Photo Exposure Archive

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Seattle Panorama-o-rama No. 2

March 4th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 2 Comments »border
I want to take a step back again and look at another super wide angle (well, stitched together) photograph of our city. This one comes straight from 1926 taken from what looks like Queen Anne. Also check out our last panorama-o-rama from 1917. Click on the thumbnail for the larger res version. This is a fun one to study. Which landmarks can you pick out?
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Seattle panorama. Copyright deposit; Pierson Photo Co.; April 19, 1926. Image courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

West Seattle, Here I Come

February 29th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 15 Comments »border
I’m moving to West Seattle tomorrow! When I told Vintage Seattle key contributor Deran Ludd, he kindly sent me these turn of the century picture postcards of Luna Park in West Seattle. Long before Fun Forest, there was Luna Park — nicknamed the “Coney Island of the west.” It opened in June of 1907 and the forces of moralism and scandal shut her down in 1913. Back to present day… West Seattle, here I come! Let’s hope the moving process is more efficient than the mortgage process has been and let’s hope the dead whale carcass is kept to a minimum. Again, special thanks to Deran Ludd for the photos (Deran is going to be opening a Yesler blog soon, so keep an eye out for that).
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Luna Park’s dancing pavilion and summer garden. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Luna Park circa 1908. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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A view from above the park. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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A 100 ton whale on exhibit at Luna Park, 1907. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Luna Park snapshot, 1908. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Luna Park snapshot, 1908. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.

Manning’s Cafeteria Early 80’s

February 25th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 16 Comments »border
By now you’ve all heard the news about the Ballard Manning’s/Denny’s designated a landmark last week. It’s a big win for Seattle preservationists yet we all have to remain vigilant about defending this building since Benaroya Company will certainly appeal the decision. Anne Forestieri, of the group who worked for the designation, was kind enough to get in touch with me and send along some photographs of the Ballard Manning’s/Denny’s circa 1983 taken by former Manning’s general manager Winnie Young. The first with a snow covered ground shows the beautiful Manning’s sign while the second is shot along Market. According to Anne, many of the original significant and character defining elements remain, including the glue lam beams, the mirawal at the base of the building (still the original red color, under several layers of paint), and the concrete battered columns on the sides. For more information on the significance of the structure, you can read architectural historian Alan Michelson’s report submitted to the Landmarks Preservation Board right here. Then check out the photos below and give them a click for a closer look.
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A snow covered Manning’s Cafeteria, circa 1983. Photograph courtesy Winnie Young/Anne Forestieri.
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Opposite angle of Manning’s Cafeteria in Ballard, circa 1983. Photograph courtesy Winnie Young/Anne Forestieri.

Seattle’s Great Storm of 1916

February 22nd, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 9 Comments »border
Deran Ludd comes through again! Just one week after sending in this cool Art Deco postcard, he just sent in a collection of photos from Seattle’s 1916 blizzard. This is the same storm that, in late January/early February 1916, collapsed the dome of St. James Cathedral. From February 1st to 2nd of that year, 21.5 inches of snow fell — which is still a record for the city. Check them out! And big thanks to Deran Ludd once again for sending these in.
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The view from Yesler Way, showing Smith Tower. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Unknown street. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Trolleys stuck in the snow at night. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Creative residents build a snowman downtown. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Digging out from the snow on a downtown street. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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The Coliseum Theater inundated with snow, 1916. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.
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Seattle’s original post office on 3rd Ave. Photograph courtesy Deran Ludd.

Happy Presidents’ Day From Vintage Seattle

February 18th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 1 Comment »border
Happy Presidents’ Day, everyone! Hopefully you’re having a relaxing day while paying homage to Washington, Lincoln, or Taft. Wait, what? In order to stay on topic I dug up this photo of Seattle Mayor J.D. Braman greeting President Lyndon B. Johnson at Seattle-Tacoma airport in 1966. Check it out.

In other news, Vintage Seattle was destroyed in the Blarch Badness Blog Contest. “It seems as if Accidental Hedonist is losing in a poll against a history blog! This doesn’t seem right,” said Kate Hopkins of Accidental Hedonist before asking readers for more votes. A history blog! In the end, this meddling history had trouble competing with pork — in all its splendor.
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Mayor J.D. Braman greeting President Lyndon B. Johnson at Seattle-Tacoma airport during the president’s Canadian visit in 1966. Photograph courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives.

Views Of Washington In Color Pt. 2

February 14th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 2 Comments »border
This is a continuation of our look at the Views of Washington In Color picture book. The collection of photographs, Twenty-Four Views of Washington and Oregon in Color, was published in the late 50’s or early 60’s. This second installment features photos of Mount Baker, San Juan Islands, Bailey Range, and Lake Chelan. Like the first batch, they’ve got a bit of a creepy look. Spy the pics below.
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Mt. Baker, Washington, from Austin Pass ski shelter.
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Picturesque San Juan Islands off the Washington Coast.
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Washington’s towering evergreens frame Bailey Range in the Olympics.
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Lake Chelan in Central Washington lies deep in the Cascade Range.

Northwest Icons Of Women’s Suffrage

February 11th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 4 Comments »border
It’s been two days since our Washington State Caucus. At first I was pretty disturbed at the lack of organization but came away pretty impressed with the local involvement with a record turnout. With this recent political momentum I wanted to look back at two Pacific Northwest icons of the Women’s Suffrage movement. After all, it wasn’t until 1920 that the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution came about — granting women the right to vote. Pictured first is Emma Smith DeVoe, a major player in the movement and presidential elector. Below DeVoe you’ll find Dr. Cora Smith King of Seattle, who was a prominent member of the Advisory Council of the Congressional Union for Women Suffrage.

P.S. I’m locked in a heated contest over at Metroblogging Seattle against another blog in their Blarch Badness Blogging Contest. Click here to head over and stick up for Vintage Seattle. They’ve also posted an interview with little ol’ me. Something tells me I should have had Shipley answer the questions for me.
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Mrs. Emma Smith Devoe, of Seattle, Washington ca. 1910-1920. Image courtesy Library of Congress, U.S. Copyright Office.
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Dr. Cora Smith King of Seattle, Washington ca. 1913-14. Image courtesy Library of Congress, U.S. Copyright Office.

Reader Photo: The Court In Recess

February 4th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 3 Comments »border
Vintage Seattle reader and Portland-based historian Kathy Tucker was kind enough to send in this fascinating photograph of her great grandfather and State Supreme Court judge, as a child in Seattle. I’ll let Kathy explain:
I have this old photograph of about 7th and Pike, ca. 1892. From the top down: McBurney Mitchell, Donald A. McDonald (later state supreme court judge, and my g-grandfather), Dr. Herbert Coe, Dubois Mitchell, Harry Coe, last unidentified. My grandmother’s (Elizabeth McDonald Parsons) cousin Marshall McDonald (he has died now) told me that Donald had a sharp wit and that family get togethers were full of zingers and laughter.

At the Washington State Historical Museum right now is an exhibit related to Donald and Bess’s son, Frederick A. McDonald. He was a World War II chaplain, and he went just after the front lines. He collected little shards of glass from religious sanctuaries and saved them in a shoebox for 50 years. Then his friends helped him achieve his dream of having them made into new windows. He died a few years ago, after the project started. The artists interviewed him and incorporated his stories into the windows. The windows include the shards and the artists had a lot of freedom in interpretation. It is on exhibit in Tacoma until March. Here is a link to the windows project: http://www.interfaith-presidio.org/mcdonald/index.htm
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From the top down: McBurney Mitchell, Donald A. McDonald, Dr. Herbert Coe, Dubois Mitchell, Harry Coe, last unidentified. 7th and Pike, ca. 1892. Photo courtesy Kathy Tucker.

Wowee, Don’t Shut Down The Gayway

February 1st, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 5 Comments »border
We all know that Seattle Center is in pretty pitiful shape these days and has been for a number of years. Topping off the decay is Fun Forest, which is likely to close next year. It wasn’t always this depressing, though. Case in point, this advertisement for the Gayway (which would later become Fun Forest) from the official 1962 World’s Fair souvenir program. Check out the wonderfully brilliant and manipulative nostalgia driven marketing, pretty much forcing dad to remember the good old days and take the kid to the Gayway for some rides and ice cream. That copy writer definitely deserved a raise. Click on the images for larger views.
Grownups don’t seem to understand. About the Gayway, I mean, and what it is to a kid. It’s like a great big magnet. Just standing outside waiting to go in is a shivery feeling.

All those things, must be a million of ‘em. All those places and rides and games. They look like little funny houses. Boy, that Space Wheel sure is high; I betcha can see clear over the world from the top.

I wonder if grown-ups hear the same things kids do… the special sound the Gayway has. If I listen hard, I can hear the whirring rides and the screams and the buzzing people always make.

Coasting downhill on a bike is fun. But, wowee, the Wild Mouse is faster and the hill is steeper and your stomach sinks when you hit a bump. That Calypso — you swing way out and lose your breath and feel like you’re flying.

My dad says there were rides in the amusement parks when he was a kid. I don’t guess there’s much difference between them and the Gayway. But I wonder if he remembers good enough to really understand. About the Gayway, I mean. It sure would be swell if he did. Because then he’d go with me on all the rides.
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Gayway Advertisement. Official Souvenir Program, Seattle World’s Fair 1962.
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Gayway Advertisement. Official Souvenir Program, Seattle World’s Fair 1962.

The Other King County Courthouse

January 28th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 5 Comments »border
Seattle’s preservation community is locking horns again with the local government, this time concerning a proposed restoration of the King County Courthouse. A $109,000 study ascertaining how much it would cost to reopen windows covered by aluminum panels in the 1960’s was vetoed by King County Executive Ron Sims. Former Seattle City Council member Peter Steinbrueck responded with a firm editorial over on Crosscut arguing that the County Council should override the veto. Historic Seattle is urging members to contact members of the County Council and asking them to support restoration of the Courthouse by overriding the veto. Now that you’re done writing those e-mails, I thought we could all look back to the old King County Courthouse Building. Before the courts moved to the current building in 1917 on Third Avenue, they used this architectural beauty atop First Hill (then known as “Profanity Hill”) beginning in 1890. Unfortunately, it was torn down in the 1930’s. No doubt, Ben Lukoff and I are left thinking “if only we’d kept this building!” All we have now are photographs, like this one from the 1900 Argus. Click on the image for a larger view.
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The old King County Courthouse in 1900.

Powell Barnett, African American Icon

January 21st, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 1 Comment »border
As we all celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day I wanted to point out Powell Barnett, one of Seattle’s great African American civic leaders. He first came to Seattle in 1906, over time working for the Barary Asphalt Paving Company, General Engineering Construction Company (who built many Seattle landmarks), and eventually serving as a clerk for State Senator Frank Connor. As a community leader, Barnett put together the Leschi Improvement Council and was its first president in 1967. As chairman of the East Madison YMCA he was known for integrating black and white communities. In 1969, the Leschi Improvement Council moved to name the park on Martin Luther King Jr Way after Barnett. This 1970 photograph depicts Powell Barnett being shown development plans by Seattle Parks and Recreation officials. Click on the image for higher resolution.
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Mr. Powell Barnett Being Shown Development Plans by John O. Andrew, chr. Board of Parks Commissioners (left), Hans A. Thompson, Supt. Dept. of Parks and Recreation, Roy Lehner, Designer, David Jensen Assoc. (Right) Oct 1970. Photograph courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives.

World’s Fair Snapshots 1962 Pt. 1

January 16th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 2 Comments »border
Ten million people came through the Seattle’s World Fair from April until October in 1962. One of them had a camera and took these snapshots. I don’t know who the photographer was or precisely on which dates they were taken, but here they are. There are a number of snapshots in this set, so I’m going to split it up into a few parts. This reminds me… if you or anyone close to you has snapshots from the World’s Fair or any Seattle related street scenes from years past, please do send them in so we can all share them. I really love to get glimpses like this from everyday people, it’s a nice alternative to the “official narrative” we’re used to from corporations, newspapers, etc. Click on the images for larger versions.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #1.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #2.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #3.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #4.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #5.
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Candid snapshot from the Seattle World’s Fair (Century 21 Exposition) #6.

Seattle Panorama-o-rama 1917

January 14th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 1 Comment »border
Dear readers, I have to admit to you that I am dead tired from a jam packed weekend of open houses, sneaking into abandoned properties, and a trip to one very special Capitol Hill mansion that you’re gonna love. I do it all for you so I know you’ll forgive me for taking this day to rest. While resting, we can all appreciate this super cool panoramic shot of the Seattle waterfront from 1917. More on those houses I mentioned above later. For now, let’s take in this 4000 pixel wide shot. Click on the image for the full res goodness.
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Seattle waterfront panorama. Copyright Pierson & Co. March 23, 1917. Image courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Seattle, The Nation’s Most Beautiful City Pt. 2

January 7th, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 4 Comments »border
What’s more beautiful than a floating bridge? Last month we had a look at some vintage 1961 aerial photography from the “Seattle The Nation’s Most Beautiful City” pamphlet. Today we’re continuing with Part 2 in the series, this time showing the Lake Washington Floating Bridge, Green Lake, downtown waterfront, and University of Washington Arboretum. While the bridge may not be beautiful in an aesthetic sense, I’d say the other three shots are. Keep in mind that the captions are also circa ‘61. Thanks once again to John Chilson of Stumptown Confidential for kindly donating the ephemera. Click on the images for high-res versions.
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The 6,561-foot-long Lake Washington Floating Bridge, a part of U.S. Highway No. 10, is busy with traffic. In the background are the Cascade Mountains. This toll-free bridge is composed of 25 floating pontoons, each held with two 65-ton anchors. The Bridge is the largest floating structure in the world.
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One of the most picturesque sections entirely within Seattle is the Green Lake area in the heart of the residential north end. A natural fresh water lake nearly a mile across, Green Lake is ringed within a park of trees, rolling lawn and two swimming beaches. In aerial photo wooded area bordering Green Lake is Woodland Park, noted for its large zoo and formal rose gardens.
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An aerial shot of the Seattle waterfront and downtown.
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The 267-acre University of Washington Arboretum contains more than 2,000 species of trees, shrubs and flowers. Dominating this scene are the colorful flowering quince. In May the Arboretum is alive with the blooms of rhododendrons. Recently an authentic Japanese teahouse was built in the Arboretum.

Views Of Washington In Color Pt. 1

January 2nd, 2008 by Cliffe | Sorted Photo Exposure | 4 Comments »border
First off, welcome to 2008. To kick things off here in the new year I thought we’d start with some great vintage Washington landscape photography. I found this small picture book titled Twenty-Four Views of Washington and Oregon in Color while rummaging through relics downtown. It’s probably from around the late 50’s or early 60’s and the images have that hauntingly beautiful period look. To me this is a 50-year offset reminder that we live in a state with an amazing natural environment. See for yourself. I’ll post more from this piece later. Click on the images to go full-res.
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Twenty-Four Views Of Washington and Oregon in Color. By Ray Atkeson. Binfords & Mort Publishers.
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Mt. Rainier, Washington, viewed from the slopes of the Tatoosh Range.
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Tulip time on Washington’s Puyallup Valley bulb farms.
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Autumn haze on the Upper Columbia near White Salmon, Washington.