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<eadheader countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" findaidstatus="needs_nucmc" langencoding="iso639-2b" repositoryencoding="iso15511"> 
	 <eadid countrycode="US" mainagencycode="wasmar" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv90994" identifier="80444/xv90994">WaSMAR1204_04.xml</eadid> 
	 <filedesc> 
		  <titlestmt> 
				<titleproper encodinganalog="title">Guide to the City Light Slide
					 Collection
					 <date encodinganalog="date" normal="1910/2000" type="inclusive">1910-2000</date></titleproper> 
				<titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">City Light Slide
					 Collection</titleproper> 
		  </titlestmt> 
		  <publicationstmt> 
				<publisher>Seattle Municipal Archives</publisher> 
				<address> 
					 <addressline>PO Box 94728</addressline> 
					 <addressline>600 Fourth Avenue, Floor 3</addressline> 
					 <addressline>Seattle 98124-4728</addressline> 
					 <addressline>archives@seattle.gov</addressline> 
					 <addressline>URL:
						  <extptr href="http://www.seattle.gov/cityarchives" show="new" title="http://www.seattle.gov/cityarchives"/> </addressline> 
				</address> 
		  </publicationstmt> 
	 </filedesc> 
	 <profiledesc> 
		  <creation>This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 
				<date>2015-07-23 12:46:10 -0700</date>.</creation> 
	 </profiledesc> 
</eadheader> 
<archdesc level="series"> 
<did> <langmaterial> <language langcode="eng">English</language>
	 </langmaterial> 
	 <repository> 
		  <corpname>Seattle Municipal Archives</corpname> </repository> 
	 <unittitle>City Light Slides</unittitle> 
	 <origination> 
		  <corpname source="naf">Seattle City Light</corpname> </origination> 
	 <unitid>1204-04</unitid> 

	 <physdesc altrender="part"> 
	 <extent altrender="materialtype spaceoccupied">3 binders</extent>
	 </physdesc>

	 <physdesc altrender="part"> 
	 <extent altrender="materialtype spaceoccupied">2426 digital image
		  files</extent>
	 </physdesc>
	 <abstract encodinganalog="5203_">Slides documenting the development of City
		  Light's public power facilities including dams, power houses, transmission
		  lines, substations, and methods of wiring.</abstract> 
	 <unitdate normal="1910/2000" type="inclusive">1910-2000</unitdate> 
</did> 
<bioghist> 
	 <head>Historical Note</head> 
	 <p>City Light provides electricity and electrical and conservation services
		  to its public and private customers. It is the largest public utility in the
		  Pacific Northwest. Public responsibility for electrical energy dates back to
		  1890 with creation of the Department of Lighting and Water Works. The
		  formulation of this public utility stemmed from fear of monopolization by
		  private companies and was reinforced by the inadequacy of those companies
		  during the Great Fire of 1889. Unable to gain access to private water, much of
		  the business district was burned to the ground. Citizens responded eagerly to
		  the idea of publicly owned water and electricity, which was later encouraged as
		  part of President Roosevelt's New Deal in the 1930s.</p> 
	 <p>In 1902, Seattle voters passed a bond issue to develop hydroelectric
		  power on the Cedar River under the administration of the Water Department. This
		  was the nation's first municipally owned hydroelectric project. Electricity
		  from this development began to serve customers in Seattle in 1905. A City
		  Charter amendment in 1910 created the Lighting Department, making it a full
		  member of the City's Board of Public Works. Under the leadership of
		  Superintendent James D. Ross, the department developed the Skagit River
		  hydroelectric project which began supplying power in 1924 with the completion
		  of the Gorge Dam.</p> 
	 <p>Both public and private power was supplied to Seattle until 1951 when
		  the City purchased the local private electrical power company, the Puget Sound
		  Power and Light Company, making the Lighting Department the sole supplier. The
		  Boundary Project in northeastern Washington began operations in 1967 and
		  supplied over half of City Light's power generation. By the early 21st century,
		  approximately ten percent of City Light's income came from the sale of surplus
		  energy to customers in the Northwest and Southwest with the remainder of City
		  Light's financial support coming from customer revenue.</p> 
	 <p>The current name of the agency was adopted in 1978 when the department
		  was reorganized. As a municipally owned public power system, Seattle City Light
		  is governed by elected Seattle officials. Administrative authority rests with
		  the Superintendent and an executive team that includes the department's Chief
		  of Staff, Service and Energy Delivery Officer, Human Resources Officer, Power
		  Supply and Environmental Affairs Officer, and Chief Financial Officer. City
		  Light is responsible for electrical service and streetlight service,
		  streetlight problems, and also conservation, both residential and
		  commercial/industrial.</p> 
	 <p>City Light provides low-cost, reliable, and environmentally responsible
		  electric power to approximately 395,000 customers in Seattle and neighboring
		  areas, including Burien, Lake Forest Park, Normandy Park, Renton, SeaTac,
		  Shoreline, Tukwila, and unincorporated King County. It is the ninth-largest
		  public power system in the United States and has the lowest rates among
		  comparably sized cities in the United States.</p> 
</bioghist> 
<scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_"> 
	 <head>Scope and Contents Note</head> 
	 <p>This wide ranging slide collection, primarily from the 1960s - 1980s,
		  heavily features the development of City Light’s power infrastructure in the
		  Skagit and the Cedar River Watershed areas. Skagit tours, hydroelectric
		  powerhouses, switchyards, control rooms, line-workers, and substations are
		  among the hundreds of images relating to Seattle City Light’s facilities. Some
		  earlier images include Skagit workers family photos from the late 1950s.
		  Portraits of City Light superintendents are also available.Included in this
		  collection are iconic scenes of Seattle including dozens of skyline views,
		  Smith Tower, Columbia Tower and other office buildings, Pike Place Market,
		  Elliott Bay, Green Lake and other parks and recreation areas, public art,
		  shipyards, neighborhoods, the Duwamish waterway, Kingdome, Seattle’s
		  waterfront, the Space Needle and Seattle Center, and City Light’s prototype
		  electric car – the RT1. nCollection has some estimated dates. All slides have
		  been digitized and are available for download. 
		  <extref href="http://archives.seattle.gov/digital-collections/index.php/Search/objects/search/_fulltext:1204-04">
				View 1204-04 online.</extref> 
				
		  <extref href="http://www.seattle.gov/cityarchives/about-the-sma/grant-support">Support for processing this collection came from The Communications and Public Affairs Division of Seattle City Light.</extref>.</p> 
</scopecontent> 
<controlaccess> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Gorge Dam (Wash.)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Boundary Dam (Wash.)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Skagit River Hydroelectric Project</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Ross Dam (Wash.)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Diablo Dam (Wash.)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Electric power transmission -- Washington
		  (State)</subject> 
	 <genreform source="gmgpc">Slides</genreform> 
	 <geogname source="lcsh">Newhalem (Wash.)</geogname> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Dams -- Washington (State)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Cedar Falls Power Plant (Wash.)</subject> 
	 <geogname source="lcsh">Elliott Bay (Wash.)</geogname> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Seattle Center (Seattle, Wash.)</subject> 
	 <subject source="lcsh">Space Needle (Seattle, Wash.) </subject> 
	 <corpname source="naf">Seattle City Light</corpname> 
</controlaccess> 
<dsc/> </archdesc>
</ead>

