, Washington. Tobey
				  traveled widely, visiting Mexico, Europe, Palestine, Israel, Turkey, Lebanon,
				  China , and Japan. After converting to the Baháʼí Faith, it became an important
				  part of his life. Born in Centerville, Wisconsin, Tobey lived in the Seattle,
				  Washington area for most of his life before moving to Basel, Switzerland in the
				  early 1960s. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG1</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey, wearing suit and tie, in
					 profile</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">B. L. Aldrich Photo Studio, Portland, Oregon</persname></origination><note><p>Written on front: To my friend, Per Hallsten, from Mark
						Tobey.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG2</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1939</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ernst Kassowitz, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG3</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey sitting in an armchair, reading, with
					 painting behind him.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 6, 1951</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">The Seattle Times</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared in the <emph>Seattle Times</emph> on
						September 6, 1951, and was taken at Tobey's studio in the University
						District.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG4</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey and Helen Boswell in<emph> Joy</emph>, a
					 play by John Galsworthy, directed by Burton James.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1924</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Wayne Albee, McBride Studio, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso of image: Mark Tobey &amp; Helen Boswell in
						<emph>Joy</emph> by Galsworthy, directed by Burton James.</p><p>Written on verso of copy of photograph: Mark Tobey and Helen
						Boswell in <emph>Joy</emph> by Galsworhty, direc. by Burton James, photo by
						Wayne Albee, McBride Studio. Prob. Cornish School.</p><p>The play was presented at the Cornish School on June 13 and
						14, 1924.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG5</container><unittitle>Pehr Hallsten, Mark Tobey and Wes Wehr, sitting at a
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April, 1962</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Uchida, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG6</container><unittitle>Portrait sketch of Mark Tobey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of original</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG7</container><unittitle>Portrait sketch of Mark Tobey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of original</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG8</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1960s</unitdate><origination><persname>Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Basle by Lord Snowdon, given to W. W. by
						Mark Witter. Restricted: consult Lord Snowdon.</p><p>"W. W." is probably Wes Wehr.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG9</container><unittitle>Backyard of Mark Tobey's house at 5018 University Way,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>Gift of Wesley Wehr, 1966</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG10</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey, standing beside a house, arms
					 crossed.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa1964</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: Sweet, Sweet. Written on verso: Dear Wes,
					 Happy New Year. hello to Bob when you write. "Spiritually" yours, Mark &amp;
					 Helmid</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG11</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey,standing beside a house, arms
					 crossed.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>Same image as above, Tobey MG10; Written on verso: Gift of
					 Wesley Wehr, 1966</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG12</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey, behind his studio on University
					 Way</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 15, 1964</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG13</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey, behind his studio on University Way,
					 looking to his right.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 15, 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>Taken at the same time as TobeyMG12</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG14</container><unittitle>Mark Tobey, behind his studio on University Way,
					 looking to his right.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 15, 1964</unitdate></did><note><p>Taken at the same time as TobeyMG12</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Todd, Hugh Clifford (February 16, 1884 - March 2,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugh Clifford Todd was born in Cheney, Washington. He served as
				  county clerk of Whitman County from 1907 to 1909. He graduated from Washington
				  State College (now Washington State University) and from Georgetown Law School
				  and began his law practice in Seattle in 1911. He served in the Washington
				  State Legislature and was a Democratic candidate for governor in 1911. He
				  managed the election campaigns for two governors, Ernest Lister and Clarence
				  Martin. Todd served as a King County Superior Court judge for 25 years,
				  retiring in 1959. In 1938, he was the first judge to rule that the Communist
				  Party of the United States believed in the overthrow of the federal government
				  by force in a case where the Communist Party had sued the city of Seattle
				  because it was refused use of the Civic Auditorium.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RonaldJT2</container><unittitle>Judge James T. Ronald's 90th Birthday
					 Party</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1945</unitdate><note><p>Standing (left to right): Austin E. Griffiths, William G.
						Long, Roger J. Meakim, Matthew W. Hill, James W. Hodson, James T. Lawler,
						Chester A. Batchelor, Donald A. McDonald, Hugh C. Todd, Thomas E. Grady, John
						S. Robinson, Clyde G. Jeffers, Kenneth Mackintosh, Calvin S. Hall, Howard M.
						Findley, Adam Beeler, Clay Allen, Robert M. Jones, Robert S. Macfarlane. Seated
						(left to right): Charles H. Leavy, John C. Bowen, Francis A. Garrecht, J. T.
						Ronald, Walter B. Beals, Bruce Blake, William J. Steinert, James B. Kinne</p></note><note><p>Filed under James Theodore Ronald subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tollefson, Thor Carl (May 2, 1901 – December 30,
				  1982)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thor Carl Tollefson, an American attorney and politician, was a
				  U.S. representative for Washington's 6th congressional district from 1947 to
				  1965. Born in Perley, Minnesota, Tollefson moved to Tacoma, Washington, in
				  1912. After his father died, Thor dropped out of school and went to work in
				  Tacoma lumber mills to provide for his family. It wasn't until 1922, when
				  Tollefson was in his early 20s, that he resumed studies at Lincoln High School
				  while continuing to work in a mill at night. Upon graduation in 1924, his
				  mother insisted that he get a college education, and he enrolled at the
				  University of Washington in Seattle. After earning his bachelor's degree, he
				  continued on to legal studies at the UW Law School. Tollefson was admitted to
				  the bar in 1930 and began practice in Tacoma. He was the prosecutor of Pierce
				  County from 1938 to 1946, and was a delegate to the Republican State
				  conventions in 1936, 1938, 1940, 1942 and 1944. He was elected as a Republican
				  to represent Washington's 6th congressional district in 1947. He sat on the
				  committee on merchant marine and fisheries, and pushed for public facility
				  ownership in Mount Rainier National Park, proposing legislation that would
				  allow the National Park Service to purchase park facilities owned by Rainier
				  National Park Company, which had struggled to maintain profitability during the
				  park's 60-day season. Public ownership would allow for expansion of park
				  facilities, proponents of Tollefson's bill said. The bill passed in 1950. He
				  was an unsuccessful candidate for re-election in 1964. Governor Daniel J. Evans
				  tapped Tollefson to serve as state Fisheries Department director. Tollefson was
				  later appointed director of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
				  After he retired as director, he took a part-time job as a special assistant to
				  Evans for international fisheries negotiations, and he continued to serve as
				  one of three U.S. representatives to the International Pacific Salmon
				  Commission.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TollefsonTC1</container><unittitle>Thor Carl Tollefson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Smith Studio, Tacoma, Washington</corpname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TollefsonTC2</container><unittitle>Thor Carl Tollefson and four unidentified men; U. S.
					 Congress building in background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TollefsonTC3</container><unittitle>Thor Carl Tollefson and five unidentified men; U. S.
					 Congress building in background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tolman, Warren Winfield (December 8, 1861 – May 15,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Warren W. Tolman was a justice of the Washington Supreme Court
				  from 1918 to 1937. Born in Illinois, Tolman received a law degree from
				  Northwestern University in 1888. He moved to Washington in 1892, and served in
				  the Washington State Senate from 1901 to 1905. He ran unsuccessfully for a seat
				  on the supreme court in 1906 and 1910. In 1914, he was a candidate for the
				  Democratic nomination for a seat in the United States Congress. On May 11,
				  1918, Governor Ernest Lister jointly appointed Tolman and John R. Mitchell to
				  vacant seats on the court. Tolman was chief justice from 1925 to 1926, and
				  again from 1931 to 1932. Tolman resigned from the court in 1937 due to failing
				  health. Tolman was notable for his efforts to establish a railroad commission.
				  In addition to his state service, he also served on the Spokane school board
				  from 1903 to 1906 and as a member of the Washington State Commission to the
				  Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in 1904.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmanWW1</container><unittitle>Warren Winfield Tolman in judicial robes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Grady, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, Caroline May (September 29, 1900 - April 19,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caroline May Tolmie was the daugher of William Fraser Tolmie and
				  Jane Work Tolmie. She married John St. Clair Harvey in 1930.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF2</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park. Simon Fraser and Caroline Tolmie St. Clair Harvey
					 standing by the Mowick Entrance of Mt. Rainier National Park, with US and
					 Canadian flags.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Premier &amp; Mrs. Tolmie, 2 Sept 1933. Mrs.
					 Mary Anne Tolmie died January 14, 1933, and newspaper accounts refer instead to
					 Caroline St. Clair Harvey, who assisted in the unveiling of the plaque.</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, Jane Florence Allison (December 16, 1894
				  -September 7, 1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Jane Florence Allison "Jean" Tolmie was the daughter of William
				  Fraser Tolmie and Jane Work Tolmie. She married Leonard Robb Andrews in
				  1920.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, John Wende Fraser (April 17, 1898 - November 18,
				  1950)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Wende Fraser Tolmie was the son of William Fraser Tolmie
				  and Jane Work Tolmie.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, Simon Fraser (January 25, 1867 - October 13,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Simon Fraser Tolmie was a veterinarian, farmer, politician, and
				  the 21st premier of British Columbia, Canada. Tolmie was the son of Dr. William
				  Fraser Tolmie, a prominent figure in the Hudson's Bay Company and a member of
				  both the colonial assembly of Colony of Vancouver Island and the Legislative
				  Assembly of British Columbia. He graduated from the Ontario Veterinary College
				  in 1891 and later became the Dominion Inspector of Livestock before entering
				  politics in 1917, becoming Unionist MP for Victoria City. He was returned in
				  the subsequent four elections as a Conservative. Tolmie served as Minister of
				  Agriculture in the governments of Sir Robert Borden and Arthur Meighen from
				  1919–1921, and in 1926. Tolmie was elected leader of the British Columbia
				  Conservative Party in 1926 but continued to sit as a Member of Parliament until
				  the 1928 provincial election, in which he ran and was elected MLA for Saanich.
				  The Conservatives were victorious that year, and Tolmie became Premier of the
				  province, also serving as Minister of Railways and as the province's Minister
				  of Agriculture and President of the Council. The Conservatives lost in the 1933
				  election, and Tolmie lost his own seat. He returned to politics three years
				  later, regaining his old federal seat of Victoria in a 1936 by-election. He
				  died in Victoria a little over a year later.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF2</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park. Simon Fraser and Caroline Tolmie St. Clair Harvey
					 standing by the Mowick Entrance of Mt. Rainier National Park, with US and
					 Canadian flags.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Premier &amp; Mrs. Tolmie, 2 Sept 1933. Mrs.
					 Mary Anne Tolmie died January 14, 1933, and newspaper accounts refer instead to
					 Caroline St. Clair Harvey, who assisted in the unveiling of the plaque.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, William Fraser (February 3, 1812 – December 8,
				  1886)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Fraser Tolmie was a surgeon, fur trader, scientist, and
				  politician. He was born in Inverness, Scotland, in 1812, and by 1833 moved to
				  the Pacific Northwest in the service of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC). He
				  served for two years, 1832-33 at Fort McLoughlin. He served at Fort Nisqually,
				  an HBC post at the southern end of Puget Sound, from 1843 to 1859. In 1859 he
				  moved to Victoria, British Columbia, where he continued serving the HBC as well
				  as becoming active in politics. His written works include <emph>Comparative
				  Vocabulary of the Indian Tribes of British Columbia</emph>(1884), and his
				  journals, which were published in 1963 as<emph> The Journals of William Fraser
				  Tolmie.</emph>Tolmie's son, Simon Fraser Tolmie, was the twenty-first Premier
				  of British Columbia. William Fraser Tolmie's name is associated with Tolmie
				  Peak near Mount Rainier and Tolmie's saxifrage (Micranthes tolmiei), which he
				  discovered there. Tolmie State Park in Washington is named for him, as are
				  Mount Tolmie, Tolmie Channel, and Tolmie Point in British Columbia. Tolmie
				  Street in Vancouver is also named for him. Other plants bearing his name
				  include Tolmie's star-tulip (Calochortus tolmiei) and Tolmie's onion (Allium
				  tolmiei). The scientific name of MacGillivray's warbler, Oporornis tolmiei, is
				  also named for him.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieWF1</container><unittitle>William Fraser Tolmie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieWF2</container><unittitle>William Fraser Tolmie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 59953</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieWF3</container><unittitle>Photograph of a plaque at the entrance to Mt. Rainier
					 National Park.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Engraved on the plaque: This entrance to Mt. Rainier National
					 Park, a replica of a Hudson’s Bay Post, is erected by the National Park Service
					 to commemorate the arrival here 100 years ago, September 2, 1833, of Dr.
					 William Fraser Tolmie, the first white man to explore this area, and an
					 outstanding citizen who long served the Pacific Northwest as physician, farmer,
					 trader, explorer, factor, legislator, historian and botanist. Dedicated
					 September 2, 1933, under the auspices of the Rainier National Park Advisory
					 Board in the presence of Ho. Simon Fraser Tolmie, Prime Minister of British
					 Columbia and son of the distinguished pioneer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tolmie, William Fraser Jr. (November 21, 1904 - April
				  10, 1954)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Fraser Tolmie was the son of William Fraser Tolmie and
				  Jane Work Tolmie. He married Frances Rose in 1931.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TolmieSF1</container><unittitle>Dedication ceremony for the northwest entrance to
					 Rainier National Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2, 1933</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: John Tolmie, unidentified, Caroline Tolmie St.
					 Clair Harvey, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmie, John Andrews, Jean Andrews, William F.
					 Tolmie and Major Leonard Robb Andrews.</p><p>An additional copy of this photograph is held in PH0482 Asahel
					 Curtis photographs, Curtis 60101</p><p>Filed under Simon Fraser Tolmie subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Toner, Ethelyn Becket (March 27, 1904 - January 12,
				  1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ethelyn Becket Toner was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. She
				  graduated from the University of Washington in 1926. After graduation, she
				  joined the registrar's office in 1928. Promoted to assistant registrar in 1938,
				  she became acting registrar in 1943 and registrar in 1945. As registrar, Toner
				  oversaw admissions, registration, the recording of students' credits, grades
				  and graduations, and issuing of records to students. Toner was a leader in many
				  other university activities, as secretary to the University faculty and
				  secretary to the University Senate. Toner was able to adapt to changes in
				  technology to help improve the University's record keeping, and was considered
				  responsible for converting to machine-records processing in 1957 and developing
				  advance registration to eliminate the need for students waiting in lines. Toner
				  was one of only a few women registrars in major universities at the time. She
				  became president of the Pacific Coast Association of Collegiate Registrars and
				  Admissions Officers and later was elected as second vice president of the
				  American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. Toner
				  took pride when she retired in 1963 in having never ''lost'' a student. She
				  married George Toner in 1936.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TonerEB1</container><unittitle>Ethelyn Toner with unidentified woman looking at
					 papers.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 7, 1963</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">R. Romanelli, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Topplish - see also Histo</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Histo (or Topplish), a member of the Warm Springs scouts under
				  Donald McKay, participated in the Modoc Campaign. He was approximately 80 years
				  old when the photograph was taken.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FitzgeraldMJ1</container><unittitle> Maurice Fitzgerald with Colonel Frazier Augustus
					 Boutelle and Histo, also known as Topplish</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1, 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption on front of photo: Three veterans of Modoc Indian War
					 1872-73. Note from back of photo: Presented to my esteemed friend C.B. Bagley
					 this 1st day of December 1923. Maurice Fitzgerald.</p><p>Filed under Maurice Fitzgerald subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Torney, Jack</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TorneyJ1</container><unittitle>Jack Torney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Torrance, Roscoe Conkling (September 2, 1899 - November
				  23, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Roscoe Conkling “Torchy” Torrance, one of the UW’s most
				  prominent sports boosters was born at Diamond, Whitman County. He acquired his
				  nickname while a student at Lewis and Clark High School in Spokane when, after
				  he had led a cheer during a pep assembly, a fellow student yelled “Come on
				  Torchy, lead another yell.” Well known throughout Eastern Washington as a top
				  high school baseball player, Torrance graduated from the University of
				  Washington with a degree in business administration in 1923. While at the UW,
				  he played baseball for four years and was a member of the UW squad that toured
				  Japan in 1921. As a member of the ASUW Board of Control, Torrance helped raise
				  money for the construction of the new Husky Stadium, which opened in 1920.
				  After graduation, he served as freshman baseball coach and assistant graduate
				  manager on the UW’s athletic staff. Torrance continued as a leader in Husky
				  recruiting for decades after leaving the UW. He was involved in the
				  construction of Longacres race track in 1933 and was executive vice president
				  of the Seattle Rainiers minor-league baseball team from 1938 until 1942, when
				  he volunteered for World War II duty with the Marine Corps. He was also active
				  with the Amateur Athletic Union and the U.S. Olympic Committee. Torrance was a
				  founder of the Washington Athletic Club and Northwest Hospital. As president of
				  Greater Seattle Inc. from 1952 to 1955, he helped organize the annual Seattle
				  Seafair celebration. Long active with the March of Dimes, he was serving as
				  state chairman of that campaign in 1952 when his daughter, Shirley, was
				  stricken with polio. He also served for many years on the board of directors of
				  the Salvation Army. Torrance received the UW Alumni Association’s Distinguished
				  Service Award in 1972, the Charles E. Sullivan Award from the Puget Sound
				  Sportswriters and Sportscasters in 1973, and the First Citizen Award from the
				  Seattle-King County Association of Realtors in 1989. The proceeds from
				  Torrance’s autobiography were donated to the support of the UW baseball team.
				  </p></bioghist><note><p>Photographs of Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance moved to PH Collection
				  0509 Roscoe C. Torrance collection</p></note><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD9</container><unittitle>Governor Albert Dean Rosellini, wearing New York Day
					 badge, with Debbie Sue Brown and Roscoe "Torchy" Torrance at the Seattle
					 World's Fair. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 10, 1962</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Albert Dean Rosellini subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Torrez, Elouisa Guerrero (December 23, 1921 - October
				  19, 1973)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elouisa (Louisa) Guerrero Torrez, a Chicana activist and
				  coordinator at the Active Mexicanos Center, was a member of the Seattle Women's
				  Commission in 1971 and a Seattle-King County Economic Opportunity Board. For
				  more than 20 years, she helped Chicanos and others new to the city find housing
				  and jobs often at her own expense.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Towne, Charles (January 29, 1863 - ?)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Charles Towne, the son of Smith D. and Amanda Towne, was born in
				  Petaluma, California where his father owned a drug store. Towne worked as a
				  journalist, writing for the <emph>New York Times</emph>, the <emph>Chicago
				  Tribune</emph> and the <emph>Tacoma Daily News.</emph> In 1891, he was the
				  editor and sole proprietor for the <emph>Puget Sound Lumberman.</emph> He later
				  edited the <emph>Northwest Electrical and Mining Review.</emph> In 1895, he
				  filed articles of incorporation to forma general lumber manufacturing business
				  with James W. Wallace. He moved to Buenos Aries in 1911 to engage in journalism
				  and literary work. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TowneC1</container><unittitle>Charles Towne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890s</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Ellison A. Lynn, Tacoma, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on verso: Charles Towne, prop. Puget Sound Lumberman,
					 Tacoma, Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Towne, Vernon West (September 22, 1910 - February 27,
				  2007)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Vernon West Towne was born in Rosalia, Washington. He graduated
				  from Washington State University and from the University of Washington Law
				  School. He was appointed to the Seattle Municipal Court in 1961 and first
				  elected in September, 1962. He became the Municipal Court presiding judge in
				  1975 and retired from the court in 1979.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TowneVW1</container><unittitle>Vernon West Towne in judicial robes, seated at the
					 bench. </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Townshend, George, 4th Viscount and 1st Marquess
				  (February 28, 1724 - September 14, 1807)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Field Marshal George Townshend, 1st Marquess Townshend, PC,
				  styled as the Viscount Townshend from 1764 to 1787, was a British Army officer
				  and politician. After serving at the Battle of Dettingen during the War of the
				  Austrian Succession and the Battle of Culloden during the Jacobite Rising,
				  Townshend took command of the British forces for the closing stages of the
				  Battle of the Plains of Abraham during the Seven Years' War. He went on to be
				  Lord Lieutenant of Ireland or Viceroy where he introduced measures aimed at
				  increasing the size of Irish regiments, reducing corruption in Ireland and
				  improving the Irish economy. In cooperation with Prime Minister North in
				  London, he solidified governmental control over Ireland. He also served as
				  Master-General of the Ordnance, first in the North Ministry and then in the
				  Fox–North Coalition. Townshend became Lieutenant-General of the Ordnance in the
				  Grenville Ministry in March 1763 and succeeded his father as Viscount Townshend
				  in March 1764. The Washington state city of Port Townsend was named in his
				  honor by Captain George Vancouver.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TownshendG1</container><unittitle>George Townshend, 4th Viscount and 1st Marquess
					 Townshend, standing wearing armour with his hand resting on a table, behind him
					 a tent and cavalry.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: George, First Marquis of Townshend, for whom
					 Port Townsend was named. From a mezzotint by C. Turner, after Sir Joshua
					 Reynolds</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TownshendG2</container><unittitle>George Townshend, 4th Viscount and 1st Marquess
					 Townshend, standing, wearing uniform, with his hand resting on a
					 table.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: George, First Marquis of Townshend,
					 Mezzotint by J. McArdell after Thomas Hudson, painter. The Right Honorable
					 George Lord Viscount Townshend, Lieut. General and General Governor of the
					 Kingdom of Ireland.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TownshendG3</container><unittitle>George Townshend, 4th Viscount and 1st Marquess
					 Townshend </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1759</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of an engraving by Samuel William Reynolds, published by
					 Hodgson &amp; Graves, after Sir Joshua Reynolds mezzotint, published 1838.</p><p>Written on verso: Hon. George Townshend, 1759. On his father's
					 death he became the fourth Viscount Townshend, 12 March, 1764. He was created
					 the first Marquis Townshend of Rockingham, on 31 October 1786. He was honored
					 by Capt. George Vancouver in the naming of Port Townsend, 8 May, 1792. This
					 portrait and the later one in my book, p. 94, were by Sir Joshua Reynolds. This
					 photograph received from Henry H. Townshend, New Haven Conn.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tracey, Agnes Ford (April 1, 1894 - August 19,
				  1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Agnes Ford married Walter Tracey on January 17, 1918. Her
				  father, James C. Ford, was vice president and general manager of the Pacific
				  Coast Company and president of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. She was the
				  president of the Washington State Women's Public Golf Links Association in the
				  1930s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TraceyW1</container><unittitle>Group wedding photograph of Walter Tracey and Agnes
					 Ford Tracey along with five other unidentified couples</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 17, 1918</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Walter Tracey subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Tracey, Walter (March 26, 1894 - September 18,
				  1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter Tracey was a lawyer who was the field director for the
				  New York War Council during World War II. He served in World War I from May 19,
				  1917 until April 15, 1919 as an intelligence officer. He married Agnes Ford on
				  January 17, 1918.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TraceyW1</container><unittitle>Group wedding photograph of Walter Tracey and Agnes
					 Ford Tracey along with five other unidentified couples</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 17, 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Travis, Ivan</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TravisI1</container><unittitle>Ivan Travis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Treacy, William (May 31, 1919 - October 16,
				  2022)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>William Treacy was born in Dublin and was ordained as a priest
				  on June 18, 1944. Not long after his ordination, Father Treacy volunteered for
				  a temporary assignment in Seattle, arriving in March 23, 1945. What was
				  supposed to be a five-year assignment turned into a lifelong ministry to people
				  of the Archdiocese of Seattle. He served as director of the Catholic
				  Information Center in downtown Seattle from 1958 to 1966. In November 1978,
				  Father Treacy started a daily Mass in downtown Seattle at Plymouth Church that
				  continued for more than 40 years. Other assignments included vice chancellor
				  for the archdiocese, chaplain at Holy Names Academy in Seattle for nearly 12
				  years and archdiocesan chaplain for the Legion of Mary for a decade. Father
				  Treacy joined Rabbi Raphael Levine on the original panel of 
				  <emph>Challenge,</emph> a pioneering program on KOMO-TV that debuted in 1960.
				  Treacy and Levine later established Camp Brotherhood, an ecumenical, religious
				  educational and cultural center in Mount Vernon, in 1967. </p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">22</container><container type="item">LevineRH2</container><unittitle>Rabbi Raphael Levine, Rev. Martin Goslin and Father
					 William Treacy during the KOMO-TV Challenge Panel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1988</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Rabbi Raphael Levine subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Treadgold, Donald Warren (November 24, 1922 - December
				  13, 1994)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Donald Warren Treadgold was born in Silverton, Oregon and earned
				  his B.A. degree in 1943 at the University of Oregon. His studies were
				  interrupted by military service between 1943 and 1946 in Europe where he rose
				  to rank of captain in the military intelligence. In 1947 he earned his Master’s
				  degree at Harvard and his Doctor of Philosophy three years later at Oxford. In
				  1949 he joined the University of Washington from which he retired at the end of
				  June 1993. He wrote several books, including <emph>Lenin and His Rivals</emph>
				  (1955), <emph>The Great Siberian Migration</emph> (1957), <emph>Twentieth
				  Century Russia</emph> (1959), the two-volume <emph>The West in Russia and
				  China</emph> (1973), and <emph>A History of Christianity</emph> (1979), the
				  revision of which was left unfinished at the time of his death. <emph>Freedom:
				  A History </emph>(1990) was the last volume Professor Treadgold wrote, but not
				  his last publication. He wrote hundreds of articles, lectures and book reviews
				  and edited <emph>The Development of the USSR</emph> (1964) and <emph>Soviet and
				  Chinese Communism</emph> (1967). He co-edited (with Larry Lerner), 
				  <emph>Gorbachev and the Soviet Future</emph> (1988), and with Peter Sugar,
				  seven of the planned ten volumes of <emph>A History of East-Central Europe.
				  </emph>Treadgold was the editor of the <emph>Slavic Review,</emph> and Chair of
				  the History Department for ten years, Acting Chair of what is now the Jackson
				  School; President of American Association for Slavic, East European, and
				  Eurasian Studies (1977); Program Committee Chair for the III World Congress of
				  International Committee on Soviet and East European Studies; Chair of the
				  Academic Advisory Committee of the Kennan Institute; and Chair of the Joint
				  Committee on Slavic Studies of ACLS. Among his awards and honors he received
				  were a Rhodes Scholarship; a Ford Foundation Fellowship; a Rockefeller
				  Foundation Grant; a Guggenheim Fellowship; the E. Harrison Harbison Award for
				  Distinguished Teaching; the Phi Beta Kappa Scholar nomination; the AAASS Award
				  for Distinguished Service and another for Distinguished Contributions to Slavic
				  Studies; and an election as a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
				  Sciences.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TreadgoldDW1</container><unittitle>Donald Warren Treadgold</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Information Services, University of Washington</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Treat, Harry Whitney (December 13, 1865 - July 30,
				  1922)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Businessman Harry Whitney Treat arrived in Seattle from New York
				  in 1902. He bought hundreds of acres of land north of Ballard where he
				  developed the Loyal Heights area and Golden Gardens Park. The Treats owned a
				  mansion on Queen Anne Hill, a large country estate in Loyal Heights, and were
				  active in Seattle society. The neighborhood of Loyal Heights was named for the
				  Treats' daughter. Treat was an avid horseman who was particularly known for his
				  skill in handling horse teams. During the 1911 Golden Potlatch ceremonies,
				  Treat was named the Duke of Seattle and was the driver for the queen of the
				  Potlatch, Daphne Pollard.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PollardD1</container><unittitle>Queen Daphne Pollard in her coach during the 1911
					 Golden Potlatch ceremony</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between July 17, 1911 and July 22, 1911</unitdate></did><note><p>The coach was driven by Harry Treat, named Duke of Seattle for
					 the Golden Potlatch ceremony.</p><p>Filed under Daphne Pollard subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Treen, Lewis Angevine (November 24, 1834 - March 22,
				  1921)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Lewis Angevine Treen, the son of Henry and Sarah A. Treen, was
				  born at Wallace River, Nova Scotia. He lived in Medway, Maine, and became a
				  United States citizen in 1859. He was mustered into the United States service,
				  on May 25, 1861, and served for three years, as a corporal of Company E,
				  Massachusetts Volunteers. He came to Puget Sound in 1866 as a member of the
				  Mercer party. He first opened a shoe store and factory in Olympia where he
				  worked out a system of measurements by which he would guarantee a perfect fit.
				  He moved the company to Seattle in 1878 and went into business on First Avenue
				  South.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TreenLA1</container><unittitle>Lewis Angevine Treen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 24, 1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Jacobs Photo Shop, Seattle</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Trimble, Ada R. (August 8, 1883 - September 13,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ada Trimble, the daughter of William Jesse Trimball and Anne
				  Hicks Trimble, attended the Union Hill School in what is now Redmond,
				  Washington. After graduation, she owned a dress shop. She married Charles W.
				  Leeper in 1912 and Charles W. Huffman in 1925.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OlsonGT1</container><unittitle>Gunner Olson with Ada Trimble and group of school
					 children at the Union Hill School</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gunner T. Olson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Trimble, Sarah Benson Allen (May 31, 1811 - January 9,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sarah Benson was born in Tennessee and moved to Illinois at an
				  early age. She married Samuel Allen (1805-1876) in 1827. The couple went first
				  to Missouri and then to Oregon, arriving in 1847. They settled in Abiqua, two
				  and one-half miles from Silverton. For many years, their home was a stopping
				  place for immigrants because they were noted for their hospitality. In 1870,
				  they left Abiqua and moved to Salem. Samuel Allen died in 1875. Sarah married
				  Stephen Alfred Trimble, an Oregon pioneer of 1852, in 1878.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TrimbleSBA1</container><unittitle>Sarah Benson Allen Trimble</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Troy, David Smith (November 17, 1870 - August 18,
				  1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>David Troy Smith was born in Washington and graduated from Puget
				  Sound University in 1890. After graduation, he served as deputy county clerk
				  for Clallam County for two years, then went to the Merchants’ National Bank in
				  Port Townsend for seven years, before taking over the management of a large
				  dairy farm in Chimicum that had branches throughout Jefferson and Clallam
				  Counties. Troy was also manager and partner of the Ladd estate in Portland,
				  which he later acquired. He entered politics in 1906 and was elected to the
				  House. He served in the Senate during the sessions of 1911 and 1913,
				  representing Jefferson, Clallam and San Juan Counties. He was chair of the
				  appropriations committee in 1913 and was the author of the bill that created
				  the Washington State Department of Agriculture. Troy was recognized as a
				  leading authority on dairy farming and was a member of the WSU Board of Regents
				  from 1910-16. The original dairy building on the campus of Washington State
				  University, was named for him. His brother, John Weir Troy, was the governor of
				  Alaska Territory from 1933 to 1939.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TroyDS1</container><unittitle> David Smith Troy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910-1916?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Signed on front</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Troy, John Weir (October 31, 1868 — May 2,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Weir Troy, an American Democratic politician, was the
				  governor of Alaska Territory from 1933 to 1939. He was born in Dungeness,
				  Washington and began his professional career in journalism, starting as a
				  newspaper reporter in Port Townsend, Washington, shortly after graduating from
				  high school there. He would publish newspapers in Washington and Alaska between
				  1891 and 1914. He was the editor of <emph>Alaska-Yukon Magazine</emph> from
				  1911 to 1912. Following this, he was the editor of the <emph>Daily Alaskan
				  Empire </emph>for twenty years, before being appointed governor in 1933.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TroyJW1</container><unittitle>John Weir Troy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1898-1900?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">J. E. Thomas, Port Angeles, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph. Original in PH Coll. 334,
					 Thomas.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Troy, Laura Bass Weir (March 26, 1849 - February 13,
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Laura Bass Weir, the daughter of John and Saluda Weir, was born
				  at Mt. Pleasant, Texas. She crossed the plains in a covered wagon with her
				  parents in 1853. The family first located in Los Angeles before moving to
				  Dungeness, Washington Territory in 1860. She married Smith Fenton Troy in 1865.
				  Her son, John Weir Troy, was a newspaper publisher and governor of Alaska
				  Territory (1933-1939). Another son, David Smith Troy, was a Washington State
				  Senator, and a third son, Preston Troy, was an attorney and nominee for the
				  State Supreme Court. Her brother. Allen Weir, was the Secretary of State for
				  Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TroyLBW1</container><unittitle>Laura Bass Weir Troy</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1900-1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>She is wearing a pin on her dress, possibly an Eastern Star
					 pin.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Troy, Smith (August 31, 1906 - January 17,
				  1984)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Smith Troy, the son of Preston Troy and Eva Sturdevant Troy, was
				  a member of a Thurston County pioneer family. He was appointed state attorney
				  general by Governor Clarence Martin in 1939 after the incumbent attorney
				  general, Garrison Hamilton, died in office. At the time of his appointment,
				  Troy was the Thurston County Prosecutor. He served out the remainder of
				  Hamilton's term and was reelected in 1944 and again in 1948. From 1943 to 1945,
				  Troy served in the Army in Europe as Lieutenant Colonel Troy and earned five
				  battle stars. During this time, Troy's deputy served as acting Attorney
				  General. Important and noteworthy cases handled during Troy's tenure included
				  the condemnation actions surrounding the creation of Olympic National Park.
				  Much of the land the federal government sought to condemn to create the park
				  contained valuable timber owned by the State. Troy filed suit against the
				  federal government; the settlement was eventually reached with the State
				  received more than 99 percent of the total amount claimed in its suit. In
				  another important case, he represented the state in its attempt to get insurers
				  to reimburse the state for the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, with the
				  insurers eventually agreeing to fully reimburse the State. Troy was also
				  successful in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court involving the fishing rights
				  of Native Americans. The Court held that in signing various treaties with the
				  native tribes in the 19th century, the state had not given up the right to
				  regulate fishing by tribe members outside native lands. Despite his incumbency,
				  Troy lost reelection in 1952. He returned to private practice in Olympia where
				  he remained an active member of the state bar until his death in 1984.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TroyS1</container><unittitle>Smith Troy seated at desk, talking on the
					 telephone</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1940s</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Trullinger, John Corse (July 29, 1828 - April 28,
				  1901)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Corse Trullinger was born in Indiana and crossed the plains
				  to Oregon in 1848 with his father’s family. In the following winter, he and his
				  brother went to the mines in California before returning to Oregon where he
				  engaged in warehousing in Milwaukee, Oregon. In 1852, he took up a claim nine
				  miles south of Portland on the Tualatin River, where he cleared fifty acres of
				  brush and timber land and put up a flourmill and sawmill. He was among the
				  first to plant an orchard and sow timothy hay. In 1863 he bought property at
				  Oswego, and rebuilt the sawmill there. He laid a logging railway from the
				  Tualatin River to Sucker Lake, placed a steam scow on the lake, and made a
				  portage to connect with the Willamette River. He bought a farm nearby which he
				  stocked with cows in order to have a steady supply of beef, butter and milk for
				  his workers. His lumber mills, at their peak, are said to have produced 1
				  million feet per month. In 1863, with A. A. Durham, he purchased a half
				  interest in the townsite of Oswego and established the first pig of iron run
				  from the iron works. In 1870 he bought the old flourmill at Centerville in
				  Washington County, which he operated until 1873, when it burned. In 1875 he
				  bought a forty-acre tract at Astoria and erected a sawmill. Trullinger was also
				  an inventor who held several patents, including the “Duplex Axe” and a turbine
				  water wheel. In addition, he was a mayor (Astoria, 1885-1887) and later a
				  legislator. He created Astoria’s first electric light company which became the
				  Astoria Electric Company, later absorbed by the Pacific Power &amp; Light
				  Company in 1910.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TrullingerJC1</container><unittitle>John Corse Trullinger</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1870s -1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Truman, Harry S. (May 8, 1884 – December 26,
				  1972)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry S. Truman was the 33rd president of the United States,
				  serving from 1945 to 1953. As the 34th vice president in 1945, he assumed the
				  presidency upon the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt that year. Subsequently,
				  Truman implemented the Marshall Plan in the aftermath of World War II to
				  rebuild the economy of Western Europe, and established both the Truman Doctrine
				  and NATO to contain the expansion of Soviet communism.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MitchellHB4</container><unittitle>Hugh Burnton Mitchell with President Harry Truman and
					 Warren G. Magnuson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1950 and 1952?</unitdate></did><note><p>Signed on front: To Paul Coughlin, with every good wish for
					 '50. Mitch.</p><p>Filed under Hugh Burnton Mitchell subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS1a-c</container><unittitle>Inaugural dinner in honor of Harry S. Truman,
					 President of the United States and Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the
					 United States by the Presidential Electors of the United States at the
					 Mayflower Hotel, Washington D. C.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 19, 1949</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Schutz, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>Photograph of the banquet was cut into three separate
						photographs</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS2</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and cabinet</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 9, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Abbie Rowe, Washington D. C.</persname></origination><note><p>John R. Steelman, Assistant to the President; Philip B.
						Fleming, Federal Works Administrator; William A. Harriman, Secretary of
						Commerce; Julius A. Krug, Secretary of the Interior; Lewis B. Schwellenbach,
						Secretary of Labor; Clinton P. Anderson, Secretary of Agriculture; Jesse M.
						Donaldson, Postmaster General; James V. Forrestal, Secretary of Defense; George
						C. Marshall, Secretary of State; Harry S. Truman; John W. Snyder, Secretary of
						the Treasury; and Tom C. Clark, Attorney General.</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><unittitle>TrumanHS3</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Harry S. Truman</unitdate></did><note><p>Photograph of a drawing</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">39</container><container type="item">TrumanHS4</container><unittitle>President Harry S. Truman and unidentified men at the
					 dedication ceremony for the Grand Coulee Dam</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 11, 1950</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Trumbull, Harlan Leo (May 29, 1886 -
				  January 21, 1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harlan Trumbull graduated from the UW in 1907 with a degree in
				  chemistry. He was active in student affairs, including the debate team. He
				  worked for B. F. Goodrich as a research chemist. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">6</container><container type="item">ByersHG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Professor Byers with students and
					 Dean Charles W. Johnson posed on the grounds of the University</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The names are written on verso: Mrs. Johnson, Henry Kreitzer
					 Benson, Harlan Trumbull, Charles W. Johnson, Rose Kahn (Kahan), Horace Deming,
					 and (Paul) Hopkins</p><p>Filed under Horace Greeley Byers subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tschudin, Mary</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TschudinM1</container><unittitle>Mary Tschudin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Missing 2025</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tsutakawa, George (February 22, 1910 – December 18,
				  1997)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Tsutakawa was an American painter and sculptor best known
				  for his avant-garde bronze fountain designs. Born in Seattle, Washington, he
				  was raised in both the United States and Japan. He attended the University of
				  Washington, where, after serving in the U.S. Army during World War Two, he
				  became a teacher. He rose to international prominence as a fountain designer in
				  the 1960s and 1970s. During his long career more than 70 of his distinctive
				  fountains were placed in public spaces. Tsutakawa is often associated with the
				  progressive 'Northwest School' of artists, and is among the major, influential
				  figures of modern Asian-American art.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TsutakawaG1</container><unittitle>George Tsutakawa with his sculpture for the Education
					 Opportunity Program</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April, 1975</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">University Photography, University of Washington</corpname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR0169/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tucker, General</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">Tucker1</container><unittitle>General Tucker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tucker, Joseph Edwin (October 17, 1833 – December 13,
				  1910) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Joseph Edwin Tucker was an American politician in the state of
				  Washington who served in the Washington House of Representatives from 1889 to
				  1891. Tucker was born in Ohio and came to Washington in 1881, settling on a
				  farm at Friday Harbor. He was a lawyer by profession and served during the
				  Civil War in the 50th and 69th Ohio regiments. He served as a probate judge of
				  San Juan County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TuckerJE1</container><unittitle>Joseph Edwin Tucker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Rogers, Olympia, Washington</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tullis, Amos Fletcher (January 6, 1830 - May 17,
				  1900)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Amos Fletcher Tullis was born in Indiana and was orphaned at an
				  early age. In 1852, he crossed the plains with his brothers John and James.
				  Arriving first in Portland and then moving north to Olympia. Tullis found
				  employment in the sawmills of Olympia and Tumwater. During the Indian War in
				  1855, he was appointed captain by Acting-Governor Mason, and with a small
				  command, guarded the transportation of the mails between Monticello, near the
				  mouth of Cowlitz River and Olympia. At the end of the war in 1856, he purchased
				  a farm in Lewis County, where he engaged in farming, dairying and stock
				  raising. He sold the farm in 1885 and moved to Tacoma, where he invested in
				  real estate. During his residence in Lewis County, he held several positions as
				  Sheriff, County Commissioner and also as a member for the counties of Lewis and
				  Thurston in Territorial Legislature. In 1880, he was appointed to the
				  Territorial Board of Commissioners to build an asylum of on the old side of
				  Fort Steilacoom, which had been donated for that purpose. In 1887 he became one
				  of the County Commissioners of Pierce County.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TullisAF1</container><unittitle>Amos Fletcher Tullis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1880s</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Turner, Edward Lewis (August 9, 1900 - February 4,
				  1960)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Lewis Turner was the vice president for scientific
				  activities of the American Medical Association and the first dean of the
				  University of Washington Medical School. He was born in Illinois and graduated
				  from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in 1928. He came to Seattle
				  in 1948 as the dean of the new medical and dental schools at the University.
				  His original planning and selection of key staff members were credited in large
				  part with the growth in scientific stature of both schools. Before coming to
				  Seattle, he had spent three years at the American University in Beirut,
				  Lebanon, leaving there to become the head of the Medical Department of Meharry
				  Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee; he became president of Meharry in
				  1938. In 1944, he went into private practice in Bradford, Pennsylvania, and in
				  1948, came to the University of Washington. The health sciences concept, under
				  which the Medical School, Dental School, School of Nursing and School of
				  Pharmacy were operated under a coordinated administration, originated with Dr.
				  Turner. He left the University in 1953 to become the secretary of the AMA’s
				  Council on Medical Education and Hospitals, and became a vice president of the
				  AMA in 1959. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TurnerEL1</container><unittitle>Edward Lewis Turner sitting inhis office reading a
					 journal</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1950?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Turner, Frederick Jackson (November 14, 1861 – March 14,
				  1932)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frederick Jackson Turner was an American historian during the
				  early 20th century, based at the University of Wisconsin-Madison until 1910,
				  and then Harvard University. He was known primarily for his frontier thesis and
				  trained many PhDs who went on to become well-known historians. He promoted
				  interdisciplinary and quantitative methods, often with an emphasis on the
				  Midwestern United States. Turner's essay,<emph> The Significance of the
				  Frontier in American History</emph>, included ideas that formed the frontier
				  thesis. In it, Turner argued that the moving western frontier exerted a strong
				  influence on American democracy and the American character from the colonial
				  era until 1890. He is also known for his theories of geographical sectionalism.
				  During recent years, historians and academics have argued frequently over
				  Turner's work; however, all agree that the frontier thesis has had an enormous
				  effect on historical scholarship.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TurnerFJ1</container><unittitle>Frederick Jackson Turner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Edwin R. Curtiss, Madison, Wisconsin</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Turner, Julius Thomas</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TurnerJT1</container><unittitle>Julius Thomas Turner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Turner, Robert Alexander Joseph (October 30, 1858 - June
				  27, 1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert A. Turner, a newspaperman from Missouri, moved to
				  Washington for health reasons in 1890. He and his wife, Minerva, first settled
				  in Seattle, but when he could not secure an adequately affordable space for his
				  paper plant, they moved to Ellensburg in 1891. In November 1893, Turner began
				  publishing a 12-page monthly, the <emph>Reformer’s Dawn</emph>, to advocate for
				  the People’s Party and the Populist movement. The paper quickly achieved
				  popularity, and by August 4, 1894, Turner changed the title to the 
				  <emph>Dawn</emph>. After only one issue, Turner changed the name to the 
				  <emph>Weekly Dawn</emph> to reinforce and reflect the more frequent
				  publication. The paper was published under this title from August 11, 1894 to
				  January 12, 1895, and then reverted back to the <emph>Dawn</emph> from January
				  19, 1895 until March 11, 1898. On March 18, 1898, the newspaper was renamed the
				  <emph>Ellensburg Dawn</emph>. By 1900, Turner changed the paper's political
				  affiliation to Independent and turned his and the paper’s efforts to promoting
				  the general welfare and economic development of Ellensburg and Kittitas County.
				  By 1906, the paper was published on a semiweekly basis. Turner was appointed
				  postmaster of Ellensburg in 1914 and became busy with the Thrift Stamp and
				  Liberty Bond campaigns as well as with other wartime duties. After 25 years of
				  editing the paper, Turner leased the paper to Arthur Slemmons and Jefferson D.
				  Mathews in 1915. It was absorbed by the <emph>Ellensburg Democrat,</emph> which
				  was published from January 29, 1914 to June 10, 1915, when it was then sold to
				  William Dadler, who continued to publish the paper as the <emph>Inter-mountain
				  Register.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TurnerRAJ1</container><unittitle>Robert A. Turner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Turpin, John Henry " Dick" (August 20, 1876 - March 10,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Henry "Dick" Turpin was an American sailor in the United
				  States Navy who survived the catastrophic explosions of two U.S. Navy ships: 
				  <emph>USS Maine</emph> in 1898, and <emph>USS Bennington</emph>in 1905. Turpin
				  was one of the first African Americans to hold the rank of chief petty officer
				  in the U.S. Navy, becoming a chief gunner's mate on the cruiser 
				  <emph>Marblehead </emph>in 1917. He was transferred to the Fleet Reserve in
				  1919 and retired in 1925. Throughout his career, Turpin was the Navy boxing
				  champion in several different weight classifications and was a boxing
				  instructor at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. When not
				  serving on active duty, Turpin was employed at the Puget Sound Navy Yard,
				  Bremerton, Washington, as a Master Rigger. He also qualified, in his civilian
				  capacity, as a Master Diver. During World War II, Turpin tried to return to
				  active service but was denied on account of his age. He volunteered to tour
				  Navy training facilities and defense plants to make inspire African American
				  sailors. The post office in Bremerton was renamed in his honor in 2020.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TurpinJH1</container><unittitle>John Henry "Dick" Turpin in Naval uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Public Information Officer, U. S. Navy</corpname></origination><note><p>Official U. S. Navy photograph</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tuttle, Hiram</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TuttleH1</container><unittitle>Hiram Tuttle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tweney, George H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TweneyGH1</container><unittitle>George H. Tweney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Twidwell, George L. (August 21, 1888 - August 10,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Twidwell was born in Montesano, Washington and was a
				  member of the Grays Harbor Dairymen's Association and deputy master of the
				  State Grange. He was a State Representative in the 1930s and was the head of
				  the Dairy Products Commission in 1946. He married Laura E. Minckler in
				  1916.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD2</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with group signing SB 151 creating a
					 division for the blind in the State Department of Social Security, making
					 appropriations and providing for the blind and the prevention of
					 blindness</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 15, 1937</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">A. C. Gerard</persname></origination></did><note><p>Standing (L-R): State Representative George Twidwell, State
					 Representative Victor Skinner, John Nelson with his seeing-eye dog, State
					 Senator Joseph Walter Thein.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Tyler, John (March 29, 1790 – January 18,
				  1862)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Tyler was the 10th president of the United States, serving
				  from 1841 to 1845 after briefly holding office as the 10th vice president in
				  1841. Tyler, who was born into a prominent slaveholding Virginia family, served
				  as a Virginia state legislator and governor, U.S. representative, and U.S.
				  senator and was one of two regional Whig vice-presidential nominees in the 1836
				  presidential election and the sole nominee on the 1840 Whig presidential ticket
				  as William Henry Harrison's running mate. He was elected vice president on the
				  1840 Whig ticket, succeeding to the presidency after Harrison's death 31 days
				  after assuming office, becoming the first vice president to succeed to the
				  presidency without being elected. Amid uncertainty as to whether a vice
				  president succeeded a deceased president, or merely took on his duties, Tyler
				  immediately took the presidential oath of office, setting a lasting precedent.
				  He was a stalwart supporter and advocate of states' rights, including regarding
				  slavery, and he adopted nationalistic policies as president only when they did
				  not infringe on the powers of the states. Tyler signed into law some of the
				  Whig-controlled Congress's bills, but he was a strict constructionist and
				  vetoed the party's bills to create a national bank and raise tariff rates. He
				  believed that the president, rather than Congress, should set policy, and he
				  sought to bypass the Whig establishment. Most of Tyler's Cabinet resigned
				  shortly into his term, and the Whigs expelled him from the party. Tyler was the
				  first president to have his veto of legislation overridden by Congress. He
				  faced a stalemate on domestic policy, although he had several foreign-policy
				  achievements, including the Webster–Ashburton Treaty with Britain and the
				  Treaty of Wanghia with Qing China. Tyler was a firm believer in manifest
				  destiny and saw the annexation of Texas as economically advantageous to the
				  United States, signing a bill to offer statehood to Texas just before leaving
				  office and returning to his plantation. When the American Civil War began in
				  1861, Tyler sided with the Confederacy. He presided over the opening of the
				  Virginia Secession Convention and won election to the Confederate House of
				  Representatives shortly before his death. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TylerJ1</container><unittitle>John Tyler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">TylerJ2</container><unittitle>John Tyler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall Jr. after a portrait by an unknown
					 artist from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>U</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Uehling, Edward A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UehlingEA1</container><unittitle>Edward A. Uehling</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Uhl, Willis Lemon</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UhlWL1</container><unittitle>Willis Lemon Uhl</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Uhlman, Mayor Wesley</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG3</container><unittitle>Martin Johanson and Mayor Wes Uhlman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mayor Uhlman presenting "First Citizen"
					 certificate.</p><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JohansonMG4</container><unittitle>Mayor Uhlman signing "First Citizen" certificate with
					 Martin Johanson and Marybell S. Johanson looking on</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 14, 1973</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Martin Gustav Johanson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ulbrickson, Alvin Martin (February 11, 1903 - November
				  7, 1980)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alvin Martin “Al” Ulbrickson was the head coach of the
				  University of Washington rowing team from 1927 until 1958. He graduated Phi
				  Beta Kappa from the University of Washington, and rowed while he attended
				  school there, stroking the national champion 8+s in 1924 and 1926. Once he
				  graduated from UW in 1926, he was hired as the freshman rowing coach. Under
				  Ulbrickson's leadership, UW crew went to the Olympics three times. On the first
				  occasion in the 1936 Berlin Games, UW won the gold in a stunning victory after
				  coming from behind. Gold and bronze medals were won in the 1948 and 1952
				  Olympics as well. After a 1958 defeat from the Soviet Union in the English
				  Henley Regatta, UW registered a surprising victory over the Soviets on their
				  home course in a rematch that was broadcast from behind the 'Iron Curtain' on
				  Seattle's KOMO Radio. He was inducted into the National Rowing Hall of Fame in
				  1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY5</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Alvin Ulbrickson, Elmer Leader and
					 Russell Callow</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">PocockGY6</container><unittitle>George Pocock with Russell Callow, Carroll M. Ebright
					 and Alvin Ulbrickson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under George Pocock subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ullman</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">Ullman1</container><unittitle>Ullman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ulsh, J. A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UlshJA1</container><unittitle>J. A. Ulsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Underhill, Kate McCrea Sands (August 5, 1881 - January
				  13, 1967)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Kate McCrea Sands, the daughter of William Sands and Helen
				  Hopkins Sands, was born in Brooklyn, New York. She attended Wells College in
				  Aurora, New York, and married Ernest Underhill, an insurance broker, in
				  1906.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LimbachRW3</container><unittitle>Roberta Limbach with Professor John A. Finley, Kate S.
					 Underhill, unidentified man and unidentified child</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1946?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Roberta W. Limbach subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Unsoeld, Jolene</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UnsoeldJ1</container><unittitle>Jolene Unsoeld</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Upham, Alfred Horatio (March 2, 1877 - February 17,
				  1945)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alfred Horatio Upham, the son of John and Laura Upham, was born
				  in Eaton, Ohio. He received an A.B. degree (1897), an A. M. degree (1898) and
				  an LL.D. degree (1927) from Miami University (Ohio), an A.M. degree (1901) from
				  Harvard, a Ph.D. (1908) from Columbia University and an LL.D. degree (1932)
				  from Wabash College. He was an instructor in Latin and Greek at Miami
				  University (1897 – 1900), a professor of English at the Agricultural College of
				  Utah (1902-1905), a professor of English at Miami University (1906 -1910),
				  associate professor of English Literature at Bryn Mawr College (1910-1913), and
				  professor of English at Miami University (1913-1920). Upham was president of
				  the University of Idaho (1920-1928) and president of Miami University
				  (1928-1945). </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH5</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo and Alfred A. Upham, President of the
					 University of Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster &amp; Stevens, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination><note><p>The photograph appeared on page 13 of the <emph>Seattle
						Daily Times</emph>. Dr. Upham was on the University of Washington campus to
						give the commencement day address.</p><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Urquhart, James</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UrquhartJ1</container><unittitle>James Urquhart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Urquhart, William Muir</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">UrquhartWM1</container><unittitle>William Muir Urquhart</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Usher Family</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">Usher1</container><unittitle>Usher Family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>V</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vail, Prof. Curtis</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VailC1</container><unittitle>Professor Curtis Vail</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vaille, Frank W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VailleFW1</container><unittitle>Frank W. Vaille</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Aelstyn, Marietta I.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanAelstynMI1</container><unittitle>Marietta I. Van Aelstyn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Asselt, Catherine Maple</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanAsseltCM1</container><unittitle>Catherine Maple Van Asselt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Asselt, Henry</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanAsseltH1</container><unittitle>Henry Van Asselt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Bergen, Robert (June 15, 1948 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Van Bergen was born in Federal Way, Washington and worked
				  in the hospitality industry, serving as General Manager of the Sheraton Hotel
				  in Tacoma, Washington, General Manager of the Crown Plaza San Marcos Resort in
				  Chandler, Arizona and the General Manager at a variety of hotels in Florida,
				  the Bahamas, Illinois, Texas and Colorado. He was named General Manager of the
				  Year for Central Illinois and was involved in multiple renovations and
				  ownership transitions. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanBergenR1</container><unittitle>Robert Van Bergen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1984</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Robert Van Bergen, General Mgr, Sheraton
					 Tacoma Hotel, 1984.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Bokkelen, J. J. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanBokkelenJJH1</container><unittitle>J. J. H. Van Bokkelen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Buren, Martin (December 5, 1782 – July 24,
				  1862)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Martin Van Buren was an American lawyer and statesman who served
				  as the 8th president of the United States from 1837 to 1841. A founder of the
				  Democratic Party, he had previously served as the 9th governor of New York, the
				  10th United States secretary of state, and the 8th vice president of the United
				  States. Later in his life, Van Buren emerged as an elder statesman and an
				  important anti-slavery leader who led the Free Soil Party ticket in the 1848
				  presidential election. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanBurenM1</container><unittitle>Martin Van Buren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanBurenM2</container><unittitle>Martin Van Buren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1840 and 1849?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall Jr. after a photograph by Mathew Brady
					 from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Buskirk, Philip Clayton</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanBuskirkPC1</container><unittitle>Philip Clayton Van Buskirk</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Cleeve, Richard</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanCleeveR1</container><unittitle>Richard Van Cleeve</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Van Devere, Trish (March 9, 1941 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Trish Van Devere (born Patricia Louise Dressel) is a retired
				  American actress. She was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for the film 
				  <emph>One Is a Lonely Number</emph> (1972), and won a Genie Award for the film 
				  <emph>The Changeling</emph> (1980). She is the widow of actor George C. Scott,
				  with whom she appeared in multiple films.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">33</container><container type="item">ScottGC1</container><unittitle>George C. Scott and Trish Van Devere with unidentified
					 man, possibly Peter Medek, the director of <emph>The
					 Changeling.</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1980</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George C. Scott subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Epps, T.C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanEppsTC1</container><unittitle>T. C. Van Epps</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Horn, Robert</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanHornR1</container><unittitle>Robert Van Horn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Loven, Steve</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanLovenS1</container><unittitle>Steve Van Loven</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Olinda, O. S.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanOlindaOS1</container><unittitle>O. S. Van Olinda</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Van Trump, Philemon Beecher (December 18, 1838 –
				  December 27, 1916)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Philemon Beecher Van Trump, known as P. B. Van Trump, was an
				  American pioneering mountaineer and writer who is best known for the first
				  documented ascent of Mount Rainier in 1870. Van Trump was born in Lancaster,
				  Ohio; his father, Philadelph Van Trump, and his maternal grandfather, Philemon
				  Beecher, represented the Ohio districts in the United States House of
				  Representatives. He was educated at Kenyon College and New York University. In
				  1867, he moved to Washington Territory as the private secretary to Marshall F.
				  Moore, the seventh governor of the territory; Moore was Van Trump's
				  brother-in-law. Van Trump and Hazard Stevens made the first documented
				  successful climb of Mount Rainier on August 17, 1870. Van Trump climbed the
				  mountain at least five other times, and he guided John Muir to the summit of
				  Mount Rainier in 1888. Van Trump joined the Sierra Club in 1893, making him one
				  of their first members outside California. He later served on the Sierra Club
				  committee that campaigned for the creation of Mount Rainier National Park. The
				  Stevens–Van Trump Historic Monument along the Skyline Trail in Mount Rainier
				  National Park was erected to commemorate the historic first ascent of the
				  mountain. Van Trump Park (an alpine meadow), Van Trump Creek, and Van Trump
				  Glacier, all in the national park, are named after him. Christine Falls were
				  named for his daughter, Christine.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VanTrumpPB1</container><unittitle>Philemon B. Van Trump</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">13</container><container type="item">FullerEF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Evelyn Fay Fuller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Photocopy of a page from a book. The page includes photographs
					 of Philemon B. Van Trump, Hazard Stevens and Helen Holmes.</p><p>Filed under Evelyn Fay Fuller subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Van Vechten, Betsy Scurry (July 8, 1888
				  - February 4, 1977)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Betsy Scurry was the daughter of John G. Scurry and Nelle May
				  Terry Scurry. Her mother was the eldest daughter of Charles C. Terry, a member
				  of the Denny Party which landed at Alki Point in 1851. Betsy married Abraham
				  Van Vechten in 1908 or 1909; the couple lived in Cordova, Alaska before moving
				  to California.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LewisMBT2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mary Bess Terry Lewis and Betsy
					 Scurry Van Vechten</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1890 and 1899?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">McClaire, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Mary Bess Terry Lewis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vancouver, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VancouverG1</container><unittitle>George Vancouver</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vanderbeck, Geo. See John F. Vandevanter</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vanderveer, Professor</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">Vanderveer1</container><unittitle>Professor Vanderveer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vandevanter, John F.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VandevanterJF1</container><unittitle>John F. Vandevanter</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vane, Henry (baptised March 26, 1613 – June 14,
				  1662)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Sir Henry Vane was an English politician, statesman, and
				  colonial governor. He served one term as the Governor of the Massachusetts Bay
				  Colony and supported the creation of Roger Williams' Rhode Island Colony and
				  Harvard College. A proponent of religious tolerance, he returned to England in
				  1637 following the Antinomian controversy that led to the banning of Anne
				  Hutchinson from Massachusetts. He was a leading Parliamentarian during the
				  English Civil War and worked closely with Oliver Cromwell. Vane served on the
				  Council of State that functioned as the government executive during the
				  Interregnum, but split with Cromwell over issues of governance and removed
				  himself from power when Cromwell dissolved Parliament in 1653. He returned to
				  power during the short-lived Commonwealth period in 1659 and was arrested under
				  orders from King Charles II following his restoration to the throne. Although
				  he was granted clemency by Charles II, he was charged with high treason by
				  Parliament in 1662 and was convicted. Charles withdrew his earlier clemency,
				  and Vane was beheaded on June 14, 1662. Vane was recognized by his political
				  peers as a competent administrator and a persuasive negotiator and politician.
				  His books and pamphlets written on political and religious subjects are still
				  analyzed today, and he is remembered in Massachusetts and Rhode Island as an
				  early champion of religious freedom.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VaneH1</container><unittitle>Henry Vane</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1660 and 1669?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Dennis on Kimberly</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vashon, James (Admiral)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VashonJ1</container><unittitle>James Vashon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Faugh, William D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VaughWD1</container><unittitle>William D. Faugh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Veniaminov, Ivan</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VeniaminovI1</container><unittitle>Ivan Veniaminov</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Vernier, Susan</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard Bakken and Susan Vernier in
					 front of house, both wearing hats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 15, 1972</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Yes-here-in a same shine, on a same
					 doorstep, at a same blink-flesh and flesh, wed by the day by day, haloed with
					 roses and desire. Dust on our faces! Our whole rosy earth! Odors and
					 butterflies! Wine to the taste, to the last quaff. Break the bottle and kiss!
					 Even in trousers! O we do have our day."</p><p>Filed under Richard Bakken subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">3</container><container type="item">BakkenR3</container><unittitle>Richard Bakken with Susan Vernier in front of house,
					 without hats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 15, 1972</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Richard Bakken subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vernon, James M.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VernonJM1</container><unittitle>James M. Vernon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Verrall, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VerrallJ1</container><unittitle>John Verrall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Villard, Henry</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VillardH1</container><unittitle>Henry Villard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Visscher, W. L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VisscherWL1</container><unittitle>W. L. Visscher</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vividishandi, Swami</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VividishandiS1</container><unittitle>Swami Vividishandi</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Voaden, Violet (1901-1984) See Florence Bean James
				  Collection PH1208</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955</unitdate></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Vogt, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt with two family members
					 on the porch of the Tacoma Hotel veranda</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt in front of building with
					 Nellie Vogt, Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt looking at Nellie Vogt,
					 Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Vogt, Helen</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt in front of building with
					 Nellie Vogt, Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt looking at Nellie Vogt,
					 Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Vogt, Nellie</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt in front of building with
					 Nellie Vogt, Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VogtG2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Vogt looking at Nellie Vogt,
					 Helen Vogt (baby in carriage), and Art Seaman at Volunteer Park,
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Vogt subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Voigt, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VoigtW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Voigt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Von Hofmannsthal, Hugo (February 1, 1874 – July 15,
				  1929)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Hugo Laurenz August Hofmann von Hofmannsthal was an Austrian
				  poet, dramatist, and essayist. He made his reputation with his lyrical poems
				  and plays and became internationally famous for his collaboration with the
				  German operatic composer Richard Strauss. Hofmannsthal studied law at Vienna.
				  At 16 he published his first poems, under the pseudonym Loris. They created a
				  stir in Vienna and in Germany with their lyrical beauty, magic evocativeness of
				  language, and dreamlike quality. After his year of compulsory military service,
				  he studied Romance philology with a view to an academic career but in 1901
				  married and became a free-lance writer. Between 1891 and 1899 Hofmannsthal
				  wrote a number of short verse plays. After the turn of the century, he
				  renounced purely lyrical forms and experimented with Elizabethan and classical
				  tragic forms. The theatre increasingly became his medium. To the end of his
				  life he collaborated with Strauss, writing the librettos for the operas 
				  <emph render="italic">Der Rosenkavalier</emph>, <emph render="italic">Ariadne
				  auf Naxos</emph>, <emph render="italic">Die Frau ohne Schatten</emph>, 
				  <emph render="italic">Die ägyptische Helena</emph>, and <emph render="italic">Arabella.</emph> After World War I, with the theatrical
				  producer and designer Max Reinhardt, he founded the Salzburg Festival.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VonHofmannsthalH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Hugo Von Hofmannsthal</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Von Scheele, Gustafva Anna Maria (May 9, 1850 -
				  1925)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gustafva Anna Maria Ekman, the daughter of Carl and Anna Ekman,
				  was born in Finspang, Sweden. She married Knut Henning Von Scheele in 1868.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VonScheeleKH1</container><unittitle>Bishop Knut Henning von Scheele and Gustafva Anna von
					 Scheele, seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Karl J. Brandt, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Knut Henning Gezelius Von Scheele subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VonScheeleKH1</container><unittitle>Bishop Knut Henning von Scheele and Gustafva Anna von
					 Scheele, standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Karl J. Brandt, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Bishop Scheele, taken at John Erickson's
					 home in Seattle; taken at the same time as the previous photo ScheeleKH1</p><p>Filed under Knut Henning Gezelius Von Scheele subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Von Scheele, Knut Henning Gezelius (May 31, 1838 - April
				  7, 1920)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Knut Henning Gezelius von Scheele was born in Stockholm. His
				  father, Knut Georg von Scheele, was a minister, and his mother, Mathilda
				  Gezelius von Scheele, belonged to a family of ministers. He studied philosophy
				  and theology at the University of Uppsala and received his PhD in 1863, and
				  four years later took the exam for candidate of theology. He taught theology at
				  the University of Uppsala, first as an adjunct and docent, and in 1879 became a
				  full professor. He later taught at a private school in Uppsala and from
				  1880-1885 was an inspector of the normal seminary there. In 1885, he was
				  appointed bishop of Visby, Sweden. He was prominent in the work of the Swedish
				  Ministerial Conference and wrote a numbers of books, including To the fight for
				  peace. He was sent to America as a representative of the Swedish king at the
				  Swedish Lutheran Augustana synod held in Rock Island, Illinois in 1910. His
				  visit was said to have given new life to Lutheranism in the United States.
				  Bishop Scheele presented his library to Augustana College (now Augustana
				  University).</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">ScheeleKH1</container><unittitle>Bishop Knut Henning von Scheele and Gustafva Anna von
					 Scheele, seated</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Karl J. Brandt, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">ScheeleKH1</container><unittitle>Bishop Knut Henning von Scheele and Gustafva Anna von
					 Scheele, standing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Karl J. Brandt, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: Bishop Scheele, taken at John Erickson's
					 home in Seattle; taken at the same time as the previous photo ScheeleKH1</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Von Scheliha Family</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VonScheliha1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Von Scheliha Family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Voorhees, Victor</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">VoorheesV1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Victor Voorhees</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Voshall, Elmer Benson (July 22, 1910 - March 6,
				  1976)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Elmer Benson Voshall (or Voschall) was born in Wyoming and
				  worked as a farmer in Kittitas County, Washington. He was arrested in 1933 on
				  charges of grand larceny.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JohnsonWC1</container><unittitle>William Carlton Johnson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 23, 1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Mug shot of Johnson at the time of his arrest in 1933 for
					 forgery. Reverse side is a photograph of Elmer Benson Voshall.</p><p>Filed under William Carlton Johnson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>W</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Waddell, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WaddellJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Waddell</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wagner</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">Wagner1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wagner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wagoner, David R.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WagonerDR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">David R. Wagoner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Waite, Davis H., Governor of Colorado</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WaiteDH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Davis H. Waite</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Waite, Morrison Remick (November 29, 1816 – March 23,
				  1888) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Morrison Remick Waite was an attorney, judge, and politician
				  who served as the seventh chief justice of the United States from 1874 until
				  his death in 1888. Born in Lyme, Connecticut, Waite established a legal
				  practice in Toledo, Ohio after graduating from Yale University. As a member of
				  the Whig Party, Waite won election to the Ohio Senate. An opponent of slavery,
				  he helped establish the Ohio Republican Party, served as a counsel in the
				  Alabama Claims and presided over the 1873 Ohio constitutional convention. After
				  the May 1873 death of Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, President Ulysses S. Grant
				  underwent a prolonged search for Chase's successor. With the backing of
				  Secretary of the Interior Columbus Delano, Grant nominated Waite in January
				  1874. The nomination of the relatively obscure Waite was poorly received by
				  some prominent politicians, but the Senate unanimously confirmed Waite and he
				  took office in March 1874. During his tenure, the Waite Court took a narrow
				  interpretation of federal authority related to laws and amendments that were
				  enacted during the Reconstruction Era to expand the rights of freedmen and
				  protect them from attacks by white-supremacy groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.
				  He sought a balance between federal and state power and joined with most other
				  Justices in narrowly interpreting the Reconstruction Amendments. He sided with
				  a majority to strike down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which had prohibited
				  discrimination in access to public services, that was not restored until the
				  Civil Rights Act of 1964. His majority opinion in Munn v. Illinois upheld
				  government regulation of grain elevators and railroads and influenced
				  constitutional understandings of government regulation. He also helped
				  establish the legal concept of corporate personhood in the United States. He
				  served on the court until his death of pneumonia in 1888. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WaiteMR1</container><unittitle>Morrison R. Waite</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1874 and 1888?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by H. B. Hall Jr. after a photograph by Bell from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wakefield, A. W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WakefieldAW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">A. W. Wakefield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walch, Gene Evelyn Graham (April 1, 1919 - February 2,
				  2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Gene Evelyn Walch, the daughter of Grover and Clara Graham, was
				  born in Colville, Washington. She attended college at the University of
				  Washington in Seattle, graduating in 1941 with a B.S. degree and a teaching
				  certificate. She was an active member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority. After
				  teaching high school in Lynden, Washington for one year, she married Edgar
				  Filion. Edgar joined the Navy during World War II, and his career resulted in
				  moves to different bases throughout the U.S. They finally settled in California
				  in 1959. After Edgar’s death, she married Ralph Walch. Gene taught English at
				  the Berlitz Language School and was a volunteer at several organizations
				  including the Palo Alto Congressional Church, the P.E.O. Sisterhood, the Carmel
				  Woman's Club and the Monterey Bay Aquarium. She was also a painter and a member
				  of the Central Coast Art Association where she served on the executive board
				  for over 30 years.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB3</container><unittitle>Betty George standing with Anne Foss and Gene Evelyn
					 Walch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June, 1984</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GeorgeEB4</container><unittitle>Betty George with Phyllis Jones, Jane McKelvy, Genie
					 Graham, Mary Helen Groniger, Helen Gardner, Grace Lowry, Helen Kamphenborg and
					 Peggy Jeane King at the reunion of their sorority</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 24, 1982</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Elizabeth "Betty" George subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wallgren, Monrad Charles (April 17, 1891 – September 18,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Monrad Charles Wallgren was an American politician who served as
				  the 13th governor of Washington from 1945 to 1949, as well as representing that
				  state in the United States House of Representatives and the United States
				  Senate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP5</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg with Governor Monrad C. Walgreen after
					 the landing from the crew regatta on Lake Washington; Herbert T. Condon and
					 Maude Condon in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Lee Paul Sieg subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">34</container><container type="item">SiegLP8</container><unittitle>Lee Paul Sieg and Governor Wallgren on the deck of a
					 boat with unidentified people in the background.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1945 - 1946?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Cliff McNair, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>The photographer appears to have been taken at the same time
					 as the previous photograph of Sieg and Wallgren.</p><p>Filed under Lee Paul Sieg subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walker, Cyrus</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WalkerC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cyrus Walker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walker, Emily Foster Talbot</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WalkerEFT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Emily Foster Talbot
					 Walker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walker, Emma</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WalkerW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William and Emma Walker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under William Walker subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walker, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WalkerW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> William and Emma Walker</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wallace, Betty Jane</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WallaceBJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Betty Jane Wallace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wallace, William H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WallaceWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William H. Wallace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wallgren, Monrad Charles (April 17, 1891 – September 18,
				  1961)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Monrad Wallgren served as the 13th Governor of Washington from
				  1945 to 1949, as well as representing that state in the United States House of
				  Representatives and the United States Senate. Wallgren was born in Des Moines,
				  Iowa; his family moved to Texas in 1894 and then to Everett, Washington in
				  1901. He attended public schools and business college in Everett, graduating
				  from the Washington State School of Optometry in Spokane, Washington in 1914.
				  He worked in retail jewelry and optometry from 1915 to 1932, as well as serving
				  in the Washington National Guard from 1917 to 1919 and 1921 to 1922. In 1932,
				  Wallgren ran for election to the United States House of Representatives as a
				  Democrat. He defeated incumbent Republican Albert Johnson, and took office in
				  the 73rd United States Congress on March 4, 1933. Near the end of his fourth
				  term in 1940, Wallgren ran for United States Senate to replace fellow Democrat
				  Lewis B. Schwellenbach, who was retiring to accept a judicial nomination.
				  Wallgren won the election, and was also appointed to finish the rest of
				  Schwellenbach's term. He took office on December 19, 1940. While Wallgren
				  served portions of two different terms (the end of Schwellenbach's and the one
				  that Wallgren was elected to), he served less than 6 years in the Senate. In
				  1944, he successfully ran for governor, resigning from the Senate on January 9,
				  1945 to serve as governor from then until 1949. He did not run for re-election
				  as governor due to his nomination by President Harry Truman as the chairman of
				  the National Security Resources Board. That nomination was later withdrawn, and
				  Wallgren served on the Federal Power Commission in 1950 and 1951. He then
				  retired from public service. In 1961, Wallgren died of complications resulting
				  from a traffic accident.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">39</container><container type="item">WallgrenMC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Monrad Wallgren with two
					 unidentified men in the Governor's office</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1949</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Wallingford, ?</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">?</container><container type="item">Wallingford1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Young woman in coat and feathered
					 hat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walls, Deryl E. (September 20, 1949 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Deryl Walls was the companion Guy Anderson, the painter, and
				  later the executor of his estate.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">XC3</container><container type="item">WehrWC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wesley Wehr with Guy Anderson and
					 Deryl Walls</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Benham Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>16 x 20 portrait</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Wesley Wehr subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walsh, James A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> James A. Walsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walsh, Mollie</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Born Mary Walsh in 1872, Mollie Walsh was known as "the wonder
				  girl of White Pass Trail" and "the angel of the Klondike Trail." She joined the
				  Klondike Gold Rush in 1897. In the winter of 1897-98, she opened up a grub tent
				  30 miles up the White Pass trail, near a rest stop called Log Cabin. She later
				  married Mike Bartlett, had a child and moved to Seattle. She was murdered in
				  Seattle by her husband on October 28, 1902. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshM1</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Mollie Walsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1894</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Schultz, Palais Studio, Butte, Montana</persname></origination></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshM2</container><unittitle>Studio portrait of Mollie Walsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1894</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshM3</container><unittitle>Postcard with portrait of Mollie Walsh and brief
					 description of her role as the "Wonder Girl of White Pass Trail"</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption on postcard: Mollie Walsh, the wonder girl of White
					 Pass Trail. Alone and without help in the winter of 1897-8 she ran a tent
					 road-house and fed and lodged the wildest and most persistent men Alaska ever
					 saw and remained as clean morally as the snow that fell on her tent.</p><p>Printed on verso: Copy by Van Ness - 905 Pike St. -
					 Seattle.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshM4</container><unittitle>Postcard with cropped, manipulated image of Mollie
					 Walsh and eulogy printed below</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption on postcard: Mollie Walsh, the wonder girl of White
					 Pass Trail. Alone and without help in the winter of 1897-8 she ran a tent
					 road-house and fed and lodged the wildest and most persistent men Alaska ever
					 saw and remained as clean morally as the snow that fell on her tent. If there
					 are still men on earth who ate Mollie's frugal meals, and were sheltered by her
					 tent, let them thank their God for having had that lucky chance, for as sure
					 and as long as snow falls on Alaska, Mollie Walsh will be remembered as the
					 girl on whose headstone could be most fittingly inscribed: HERE LIES DRAMA!
					 Mollie Walsh was murdered by here husband, October 28, 1902.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walsh, Thomas J.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalshTJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas J. Walsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walstrom, Nelson</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WalstromN1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Nelson Walstrom</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">37</container><container type="item">ThomsonD7</container><unittitle>David Thomson , Maude Thomson, Herbert T. Condon and
					 Nelson Wahlstrom sitting in a 1947 or 1948 Dodge convertible by Thomson
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1948</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">James O. Sneddon, Office of Public Information, University of Washington</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: Dedication Thomson Hall, June 6, 1948</p><p>Filed under David Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walters, Mr. &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Walters1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mr. &amp; Mrs. Walters</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Walters, T. A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WaltersTA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">T. A. Walters</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wappenstein, C.W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WappensteinCW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">C. W. Wappenstein</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Warbass, E.D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WarbassED1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">E. D. Warbass</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ward, George</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WardG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George and Louise Ward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ward, Louise</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WardG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George and Louise Ward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under George Ward subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ward, Newton G.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WardNG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Newton G. Ward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Wardall, Thomas (August 9, 1815 - January 28,
				  1918)</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Thomas Wardall was born in England in 1815, two months after the
				  Battle of Waterloo. He came to the United States when he was twenty years old
				  and settled in Cincinnati. Later, he moved to Wisconsin and then to
				  Springfield, Illinois where he operated a general store opposite Abraham
				  Lincoln’s law offices. From Springfield, he went to Mitchell County, Iowa where
				  he worked as a farmer, grazier and veterinarian. At the age of 96, he decided
				  to visit his son, Alonzo, in Seattle; he remained in the city until his death.
				  He was a member of the Borrowed Time Club in Seattle, a 70-and-over men's-only
				  club, and was honored by them on his 100th birthday.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EdwardsJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Postcard with members of the Borrowed
					 Time Club in Seattle, including John Harrington Edwards and Thomas
					 Wardall.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Long's Photo Studio</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>Postcard</p></phystech><note><p>Written on front: The central figure is that of our 100 year
					 old "boy," Mr. Thomas Wardall.</p><p>Filed under John Harrington Edwards subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Ware, Louise M.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WareLM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Louise M. Ware</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Warner, Lucien</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WarnerL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Lucien Warner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Warnke, Janice</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WarnkeJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Janice Warnke</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Warren, America, Eliza &amp; Elizabeth</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Warren1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> America, Eliza and Elizabeth
					 Warren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Warren, Eliza Spalding</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WarrenES1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto"> Eliza Spalding Warren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Washburn, R. C.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WashburnRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">R. C. Washburn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Washburn, R.L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WashburnRL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">R. L. Washburn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Washington, George &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Washington1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George &amp; Mrs.
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Washington, George (February 22, 1732 – December 14,
				  1799)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Washington was an American military officer, statesman,
				  and Founding Father who served as the 1st president of the United States from
				  1789 to 1797. Appointed by the Continental Congress as commander of the
				  Continental Army, Washington led the Patriot forces to victory in the American
				  Revolutionary War and served as the president of the Constitutional Convention
				  of 1787, which created the Constitution of the United States and the American
				  federal government. Washington has been called the "Father of the Nation" for
				  his manifold leadership in the formative days of the country.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WashingtonG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WashingtonG2</container><unittitle>President George Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Frederick Girsch. after a painting by Gilbert
					 Stuart from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Waskowitz, Frank T. (Fritz) (1910 - September 29,
				  1942)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Frank T. “Fritz” Waskowitz was a football star at the University
				  of Washington. A halfback, he joined the Huskies in 1935 and played in the 1937
				  Rose Bowl. The following season, he was the team captain, leading the Huskies
				  to a 7-2-2 record. In a midseason Apple Cup matchup with Washington State,
				  Waskowitz threw an 80-yard touchdown pass, which stood as the longest pass in
				  program history at the time and is tied for 11th in Husky Football history.
				  Waskowitz led the Huskies in passing, total offense, and punting in 1937.
				  Following his career at Washington, he signed on to play football with the New
				  York Giants, but enlisted in the Navy at the beginning of World War II.
				  Stationed at Hickam Field in Honolulu, he was badly burned in the attack on
				  Pearl Harbor in December 1941. He went on to serve with the 13th Air Force,
				  11th Bombardment Group, 98th Bombardment Squadron and was the pilot of B-17E,
				  nicknamed 'the Blue Goose’; he flew over 50 bomber missions. He was on a
				  bombing mission near Bougainville, New Guinea when the plane was hit by
				  anti-aircraft fire. The bomber's wing tore off and the plane crashed into the
				  sea, killing all aboard. He received the Distinguished Service Cross, the
				  Silver Star, the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal and the Purple
				  Heart. Because his body was not recovered, his name is inscribed on the Tablets
				  of the Missing. A Civilian Conservation Corp camp located in North Bend was
				  renamed Camp Waskowitz in his honor; the camp was built in 1935 and is one of
				  only two remaining CCC camps still intact today in the United States. The
				  Waskowitz Environmental Leadership School, a charitable foundation supporting
				  environmental programs for Highline Public Schools, teaches high school
				  students both academic and career skills through themes of leadership,
				  environment and community. The Blue Goose Tavern, named after Waskowitz's
				  aircraft, was established in Port Orchard in 1948 and is currently still in
				  operation. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">IngramR2</container><unittitle>Students posing with football</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate></did><note><p>Front row (left to right): unidentified, Ed Rulis, Frank
					 "Fritz" Waskowitz, unidentified, unidentified; Back row (left to right):
					 unidentified, Vic Markov, Bob Ingram, Negley England.</p><p>Written on verso: The Lindbloom bunch, Tri-Alpha House,
					 1933.</p><p>Filed under Robert Ingram subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RulisEC1</container><unittitle> Edward Charles Rulis with Frank "Fritz"
					 Waskowitz</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1936?</unitdate></did><note><p>Waskowitz is on the left, Rulis on the right.</p><p>Filed under Edward Charles Rulis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Watson, Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Watson1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Watson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Watson, Genneva</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WatsonG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Genneva Watson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Watson, Sir Thomas</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WatsonT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sir Thomas Watson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Waughop, John W. (Dr.)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WaughopJW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John W. Waughop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Way, Annie Rector</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WayAR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Annie Rector Way</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>We As Kush</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">KushWA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">We As Kush</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weatherford, William, Dr. &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeatherfordW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. and Mrs. William
					 Weatherford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weaver, J. J. (Mrs.)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Weaver1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mrs. J. J. Weaver and daughter Beulah
					 Young</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weber, Helen Elizabeth- See Helen E. Hopkins</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Webster, Daniel (January 18, 1782 – October 24,
				  1852)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Daniel Webster was an American lawyer and statesman who
				  represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress and served as
				  the U.S. Secretary of State under Presidents William Henry Harrison, John
				  Tyler, and Millard Fillmore. Webster was one of the most prominent American
				  lawyers of the 19th century, and argued over 200 cases before the U.S. Supreme
				  Court between 1814 and his death in 1852. During his life, he was a member of
				  the Federalist Party, the National Republican Party, and the Whig Party. During
				  the Mexican–American War, he emerged as a leader of the "Cotton Whigs," a
				  faction of Northern Whigs that emphasized good relations with the South over
				  anti-slavery policies. In 1850, President Fillmore appointed Webster as
				  secretary of state, and Webster contributed to the passage of the Compromise of
				  1850, which settled several territorial issues and enacted a new fugitive slave
				  law. The Compromise proved unpopular in much of the North and undermined
				  Webster's standing in his home state.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1840 and 1852?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Jackman after a daguerreotype by John Adams
					 Whipple from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Webster, Donald</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterD1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donald Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Webster, Donald H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterDH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Donald H. Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Webster, E. J.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterEJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">E. J. Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Webster, Henry A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterHA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Henry A. Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Webster, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WebsterJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">John Webster</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weed, George A., Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeedGA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. George A. Weed</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wegener, O.F.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WegenerOF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">O. F. Wegener</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wehn, J. A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WehnJA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">J. A. Wehn</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wehr, Wesley Conrad (April 17, 1929 - April 12,
				  2004)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Wesley Wehr was an American paleontologist and artist best known
				  for his studies of Cenozoic fossil floras in western North America. He
				  graduated from the UW in 1952 with a B. A. and received his M.F.A. in 1954. In
				  the 1970s he started to focus on paleobotany, and with Kirk Johnson, discovered
				  the Boot Hill Fossil Site in Ferry County, WA. In the early 1980s, he helped
				  with the initial setup and organization of the Stonerose Interpretive Center in
				  Republic, WA. A number of extinct plants and insects were named in honor of
				  Wehr including Osmunda wehrii, Wessiea yakimaensis, Pseudolarix wehrii, and
				  Cretomerobius wehri. The fossil flower, Wehrwolfea striata was named for Wehr
				  and paleobotanist Jack Wolfe. Wehr published two books with University of
				  Washington Press that chronicled his friendships with artists and
				  scientists.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box:oversize">XC3</container><container type="item">WehrWC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wesley Wehr with Guy Anderson and
					 Deryl Walls</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1992</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Benham Studio, Seattle, WA</corpname></origination></did><phystech><p>16 x 20 portrait</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">38</container><container type="item">TobeyMG5</container><unittitle>Pehr Hallsten, Mark Tobey and Wes Wehr, sitting at a
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April, 1962</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">George Uchida, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Mark Tobey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weichbrod, Arthur</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeichbrodA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Arthur Weichbrod</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weir, Allen</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeirA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Allen Weir</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weiss, Albert Paul</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeissAP1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Albert Paul Weiss</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Weizmann, Chaim Azriel (November 27, 1875 - November 9,
				  1952)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Chaim Azriel Weizmann was a Zionist leader and Israeli statesman
				  who served as President of the Zionist Organization and later as the first
				  President of Israel. He was elected on 16 February 1949, and served until his
				  death in 1952. Weizmann convinced the United States government to recognize the
				  newly formed state of Israel. He was also a biochemist who developed the
				  acetone–butanol–ethanol fermentation process, which produces acetone through
				  bacterial fermentation. He founded the Weizmann Institute of Science in
				  Rehovot, Israel.</p></bioghist><note><p>Signed: To Leo Weisfield, in appreciation of devoted service and
				  leadership in behalf of the United Jewish Appeal, May 4, 1949, The First
				  Anniversary of Israel.</p></note><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WeizmannCA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Chaim Azriel Weizmann</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 4, 1949</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Welch, Frances</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LevesqueEA3</container><unittitle>Emma Levesque with Frances Welch in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1924?</unitdate></did><note><p>Frances Welch and Emma Levesque worked together at Frederick
					 &amp; Nelson Department Store in Seattle.</p><p>Filed under Emma Levesque subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wellander, Eudora (February 28, 1911 -
				  August 28, 1990)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Eudora Wellander was secretary-treasurer of the Hotel, Motel,
				  and Club Service Employees Union, Local #551 , and served on the Local Joint
				  Executive Board of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees Union in the 1950s and
				  1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">ClintonGS2</container><unittitle>Gordon Clinton with group of labor leaders and King
					 County Sheriff Tim McCullough</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1964</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Carter Photography, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>The group includes (left to right): Frank Albrecht, Eudora
					 Wellander, Dorothy Guiberson, John A. Jaeger, Eloise Pratt, Mayor Clinton, and
					 Sheriff Tim McCullough.</p><p>Filed under Gordon S. Clinton subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wells, Colonel</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">Wells1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Colonel Wells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wells, Edmund Hazard (August 28, 1860 - April 9,
				  1940)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edmund Hazard Wells was born in Ohio and began his newspaper
				  career on the<emph render="italic"> Cincinnati Post </emph>as a reporter and
				  editorial writer. In 1890 he was hired by Frank Leslie’s Weekly to explore
				  central Alaska. He and his three companions were missing for ten months; he
				  later wrote a report of his adventures. In 1899, Wells founded the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Star</emph>, which became a political power and
				  influenced the affairs of the city and county. He sold the paper in 1909. In
				  addition to the <emph render="italic">Star</emph>, he founded 
				  <emph render="italic">The Portland News,</emph><emph render="italic">The
				  Spokane Press</emph> and the <emph render="italic">Tacoma Times.</emph> In
				  1912, with Lawrence Colman, John P. Hartman, T. S. Lippy, H. W. Treat and
				  others, he started the Sun Publishing Company and began publication of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Seattle Sun.</emph> The business conditions following the
				  outbreak of war, financial mismanagement and lack of capital lead to the
				  failure of the paper in 1915. He later worked as the publicity director for
				  Senator Miles Poindexter’s presidential campaign in 1920. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle>Wells, Mary Ann (1895?-January 8, 1971)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Mary Ann Wells was the founder of the Cornish School Dance
				  Department. In 1923, she opened the Mary Ann Wells School of the Dance.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">McBrideEE1</container><unittitle>Cast of <emph render="italic">Treasure Island
					 </emph>performance at the Seattle Soroptimists Club luncheon at the Olympic
					 Hotel; Lois Sandall (as Long John Silver), Ella McBride (as Darby McGraw),
					 Jessie Kelly (as Jim Hawkins), Rose Morgan (as Black Dog) and Mary Ann Wells
					 (as Captain Billy Bones)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 29, 1926</unitdate></did><note><p>The photo appeared in the September 30, 1926 edition of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Seattle Daily Times</emph>.</p><p>Filed under Ella E. McBride subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wells, Max</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WellsM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Max Wells</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Welsh, Daniel Theron</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WelshDT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Daniel Theron Welsh</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wenk, Edward Jr. (January 24, 1920 - June 27,
				  2012)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Edward Wenk had a multifaceted career as a civil engineer,
				  educator, author, and policy and risk analyst. He began his professional career
				  as an engineering specialist in submarine hull strength design with the U.S.
				  Navy in 1941. He was responsible for being the director of, and on aboard for,
				  the first deep sea dive of each new class of submarines that he designed. In
				  1959, he accepted a position as Senior Specialist for Science and Technology in
				  the Library of Congress Legislative Reference Service; his primary
				  responsibility was to serve as the first science advisor to the Congress. He
				  subsequently played a variety of policy advisory roles on the White House staff
				  in the administrations of Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon, and was the
				  Executive Secretary of the National Council on Marine Resources and Engineering
				  Development. The Council was charged with representing marine interests
				  throughout the government at the Cabinet level and was chaired by the Vice
				  President, Hubert H. Humphrey. In 1970, he was appointed at the rank of
				  professor at the University of Washington in Civil Engineering and Public
				  Affairs. During his lifetime he received a number of honors and awards,
				  including being elected to Sigma Xi, the National Academy of Engineering and
				  the National Academy of Public Administration. He was awarded the Ralph Coats
				  Roe Medal by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and was named
				  distinguished alumnus by Baltimore Polytechnic Institute and Johns Hopkins
				  University. He was appointed to the Alaska Commission to investigate the wreck
				  of the Exxon Valdez in 1989, and was a member of the task force to investigate
				  life and property losses caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HumphreyHH2</container><unittitle>Hubert Humphrey with Edward Wenk, Jr. and S. Dillon
					 Ripley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1960 and 1969?</unitdate></did><note><p>Humphrey and Ripley presenting Wenk with a proclamation naming
					 him an admiral in the Smithsonian Navy for his work at the Smithsonian in ocean
					 studies.</p><p>Filed under Hubert H. Humphrey subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wessman, Harold E. (December 27, 1899-July 29,
				  1989)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Wessman was a professor of Civil Engineering at the UW
				  and later was Dean of the College of Engineering.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BabbAL1</container><unittitle>Albert Babb with Dean Harold E. Wessman, Henry M.
					 Jackson and UW President Henry Schmitz at the nuclear pile located in Bagley
					 Hall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1956 and 1957</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Robert I. Peterson, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>The wall behind Babb is a precursor type of reactor known as a
					 graphite pile, which was not a net producer of energy, located in Bagley Hall,
					 the chemistry building. The cylinders sticking out of the graphite pile are
					 fuel rods containing natural uranium. The people in the picture are wearing
					 radiation dose badges, commonly known as dosimeters. The picture was probably
					 taken in 1956 or 1957, shortly after the U.S. Government's announcement of the
					 Atoms for Peace Program. This time frame would be consistent with Henry Schmitz
					 still being UW president; he stepped down in 1958.</p><p>Filed under Albert Babb subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>West, Theodore Clinton (May 17, 1919 - February 9,
				  2015)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore Clinton West served in World War II as a hospital
				  corpsman, traveling to Guadalcanal in a Liberty Ship troop transport. His
				  recollections were recorded in a Snohomish 2010 collection of WWII survivors'
				  stories, <emph render="italic">War and Sacrifice</emph>. After the war, he
				  received his PhD in Pharmacology from the University of Washington, where he
				  taught and continued to do research. West pioneered the use of the
				  microelectrode recording in single cardiac cells which facilitated the analysis
				  of the effects of various drugs on the release and actions of autonomic
				  neurotransmitters. He later taught at the University of California Davis where
				  he streamlined the medical school curriculum. He retired in 1986, having
				  published over seventy papers in his field. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">23</container><container type="item">LoomisTA1</container><unittitle>Theodore A. Loomis with Theodore West with model car
					 created for experiment</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Theodore Loomis and Theodore West were professors of
					 pharmacology at the University of Washington. In 1957, they build a machine to
					 test the effects of alcohol on a person's ability to drive. The photograph
					 shows the machine. The model car on the table is controlled by the steering
					 wheel as a road pattern rolls beneath the car. Meters and clocks measured the
					 test subject's ability to drive. Dr. Loomis is at the steering wheel while Dr.
					 West observes. A version of the photograph and an accompanying story appeared
					 in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on April 10, 1957.</p><p>Filed under Theodore A. Loomis subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wheeler, Alta Mary Mills (July 30, 1883 - June 12,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alta Mary Mills was born in Kansas City, Missouri, the daughter
				  of John Mills and Laura McGuire Mills. She married James W. Wheeler on April
				  23, 1908 in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillS3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sam Hill with Alta Wheeler at a train
					 station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Samuel Hill subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmanFE1</container><unittitle>Frank Holman with James and Alta Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Frank E. Holman subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wheeler, Burton K.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WheelerBK1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Burton K. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wheeler, James William (January 18,
				  1874 - April 6, 1974)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>James W. Wheeler was born in Olney, Illinois and arrived with
				  his parents in Seattle in July, 1889, a few days after the Seattle Fire. His
				  father, Jonas Wheeler, was a carpenter and built one of the first residences in
				  Fremont. James began selling real estate while still in high school. He founded
				  West and Wheeler in 1901 and served as president of the firm for over 40 years.
				  He was a charter member and president of the Seattle-King County Board of
				  Realtors, vice president of the National Association of Real Estate Boards,
				  past president of the Northwest Real Estate Association and director of the
				  Seattle Trust Company. His hobby was wood working, and he made many wooden
				  bowls, some of which were given to the Seattle-King County Real Estate Board’s
				  First Citizens. He also presented them to Winston Churchill and Herbert
				  Hoover.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">ErskineRC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Erskine with Warren L. Morris and
					 James W. Wheeler at Sunrise Park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1941</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Robert C. Erskine subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD1</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill standing with his son, R. Dwight Hill
					 Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Reuben Dwight Hill subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillRD2</container><unittitle>R. Dwight Hill sitting at desk with his son, R. Dwight
					 Hill Jr., and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1966</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Color photograph</p></phystech><note><p>Filed under Reuben Dwight Hill subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillS2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Sam Hill with J.W. Wheeler at a train
					 station</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Samuel Hill subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">18</container><container type="item">HolmanFE1</container><unittitle>Frank Holman with James and Alta Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1950 and 1965?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Alfred S. Witter, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Frank E. Holman subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacksonFC1</container><unittitle>Frank Cline Jackson standing near stack of papers with
					 J. W. Wheeler and Laurence S. Booth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Frank Cline Jackson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">22</container><container type="item">LandonD1</container><unittitle>Daniel Landon with Harold Sparkman, James M. Sparkman,
					 George Noyes and James. W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 7, 1932</unitdate></did><note><p>In the foreground are papers bearing the certified signatures
					 on the initiative petition for the 40 mil tax limit bill. A version of this
					 photograph appeared in <emph render="italic">The Seattle Times</emph> on
					 Sunday, July 10, 1932, indicating that the papers were filed on Friday, July 7,
					 1932.</p><p>Filed under Daniel Landon subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MartinCD3</container><unittitle>Governor Martin with stack of petitions containing
					 125,000 signatures for Initiative 141 40 mill limit, presented by Laurence S.
					 Booth and James W. Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1936</unitdate></did><note><p>The Washington Property Tax Levy Limits Initiative, also known
					 as Initiative 114, was on the November 3, 1936 ballot in Washington as an
					 Initiative to the People, where it was approved. The measure limited the
					 aggregate annual rate of levy on real and personal property for state, county,
					 city, school district and road districts to forty mills and limited the tax
					 levy for public universities to two mills.</p><p>Filed under Clarence D. Martin subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">26</container><container type="item">MorrisWL1</container><unittitle>Warren L. Morris and James W. Wheeler at Sunrise Park,
					 deer in background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 29, 1941</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Warren L. Morris, 1 free deer, J. W.
					 Wheeler, Sunrise Park.</p><p>Filed under Warren L. Morris subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">31</container><container type="item">RoselliniAD2</container><unittitle>Albert Dean Rosellini shaking hands with James W.
					 Wheeler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1963</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert D. Rosellini subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">32</container><container type="item">RussellHH1</container><unittitle>Hugh Hopkins Russell with James W. Wheeler at the Real
					 Estate Board Banquet where Russell was installed as president of the Seattle
					 Realty Board.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 12, 1939</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Roy M. Peak Photography, Seattle, Washington</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: To Mr. Wheeler, the "daddy" of the Real
					 Estate Board</p><p>The photograph appeared on page 9 of the January 13, 1939
					 edition of <emph>The Seattle Times.</emph></p><p>Filed under Hugh Hopkins Russell subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wheeler, Margaret (March 21, 1912 - August 27,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret Wheeler, the daughter of William C. Wheeler and Carolyn
				  Mason Wheeler, graduated from Stadium High School and taught school. She died
				  of burns suffered in a fire.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wheeler, Ruth (December 17, 1913 - June 5,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ruth Wheeler was born December 17, 1913 in Tacoma to William
				  Wheeler and Carolyn Mason Wheeler. She lived most of her life in Tacoma,
				  graduating from Stadium High School, attending the College of Puget Sound (now
				  UPS), working for the Tacoma Title Company, and caring for her parents. Her
				  paternal grandparents, the Senior William Wheelers, and her maternal
				  grandparents, the Allen C. Masons, were early Tacoma pioneers instrumental in
				  many business and philanthropic endeavors in the City of Tacoma. The Mason
				  Intermediate School and Mason United Methodist Church (both in the Proctor
				  District) were named for her grandfather, Allen C. Mason.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wheeler, Robert Mason (March 21, 1915 - November 25,
				  1944)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Mason Wheeler, the son of William Wheeler and Carolyn
				  Mason Wheeler, was born in Tacoma and graduated from Stadium High School in
				  Tacoma. He worked as bookkeeper prior to enlisting in the Army in 1942. He was
				  killed in action in France in 1944 and is bured in Arlington National
				  Cemetery.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">24</container><container type="item">MasonAC3</container><unittitle>Margaret Wheeler, Ruth Wheeler, Robert Wheeler,
					 Letitia Fogg, Elizabeth Fogg and Charles Fogg, Allen Mason's six grandchildren
					 in 1915.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1915</unitdate><note><p>Filed under Allen Chase Mason subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whelan, Harold Paul (March 24, 1914 - July 9,
				  1981)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harold Paul Whelan, the Spokane Philharmonic’s first music
				  director and an experienced violinist, led the orchestra from 1945-61. He was a
				  graduate of the University of Washington’s music department. He established the
				  tradition of performing works by Northwest composers. In the orchestra’s second
				  season in 1947, Whelan invited George Frederick Mackay, a composer born in the
				  Eastern Washington farming community of Harrington and a professor at the
				  University of Washington, to conduct his Cello Concerto and his Suite on
				  Northwest Indian Songs and Dances with Gordon Epperson on cello. In 1962, he
				  moved to Hayward, California where he joined the music faculty at California
				  State College in Hayward. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">12</container><container type="item">EppersonG1</container><unittitle> Gordon Epperson with Harold Paul Whelan and George
					 McKay examining the score of McKay's cello concerto</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1947</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Gordon Epperson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>White, Edwin G.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhiteEG1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Edwin G. White</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>White, Dr. and Mrs. Elija</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhiteE1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. and Mrs. Elija White</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>White, Frank E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhiteF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frank E. White</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>White, Harry</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhiteH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Harry White</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>White, Richard M.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhiteRM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Richard M. White</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitfield, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitfieldW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Whitfield</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitford, Florence A. L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitfordFAL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Florence A. L. Whitford</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitman, Marcus</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitmanM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Marcus Whitman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitman, Narcissa (Prentiss) (missing
				  2/9/92)</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitney, Cyrus</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitneyC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cyrus Whitney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitney, William</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitneyW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">William Whitney</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Whittier, John Greenleaf (December 17, 1807 – September
				  7, 1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Greenleaf Whittier was an American Quaker poet and advocate
				  of the abolition of slavery in the United States. Frequently listed as one of
				  the fireside poets, he was influenced by the Scottish poet Robert Burns.
				  Whittier is remembered particularly for his anti-slavery writings, as well as
				  his 1866 book <emph>Snow-Bound.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhittierJG1</container><unittitle>John Greenleaf Whittier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Valerian Gribayedoff after a portrait by Thompson
					 from<emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whittier, Merrill</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhittierM1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Merrill Whittier</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whittlesey, W. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhittleseyWH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">W. H. Whittlesey</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitworth, Frederick H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitworthFH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Frederick H. Whitworth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitworth, George Frederick</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">40</container><container type="item">WhitworthGF1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">George Frederick
					 Whitworth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whuber, F. Ceele, M.D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WhuberFC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">F. Ceele Whuber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wickersham, James</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WickershamJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">James Wickersham</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Widditsch, Ann Ryan (July 21, 1925 - June 17,
				  2014)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p> Ann Ryan grew up in Albert Lea, Minnesota and graduated from
				  Monmouth College and the University of Illinois, earning a master's degree in
				  English. She became a writer and editor. In the 1950s, she was an associate
				  editor of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, an outgrowth of the bomb project.
				  She was the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of
				  Washington, a consultant with the Institute of Water Resources for Army Corps
				  of Engineers, and a member of the League of Women Voters of Seattle, the
				  Washington Environmental Council, and the Washington State Ecological
				  Commission. She was also a participant in committees to control water pollution
				  at Lake Washington and Green River Basin and other civic activities. She was
				  executive secretary of the Washington Marine Recreation Land Initiative 215
				  Campaign in 1964. Widditsch served on the National ACLU Board in the 1970's,
				  served on the Publications Committee ca. 1979-1981, the Energy and Civil
				  Liberties Committee ca. 1975-1977, and chaired the Biennial Conference
				  Committee 1975-1976. Her papers are held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WidditschAR1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Ann Ryan Widditsch</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Elisabeth Blaine, Seattle</persname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wiggins, Thomas "Blind Tom" (May 25, 1849 – June 14,
				  1908) </unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Thomas "Blind Tom" Wiggins was an African American musical
				  prodigy. He had numerous original compositions published and had a lengthy and
				  largely successful performing career throughout the United States. During the
				  19th century, he was one of the best-known American performing pianists</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WigginsT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Thomas Wiggins</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1860 and 1869?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilbur, J. H. (D. D.)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilburJH1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">J. H. Wilbur</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilcox, Walter</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilcoxW1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter Wilcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wiles, Sam, Mr. &amp; Mrs.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilesS1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wiles</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wiley, Jim</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WileyJ1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Jim Wiley</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilkes, Charles (Rear Admiral)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilkesC1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Charles Wilkes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilkie, Dr.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">Wilkie1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Dr. Wilkie</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willard, Asa L.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WillardAL1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Asa L. Willard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willatsen, Andrew</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WillatsenA1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Andrew Willatsen</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willcox, Walter Ross Baumes (August 2, 1869 - April 20,
				  1947)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Walter R. B. Willcox was well-established in a business career
				  before he left it to study with in an architect’s office in Boston. He
				  continued his studies in the School of Architecture at the University of
				  Pennsylvania. He began active practice in Burlington, Vermont, where he
				  designed residences, schools, hospitals and various commercial buildings. He
				  moved to Seattle where he began a new practice with an earlier associate,
				  William J. Sayward. Willcox was active in the establishment of the Seattle
				  Architecture Club and served as the secretary and president of the Washington
				  State Chapter of the A.I.A. He was active in securing for Seattle a Municipal
				  Planning Commission and served as a member of the commission. Willcox became a
				  member of the American Institute of Architects in 1907 and a fellow of the
				  A.I.A. in 1910. He served on several committees and on the A.I.A. Board. He
				  practiced in Seattle on 1914 when he became the chair of the Department of
				  Architecture at the University of Oregon. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WillcoxWRB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD3</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD4</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD5</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD6</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox looking at drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD7</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox sitting at a kitchen
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD8</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Joseph Wade
					 Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD9</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 and Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willey, Willis Ray (September 15, 1884 - May 17,
				  1956)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Willis Ray "Willie" Willey was born in Mount Ayr, Iowa and moved
				  to Spokane in 1905, where he became a fixture for more than fifty years.
				  Perhaps in an attempt to strengthen his immune system, he started to shed his
				  clothing about the time WWI started. Gradually, as his body acclimated to cold
				  temperatures, he wore fewer clothes until he was down to a pair of shorts and
				  sandals. Willie made his living doing odd jobs for people around town,
				  salvaging iron and twisted car parts and selling postcards of himself and his
				  animals. He traveled and lived in a car that he built himself. A book, 
				  <emph render="italic">The life of Willie Willey: Nature boy, traveler and
				  ambassador of good will </emph>by Keith Yates, was published in 1966.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilleyWR1</container><unittitle>Willie Willey and motor home</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Written on front: Built by W. R. Willey's Mixed Overland.
					 Oakland Radiator, Ford T Motor, Model A Front Axle, Chevrolet Transmission,
					 Studebaker Rear End. 22 years like this Summer and Winter. Ringtail kitty,
					 coyote and badger are my pals.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilleyWR2</container><unittitle>Willie Willey with animals</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1930 and 1939</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc><note><p>Printed on front: Since 1918 I have worn no clothes summer
						or winter other than the attire I now wear. Do I catch cold? No. Living
						naturally is the answer.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, DeWitt</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsD1</container><unittitle>DeWitt Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Eliza M. (Mrs. L.D.)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsEM1</container><unittitle>Eliza M. Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Williams, Alice Jeanette (June 11, 1914 – October 24,
				  2008)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Alice Jeanette Williams, née Alice Jeanette Klemptner, was an
				  American politician and human and women's rights activist from Seattle,
				  Washington. She served on the Seattle City Council from 1969 to 1989. In 1962,
				  she became the first woman to head the King County Democrats as well as any
				  major political party in a large metropolitan area in the United States.
				  Originally named after woman suffragist Alice Paul, she went by her middle name
				  Jeanette beginning in her youth. At the age of 16, she attended Cornish School
				  and later received graduate degrees in Violin at the University of Washington
				  and American Conservatory of Music. While in Chicago, she played with the
				  Chicago Philharmonic Orchestra. Williams began her political career while
				  serving as a precinct committee officer. In 1962, she became the first woman to
				  chair the King County Democrats as well as any other major political party in a
				  large metropolitan area in the country. In 1969, she won a seat on the Seattle
				  City Council where she would serve for twenty years after five consecutive
				  re-elections. Williams introduced some of the first legislation to prohibit
				  employment and housing discrimination against gays and lesbians in the city.
				  She pushed for additional laws giving the same protections to transgender
				  people. In 1972, Williams formed the Seattle Women's Commission to advise the
				  mayor, city council, and city departments on issues that impact women in
				  Seattle. During her tenure, she lobbied the federal government for funding for
				  the construction of the West Seattle Bridge and led and supported many efforts
				  related to Seattle parks. She introduced legislation to convert Kubota Garden
				  to a city park and promoted the preservation of the Sand Point Naval Air
				  Station as Magnuson Park. In 2009, the West Seattle Bridge was named in her
				  honor, and in 2003, the Jeanette Williams Award was created as part of the 2003
				  Seattle Women’s Summit to recognize an individual who demonstrates significant
				  leadership and service in advancing the cause of women in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">17</container><container type="item">HillT1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Tim Hill with Metro Council
					 members</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 16, 1978</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Dudley, Hardin &amp; Yang, Seattle</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Tim Hill is pictured first on the left in the first row. Also
					 in the photograph: Aubrey Davis, Robert Greive, William Reams, C. Carey
					 Donworth, Michael Hildt, Paul Kraabel, Randy Revelle, George Benson, John R.
					 Miller, Phyllis Lamphere, Sam Smith, Ruby Chow, Jeanette Williams, and Wayne
					 Larkin. Several other members are not identified.</p><p>Memorandum accompanying photo: To: Metro Councilmembers. From:
					 Neil Peterson. Enclosed is a copy of the group photograph that was taken at the
					 March 16 council meeting. We intend to hang an enlargement of it in the Fourth
					 Floor Conference Room of the Exchange Building. the individual photos we have
					 taken will be placed that room, too, so that all council-members will be
					 represented. The photos will also be used in other displays so citizens can
					 become more familiar with the memebrs of the Council.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Tim Hill subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Melinda A. Watson</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsMAW1</container><unittitle>Melinda Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Robert</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsR1</container><unittitle>Robert Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Dr. Robert Hardin (September 27, 1909 -
				  November 4, 1979)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Robert Hardin Williams was the first chairman of the Department
				  of Medicine at the University of Washington, serving from 1948 to 1963. An
				  endocrinologist, Williams graduated from Johns Hopkins Medical School and had
				  internships and residencies at Harvard and Vanderbilt University. He was on the
				  faculty at Harvard from 1940 to 1948 before joining the faculty of the
				  University of Washington. He directed the Department of Medicine in its
				  formative period, supervising the development of its programs. He was the
				  founder and president of a number of medical associations, among them the
				  Association of Professors of Medicine, which brought together the chairmen of
				  departments of medicine in a model later followed in other specialties.
				  Williams conducted his early work on thyroid disorders. His later research
				  concentrated on diabetes, particularly insulin secretion and metabolism and its
				  interaction with other hormonal substances. He established the Diabetes
				  Research Institute and the Diabetes Center at the University of Washington and
				  also studied problems of obesity, atherosclerosis, and lipid metabolism. Dr.
				  Williams wrote the widely used <emph render="italic">Textbook of Endocrinology
				  and Diabetes</emph> . As a physician, he was particularly concerned with issues
				  of life and death and wrote a book, <emph render="italic">To Live and Die:
				  When, Why, and How?</emph> , which addressed the issues of euthanasia, suicide,
				  population planning, organ transplantation and the afterlife. His papers are
				  held in UW Special Collections.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsRH1</container><unittitle>Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsRH2</container><unittitle>Portrait</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1970 and 1979?</unitdate></did><note><p>Copy of a pencil sketch.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Caleb Sherwood (February 17, 1880 - August 31,
				  1937)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Caleb Sherwood Williams was president of the Northwest Real
				  Estate Association in 1928. He had a real estate and surety company in La
				  Grand, Oregon.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, Walter</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsW1</container><unittitle>Walter Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williams, William E.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilliamsWE1</container><unittitle>William E. Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Williamson</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">Williamson1</container><unittitle>Williamson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willis, Bailey</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WillisB1</container><unittitle>Bailey Willis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Willis, Elizabeth Bayley</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WillisEB1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Bayley Willis</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Bruce Adelbert (January 19, 1921 - June 16,
				  1991)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Bruce Wilson, a state senator and newspaper publisher, served as
				  a member and chairman of the state Public Disclosure Commission. He was named
				  to the commission by Governor Booth Gardner on Jan. 1, 1987, but resigned in
				  1991 because of health problems. Wilson, a Democrat, served three terms in the
				  state Senate representing the Okanogan area in northeastern Washington, leaving
				  after his final term expired in 1982. He owned and published <emph>The Omak
				  Chronicle </emph>from 1956 to 1980, when he sold the weekly. He also had an
				  interest in the <emph>Port Townsend Leader</emph>, the <emph>Shelton-Mason
				  County Journal</emph> and the <emph>Montesano Vidette. </emph>Wilson wrote 
				  <emph>The Late Frontier, A History of Okanogan County.</emph></p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner. </p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, George R.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonGR1</container><unittitle>George R. Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, George S. (September 6, 1901-December 27,
				  1963)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>George Wilson played football at the University of Washington
				  from 1923 to 1925. He ran, passed, caught passes, punted, and played linebacker
				  on defense, a 60-minute player. In 1925 his teammates selected Wilson as the
				  Flaherty Award as the team's most inspirational player. During his three years
				  with the Huskies they won 28 games, lost three, were tied three times, and went
				  to the Rose Bowl twice. Wilson was named by Grantland Rice to the 1925
				  All-American backfield along with Illinois’ Red Grange and Stanford’s Ernie
				  Nevers. Wilson had a brief fling in the struggling world of pro football in the
				  late 1920s before his life began a downhill slide. He was a longshoreman in
				  1963 when he died alone and broke. Many have called George Wilson the
				  University of Washington’s best football player ever. His jersey number, 33, is
				  one of three that have been retired by the University of Washington.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">2</container><container type="item">BagshawEW2</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Enoch Bagshaw and George Wilson
					 looking at #33 football uniform</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1923 and 1925</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Webster and Stevens, Seattle, Washington</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Filed under Enoch W. Bagshaw subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Harry G.</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Harry G. Wilson was a sideshow entrepreneur with Buffalo Bill's
				  Wild West Show and was later owner or part-owner of the Jones Brothers &amp;
				  Wilson Circus, the Cook &amp; Wilson Wild Animal Circus, Wilson's Trained
				  Animal Circus, and Wilson's Lions &amp; Bears.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">8</container><container type="item">CodyWF2</container><unittitle>Bill Cody in Pawnee, Oklahoma with Major John Burke,
					 Harry Wilson, Major and Mrs. Gordon (Pawnee Bill) Lillie, and Jose
					 Barrera</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><note><p>Reference print from the Historical Society of Montana - not
					 to be reproduced.</p><p>Filed under William F. Cody subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Joe</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonJoe1</container><unittitle>Joe Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, John</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonJohn1</container><unittitle>John Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Joseph (tintype)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonJoseph1</container><unittitle>Joseph Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Joseph Wade (February 9, 1878 - September 7,
				  1968)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Joseph Wade Wilson was the designed of many important Seattle
				  buildings and a long-time architect with the Federal Housing Administration.
				  Born in Morristown, Illinois, he served in the Navy during the Spanish-American
				  War. He graduated from the University of Illinois, receiving a B. A. in
				  engineering in 1903 and a Master’s degree in architecture the following year.
				  He came to Seattle in 1909 where he joined the firm of Howells &amp; Stokes who
				  had been commissioned to design the Olympic Hotel. After work with the
				  Metropolitan Building Company, he went into partnership with the firm of
				  Albertson, Wilson &amp; Richardson. While in this firm, he was awarded special
				  Honor Awards from the American Institute of Architects for the Northern Life
				  Tower and St. Joseph’s Catholic Church. He also designed the Seattle Y.M.C.A.
				  and several buildings on the University of Washington campus, including Hall
				  Health Center, Gowen Hall and Savery Hall. He retired in 1956.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD3</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of fireplace</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD4</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of bookcase</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD5</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox in front of window</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD6</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox looking at drawings</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD7</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox sitting at a kitchen
					 table</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD8</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Joseph Wade
					 Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RichardsonPD9</container><unittitle>Paul Richardson with Arthur Loveless, Louis Baeder,
					 and Joseph Wade Wilson and Walter R. B. Willcox</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1929?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Paul David Richardson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Ruth M.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonRM1</container><unittitle>Ruth M. Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, W. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonWH1</container><unittitle>W. H. Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, W. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonWH1</container><unittitle>W. H. Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilson, Woodrow (President)</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WilsonW1</container><unittitle>Woodrow Wilson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle type="itemphoto">Wilson, Worrall (November 11, 1874 -
				  February 23, 1936)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Worrall Wilson was a lawyer and banker who came to Seattle in
				  the early 1900s. He was president of the Washington Title Company, president of
				  the executive board of the Seattle Council of Camp Fire Girls and served on the
				  Chamber of Commerce.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">11</container><container type="item">EcksteinN1</container><unittitle>Caricature of Nathan Eckstein (as Kid Optimism) and
					 Worrall Wilson (as Old Man Pessimism) in a boxing ring</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Fitgerald</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written on verso: "K.O." = Nathan Eckstein/"OMP" = Worrall
					 Wilson.</p><p>Filed under Nathan Eckstein subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilt, Clara Antoinette - see Clara Antoinette
				  McCarty</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wilt, "Doc"</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">Wilt1</container><unittitle>"Doc" Wilt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wimmler, Norman Lucius (September 13, 1885 - March 26,
				  1964)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Norman Lucius Wimmler was born in Alma, Wisconsin. He graduated
				  with a B.S. in Mining and Geology from the UW in 1908. While at the UW, he was
				  on the <emph>Tyee</emph> staff and was president of the Oval Club. He spent his
				  summer vacations investigating the Alaska gold fields, and his place mining
				  bulletin was declared by many authorities to be the best instrument touching on
				  the subject to be published. After graduation, he spent three years in China,
				  Manchuria and Siberia studying mining, He was stationed in Alaska in 1922
				  covering placer mining districts for the Bureau of Mines and was the first
				  placer mining specialist to be sent to the area in many years. The publication
				  of his thesis, <emph>Placer Mining Methods and Costs in Alaska,</emph> led to
				  his appointment by the Russian government in a position of authority in the
				  development of its mineral wealth. Wimmler worked as the chief consulting
				  engineer in charge of placer mining for the USSR. He later worked for the US
				  Department of Interior, retiring in 1950. </p></bioghist><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW11</container><unittitle>University of Washington Campus Day, 1908: Thomas F.
					 Kane, Frederick Padelford, Morgan Padelford, Charles W. Johnson, Otto Patzer,
					 Robert E. Moritz, Holland (?), Herbert T. Condon, David Thomson, Charles W.
					 Smith, William T. Darby, Arthur S. Haggett, Charles M. Strong, Harvey B.
					 Densmore, Frederick A. Osborn, Thomas K. Sidey, William V. Lovitt, Clarence R.
					 Corey, Wiliam M. Dehn, Norman Wimmler, Silas F. Scott, and Pierre J.
					 Frein.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: C. W. Smith, under the white hat, on
						campus, near 15th Avenue East. Written above Smith's head: "Little Willie."</p><p>Filed under Charles Wesley Smith subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wiltamuth, Ralph</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WiltamuthR1</container><unittitle>Ralph Wiltamuth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winans, W. P.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinansWP1</container><unittitle>W. P. Winans</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wingate, Robert</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WingateR1</container><unittitle>Robert Wingate</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wingren, Olaf (Olof) John (April, 1871-May 24,
				  1918)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Olaf J. Wingren was a successful photographer in La Conner,
				  Washington. He was born in Sweden and started to learn the trade of a
				  blacksmith before leaving for America. During the ten months after his arrival,
				  he worked in a tannery in Pennsylvania, then came west, arriving at La Conner
				  in 1889. His first years were spent in farming and blacksmithing before opening
				  a repair shop for guns and bicycles. during these years, he studied
				  photography. He eventually opened a gallery in La Conner. He also served as
				  councilman for the city of La Conner.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WingrenOJ1</container><unittitle>Olaf John Wingren</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1919?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Mary Randlett, Seattle, WA</persname></origination></did><note><p>Copy of original photograph.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winkenwerder, Hugo</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinkenwerderH1</container><unittitle>Hugo Winkenwerder</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winson, Eunice</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinsonH1</container><unittitle>Harry and Eunice Winson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Harry Winson subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winson, Harry</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinsonH1</container><unittitle>Harry and Eunice Winson</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winsor, Richard</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinsorR1</container><unittitle>Richard Winsor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winston, P. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinstonPH1</container><unittitle>P. H. Winston</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winthrop, John (January 12, 1587/88 – March 26, 1649)
				  </unittitle></did><bioghist><p> John Winthrop was an English Puritan lawyer and one of the
				  leading figures in founding the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the second major
				  settlement in New England, following Plymouth Colony. Winthrop led the first
				  large wave of immigrants from England in 1630 and served as governor for 12 of
				  the colony's first 20 years. His writings and vision of the colony as a Puritan
				  "city upon a hill" dominated New England colonial development, influencing the
				  governments and religions of neighboring colonies. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinthropJ1</container><unittitle>John Winthrop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1630 and 1639?</unitdate><origination><persname role="engraver">Oliver Pelton</persname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinthropJ2</container><unittitle>John Winthrop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1630 and 1639?</unitdate><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Engraving by Girsch after a portrait by Anthony Van Dyke from 
					 <emph>Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography</emph></p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Winthrop, Theodore</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WinthropT1</container><unittitle>Theodore Winthrop</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wirt, M.</unittitle></did><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box">35</container><container type="item">SmithCW1</container><unittitle>Charles W. Smith with M. Wirt</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Charles W. Smith subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Withers, Pete</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WithersP1</container><unittitle>Pete Withers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wittenmeyer, Anna K.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WittenmeyerAK1</container><unittitle>Anna K. Wittenmeyer</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woessner, Frank</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoessnerF1</container><unittitle>Frank Woessner</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wolfe, Thomas</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WolfeT1</container><unittitle>Thomas Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wolfe, Vera</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">27</container><container type="item">OttenheimerAM2</container><unittitle>Unidentified man in uniform, John Bunzel, Theodore
					 Astley, Mr. Chinn, Albert Ottenheimer, Trudi Kirkwood and Vera
					 Wolfe</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1945 and 1946</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert M. Ottenheimer subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Wolfle, Helen Morrill (December 13, 1906 - July 21,
				  1988)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Helen Morrill, the daughter of Edwin Morrill and Mildred Jones
				  Morrill, was born in Waterville, Washington. She graduated from the University
				  of Washington with a B. S. in 1927 and an M. S. in 1928. She did further
				  studies at Ohio State University and taught psychology at the American
				  University in Washington D. C. She married Dael Lee Wolfle in 1929.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM1</container><unittitle>Helen Morrill and Harold Stevenson, close to Richmond
					 Beach, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">41</container><container type="item">WolfleHM2</container><unittitle>Mount Rainier excursion: Helen Morrill, Harold
					 Stevenson, Warner Chapson, Amelia Nicoles, Gertrude Sennes</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wolverton, William (Colonel), M.D.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WolvertonW1</container><unittitle>Colonel William Wolverton</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wong, Shawn</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WongShawn1</container><unittitle>Shawn Wong</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woo, Gen</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WooG1</container><unittitle>Gen Woo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, C.E.S.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodCES1</container><unittitle>C. E. S. Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, Elizabeth</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodE1</container><unittitle>Elizabeth Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, James A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodJA1</container><unittitle>James A. Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, Lyman</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodL1</container><unittitle>Lyman Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, Ross</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodR1</container><unittitle>Ross Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wood, T.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodT1</container><unittitle>T. Wood</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woodbarne, Lloyd</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodbarneL1</container><unittitle>Lloyd Woodbarne</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woodhouse, Rossalind (June 7, 1940 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Rosalind Woodhouse, a social worker at the Seattle Housing
				  Authority, was a member of the Seattle Women's Commission in 1971.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">1</container><container type="item">AliesanJ1</container><unittitle>Group photo of The Seattle Women's Commission: Kay
					 Regan, Carver Gayton, Shirley Caldwell, Elinor Hunsinger, Shirley Bridge,
					 Louisa Torrez, Alice Beals, Barbara Laners, Alan Graban, Esther Clarke, Ruth
					 McCloy, Jody Aliesan, Rossalind Woodhouse and Helen Sommers, published in 
					 <emph>The Seattle Daily Times</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 7, 1971</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Jody Aliesan subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woodin, Ira see Carson D. Boren</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>An early pioneer who was the founder of Woodinville.</p></bioghist></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woods, Rufus</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodsR1</container><unittitle>Rufus Woods</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woodward, A. P.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">41</container><container type="item">WoodwardAP1</container><unittitle>A. P. Woodward</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woolery, F. W.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WooleryFW1</container><unittitle>F. W. Woolery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Woolery, J. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WooleryJH1</container><unittitle>J. H. Woolery</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Worth, Frank</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WorthF1</container><unittitle>Frank Worth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Worthington, P. A.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WorthingtonPA1</container><unittitle>P. A. Worthington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Worthylake, Mary Moore</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WorthylakeMM1</container><unittitle>Mary Moore Worthylake</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wright, Edgar J.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WrightEJ1</container><unittitle>Edgar J. Wright</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wright, Tom</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WrightT1</container><unittitle>Tom Wright</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wright, William T.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WrightWT1</container><unittitle>William T. Wright</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wurdemann, Audrey</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WurdemannA1</container><unittitle>Audrey Wurdemann</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wyckoff Family</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">Wyckoff1</container><unittitle>Wyckoff Family</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wycoff, John Van Dyne (July 24, 1862 - October 21,
				  1926)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>John Van Dyne Wycoff was born in Seattle in 1862. He was a
				  member of the Washington Pioneers and the Seattle Volunteer Firemen's
				  Association and for many years was also a member of the paid fire department.
				  He later was employed at the government assay office. Wycoff played second base
				  for the Seattle Reds baseball club, the champions of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Oregon, Washington Territory and British Columbia) during the 1884 season. His
				  father, Louis Wyckoff, was the first territorial sheriff. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">19</container><container type="item">JacobsHR1</container><unittitle>The Seattle Reds Baseball Team</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1884?</unitdate><origination><corpname>Souvenir Art Studio</corpname></origination><physdesc><extent/></physdesc></did><note><p>Souvenir baseball card with photographs of Dighton H.
					 Blackmar, Edward W. Burnell, Fletcher T. Coulter, Allan B. Ensign, James Edward
					 Fairbairn, Harrison R. Jacobs, William J. Kenny, Joseph T. Reddish, George W.
					 Roll, George E. Starrett, William R. Thornell, and John V. Wyckoff. Blackmar's
					 name is listed as "Blackmarr" on the card.</p><p>Written on front of card under the photo of A. B. Ensign, the
					 president and manager of the team, is the name "I. A. Nadeau." Ira A. Nadeau
					 was the general manager of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.</p></note><note><p>Filed under Harrison R. Jacobs subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Wyeth, Nathaniel J.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">WyethNJ1</container><unittitle> Nathaniel J. Wyeth</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>XYZ</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yamaguchi, Jinta</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">YamaguchiJ1</container><unittitle> Jinta Yamaguchi</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yamashita, General</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">Yamashita1</container><unittitle>General Yamashita</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yamisaki, Minoru</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">YamisakiM1</container><unittitle>Minoru Yamisaki</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yarno, Margaret H. (November 22, 1867 - April 14,
				  1962)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Margaret H. Yarno, the daughter of John and Lisette Yarno, was
				  born in Illinois and came to Seattle as a young child. She was a student at
				  Denny School in 1883 and after graduation, taught school. Her home at 612
				  Fairview Avenue North, was built in 1877 and was one of the last pioneer houses
				  in Seattle, surviving until the 1960s.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">20</container><container type="item">JonesOS3</container><unittitle>Group photo of school children with teacher, Orrin S.
					 Jones, on the steps of the Sixth Street School, located at 6th and
					 Madison</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1883</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Class of 1883, including Annie Hall (Strong)
					 and Margaret H. Yarno with Professor O. S. Jones.</p><p>Front Row (left to right): Willetta Robertson, who was the
					 granddaughter of Captain Renton, the lumberman who was prominent with the
					 Blakely Mills; Allie Whalie; Minnie Reeves, whose father was a member of the
					 banking firm of Reeves and Mackintosh; Callie Gillette; Frank Copp, civil
					 engineer; Julius Shults; Charlie Wilson, at one time in the theatrical business
					 and identified with the Primrose and Dockstader Minstrels; Juston Houghton.
					 </p><p>Second Row (left to right): Kate Orth; Anna Hall, who married
					 Major J. F. A. Strong, who later became governor of Alaska; Edna Morrison;
					 Annie Christ; George Parker, whose father, Isaac Parker, built the first brick
					 building in Seattle; Walter Piper, one of the founder of Piper &amp; Taft; Ray
					 Coombs, the artist who painted the original picture of Chief Seattle; Ralph
					 Andrews, engineer; Randolph Kalberg.</p><p>Third Row (left to right): Sophie Lider; Barbara Wander; Mamie
					 Keezer; Annie Rinehart, now Mrs. John E. Chilberg; Alvie Curtis; Barton
					 Robinson; Frank Stanz.</p><p>Fourth Row (left to right): Hattie Morse, sister of Major
					 Chester Morse, engineer; Annie Troxil; Margaret Yarno, whose father built many
					 of the early ships on Puget Sound; Clara Hinkley, who married Sherman
					 Moran.</p><p>Fifth Row (left to right): Kate Howes, who married John Eyler;
					 Brittie Scott; Hattie Kalberg, who married Henry Frankland; May Hoyt; Ray
					 Giddings; George Newell, whose father owned Newell’s Mill; Carl Jones.</p><p>Top Row (left to right): Bertha Robertson; Melissa Megonnigle;
					 Edson Weeks; Martin Mindelstat; Charlie Harrison; ? (no first name given)
					 Smith; Bert Huntoon, brother of Richard Huntoon, Seattle attorney.</p><p>Filed under Orrin S. Jones subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yates, ?</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">Yates1</container><unittitle>Young woman in sailor uniform, Yeoman First Class
					 insignia on sleeve, and wearing U.S.S. Philadelphia cap</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yesler, Henry (December 2, 1810 – December 16,
				  1892)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Yesler was an entrepreneur considered to be Seattle,
				  Washington's first economic father and first millionaire.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB1</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry
					 L. Yesler, and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1889 and 1890</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/POR051/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Nineteenth Annual
					 Greeting.</p><p>Every year, from 1870 until Henry Yesler's death in 1892,
					 Gatzert, Yesler and Maddocks made social calls on New Year's Day, and the cards
					 were left as mementos of their visit.</p><p>Filed under Bailey Gatzert subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item"> GatzertB2</container><unittitle>Copy photo of cabinet card of Bailey Gatzert, Henry L.
					 Yesler and Moses R. Maddocks</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1885 and 1886</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Judkins, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Printed on card: Happy New Year, Our Fifteenth Annual Call,
					 Beauty Unadorned.</p><p>Filed under Bailey Gatzert subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yesler, Mrs. H.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">YeslerH1</container><unittitle>Mrs. H. Yesler</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1914 and 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Yorke, Philip - see Earl of Hardwicke</unittitle></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Young, Clara Kimball</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">YoungCK1</container><unittitle>Clara Kimball Young</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Young, E. T.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">YoungET1</container><unittitle>E. T. Young</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Young, Henry Esson (February 24, 1862 – October 24,
				  1939)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Henry Esson Youngwas a physician and political figure in British
				  Columbia. He represented Atlin in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
				  from 1903 to 1915 as a Conservative. Young served in the provincial cabinet as
				  Minister of Education and Provincial Secretary. He helped establish the
				  University of British Columbia in 1908, and served as Secretary of the
				  Provincial Board of Health from 1915 until his death in 1939.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">36</container><container type="item">SuzzalloH4</container><unittitle>Henry Suzzallo with with John Duncan MacLean, Minister
					 of Education; Robert Edward McKecknie, Chancellor of the University of British
					 Columbia; Walter Cameron Nichol, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia;
					 Arthur William Currie, Principal of McGill University; Henry Esson Young, head
					 of the Provincial Department of Public Health; and John Stanley Plaskett,
					 Director, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1920</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Stuart Thomson, Vancouver B.C., Canada</persname></origination><note><p>Filed under Henry Suzzallo subseries.</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Youngs, Luther B. (December 1859 - June 10,
				  1923)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Luther B. Youngs came from Fulton, Kentucky to Seattle in 1883
				  and went into the construction business. He also served in Seattle's
				  all-volunteer fire department. Youngs was made head of the City Water and Light
				  Department on February 5, 1895. When the departments were separated in 1910, he
				  remained as superintendent of the Water Department and was chair of the Board
				  of Public Works for over ten years. Under his supervision, the Cedar River
				  Water System was planned and installed. The first water delivered from Pipeline
				  Number Three reached Seattle on October 23, 1923, four months after his death.
				  In recognition of his years of service with the Water Department, city
				  officials asked that Swan Lake be renamed Lake Youngs. In addition, a bronze
				  memorial plaque created by V. T. Goumas was placed on a water tower in
				  Volunteer Park in Seattle.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">29</container><container type="item">ProschTW3</container><unittitle>A committee of citizens on a trip to note the turning
					 on of the water into the pipeline leading into Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 19, 1902</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Asahel Curtis, Seattle</persname></origination></did><note><p>Left to right: Edmund H. Wells, A. Kistler, Ellis Morrison,
					 George Landsburg, Louis Sefrit, Fred Bechdolt, Luther B. Youngs, Thomas Prosch,
					 R. H. Thomson, John P. Hartman, Otto Roseleaf, Harry R. Clise, James A. James,
					 William H. Murphy, and Henry W. Scott.</p><p>Filed under Thomas W. Prosch subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH4</container><unittitle> Reginald Heber Thomson and the Seattle City Council
					 having lunch in a park</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1, 1900</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Anders B. Wilse, Seattle Daily Times</persname></origination><note><p>Written on verso: left to right: R. H. Thomson, (unknown),
						James Murphy, L. B. Youngs, H. W. Scott, John P. Hartman, Lewis Seifert (sic.
						), J. A. James, George Landsburg, unknown.</p><p>The City Council spent May 1, 1900 inspecting the reservoir
						work of the Cedar River system followed by lunch in the park. The photograph
						appeared on the front page of the <emph>Seattle Daily Times</emph> on May 4,
						1900. Although the third figure from the left is identified as James Murphy, it
						appears to be William Hall Murphy, who was a member of the Seattle City Council
						at the time.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container>37</container><container type="item">ThomsonRH7</container><unittitle>Reginald Heber Thomson and a group of men standing in
					 front of a log cabin</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Circa 1910?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: From left to right: Unidentified; Francis
						W. Grant, Supt. of Buildings; L. B. Youngs, Supt. of Water &amp; Light; R. H.
						Thomson, City Engineer; C. B. Bagley, Secretary of Public Works; E. C. Cheasty,
						Park Board member; Ferdinand Schmitz, Park Board members; unidenified.</p><p>Filed under Reginald Heber Thomson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Zander, Louise</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">ZanderL1</container><unittitle>Louise Zander</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Zeehandelaar, Felix J.</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">ZeehandelaarFJ1</container><unittitle>Felix J. Zeehandelaar</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle>Ziegler, Ludwig (Louis) (July 17, 1837 - January 15,
				  1911)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Ludwig (Louis) Ziegler was born in Germany and came to the
				  United States in 1852 when he was 15. He became a wagon maker in Chenoa,
				  Illinois, eventually owning his own wagon shop in 1863. He moved to Spokane
				  Falls, Washington in 1879 with his wife Margaret and his son William. Ziegler
				  opened the first hardward store in Spokane. After the 1889 fire that destroyed
				  much of downtown Spokane, including his store, he built a five story town that
				  was completed in 1890. He was actvie in the Masonic Lodge and was the first
				  master of Spokane Lodge 34. He was elevated to Grand Master of Washington
				  Territory in 1885.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">16</container><container type="item">HallerGO4</container><unittitle>Granville Owen Haller, Ludwig (Louis) Ziegler, Thomas
					 Reed and two unidentified men</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1889?</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Harrison, Spokane Falls, Washington Territory</persname></origination><note><p>Original photograph in Coll. 334 Early Photographers</p><p>Filed under Granville O. Haller subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Zillman, Lawrence</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">42</container><container type="item">ZillmanL1</container><unittitle>Lawrence Zillman</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Zimmerman, Theodore William (June 27, 1878 - May 1,
				  1941)</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Theodore W. Zimmerman was active in the Portland real estate
				  market for over twenty-five years. He was secretary of the Oregon Association
				  of Real Estate Boards, secretary of the Northwest Real Estate Association and
				  an honorary life member of the Portland Realty Board. </p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">30</container><container type="item">RitterAR1</container><unittitle>Albert Ritter with Theodore W. Zimmerman, James W.
					 Wheeler, Ford S. Barrett, Fred E. Reed, George Spencer, and Sherwood
					 Williams</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1920 and 1939?</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under Albert R. Ritter subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Zussy, Nancy Louise (March 4, 1947 - )</unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Nancy Louise Zussy was born in Tampa and graduated from the
				  University of Southern Florida with a Masters in Library Science. She began her
				  library career in Georgia as a library media specialist and an assistant at the
				  Georgia State Library. She was deputy librarian of the Washington State Library
				  in Olympia from 1981 until 1986, and state librarian from 1986 until 2002. She
				  designed and implemented one of the state’s largest privatization efforts,
				  moving about one-half of the state library to nonprofit status. She was the
				  chair of the Consortium of Automated Libraries in Olympia from 1982 until 1997
				  and served as a consultant to various public libraries in the U.S. and
				  Russia.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box">14</container><container type="item">GardnerWB3</container><unittitle type="itemphoto">Governor Gardner speaking at
					 Governor's Writers Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate></did><note><p>Nancy Zussy, State Librarian; Carla Rickerson, Chair, Awards
					 Jury; David Remington, Deputy Directory, Washington State Library; LeRoy Soper,
					 University of Washington Bookstore; and Fredrick D. Huebner, author, in
					 audience.</p><p>Filed under William Booth Gardner subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">30</container><container type="item">RickersonCT1</container><unittitle>Carla Rickerson speaking at the Governor's Writers
					 Awards Day, Olympia, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1991</unitdate><note><p>In audience: Nancy Zussy, Washington State Librarian; David
						Remington, Deputy Director, Washington State Library; Governor Booth Gardner;
						Bruce Wilson, Lee Soper, Frederick Huebner; Willo Davis Roberts; Barbara
						Berger. Signed by Booth Gardner.</p></note><note><p>File under Carla T. Rickerson subseries</p></note></did></c03></c02></c01></dsc></archdesc></ead>

