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How to Update the Honor Rolls — HistoryLink.org Duty Every May

Every May before Memorial Day the Honor Rolls (Washington state people killed in battle) should be updated. In adding names to the honor rolls, we follow the direction of the Garden of Remembrance Advisory Board (the Garden of Remembrance is the garden of stone walls with names inscribed behind Benaroya Hall on 3rd Avenue in Seattle).
The contact is Dave Barber
Dave Barber
Garden of Remembrance Advisory Board
Home: 206-522-8798
Work: 206-684-0400
[email protected]
The board goes through considerable deliberation as to whether a name should go on the list. The names on the list are only people from Washington state (not people briefly stationed here or launched from here).
If there is a death reported in the newspaper (of someone killed in Iraq or Afghanistan, for example) it’s fine to add the name at any time (as long as the person is definitely from Washington state).
But every May we also need to contact Dave and get the new list and update it in time for Memorial Day.

How to send subscriber

1. Edit the thing.

2. Go to staff site.

Use the Subscriber manager link to access the dropdown

3. Click manage subscriber, then click bulk send subscriber letter

4. The “bulk send” interface has a place for text to be entered.  In most cases one will paste the text from an edited word document.  Select all the old text and delete, then paste in the new text.   Change the email address for the preview email to an address the user has access to.  Then click the “Preview Email” button.

Bulk Send Interface

The text in the text only version window will be sent to the provide preview address.  The bulk send interface will be replaced by a page with two links.  One to return to the bulk send interface for editing the newsletter and one to send out the news letter.  Once the preview newsletter has been reviewed and approved, the “red” link to send the newsletter may be clicked.  Once the process is complete the user will get a notice of how many emails have been sent.

Washington Forest Protection Association Chronology, 1908-2008

Washington Forest Protection Association

Timeline of the First Century
1908–2008

Phil Dougherty & the HistoryLink Staff

Produced by History Ink/HistoryLink for Washington Forest Protection Association 

Washington Forest Protection Association: Timeline of the First Century, 1908–2008
by Phil Dougherty and the HistoryLink Staff

Produced by History Ink/HistoryLink
for Washington Forest Protection Association
To learn more about Washington Forest Protection Association visit http://www.wfpa.org/
To learn more about Washington state history visit www.historylink.org

Chronology: Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA)

September 11–13, 1902. In Washington state, a fire known as the Yacolt Burn kills 38 people in Clark, Cowlitz, and Skamania counties and burns more than 370 square miles of timber worth up to $30 million in 1902 dollars (more than $600 million in 2008 dollars). The fire, fanned by unusual dry easterly winds, travels 36 miles in 36 hours. There is no organized effort to stop the conflagration. The disaster leads to the first organized efforts to establish fire protection in the state.

1903. The Washington State Legislature designates the State Forest Fire Warden as Commissioner of Public Lands, to be assisted by county commissioners designated deputy wardens. However, no funding or authority is provided to the commissioners, who in reality can do very little to protect timber owned by the State.

1905. The Legislature establishes a State Board of Fire Commissioners, which appoints a State Forest Fire Warden and deputies. Although $7,500 is appropriated to fight fires for the biennium of 1905–1907, this money runs out during the summer of 1905. The commission appeals to private timber interests — who own vast tracts of land — for assistance. A total of $10,300 is raised to fight fires in 1906.

1907. Major timberland owners first meet to discuss forming a fire protection association. These meetings will continue into 1908, and leaders in the timber business mail 800 letters to timberland owners inviting them to form a voluntary association to suppress forest fires.

April 6, 1908. Twenty-two timber companies incorporate the Washington Forest Fire Association (WFFA), which establishes the first organized fire patrol system in the state. The life of the association is set at 50 years. (According to Charles Cowan in The Enemy Is Fire!, a history of the WFFA’s first 50 years, this was a common custom in 1908). The four founding members of the WFFA are Green Diamond Resource Company, Merrill & Ring, Port Blakely Tree Farms, and Weyerhaeuser Company. The association’s offices are located in the Colman building on 1st Avenue in Seattle. The WFFA recruits 126 members in its first year and assesses its members one-half cent per acre of land patrolled. The Chief Fire Warden organizes a force of 75 men, each of whom is equipped with an axe, a planter’s hoe, and a 10-quart water bag (for the fire crew). The State commissions patrolmen as Forest-Rangers-at-Large.

1908. George Long (1853–1930), General Manager of Weyerhaeuser Timber, is the first president of WFFA. Long will serve as president of WFFA until 1930, and is instrumental in managing the initial partnerships with other timber companies to establish the association and to fight forest fires. Long also recruits many of the 126 members that the WFFA gains in its first year.

May 1908. D. P. Simons Jr., Chief Fire Warden of WFFA, begins organizing the first patrol system. Seven fire districts are established, from the coast to the Cascades east to west and from the Columbia River to the Canadian border north to south. Each district is in the charge of an inspector whose duty it is to travel around through his district, offering advice to the patrolmen and putting on extra men when necessary. Fires are ranked as “Class A” (small), “Class B”
(relatively small, not more than five acres), and “Class C” (large fires requiring extra help and expense).

1909. The WFFA adds six motorcycles, one motorboat (used for patrols on Hood Canal), and one saddle horse to its complement, enabling its patrolmen to patrol a greater territory with less exertion.

1910. The first automobile is furnished by the WFFA to two fire inspectors in the southern part of the state. Other inspectors continue to travel via horse, motorcycle, bicycle, and the one motorboat on Hood Canal.

August 20 and 21, 1910. More than 1,000 fires strike Idaho and Montana, destroying three million acres and killing 85 people. Large fires also strike in late July 1910 and continue through August, destroying more than 150,000 acres in the state. Improper slash burning (disposal of wood remnants left over after logging) is blamed for the major fires. Aggressive fire protection becomes national policy.

1911. The Legislature enacts a new fire law that makes prevention of forest fires of the first importance and full suppression of fires next in importance. The biennial appropriation is increased to $30,000 for the 1912–1913 biennium. The new law gives the Fire Warden more authority to put more men in the field. The WFFA fire patrol grows 10 inspectors and 75 to 90 rangers. Permits begin to be issued for slash burning, and in 1911 the WFFA inaugurates a program for slash burning in the spring, when conditions are more favorable for safe burning. Membership assessment increases to two cents per acre.

May 1913. The WFFA begins a system of logging-camp inspections. At the time there are nearly 1,500 donkey engines (a steam-powered winch with a cable, often equipped with log skids) operating in Western Washington. These donkey engines have no effective means of stopping sparks from escaping. Rangers obtain logging location reports of logging operations within their districts, which specify to within 40 acres where logging is being conducted. This enables forest patrols to patrol more effectively.

1914. For the first time, the WFFA increases its advertising against fires (previously limited to posted warning notices) by sending 400 picture slides to “moving picture” theaters and sending several thousand pictures of a campfire scene to be distributed and displayed at public schools in Western Washington.

1914. The WFFA temporarily arranges to receive weather forecasts from a weather office in Portland whenever easterly winds, which carry the greatest threat of accelerating fires, threaten. Although the value of weather forecasting and fire prevention is clearly recognized after this trial run, it will be another 12 years before fire-weather warning services are placed on a permanent basis.

December 31, 1915. Reports from both the president and secretary in the 1915 WFFA Annual Report note that more than a million acres of timberland in Western Washington benefit from WFFA patrols without contributing to the cost. This represents about half the total acreage being patrolled in the region. The report notes that Oregon has a compulsory law that if a timber owner will not contribute to a local forest fire protection association, he is assessed for his acreage and required to pay this amount into state funds; the State of Oregon then disburses the
funds for fire protection. The call goes out to enact a similar law in Washington.

1916. The WFFA employs a total of 85 men in the field and the State provides an additional 73 men for patrolling in Western Washington. A custom of holding yearly meetings in several locations each June between WFFA, state, and Forest Service patrolmen begins. These meetings enable the patrolmen to better coordinate their resources and work in cooperation.

1917. The Legislature enacts the Forest Patrol Law (Section 6, Chapter 105, Laws of 1917, which in 1986 becomes RCW 76.04.600). Owners of forestlands that have enough timber, standing or down, or flammable debris, to constitute a fire menace to life and property, are required to “provide, during the season of the year when there is danger of forest fires, adequate protection against the spread of fire,” and the failure so to do authorizes the State Forester to provide such protection and to report the cost thereof to the county assessor to be assessed and collected against the property in the same manner as other state and county taxes. The law goes into effect in time for the 1917 fire season. Under an agreement between the WFFA and the State Board of Forest Commissioners, the WFFA patrols some 600,000 acres belonging to non-members of the WFFA, and the State Forester assesses these lands accordingly. Funds collected by the State Forester are paid to the WFFA in an amount of two cents per acre of land patrolled, which equals the levy amount the WFFA charges its members per acre in 1917. Forest protection taxes are levied in the autumn following the season for which they apply, and are collected the next year. (In The Enemy Is Fire!, Cowan notes that in reality, a large number of acres are allowed to revert to counties in lieu of taxes, and the WFFA eventually writes off a book debt of more than $750,000 in unpaid patrol costs.) As a result of the new law, membership increases by nearly 75 percent in the WFFA during the year, from 198 members at the end of 1916 to 346 members at the end of 1917. The office of the State Fire Warden receives more adequate financing as a result of the law, and a field organization develops with the appointment of district fire wardens whose jurisdiction typically is one county.

1918. The State Forester levies an assessment against 725,000 acres as a result of the WFFA patrols. The fire season is remembered as two seasons, with the first dry season (between April and July) so severe that Governor Ernest Lister supplements the forest patrol with 30 members of the National Guard. The WFFA patrol force in 1918 passes 100 for the first time, reaching a total of 101. Forty-eight automobiles are used by the patrollers in 1918, an increase of 17 from 1917.

January–November 1918. Spruce loggers log spruce and Douglas-fir trees in Western Washington as part of the World War I effort. The spruce is used in ships and particularly in “aeroplanes.” The 1918 WFFA Annual Report notes that the logging work done by the Spruce Production Division of the U.S. government that year was not as hazardous as a typical logging operation, and credits “painstaking effort put forth by the Spruce Production Division” to prevent fires.

September 27, 1918. One of the worst fires of the year destroys the town of Lindberg in Lewis County. The fire, started by a spark from a donkey engine, kills 84 million feet of standing timber and destroys a large amount of logging machinery.

October 1919. Plans are made to extend an airplane patrol service (already in use in California and Oregon) to Washington. Tentative plans are made to establish a base at Camp Lewis, with four air patrols operating from there, for the 1920 fire season. However, due to a lack of Congressional appropriations, airplane patrols are not implemented in 1920.

1919. Lookout houses are being built atop some of the mountains in Western Washington.
At least one of these has already been in use since as far back as 1916.

1920. In the 1920 WFFA Annual Report, President Long notes that there is a “growing sentiment in favor of reforestation” of logged-off lands. Patrols are added to some logged-off areas to allow second-growth to take hold in these areas.

1920. Eighty men are commissioned by the State Forester as logging-camp wardens in 1920. This program, begun on a trial basis in 1919 with nine wardens, shows success in reducing forest fires. These men supervise the use of logging equipment to ensure all safeguards are used to prevent fires. This effort, though successful in reducing forest fires, eventually is curtailed because it slows the overall logging operations at the camp, which camp supervisors are usually unwilling to tolerate.

January 29, 1921. “The Great Blowdown” strikes the Washington coast. Hurricane-force winds with gusts of more than 100 m.p.h. strike the Washington coast, blowing down power lines and telephone lines; three to seven billion board feet of timber are also blown down. This results in an enormous fire hazard, particularly on the Olympic Peninsula, which bears the brunt of the storm. The U.S. Forest Service, the State, and the Washington Forest Fire Association deploy additional fire suppression crews to protect the region. National Guard troops limit access into affected areas. The U.S. Army responds with air patrols, but the fuel appropriation runs out; the State of Washington and the Washington Forest Fire Association respond with $1,029.93 each to buy enough gasoline to keep the JN-4s from Camp Lewis flying.

1921. The Legislature passes an appropriation of $5,000 for the State to repurchase logged-off land for the purpose of reforestation. This is the first law of its kind in the state that recognizes the benefits of reforestation. President Long notes in his annual report that in many cases the logged-off land is better suited for reforestation than for agricultural purposes, and adds that without it, most of Washington’s forests will be gone within 50 years.

1921. The WFFA, in conjunction with the State Forestry Department, improves 50 locations in Western Washington for use as campgrounds by tourists. By 1921 automobile travel is becoming more widespread and often the tourists camp wherever they can. Providing a safe campsite from which surrounding underbrush has been removed proves to be another effective means of reducing accidental fires.

October 1921. Washington State Forestry Conference organizes under the auspices of the State Development Bureau of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. For at least the next four decades this is the forum where much of the forestry legislation in the state originates.

1922. The WFFA patrol force now totals 178, consisting of 20 district wardens, 75 regular patrolmen, and 83 extra patrolmen. The State employs an additional 55 patrolmen, for a combined total of 253 men; 110 of these men (or nearly half) are now using automobiles in their work. The extra men are kept busy: The 1922 fire season is one of the worst on record in Western Washington, with 947 fires reported and more than 300,000 (possibly more than 350,000 — accounts differ) acres burned.

May 31, 1922. Fires sweep across eastern King County as part of the disastrous 1922 fire season. There are no fatalities, but more than a dozen men are injured; hundreds of thousands of dollars of property are destroyed, and the northern half of the town of Cedar Falls is destroyed.

October 1922. At the annual Washington State Forestry Conference, seven principal recommendations are made to prevent the risk of forest fires. For the first time, it is recommended that slash burning be prohibited between June and August. The Legislature adopts part of these recommendations at its session in 1923.

1923. As a result of a particularly bad fire season in 1922, manufacturers develop better mechanical methods of fire protection. Portable gasoline pumps become more widely used in the state in fighting forest fires. The WFFA purchases 12 such portable pumps in 1923, each weighing between 80 and 140 pounds, and each equipped with 1,000 feet of hose. Lighter pumps become available later in the 1920s.

1923. Writers for the U.S. Forest Service publish papers showing the relationship between weather and fires. Although hot weather has long been known to be conducive for fires, for the first time low relative humidity (below 35 percent) is also shown to have a significant effect. The paper demonstrates that forest fuels dry out more rapidly when the humidity is low, and recommends slash burning only in the spring, adding that slash burning in the fall destroys seeds in the slash essential for forest regeneration. Suggestions to shut down logging operations in extreme fire weather are initially ignored.

1923. The Legislature creates a State Forest Board and authorizes the board to purchase lands suitable for reforesting at a maximum of $6 per acre. A maximum of $200,000 for the period April 1923–March 1925 is authorized to be spent for such purchases. During 1923, the State purchases several thousand acres as a result of the new law.

June 7, 1924. The U.S. Congress enacts the Clarke-McNary Act . The act sets up a formula that the U.S. government will assume 25 percent of a state’s cost of fire prevention and suppression, the states will assume 25 percent, and forest landowners 50 percent. States are required to observe minimal standards that are set up for the prevention and suppression of forest fires, and if these standards are met, 25 percent of their costs will be reimbursed by the federal government.

July 1924¬. In the spring of 1924, the WFFA asks the U.S. Weather Bureau to make a special study of fire weather causes and effects, and offers to pay all necessary extra expense. The weather service initially rejects this proposal, but later in the year assigns two men for this duty. The WFFA furnishes equipment (particularly hygrothermographs, which record both temperature and humidity) for seven observation stations. The WFFA also begins telegraphing fire-warning forecasts to loggers and others. This program expands in 1925.

1925. Many logging camps begin using hair hygrometers and sling psychrometers during the mid-1920s to determine relative humidity to predict fire weather. A hair hygrometer uses strands of hair (with oils removed) attached to levers to amplify changes in hair length, since hair lengthens as humidity increases. A sling psychrometer consists of two thermometers, a dry bulb thermometer and wet bulb thermometer; readings are taken from both thermometers and compared and then the relative humidity is calculated by use of a chart.

1925. The WFFA purchases its first truck, a Graham Brothers one-ton, in which is installed three gas pumps, 3,000 feet of fire hose, and sundry tools. The truck is stationed in Seattle and dispatched to fires across Western Washington upon request. Newspapers and radio stations in Seattle begin publishing fire-weather-situations forecasts in 1925.

July 1, 1926. Fire-weather forecasts are placed on a permanent basis. Starting on this date they are officially recognized as one of the special phases of Weather Bureau activities. Funds are appropriated to pay the salary of meteorologists now permanently assigned to fire-weather projects.

1926. The State provides three special police officers, whose salaries are supplemented by the WFFA, to patrol the forests to insure the forest laws are being met. The program proves successful, with a number of violators being caught and fined.

February 1927. By this time at least one insurance company, the Loggers Insurance Company, attaches a rider called “Humidity Warranty for Logging Risks” to its policies, requiring an insured logger to completely suspend operations at any time between April and October when the humidity at the logging camp falls below 30 percent.

1927. In 1927 the WFFA consists of 277 members, and 3.1 million acres of land are patrolled, of which 800,000 acres are logged-off areas. Charles Cowan (1887-1969) becomes Chief Fire Warden.

1928. The WFFA begins to use tank pumps. These small, portable pumps represent a significant increase in firefighting capacity. The pumps can be filled with water to stop spot fires, but they can also be filled with coal oil to start back fires and for slash burning. Tank pumps are found to be particularly useful for lighting back fires; before this time a pressure torch (essentially a flame thrower) was used, which was more clumsy and carried more risk to the person using it.

1928. The WFFA purchases a fire hall in Seattle to store its equipment, and develops sharpening tools to maintain this equipment. This not only provides a central location for all of its equipment but also a safer one. Before this time equipment had been stored wherever space could be found on the District Warden’s premises; often rats dined on the WFFA’s fire hose.

1929. Lookout towers begin to become widely used to detect fires, and four such towers are built atop mountains in Western Washington in 1929. The towers are designed and erected by the WFFA in cooperation with the State, and range in height from 59 to 119 feet. Many are equipped with ladders and others with stairs, but the only way to ascend at least one tower (the Capitol Peak tower west of Olympia) is by rigging up a bosun’s chair and rappelling up the tower; the climber pulls himself up to the floor of the tower in this manner while being aided by a counterweight which drops from the tower to the ground as the ranger ascends the tower. These lookout towers prove to be quite successful in the early detection of fires. Four more towers are built in Western Washington in 1930 alone; more towers follow, and will be used for the next 30 to 40 years as part of firefighting efforts. More roads, trails, and telephone lines are soon built by the WFFA for these towers, which also provides easier access for firefighters in the event of fire.

1929. The WFFA purchases its first tractor, a 15-horsepower Caterpillar, and uses it with a plow that the WFFA builds. When the tractor can be used, it is found to be more effective in fighting fires than a crew of 50 men. The tractor is also used to remove old ties, to grade roads, and to raise completed bents for lookout towers.

March 11, 1930. George Long, President of the WFFA since its inception in 1908, resigns. (He dies suddenly in Klamath Falls, Oregon, on August 2, 1930.) Edwin G. Ames, another of the original incorporators of the WFFA and its vice-president since 1917, also resigns.

1930. The 1930 WFFA Annual Report notes that hose connections have improved, with a newer standard male-female type of coupling now giving a firm watertight connection with an inch turn of the coupling; it is stronger and much faster to use, and the report notes that 15 minutes are saved per 1,000 feet of fire hose used, thanks to this new coupling.

1930. With the onset of the Great Depression, incendiary (deliberately set) fires become a significant problem in 1930. These fires, also called “make work” fires, are often set by homeless or similarly displaced people who have taken up residence on logged-off land or in abandoned logging camps. When firefighters arrive, they are often met by the same people who set the fire,
who offer to help put it out, for pay. Given the hard economic times, little action is taken against the arsonists, and arson fires continue to be a major source of fire loss in Western Washington during the early 1930s as the Great Depression continues.

1931. Incendiary fires continue to plague the WFFA, with more than 20 percent of fires reported in Western Washington this year to have been deliberately set. But this year is remembered for the WFFA’s efforts to fight the hemlock looper in Pacific County, a moth which, in its larvae stage, is a defoliator and very destructive to hemlock, Douglas fir, and spruce. The WFFA takes a lead role in coordinating the attack on this pest, and state, county, and some private landowners cooperate in conducting a dusting operation from the air, still a relatively new way to combat pest infestations.

1933. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camps develop. The CCC was developed by President Roosevelt shortly after his inauguration in March 1933 as a work relief program to combat unemployment. Two hundred young men, ranging in age from 18 to 25, begin assembling in June, and by the end of July 12 companies are stationed in several camps set up throughout the state, with superintendents and foremen of the camps selected from local experienced men. The “CCC boys” build roads, trails, ranger houses, and fire towers, and engage in some limited fire fighting. Incendiary fires sharply drop in 1933 as a result of the CCC presence, because the
CCC staff on hand is sufficient to fight fires and it is no longer necessary to hire men on the spot.

1934. CCC men continue to play an important role in the WFFA in 1934. With the assistance of the WFFA, they erect three new fire towers that year in Western Washington, and in 1933 and 1934 they develop a total of 1,100 miles of new road in their territory, either by developing the road entirely or converting old logging grades into roads. The CCC continues to develop into a more effective firefighting force as well. Incendiary fires continue to decrease.

June 1, 1934. Article 10 of the National Lumber Code goes into effect. Chief Fire Warden Charles Cowan participates in drafting some of the regulations in the code. Whenever dangerous fire weather threatens, the State Forester can issue logging shutdown orders subject to the approval of a committee representing the loggers. According to Cowan, most loggers “cheerfully accept” the new rules. While fires caused by logging have already been declining since the late 1920s, they drop an impressive 75 percent during the next two years from
their average since 1920, and the total number of acres burned from these fires drops even more dramatically from the 14-year average, by 90 percent. In 1934 and 1935 logging fires make up less than 2 percent of the total fires in Western Washington, showing that prevention of fires is even more significant than suppression of fires. The regulations also require the forest products industry to prepare plans to restore logged lands. Weyerhaeuser loggers leave seed trees standing to naturally populate the new forests.

1935. The U.S. Supreme Court strikes down Article 10 in May 1935, but much of the industry continues to voluntarily comply. Recreational fires accidentally set make up 35 percent of fires in the same territory during the year, reflecting the increasing use of privately owned forest lands by the general public. In mid-summer the number of CCC camps in Western Washington is reduced from 20 to nine.

1935. The State establishes a 30-acre forest nursery in the Capitol State Forest near Littlerock (Thurston County), complete with cone-drying facilities, seed beds, irrigation systems, and a power extractor that pulls seeds from cones. Directed by State Forester T. S. Goodyear, the nursery marks the first time the State has taken steps to perpetuate tree growth in the state. CCC crews also plant 1.25 million Douglas-fir nursery seedlings to reforest 15,624 acres of state trust lands.

1936. The 1936 WFFA Annual Report notes that the 15-year average of total number of acres burned in fires each year on association lands in Western Washington is 120,357; however, by this time more effective firefighting measures are taking effect and this number will begin to drop rapidly over the next few years.

December 1937. The WFFA concludes the year with the approach of its 30th anniversary. The association patrols 2.6 million acres of forest lands owned by 171 individuals and corporations; members pay three cents an acre. The association also patrols an additional 2.1 million acres of land under contract for patrol protection with the State Division of Forestry; these property owners are assessed for this service under provisions of the Forest Patrol Law. Fires started by recreation continue to be the largest cause of fires in Western Washington. In 1937 the Legislature extends the fire season for one month, from April 15 to October 15. Previously the season had run from May 1 through September 30.

1938. The WFFA begins to measure fuel moisture as part of its assessment of fire risk.
1939. The WFFA begins fighting small roadside fires with five-gallon pump cans. Two different kinds of pumps are installed on pickup trucks, one driven by a fan belt and the other by
a power take-off, which is a driveshaft used to draw power from the engine to the pump. The reliability of engines now enable a fire patrolman to put out many fires by himself in their early
stages, if the weather conditions are not extremely hazardous. The program is so successful that it is later enlarged. The CCC continues to provide valuable assistance to the WFFA, both in fire fighting and in the construction of forest roads, telephone lines, and fire towers, as well as in tree-planting.

1940. All WFFA patrol trucks are equipped with portable pumps utilizing the fan-belt method. The trucks are then equipped with three 55-gallon barrels and are used to fight roadside fires; suction hoses are also provided which enable water to be taken from nearby creeks during a fire. These pump trucks prove successful, increasing the number of fires controlled to under a quarter acre in 1940 (a rather difficult fire year) to 50 percent of all fires. Yarders in logging yards capable of operating the pumps and railroad speeders pulling light fast cars capable of carrying the water barrels needed to fight fires are also used to fight logging fires. Smaller crews of four men are used on an experimental basis to fight fires, with some success.

May 31, 1940. Keep Washington Green is formed by a proclamation issued by Washington Governor Clarence Martin. Keep Washington Green is an organization that works through public education from 1940 until 1995 to prevent human-caused forest and range wildfires.

1941. CCC enrollment in the WFFA dwindles dramatically during the year as the national defense effort steps up immediately prior to American involvement in World War II. Congress appropriates $1 million for the establishment of another fire-defense organization in the states; Washington receives $150,000 of these funds and officials set up an organization that places an additional 130 men in the field. For the first time since 1925, recreational fires are not the chief cause of fires in Western Washington during the year (lightning is.) The WFFA supplements its use of portable pumps by trying light trailers on an experimental basis. These trailers can carry an additional 200 gallons of water over and above an additional 100 gallons on the pickup truck. The trailer can be easily detached and towed back to the water source for refilling.

June 21, 1941. Weyerhaeuser Timber Company dedicates the nation’s first tree farm near Montesano in Grays Harbor County. The 130,000-acre tract, named the Clemons Tree Farm, is named after local logger Charles H. Clemons. By the end of the twentieth century, there will be more than 70,000 tree farms in the United States comprising more than 93 million acres of land.

1942. “The season 1942 was a year which was accompanied by the alarms of war” (Report of Chief Fire Warden, 1942 WFFA Annual Report, p. 6). In January all forest-protection agencies, both state and national, meet to discuss potential forest-fire contingencies. There is a particular fear that Japan will attempt to firebomb Washington state forests and start a
conflagration of enormous proportions. The CCC is disbanded, and manpower shortages develop because of the war; emergency fire crews (consisting mostly of high school youths) are set up at federal expense and placed under the supervision of the State Forester. Forest patrols open early in the season to prevent sabotage; repair and replacement of broken equipment
becomes difficult due to the war effort. Weather forecasts cease to be broadcast, though the U.S. Weather Service provides information (subject to military censorship) directly to forest-protection agencies. Radio stations and newspapers increase coverage for the need for fire prevention, which proves effective; 1942 shows a drop in number of fires and an even bigger drop in number of acres burned.

1943. Nearly two million acres of forest land are closed to the public during 1943 in an effort to reduce fire hazard. More than 800 high school youths, ranging in age from 16 to 18, are recruited to fight fires.

February 12, 1945. The first of 28 incendiary balloons launched from Japan and known to land in Washington are discovered seven miles north of Spokane. Two unexploded bombs are discovered and neutralized. As many as 9,000 balloons are sent aloft from the
Japanese island of Hokkaido beginning in November 1944 to set forest fires in order to siphon manpower and resources away from the war effort; however, this effort is not successful.

1945¬. World War II ends in September, and normal travel and forest use begins slowly to resume. Timothy Jerome, the last surviving original incorporator of the WFFA, dies in April; he had served as a trustee of the WFFA continuously since 1908. The Legislature passes the Forest Practice Act, which goes into effect on January 1, 1946.

January 1, 1946. The Forest Practice Act goes into effect. This act requires Washington loggers to plant trees to replace the logs that they have harvested, thereby ensuring future forest growth. Any logger seeking a permit to cut timber has to agree to provide adequate reforestation. This also applies to a private landowner cutting his own trees. The State Division of Forestry is empowered to enforce the provisions and a nine-member board will adopt rules to protect soils, water, fish, wildlife, and public capital improvements from the impacts of logging. Some timber interests oppose the statute and appeal its constitutionality to the U.S. Supreme Court, which upholds the law.

1946. Two WFFA International trucks are converted into tank trucks, each equipped with 500-gallon sheet-steel tanks filled and emptied by a Pacific Marine pump powered by a transmission takeoff from the engine.

1947. The Rue Creek Agreement is entered into between the WFFA and a number of logging operators in an area of high fire hazard in Pacific County. (An adjacent area, Trap Creek, is
added to the organization by 1953.) The WFFA makes additional firefighting equipment available to members of this local association (none of whom are actual WFFA members), and in turn, the Rue Creek members assess themselves 20 cents an acre annually for a special patrolman for the area who has immediate access to the firefighting equipment. This is the earliest such agreement entered into by the WFFA (others will follow), and provides immediate protection for fires within the members’ boundaries. Prior to this time members had to wait for WFFA firefighters and equipment to arrive from other locations, which in some cases took hours — a crucial amount of time during a fire. The Rue Creek Agreement is renewed annually through 1959.

April 1947. The State Division of Forestry notifies the WFFA that it will no longer renew the annual patrol contract to protect state-assessed lands, which it has entered into with the WFFA since 1917. This is the culmination of a deteriorating relationship which has been ongoing
between the State and the WFFA for several years. The State takes over protection of all assessed forest lands previously contracted to the WFFA, and stops providing to the WFFA information regarding its maintenance, improvements, and law enforcement work in the field.

1948. The WFFA enters into a contract with the State in which the State undertakes the actual field protection of WFFA-member lands. The Rainier Forest Association develops for the purpose of fighting fires specifically within its boundaries (this association dissolves in 1962). Chemical spraying for brush control begins, directed at alder trees that grow on roadsides, and
proves moderately successful. The WFFA begins inspecting fire-law compliance and other fire-prevention measures of logging operations on member and neighboring lands, and continues this practice for 20 years. These inspections are actually supplemental actions to similar inspections done by the State.

1949. District fire wardens now begin closing forest lands by district instead of all through Western Washington when conditions are hazardous. This makes sense, since some areas in the region can be dangerously dry while others might be socked in with fog and have no fire danger.

1950. The WFFA continues to emphasize its focus on fire prevention, inspecting firefighting equipment and adding patrols on tree farms owned by member companies. In 1950 there are membership holdings of 3,260,653 acres listed with the WFFA.

1951. Meteorologically 1951’s fire season mirrors the extreme fire conditions of 1922, considered one of the worst in the state’s history, but thanks to cooperation between the State Division of Forestry, logging operators, the WFFA, and the Rainier Forest Association, total acres lost in 1951 is barely 10 percent that of 1922 (35,000 acres as compared to 300,000 to 350,000 acres). This demonstrates how far both fire prevention and firefighting techniques have come in less than 30 years. In 1951 the WFFA also is involved in the new technique of cloud seeding with silver iodide to produce rain, but the results are unclear. Cloud-seeding experiments continue in 1952. Two WFFA inspector cars are equipped with two-way radios, enabling faster communication when a new fire is reported or hazardous conditions exist. The Legislature passes a snag-falling law, which provides additional protection in preventing forest fires; the law requires that standing dead trees be removed by logging operators on land upon which they are working.

September 20, 1951. A major forest fire burns 33,000 acres and 32 buildings in Forks, and the town of 1,000 residents is evacuated. Much of the damage to the town is on its outskirts; a fortuitous drop in the wind at the last minute prevents the town itself from going up in flames.

1952. The Abernathy Forest Association is incorporated to provide extra protection to 109,000 acres of land in Cowlitz, Wahkiakum, and Lewis counties, and operates through 1963. The WFFA begins a method of warning the public of high fire risk by utilizing large loudspeakers, or bull horns, mounted on an airplane and flying over hazardous areas broadcasting these warnings. (The State subsequently takes over the system and utilizes it in Eastern Washington.) The new medium of television begins contributing to the fire-prevention cause. James Bridge, president of the WFFA since George Long’s resignation in 1930, dies unexpectedly on August 28, 1952.

1952. The WFFA joins with the Oregon Forest Fire Association and a group of Oregon logging operators to produce a film, The Enemy Is Fire, to educate loggers on many common mistakes
made in logging operations that can lead to a fire and to show the value of fire prevention. The film is first shown to loggers in the spring of 1953 and proves so popular that it is also shown to other interested groups and later to schoolchildren. A second film, Fire Weather, is completed late in 1955 and proves equally as successful; these films continue to be shown into the 1960s.

1954. The WFFA records its best season since its inception in 1908, with both the fewest number of fires (369) and the fewest number of acres burned (607). The WFFA begins testing ejectors, suction hoses capable of bringing otherwise inaccessible pressurized water within reach. Airplane patrols are used by the Rainier Forest Association to spot lightning fires and weekend fires often caused by recreationists.

1955. The Legislature creates two “honor camps.” One camp, manned by 65 selected inmates from the Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla, is authorized to remove snags from the area of the Yacolt Burn, which is still considered hazardous. The second camp, manned from the prison at Monroe, is authorized to develop state forest lands in western Clallam County. A major early freeze strikes Western Washington in early November 1955, severely damaging crops and younger (less than 30 years old) second-growth forests, which slows the WFFA’s ongoing forest regeneration efforts.

1956. KING-5 TV begins broadcasting forest-fire weather information at 6:50 p.m.; this mirrors a report of snow and ice conditions over the mountain passes that KING-5 has been
broadcasting in the winter. This helps alert the public to adverse weather conditions and is an additional deterrent to fires started by carelessness.

1957. The Legislature creates the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to consolidate the work of several agencies responsible for state and privately owned forest and forest practices. It is felt that one department is better able to manage state lands, regulate the timber harvest, and guarantee a sustainable yield of timber through reforestation. (Legislation proposing such a department had been unsuccessfully presented several times to the Legislature as far back as 1933.) The Department of Natural Resources brings together the Division of Forestry, the Board of State Land Commissioners, and others. The Legislature also creates a State Forest Board, which advises the Department of Natural Resources; the Board holds its first meeting on April 1, 1957.

January 1958. With the approaching expiration (in April 1958) of the 50-year corporate life of the WFFA, the WFFA is reincorporated as the Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA).

1958. Charles Cowan retires. Cowan, author of The Enemy Is Fire!, served for 31 years in the WFFA, first as Chief Fire Warden, and, beginning in 1950, as Manager. The fire-weather staff at the Department of Natural Resources devises a system that divides the western half of the state into 21 zones in recognition of the different elevation, topography, and prevailing weather exposures in each zone. Detailed weather forecasts are now provided to these zones. Notes the 1958 WFPA Annual Report, “This is a distinct step toward the localized forecasting so long desired by field personnel.”

1958. The Webster Forest Nursery, named after Mike Webster, then supervisor of the newly formed Department of Natural Resources, is established on 80 acres near Olympia. In 2008, this nursery consists of 270 acres of bare-root ground and 30,000 square feet of greenhouses. The objective of the Webster Forest Nursery is to produce eight to 10 million seedlings annually to be planted on DNR-managed state trust land, and to make available to private landowners with small holdings three to five million seedlings that can be planted to meet the requirements of the State Forest Practices Act.

1959. Two-way radios (industrial radios), first used by the WFFA in 1951, are now widely used by the WFPA, and with good effect. These channels are used to provide instant weather reports from all areas of operations, allowing field supervisors to quickly react to hazardous weather conditions by closing down logging operations in the area; the radios are also used for faster reporting of fires.

1960. The WFPA inaugurates a bear control agreement in the northern half of Grays Harbor County. This operation expands to cover 2,100 square miles in 1961. It is reported that bears began killing trees in the area in the late 1940s, and the Game Department declared them to be predators. Landowners assess themselves four cents an acre for this protection. Ankle snares and, in some cases, dogs are used to trap the bears; 167 bears are reported taken during the 1960 season. Later in the 1960s, sports hunters are allowed to keep the bear population in check.

1961. Two positions for District Forester are created, one for “the area from Skamania to Clallam counties” and the other for “the remaining counties.” These foresters inspect fire-prevention measures in logging operations and provide reports concerning legal requirements and recommendations for extra safety precautions to both the field supervisor and the company manager. Seven local fire-protection committees are created in Western Washington to more cooperatively and effectively resolve protection problems that might be unique to their area. Also in 1961, the WFPA successfully petitions the Grays Harbor County Commissioners to restrict open-range cattle grazing in the county, as some cattle owners have been putting their cows on tree farm lands in such large numbers that trees are destroyed, creating a fire risk. This program to limit cattle grazing expands to Pierce County in 1962, and to additional counties as the 1960s progress.

October 12, 1962. A disastrous windstorm strikes Western Washington, with wind gusts of up to 150 m.p.h. in Wahkiakum County; the National Weather Service later designates it as Washington’s worst weather disaster of the twentieth century. Approximately 17 billion board feet of timber are blown down, far eclipsing the amount of board timber blown down in “The Great Blowdown” of January 1921. As was the case in 1921, the Olympic Peninsula is particularly affected by the storm. A massive salvage effort ensues, but the supply exceeds the demand in regional lumber mills. It takes several years to remove all of the destroyed timber from the scene of the blowdown. In 1966, approximately 350 million board feet of timber are shipped to Japan.

1963. Hemlock looper again breaks out in Pacific County; it is the first such infestation since 1931. The Department of Natural Resources uses the pesticide DDT to fight the infestation, which brings intense national scrutiny because of the recent publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, which details the hazards of DDT. Helicopters are used to provide spraying; the project is closely supervised. At the end of 1963 the project is reported to be a success. The WFPA reproduces 23 previously published articles about various aspects of pesticide use and its effects under the title You and Forest Chemicals and distributes 350 copies to Washington state foresters.

1963. The WFPA and Department of Natural Resources station a water-scooping aerial tanker at Kelso, Washington. The cost is $15,000 for 45 hours of flying time; “Scooper I,” as the plane is called, is used on five fires, and proves to be a valuable addition in fire fighting. Also in 1963, Dow Chemical Company releases a new gelling agent that when added to water causes it to form into a gelatinous mass. When dropped, this gel clings to everything it lands on, providing an excellent fire retardant that is much slower to evaporate than regular water or other fire retardants already in use.

1964. The WFPA begins providing aerial photography in what becomes known as the “small scale aerial photography project” to its members in Southwestern Washington. By 1966 this program expands to include the area east of Puget Sound north to the Canadian border, as well as the Olympic Peninsula. These photos are made more useful by superimposing township and range lines in a square grid over the aerial images. They can then be used for forest management and protection by aerial fire detection, as well as for reproduction to create low-cost field maps. The WFPA also begins a cooperative bear research program in conjunction with other organizations. Study areas are established and radio tracking devices are used on bears to study their habits. It is hoped that this research will lead to a better solution of the bear-control problem. This program continues through 1968.

1966¬. The WFPA reorganizes and becomes a state-wide organization. This reorganization, begun late in 1965, is the result of requests by forest landowners in the state for the WFPA to take on an additional job of determining the consequences of public policies on forest lands and to develop policies to strengthen the forestry segment of the state’s economy, as well as to provide a liaison between WFPA members and the public and governmental agencies in Washington state. After the WFPA becomes a state-wide organization, for the first time representatives from Eastern Washington sit on the WFPA Board of Trustees, and 17 companies and individuals from Eastern Washington apply for membership in the WFPA. WFPA membership holdings at the end of 1966 are nearly 3.9 million acres in Western Washington alone, but Eastern Washington holdings add almost another million acres to the total.

1967. Aerial reconnaissance for fires begins to replace the use of fire tower lookouts in Western Washington. The WFPA uses a helicopter for the first time to fight fires in 1967. A Kaman twin-
rotor helicopter, which carries 250 gallons of water in a container slung from a cargo hook under the aircraft, is leased. The WFPA will expand its helicopter fleet to four in 1970. The WFPA begins using forest-fire simulators for training at the U.S. Forest Service office in Redmond, Oregon. Realistic forest-fire problems are simulated on the machine and the trainee can practice actions to control the fire, thus enabling him to be better prepared to fight an actual fire. In 1968, the WFPA will use a similar simulator located at the training center of the Department of Natural Resources in Shelton, Washington. The WFPA devises a system to allow persons in aircraft to identify radio-equipped cars by a particular coded number in the car’s radio equipment; a corresponding number decal is placed on the car’s roof top to make it identifiable from the air. This enables persons in aircraft to more efficiently establish radio contact with the individual radio operator through his individual radio network. The WFPA also begins publishing uniform maps with unified hunting rules for hunters in its districts.

1967. The WFPA embarks on two projects to better inform the public of the issues involving forestland management. The projects include a program of providing tours for state legislators; the WFPA also sponsors a monthly luncheon for the Seattle press at which an expert speaks on a timely subject and answers questions. The tours and press luncheons are designed to provide a broader educational background to the public of the issues presented in forestry as opposed to focusing on any particular issue. These projects continue into the early 1970s.

1968. The U.S. Park Service begins allowing some natural fires to burn in certain areas, and begins employing some manager-ignited fires. Parks in the Northwest gradually adopt the prescribed-burning approach during the 1970s.

1969. Charles Cowan, Chief Fire Warden from 1927 until 1958, dies. Although he had been retired for more than a decade, he had continued to provide guidance to his successor on an as-needed basis until shortly before his death. Also in 1969, the Department of Natural Resources takes over the aerial photography program from the WFPA.

1970. The 1970 WFPA Annual Report notes that the 20-year annual average between 1950 and 1969 of total number of acres burned in fires on association lands is 4,480. This is a 96 percent decrease from the period 1920–1935, when the annual average destroyed was more than 120,000 acres. However, the total number of fires each year remains largely unchanged; the 1920–1935 average is 777 fires annually and the 1950–1970 average is 791. These facts show the advances made in firefighting technology over the course of half a century.

1971. The WFPA increases its legislative activity as the result of increased attention from the public to environmental issues that affect forest land, as well as forest taxation issues, another hot-button topic. The WFPA advocates replacing the current ad-valorem property tax on a growing timber crop with a tax on timber at the time of harvest. A new tax law is passed in 1971 (which takes effect in January 1972) that phases out the ad-valorem tax on timber over a period of three years and phases in an excise tax on the value of the timber harvested.

1971. The State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) is enacted (RCW 43.21C RCW). The act seeks to maintain and improve environmental quality by requiring that governmental agencies give proper consideration to environmental matters when making decisions on actions that may
impact the environment. This results in “a bewildering array of fractionated, uncoordinated regulations administered by … many governmental entities” (1973 WFPA Annual Report, p. 8) and results in increasing difficulties for effective forest management. In an attempt to counter this trend, the Washington Legislature passes the Forest Practices Act in 1973.

1972. Some U.S. Forest Service employees experiment with allowing lightning-set fires to burn in designated wilderness areas. They discover that fires in the undergrowth of pine forests burn
slowly without damage to larger trees, and that animals are not harmed. The U.S. Forest Service and other land management agencies begin letting some natural fires burn in wilderness areas. Human-caused fires or fires that threaten homes or buildings are fought as before.

1973. The Legislature passes the Forest Practices Act. The act is designed to regulate all forest practices on state and private land, including logging and its impacts on the environment. An 11-member Forest Practices Board is established to develop the new regulations, which are intended to be completed and in effect by January 1, 1975, but numerous technical questions require at least nine drafts of the regulations to be written. The process continues into early 1976, with final regulations effective on July 1, 1976.

January 1975. The WFPA opens a branch office in Olympia, with a goal of more effectively representing its interests in the state capital on issues involving forest land. This is necessary because of dramatically increased governmental action on both the legislative and administrative levels of state and local governmental agencies during the preceding few years. The new office allows the issues and programs that involve the WFPA to become more visible and understood by state legislators, administrators, and their staffs in the state capital.

November 1975. The WFPA again restructures. Five committees are created to more effectively deal with the major issues facing the WFPA. These five committees are (1) Forest Management; (2) Land Use; (3) Forest Taxation; (4) Governmental Affairs; and (5) Public Information.

July 1, 1976. Washington’s new Forest Practices Act takes effect. This is the first major change in the regulation of logging since the original 1946 act. Compliance with the 1946 act had been sporadic, and the new act is designed to guarantee sustainable yields for state, municipal, and private forests while protecting other resources. Since 1976, the rules in the act have evolved as the result of other scientific research, public interest, and other regulations.

1977. Stewart “Stu” Bledsoe becomes WFPA executive director. The WFPA conducts regional meetings for loggers featuring the new hose torpedo. This device enables a logging crew to rapidly string out fire hose using the log yarding cable system. The WFPA continues to increase its public information programs with a series of new programs and publications. The WFPA
also begins to implement Project Learning Tree on a large-scale basis in 1977. Project Learning Tree is a program designed to teach teachers how to teach forestry topics. This program will grow in leaps and bounds during the 1980s.

1979. The WFPA organizes and staffs an informal organization known as the Washington State Pest Management Alliance (WSPMA), which is created to address growing public concern surrounding the use of herbicides and to promote the safe use of herbicides. The alliance becomes a separate entity in 1981, and in 1984 is renamed the Washington Pest Management Council.

1979. Late in the year, environmentalists bring a lawsuit in the name of “2.1 Million Acres of Trees, State Trust Land, Water, Wildlife, and Ecosystems et al.” (1980 WFPA Annual Report,
p. 19) attacking the Department of Natural Resources’ environmental-impact statement on its forestland-management program for the decade, as well as the Board of Natural Resources’ interpretation of its duties in managing state trust lands. Recognizing that the suit has considerable potential to affect forest management, the WFPA and other associations intervene in the suit, which is settled in September 1982.

1981. The WFPA continues to take an active role in legislative affairs. In 1981 the forest practices exemptions that were previously in the Forest Practices Act (but challenged by a lawsuit) are placed in the State Environmental Policy Act statute as the result of passage of House Bill 372. This particular bill has a “sunset clause” and is set to expire in June 1983. Two years later a permanent bill is passed.

1982. The WFPA celebrates its 75th year beginning in April 1982. The 1982 WFPA Annual Report notes that, particularly in the 25 years since 1957, the WFPA has grown from a landowner’s cooperative that fought fires to a multi-faceted organization that deals in five broad areas: forest management, forest taxation, land use, governmental affairs, and public affairs. At the end of 1982 WFPA members own more than five million acres of private commercial forestland in Washington, or slightly more than half of such lands in the state. In 1982, forest products represent 21 percent of manufacturing jobs in Washington, second only to aerospace; illustrating the continuing importance of the WFPA’s cooperative actions to protect the interests of forest landowners.

April 1983. A permanent bill is passed by the Legislature that exempts three classes (designated Class I, II, and III) of forest practices from the State Environmental Policy Act.

1984. The WFPA’s Governmental Affairs Committee aggressively and successfully lobbies to get a new timber-tax bill passed. The three main components of the bill are: (1) Reduction of the timber excise tax rate from 6.5 percent to 5 percent over a three-year period beginning in July 1985; (2) Phasing out the 1931 Reforestation Act and reclassifying the reforestation lands under the 1971 law, with the yield tax phased down from 12.5 percent to 5 percent by 1994; and (3) Redistribution of timber-tax revenues, with local governments guaranteed a large share of the revenue generated from private timber.
1985. The Supplemental Bear Feeding Program begins. This is part of the Animal Damage Control Program implemented by the WFPA to curb damage to trees from feeding animals.
Black bears, in particular, strip off the bark of prime, maturing trees in the early spring in search of nourishment before berries and other food becomes available. The Supplemental Bear Feeding Program minimizes bear damage to trees by providing special food pellets to these
animals. The program proves successful and grows rapidly: In its 10th year (1994), more than 310,000 pounds of pellets are used to feed bears at nearly 600 feeding stations scattered throughout Western Washington.

1986. The WFPA begins using computer software as part of its environmental education program. The Communications Committee of the WFPA also develops a public-opinion research
program of focus groups and a statewide survey, to help it plan future activities by obtaining additional information on the depth and strength of public awareness on recreation and wildlife-management issues on forest land.

July 1986. Acting on an idea first suggested earlier in the year by Billy Frank of the Nisqually Tribe, the Northwest Renewable Resources Center convenes a conference in Port Ludlow to consider alternative dispute resolution for forest practices. Fifty individuals, representing the timber industry, tribes, environmentalists, and natural resources agencies, meet for three days. This conference becomes known as “Port Ludlow II” and is so successful that the group asks the Forest Practices Board to delay its new rules so the group can work out its own plan; the ultimate goal is to resolve forest-practices issues through negotiation instead of litigation. The meeting will eventually result in the Timber Fish Wildlife Agreement.
February 17, 1987. After six months and 60 meetings between various parties noted above, the Timber Fish Wildlife (TFW) Agreement is announced. The goals of the agreement are to both provide for the environment and for a healthy forest industry. Changes in rules are negotiated among interested parties instead of argued before a commission or a court. A three-year moratorium on new regulations allows the group to formulate its own proposals, and although TFW is not officially implemented in 1987, it receives approval from both the Legislature and the Forest Practices Board. Each logging site is dealt with individually based on the best science at the time (adaptive management), rather than on broad and complex regulations. Both fish-bearing streams and the upland watersheds that support them are protected. The Timber Fish Wildlife Agreement becomes a model for Washington’s private landowners to resolve natural-resource issues. State and private natural-resource managers statewide working with treaty Indian tribes and environmental groups begin implementing the agreement in 1988.
1987. Cooperative Monitoring Evaluation and Research (CMER) forms as a part of the Timber Fish Wildlife Agreement. Under TFW, CMER’s tasks are to provide sound research on the impacts of forest management to public resources.

1988. Stewart “Stu” Bledsoe, WFPA executive director from 1977 until 1988, dies on September 6, 1988. Bledsoe is remembered for leading WFPA’s smooth transition from what had been largely a fire-protection association into an association more able to represent its members on a full spectrum of issues confronting forest landowners that had arisen in the 1970s and 1980s.

1988. The WFPA begins sponsoring the Tree Farm Program and in 1989 will launch a project designed to help tree farmers, foresters, and teachers join together to educate students about tree farming and forest management. This project will continue to grow into the 1990s.

1989. The WFPA reaches an agreement with the Department of Natural Resources to limit weekend slash burning from July to October in response to concerns about smoke pollution. In return, the DNR agrees to increased flexibility regarding slash burning during the spring burning season and on weekdays during the summer.

June 26, 1990. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service lists the northern spotted owl as an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act, resulting from the widespread loss of the owl’s habitat due in part to timber harvesting. In 1991 the Department of Natural Resources issues Spotted Owl Memo No. 3, which sets aside large areas of land for owl habitat. This has an enormous impact on landowners. Timber harvest levels are reduced as much as 80 percent across Washington, Oregon, and California, and “at this time confusion reigns,” says the 1991 WFPA Annual Report.

1991. The WFPA implements a significant public-education campaign to better inform the public of what it does and to avoid understandings that can lead to unnecessary restrictions on WFPA operations. Television, radio, and print programs are distributed to the public throughout the state during the 1990s.

October 16–21, 1991. Wildland fires erupt in Spokane on October 16, killing one person and destroying 114 homes in what becomes known as the Spokane Firestorm. By October 19, Spokane is surrounded on three sides by fires. The fires are briefly contained before flaring up again on October 21, and it takes more than 4,000 firefighters to again contain the fires. This disaster and the Oakland Hills Fire the same weekend in Oakland, California, demonstrate the hazards of urban encroachment on wildlands. As a result of the Spokane Firestorm, the Legislature passes a law in 1992 expanding the mobilization of resources during large fires, including the National Guard. The law also provides for the reimbursement of agencies called in to assist in large fires and for agencies whose own resources are exhausted.

1992. The Forest Practices Board adopts new forestry rules that limit the size of logging clearcuts, establish a rate-of-harvest monitoring rule, and establish new protection for wetlands. The rules require significant changes in forest practices aimed at providing additional wildlife habitat. The WFPA participates with Native American tribes and state agencies to bring about these new rules. The board also adopts a scientific methodology for examining the environmental health of watersheds and addressing the cumulative effect of forest practices.

September 1993. The WFPA prevails in a ruling in the Thurston County Superior Court regarding the spotted owl. In 1992, the Forest Practices Board adopted a rule (developed by the WFPA and others) that avoided additional environmental review for timber harvesting outside a 500-acre protection zone surrounding an owl nest. Washington’s Department of Wildlife did not adopt the rule, and sued the Department of Natural Resources to prevent implementation. The WFPA joined in the lawsuit in order to protect its member interests, and in September 1993, a Thurston County Superior Court judge rules that the 500-acre rule is valid.

1994. The Northwest Forest Plan (NWFP) goes into effect. The goal of the NWFP is to adopt coordinated management direction for the lands administered by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and the United States Department of the Interior (USDI) Bureau of Land Management, and to adopt complementary approaches by other federal agencies within the range of the northern spotted owl. The management of these public lands must meet dual needs: the need for forest habitat and the need for forest products. At the state level, the Forest Practices Board negotiates with tribes, environmentalists, and landowners to develop a cooperative strategy for private forestlands to protect the spotted owl.
July–August 1994. On July 24, lightning ignites a forest fire in the Wenatchee National Forest at Tyee Creek that burns for 33 days before it is contained. Other fires in the region on Hatchery Creek and Rat Creek consume another 40,000 acres. The Tyee Creek fire is one of the largest forest fires in Washington in the twentieth century.
1996. The WFPA establishes a presence on the Internet with a home page and a news page, complete with an email address for readers to contact the association, at http://www.wfpa.org/.

July 1, 1996. New forest-practices rules regarding the spotted owl take effect. The rules contain provisions for assessing potential impact to the owls that might result from forest practices on non-federal lands. The rules establish “critical habitat state,” provide definitions of suitable spotted owl habitat, and define key landscapes (called “Spotted Owl Special Emphasis Areas”) where owl conservation is important. The rules contain language requiring their periodic assessment.

1997. The WFPA creates the Eastside Forest Management Committee. This committee focuses on landowner issues east of the Cascade Crest, and forms as the result of requests from members in Central and Eastern Washington, who want a separate committee to insure that the differences east of the Cascades in forest environment, harvest methods, streamside characteristics, soils, and precipitation are taken into account in WFPA discussions and decision-making.

1998. The Legislature passes a number of bills regarding salmon management and salmon recovery, which is the WFPA’s highest priority area in 1998. These bills support the WFPA’s efforts in state-based planning for salmon habitat protection through the Timber Fish Wildlife forum. The bills include: (1) Salmon Habitat Restoration, which is a comprehensive measure for voluntary salmon habitat restoration; (2) Steelhead Recovery Pilot, which is a pilot program to address steelhead endangered species listings in Southwestern Washington; and (3) Fish Enhancement Projects, which facilitates the removal of fish passage barriers and encourages other fish enhancement efforts.

June 7, 1999. Washington Governor Gary Locke signs the Forests & Fish Agreement, which the Legislature passed on May 19, 1999. This is arguably the most significant achievement of resource protection on forest lands created during the 1990s, and is the result of an intense two-year effort by the WFPA and other interested parties, working through the TFW forum, to respond to issues surrounding fish habitat and water quality protection mandated by the federal Endangered Species and Clean Water Acts, and to develop a state-based, cooperative plan. The law increases buffers of trees alongside 60,000 miles of streams on 9.3 million acres of state and private forestland, improves road-maintenance standards and increases protection for steep and unstable slopes. Permanent forest practices rules will be adopted in 2001.

2001. The Forest Practices Board adopts permanent rules to implement the Forests & Fish Agreement. More than 1,760 public comments are received regarding the new rules; 71 percent of these comments are favorable. In July 2001, the Forest Practices Board reorganizes and formalizes Cooperative Monitoring Evaluation and Research (CMER), giving it the role to advance science needed to support the adaptive management program.
July 10, 2001. Four U.S. Forest Service firefighters die while battling the Thirty Mile Fire in Okanogan County. There are no towns or structures near the fire, but under Forest Service policy, managers are obliged to fight the fire because it is started by human activity. Naturally occurring fires, such as those started by lightning, are allowed to burn. The incident causes a rethinking of Forest Service firefighting policies, including not fighting a fire if it is not safe to do so.
2003. The WFPA establishes the Pacific Education Institute (PEI), a non-profit organization that promotes using environmental education as the basis for teaching, and supports teachers who are working to incorporate environmental education into the classroom. Using this program, students apply math, science, the arts, and social studies skills to field investigations both outdoors and in their classrooms.
December 3, 2003. President George W. Bush signs the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003, designed to reduce the risk of catastrophic forest fires by thinning brush and dense undergrowth in forested areas.
June 5, 2006. The Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) is signed into law. This is a 50-year contract between the state and the federal government that assures private forestry landowners in Washington state that their practices meets the requirements for aquatic species that are set forth in the Endangered Species Act. The plan covers 60,000 miles of stream habitat running through more than nine million acres of private and state forestland. The HCP also requires adaptive management to improve forest-management decisions and on-the-ground practices. This allows for forest-practices rules to change based on peer-reviewed scientific need. As of the end of 2007, Washington is the only state to have achieved national recognition from the federal government that its state forest-practices system meets the Endangered Species and Clean Water Acts.

2006. Washington’s Court of Appeals, in response to two legal actions, confirms that Class I, II, and III forest practices are exempt from review under the State Environmental Policy Act.

2007. As part of the Forests & Fish Agreement, private forest landowners (including WFPA members) are required to improve forest roads under a Road Maintenance and Abandonment Plan in order to protect public resources, including water, fish and resource habitat. Improving roads by reducing or eliminating runoff and sediment being delivered into streams provides new and improved habitat for fish. By late 2007, nearly 60,000 miles of road have been improved in Washington’s forests and more than 1,800 barriers to fish passage have been removed, opening up almost 1,000 miles of stream habitat.

April 6, 2008. In March, Washington Governor Christine Gregoire proclaims March 11, 2008, as “Washington Forest Protection Association’s 100th Anniversary Celebration,” and on April 6, 2008, the Washington Forest Protection Association officially reaches the 100-year mark and begins its second century.

Sources
Washington Forest Fire Association (WFFA) Annual Reports, 1908–1957; Washington Forest Protection Association (WFPA) Annual Reports, 1958–2007; Charles S. Cowan, The Enemy Is Fire! (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co., 1961); Harold Steen, The U.S. Forest Service: A History (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1976), 227; HistoryLink.org Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History, “Forest Fire in Washington State,” “Yacolt Burn, largest fire in recorded state history, rages from September 11 to 13, 1902,” “Timber companies organize Washington Forest Fire Association on April 6, 1908,” “The ‘Great Blowdown’ strikes the Washington coast on January 29, 1921,” “Weyerhaeuser dedicates the nation’s first tree farm near Montesano on June 21, 1941,” “Japanese incendiary balloons land in Washington beginning on February 12, 1945,” “Forest Practice Act requires reforestation of logged lands on January 1, 1946,” “Forest fire burns 33,000 acres and 32 buildings in Forks on September 20, 1951,” “Washington legislature creates the Department of Natural Resources in 1957,” “Columbus Day windstorm disaster blows Olympic Peninsula and Puget Sound on October 12, 1962,” “Federal Judge George Boldt issues historic ruling affirming Native American treaty fishing rights on February 12, 1974,” “New forest practices rules take effect on July 1, 1976,” “Timber Fish Wildlife Agreement offers new way to manage state forests on August 22, 1986,” “Spokane wildland fires kill one person and destroy 114 homes beginning October 16, 1991,” “Tyee Creek Fire burns 135,000 acres for 33 days north of Wenatchee, beginning July 24, 1994,” “Four firefighters die in forest fire in Okanogan County on July 10, 2001” (all by David Wilma), (http://www.historylink.org); “WFPA 100th Anniversary 1908–2008,” and “What is the Timber Fish Wildlife (TFW) Agreement?” Washington Forest Protection Association website (http://www.wfpa.org); “Boldt Phase II Decision, Lessons for the Forestland Owners” and “Catastrophic Wildfire: Active forest management reduces the risk.” WFPA brochures;” Cindy Mitchell, email to Phil Dougherty, July 8, 2008; Proclamation, “Washington Forest Protection Association 100th Anniversary Celebration,” WFPA website (http://www.wfpa.org/resource/news/governors%20proclamation.pdf); “Endangered Species Act of 1973,” and “Northern Spotted Owl,” U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service website (http://www.fws.gov); “Northwest Forest Plan Overview,” Regional Ecosystem Office website (http://www.reo.gov); “The 1910 Fire,” Idaho Forest Products Commission website (http://www.idahoforests.org); “Federal Water Pollution Control Act (Clean Water Act),” University of New Mexico School of Law Institute of Public Law, Federal Wildlife and Related Laws Handbook (http://ipl.unm.edu/cwl/fedbook/fwpca.html); “Final Briefing Report to the Washington State Forest Practices Board regarding Spotted Owl Status and Forest Practices Rules,” Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife website (http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/research/papers/spotted_owl/forest_practices.htm); “The Growth Management Act,” Washington State Growth Management Hearing Boards website (http://www.gmhb.wa.gov); State Environmental Policy Act (http://www.mrsc.org/Subjects/Environment/sepa.aspx); American Tree Farm System (http://www.treefarmsystem.org); Guide to the Louis Linden Madsen Papers (http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu); Pacific Education Institute website (http://www.pacificeducationinstitute.org); Preliminary Guide to the Keep Washington Green Records (http://www.lib.washington.edu); U.S. Forest Service website (http://www.fs.fed.us); Webster Forest Nursery website (http://www3.wadnr.gov).

HistoryLink Vision Document December 2011

HistoryLink.org Content Vision December 2011

Note: This version of our content vision is organized in such a way that the units might be easier to raise money for. It does not include an inventory of “done” essays (except for cities & towns). It is not carved in stone but we can use it for the next year or so.

Contents
1. Essays grievously missing or desperately requiring replacing
2. Fur Trade Era plus Missionaries (being worked on by Jack and Claire Nisbet and Cassandra Tate)
3. Whatcom County vision (Margaret Riddle and Phil Dougherty)
4. Spokane County vision (Jim Kershner and Laura Arksey and Margaret and PL)
5. Snohomish County vision (Margaret Riddle and Snoho Cy team)
6. Science & Technology vision (PL, Bob Kahn, Sally James)
7. Arts vision (Paula Becker and Peter LeSourd, PL helping)
8. Environment (Environment committee)
9. Cities & Towns
10. Sports
11. Northwest Indians
12. Political Biographies
13. Ethnic Communities
14. Military History
15. Buildings that don’t fall under another category
16. Crime
17. Biographies Outside another category
18. Seattle files (we have some money to do)

1. ESSAYS GRIEVOUSLY MISSING OR DESPERATELY REQUIRING RECASTING OR REPLACING

A biography of every governor. The ones we don’t have:
Elisha P. Ferry (1825-1895) term of office, 1889-1893 — assigned to Dana Standish
John R. Rogers (1838-1901), term of office, 1897-1901
Henry McBride (1856-1937), term of office, 1901-1905
Albert E. Mead (1861-1913) term of office, 1905-1909
Samuel G. Cosgrove (1841-1909), term of office, 1909 (served for a day)
Marion E. Hay (1865-1933), term of office, 1909-1913
Ernest Lister (1870-1919), term of office, 1913-1919
Louis F. Hart (1862-1929), term of office, 1919-1925
Clarence D. Martin (1887-1955), term of office, 1933-1941
Christine Gregoire (b. 1947) (term of office, 2005-present) Assigned to CT 2012

Biographies of Senators from Washington state (list to come)
July 1977 State Conference for Women in Ellensburg (assigned to CT)
We have no GLBT history for outside Seattle
Rewrite Panic of 1893 to pertain to the whole state
1918 flu — rewrite to pertain to whole state
Elwah dam removal (environment and current event)
Linda Buck — 2004 Nobel Prize (timeline)
1895 Barefoot Schoolboy Act
Rewrite William Dwyer file (for Kit)
bio of Chief Leschi
Cyber on Chinook Jargon (for Kit)
Biography of Kamiakan — assigned to Jim Kershner
I-5 and I-90 cyberpedias
Boeing Bust Cyberpedia
Progressive Movement in Washington State
Timeline of when Quiemuth was murdered in Olympia done

Companies that it is very strange we don’t have
Amazon.com
Costco
Starbucks
REI
PCC (Puget Sound Coop)

Current Events (we do as needed)
Bill and Melinda Gates open headquarters June 6, 2011
Granite Falls elects Muslim mayor, November 17, 2009 — done
Suquamish Tribe recognizes gay marriage

2. FUR TRADE ERA (JACK AND CLAIRE NISBET) (CASSANDRA TATE DOING MISSIONARY ASPECT) THIS INVOLVES MUCH NATIVE AMERICAN CONTENT.

Fur-Trade-Era Events:
1872 earthquake
Intermittent fever & lower Columbia tribes (1830s)
Dams on Spokane River (1890s+)

Fur-Trade-Era Biographies:
Artists
James Madison Alden
Charles W. Wilson
Paul Kane
Warre & Vavasour
James Keist Lord

Fur Traders
A. C. Anderson
Nathaniel Wyeth
Joseph Pelton – (discovered by overlanders w/ Nez Perce, taken to Astoria)
John Work
Archibald McDonald
William Kittson

Scientists/Naturalists
Karl Geyer, botanist
Townsend and Nuttall
Meredith Gairdner
William Tolmie
George Gibbs
Hitchcock
Daubenmire

Tribal Figures
Qualchan
Iroquois in eastern WA
John Stevens
Click Relander

Fur Trade Other:
Companies
Washington Brick & Lime
First Thought Mine
Spokane Smelter

Places
Bossburg
Orient
Camp Washington

Fur-Trade-Era Timelines
1803
Feb. 20, 1803 — H. Thompson, seaman on ship Guatimozin of Boston, carves name in tree on shore of Bakers Bay

1806
July, 1806 — Lower Columbia River Indians deliver papers from Lewis & Clark expedition to ship Lydia, trading at Bakers Bay

1811
September, 1811 — David Stuart, Montigny, Michel Boulard explore up Okanogan River w/ pack & saddle horses to Kamloops

1812
April 29, 1812 — PFC brigade encounters Crooks & John Day at Umatilla River

July 31, 1812 — Robert Stuart (Pacific Fur Company) departs Walla Walla overland for New York w/ Crooks, McLellan + 3 men

1814
First Domestic Animals to Eastern Washington

January 1814 — Attack at Cascade rapids – Alexander Stewart wounded, Iroquois killed

February 28, 1814 — Ship Pedlar arrives on Columbia, with Wilson Price Hunt of Pacific Fur Company

April 2, 1814 — Ship Pedler departs Columbia with several partners of Pacific Fur Company and company records on board, marking end of John Jacob Astor’s presence in Northwest

April 23, 1814 — Ship Isaac Todd, owned by North West Company, enters Columbia River with partner Donald McTavish on board

Spring 1814 — Donald McKenzie returns east with the North West Company brigade, conveying the papers connected with the Columbia negotiations to Astor in New York.

May 22, 1814 — North West Company partners Alexander Henry, Jr. & Donald McTavish drown in Columbia River after departing Ft. George to board the ship Isaac Todd anchored in Bakers Bay

June 29, 1814 — North West Company brig Columbia enters Columbia River with cargo of trade goods from England

July 1814 — Alexander Ross departs Fort Okanogan with three native guides and, following a tribal trail, makes the first recorded traverse of the Cascade Mountains, crossing Cascade Pass near present-day Marblemount

September 26, 1814 — The Isaac Todd sails for China, initiating the first Anglo-Canadian transpacific trade with China

December 24, 1814 — Treaty of Ghent signed between United States & Great Britain, signaling end of War of 1812

1815
North West Company hires a Boston shipping firm to carry supplies to the Columbia & conduct trade with China

1816
May 1816 — North West Company rebuilds Fort Okanogan; clerk Ross Cox records details of construction and lifeways around the post

Donald McTavish sails from Columbia River to San Francisco & Monterey to trade with Spanish officials

1817
May 1, 1817 — North West Company partner Donald McKenzie leads party up the Snake River to open trade with Shoshone Indians

June 1817 — Seven North West Company trappers wreck their canoe at Death Rapids on the Columbia, only one survives

October 4, 1817 — The American warship Ontario sails from New York City on a secret mission to retake American property on the Columbia River

November 15, 1817 — Simon McGillivray of North West Company writes British embassy in Washington of American warship Ontario’s mission

1821
July 1821 — Great Britain passes Act of Parliament regulating fur trade in North America by the Hudson’s Bay Company

December 1821 — A royal grant extends the Hudson’s Bay Company’s exclusive trade privileges to the Pacific slope

1825
March 19, 1825 — Governor George Simpson of Hudson’ Bay Company places John McLoughlin in charge of entire Columbia district (sole Chief Factor in district)

April 14, 1825 — HBC Governor Simpson selects site for Fort Colvile to replace Spokane House

April 25, 1825 — HBC Governor George Simpson writes to John McLoughlin, suggesting trader John Work marry daughter of Cayuse chief as a political maneuver to secure trade

1826
First flour mill in Eastern Washington built at Meyers Falls on the Colville River

March 21, 1826 — Spokane House is abandoned and operations of the Hudson’s Bay Company moved to Fort Colville

September 1826 — John McLoughlin, in charge of Fort Vancouver, writes to Hudson’s Bay Company Governor to suggest the possibility of exporting salted salmon from the Columbia to California

1827 — Samuel Parker visits Fort Okanagan to assess need for Christian missionaries

1828
Sawmill erected 5-6 miles above Fort Vancouver on north bank of Columbia

Alexander Mackenzie & Hudson’s Bay Company party killed by Clallam Indians on Puget Sound

May 29, 1828 — John Work & party of Hudson’s Bay Company workers have canoe accident while descending Priest Rapids on the Columbia, three men drown

August 8, 1828 — Arthur Black, survivor of Jedediah Smith’s party who were attacked on Umpqua River, arrives at Fort Vancouver;

August 10, 1828 — Jedediah Smith and two other survivors reach Fort Vancouver

October 25, 1828 — Governor George Simpson of Hudson’s Bay Company arrives at Fort Vancouver on tour of Columbia District

1835
Samuel Parker visits Fort Vancouver to ascertain need for Protestant missionaries in Northwest

Smallpox epidemic in Northwest (Review what has been done and what needs to be done)

1836
March 1836 — Mr. & Mrs. William Copendale arrive at Fort Vancouver from England to oversee farm & dairy

Ship Neriad delivers Rev. Herbert & Jane Beaver from England as chaplain to Fort Vancouver

December 22, 1836 — William Slacum, U. S. Navy, arrives at Fort Vancouver to investigate rumors of mistreatment of Americans by Hudson’s Bay Company

1838
“Ultimatum Map” prepared by Bureau of Topographical Engineers

John Jacob Audubon completes paintings for Birds of America, using specimens from Columbia River collected by John Kirk Townsend

July 1838
Jesuit priest Father Demers arrives at Kettle Falls, baptizes Indian & mixed blood children

1841
Fort Walla Walla burns and is rebuilt
St. Mary’s Mission is founded on Pend Oreille River

1845
St. Paul’s Mission is established at Kettle Falls

1852
Gold is discovered on upper Columbia River

1853
Pacific Railroad Survey teams under George McClellan & Isaac Stevens traverse Washington Territory in search of best route for transcontinental railroad

Oct. 18, 1853 — Camp Washington is established near present-day Spokane by Governor Isaac Stevens

Nov. 25, 1853 — Governor Stevens arrives in Olympia to take office as governor of Washington Territory

1855
Congress appropriates $30,000 to begin construction of a wagon road from Fort Benton on the Missouri River to Fort Walla Walla on the Columbia River

MISSIONARIES AND A COUPLE OF RELATED FILES (CASSANDRA TATE):

CYBERPEDIAS

Marcus Whitman (1802-1847) — missionary and physician; founder of the Whitman Mission near Walla Walla in 1836; shifted the focus of the mission away from the salvation of Indians souls to promotion of American settlement in Oregon Country in order to “save” it as a territory of the United States; killed by Indians in 1847.

Narcissa Whitman (1808-1847) — Wife of Marcus Whitman; one of the first two white women to cross the Rocky Mountains into present day Washington. The only woman killed by Indians during the “Whitman Massacre” of 1847.

John McLoughlin (1784-1857) — chief factor of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s Columbia District – covering the present-day states of Washington, Idaho, and Oregon; headquartered at Fort Vancouver – from 1824 to 1846; provided critical help to the missionaries and to the American settlers who came after them; had most of his personal holdings confiscated by an ungrateful nation after the Canadian/U.S. boundary treaty of 1846; died nearly penniless; later deified as the “Father of Oregon.”
Cayuse Indians — once prominent tribe in what is now southeastern Washington, known for horse breeding and horsemanship, decimated by measles brought in by white settlers; attacked the Whitman mission in what became known as the Whitman Massacre in 1847; hunted and harassed by militia until five members of the tribe surrendered to U.S. authorities and were hanged in retribution for the Whitman attack; now part of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Reservation.
MISSIONARY TIMELINES
February 18, 1836 — Marcus Whitman marries Narcissa Prentiss. The next day, the couple begin their journey, with Henry and Eliza Spalding, to the west.

August 29, 1838 — Four missionary couples, dispatched by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions as reinforcements for the Oregon Mission, arrive at Waiilatpu, a mission near present-day Walla Walla, established by Marcus and Narcissa Whitman two years earlier. One of the couples will join the Spaldings at Lapwai; the others will establish missions near Spokane and Kamiah, Idaho.

June 23, 1839 — Two-year-old Alice Clarissa Whitman, the first child born of American parents in what is now Washington state, drowns in the Walla Walla River behind the Whitman mission at Waiilatpu. In her grief, Narcissa Whitman withdraws from virtually all interaction with the Cayuse Indians, a factor that contributes to her own death six years later.

October 3, 1842 — Responding to a letter from the American Board of Commissioners of Foreign Missions, ordering that the missions at Waiilatpu and Lapwai be closed (because of continuing dissension among the missionaries), Whitman leaves Waiilatpu on a journey East to convince the Board to change its mind.

September 1843 — Having convinced the board to rescind its order closing the mission, Whitman helps guide a wagon train of about a thousand people to Oregon Country, in the beginning of what becomes known as the Great Migration. An advance party from the emigrant train reaches Waiilatpu a few days before Whitman and the main party arrive, on September 28. Whitman is perturbed to discover that the early arrivals had broken into the mission house and then left it open to the Indians. Nonetheless, this marks a turning point in the focus of the mission, from efforts to “civilize” and Christianize the Indians to providing aid and support for emigrants.

November 29, 1897 — Beginning of a three-day commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Whitman massacre. Events include the unveiling of an obelisk, dedication of a mausoleum, and many speeches, including remarks by two survivors of the attack (Catherine Sager Pringle, who delivered “a pathetic address that moved many to tears” and Matilda Jane Sager Delaney, then 58, described as “now very feeble but possessed of a very clear memory”).

OTHER MISSIONARY-RELATED FILES (not yet assigned):

Cushing Eells (1810-1893) — missionary and founder of Whitman College; and his wife,

Myra Eells (1805-1878) — Members of the “reinforcements” sent to the Oregon Mission by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) in 1838.

Myron Eells (1843-1907) — son of Cushing and Myra, missionary, scholar, and collector

William H. Gray (1810-1881) — a lay member of the original Whitman Mission; accompanied the Whitmans and the Spaldings on their journey west in 1836; in later life wrote a history of Oregon.

Henry H. Spalding (1803-1874) and Eliza Spalding (1807-1851) — missionaries and educators: co-founders of the ABCFM’s Oregon Mission in 1836. Chose not to stay with the Whitmans at Walla Walla but to establish a separate mission station at Lapwai, among the Nez Perce.

Elkanah Walker (1805-1872) — missionary; member of the reinforcement party of 1838.

Other Timelines:

1837
March 14, 1837 — Alice Clarissa Whitman born at Waiilatpu mission near Walla Walla

1838
September 1838 — Elkanah Walker & Myron Eells travel to Spokane country to scout mission site

Eells conducts religious service in Chewelah

December 7, 1838 — Cyrus Walker born at Whitman Mission near Walla Walla

3. WHATCOM COUNTY COMMITTEE (Phil and Margaret)

A Lummi suite, 3 essay sets (cyberpedia and timeline)
Lummi Nation
Bio of tribal elder (to be determined)
Bio of tribal elder (to be determined)

A Nooksack Tribe suite (same as above)

Whatcom suite, 4 essay sets (cyberpedia and timeline)
Birch Bay
Ella Higginson (1861-1940), author and poet
Blaine Icelanders
Mt. Baker Gold
Western Washington University
Lynden Tribune

Whatcom Timelines
Bellingham water fight 1891 (humorous story)
Dirty Dan Harris Cyber and timeline
Pacific American Fisheries plant, timeline event
Bellingham interurban (train that ran along Chuckanut Bay 1912-1929)
North Cascades Highway opens on September 2, 1972.
Bellingham Cruise Terminal opens on October 3, 1989 (Port of Bellingham)

Whatcom County Cities & Towns (* indicates incorporated)
Acme
Alderwood
Bellingham (revise current thumbnail)
Birch Bay
Chuckanut Village
Custer
Deming
Edgemoor
Everson*
Geneva
Glacier
Happy Valley
Kendall
Maple Falls
Marietta
Nooksack*
Peaceful Valley
Silver Beach
South Bellingham
Strandell
Sudden Valley

Other Whatcom Cy populated areas
Fairhaven
Lummi Island
Newhalem

Whatcom Biographies
DeMatto, James (Bellingham mayor)
Hawley, Emmet (Lynden pioneer)
Zylstra, D.K. (Dutch pioneer in Lynden)

Whatcom Clubs
Aftermath Club (Bellingham — existed from 1895 to 2003)
Clam Diggers Club (Lynden – established 1909; I think the descendants still meet)

National Register properties/sites (timelines, slide show, cyberpedias??)
Aftermath Clubhouse, 1300 Broadway, Bellingham Natl. Register
Austin Pass Warming Hut (CCC)
B.P.O.E. building, Bellingham
George Bacon House, 2001 Eldridge, Bellingham
Barlow Building (Crown Bar ) 211 W. Holly St. , Bellingham
Beaver Pass Shelter, 14 mi. W of Ross Lake , Diablo
Bellingham National Bank Building, 101-111 E. Holly St. , Bellingham
Berthusen Barn and Privy, 8837 Bethusen Rd. , Lynden
Alfred L. Black House, also known as Wahl House, 158 S. Forest St. , Bellingham
Boundary Marker No. 1, Marine Dr. at U.S./Canada border , Point Roberts

Chelhtenem, also known as Lily Point, Roughly bounded by Claire Ln. and Boundary Bay , Point Roberts

Territorial County Courthouse Building, 1201-1213 N. State St. , Bellingham
Deer Lick Cabin, E of Ross Lake on Lightening Creek Trail

Desolation Peak Lookout, on Desolation Peak E of Ross Lake, 6 mi. S of Canadian Cissna Cottages Historic District, Bellingham

Citizen’s Dock, 1201 Roeder Ave. , Bellingham
Copper Mountain Fire Lookout, also known as Copper Ridge Lookout
Daylight border , Hozomeen
Devil’s Corner Cliff Walk, N of Newhalem in Ross Lake National Recreation Area
Donovan, J. J., House, 1201 Garden St. , Bellingham
Eldridge Avenue Historic Disrict (Bellingham)
Eldridge Homesite and Mansion, 2915 Eldridge Ave. , Bellingham
Fairhaven Historic District (Fairhaven)
Fairhaven Public Library 1105 12th St., Bellingham
Fish and Game–Hozomeen Cabin (added 1989 – – #88003454)
Flatiron Building, also known as Bellingham Bay Furniture Building, 1311-1319 Bay Gamwell House, 1001 16th St. , Bellinngham
Glacier Ranger Station ** (added 1980 – – #80004013)

Gorge Creek Bridge, also known as Bridge Number 20/323, WA 20 over Gorge Creek, Newhalem

Great Northern Passenger Station, S end of D St. , Bellingham
Hotel Laube, 1226 N. State St. , Bellingham

Immanuel School of Industries–Department of Public Welfare, also known as I Street Relief Depot, 1303 Astor St. , Bellingham

International Boundary US—Canada, along US–Canada border between eastern boundary of Ross Lake NRA and western boundary of North Cascades National Park , Hozomeen

Koma Kulshan Ranger Station, Forest Rd. 11, W of Baker Lake, Mt. Baker National Forest , Concrete

Larrabee House, also known as Lairmont Manor & Mt. St. Mary’s Novitiate, 405 Fieldstone Rd. , Bellingham

Leopold Hotel, 1224 Cornwall Ave. , Bellingham
MV Plover (ferry), 245 Marine Dr., Blaine
Middle Fork Nooksack River Bridge, Mosquito Lake Rd. , Acme

Montague and McHugh Building, 114 W. Magnolia St. , Bellingham
Morse Hardware Company Building, 1023-1025 N. State St. , Bellingham
Morse, Robert I., House, 1014 N. Garden St., Bellingham
Mount Baker Theatre, 106 N. Commercial St., Bellingham
Nuxwt’iqw’em, also known as Middle Fork Nooksack River Valley
Oakland Block, 310-318 W. Holly St. and 419 Champion St., Bellingham

Old Main, Western Washington State College, also known as New Whatcom Normal School 516 High St. , Bellingham

Old No. 6, Locomotive #6;Seattle Skagit River Railway, SR 20 , Newhalem

Park Butte Lookout, Mt. Baker Ranger District, SW of the Easton Glacier of Mt. Baker, Sedro Wooley

Perry Creek Shelter, On Little Beaver Trail, 5 mi. W of Ross Lake , Hozomeen
Pickett House, 910 Bancroft St., Bellingham
Pioneer Park, 2002 Cherry St. , Ferndale

Richards, T.G., and Company Store, also known as Whatcom County Courthouse
1308 E St. , Bellingham

Roeder, Victor A., House, a.k.a Roeder Home, 2600 Sunset Dr. , Bellingham
Roth, Lottie, Block , 1106 W. Holly St. , Bellingham

Sanitary Meat Market, also known as Palace Meat Market, 1015-1019 N. State St. , Bellingham

Sehome Hill Historic District, portions of Jersey, Key, Liberty, Mason, Newell, E. Myrtle, E. Laurel, and E. Maple Sts., Sehome

Si’ke village with historic area called Tsi’lich, also known as 45WH17, Blaine
Sourdough Mountain Lookout, on Sourdough Mountain, 5 mi. NE of Diablo

South Hill Historic District, bounded by Knox, 11th, State, Cedar, 17th, and Highland, Bellingham

U.S. Post Office and Courthouse, also known as Federal Building, 104 W. Magnolia St. , Bellingham

US Post Office–Lynden Main, 600 Front St. , Lydnen
United States Border Station at Sumas, Washington, 131 Harrison St. , Sumas

Wardner, James F., House, also known as Wardner’s Castle, 1103 15th St., Bellingham

Washington Grocery Company Warehouse, 1125 Railroad Ave. , Bellingham

Whatcom Museum of History and Art, also known as Old City Hall, 121 Prospect St., Bellingham

Wild Goose Pass Tree, also known as Austin Pass Tree, Glacier

Winchester Mountain Lookout, Mt. Baker Wilderness Area overlooking the N fork of Nooksack River and W fork of Silesia Creek , Sedro Wooley

York Historic District, bounded roughly by Ellis St., Meador Ave., 1-5, and Lakeway Dr., Bellingham

Young Women’s Christian Association, 1026 N. Forest St. , Bellingham

4. SPOKANE COUNTY LIST (Jim Kershner, Laura Arksey, Margaret, Priscilla, [Steve Emerson])

Kalispel/Northeast Washington suite:
Two essay sets (cyberpedia and timeline) on each of the following subjects:
A history of the Kalispel Tribe.
A history of Chief Masselow, the Kalispel’s most important chief.
A history of Cusick, town near Kalispel Reservation along the Pend Oreille River.
A history of Ione, a town in the same area.
A history of Usk, a town in the same area. (With possibly a history of Boundary Dam substituted for any of the above towns).
Power-development suite: Two essay sets (cyberpedia and timeline) on the following:
A history of Washington Water Power, the major power company in Spokane and the region, founded in 1889 and now known as Avista. This company has a rich history, since it owned not only dams and electricity but also Spokane’s streetcar system and the region’s biggest amusement park, Natatorium Park.

A history of Nine Mile Dam, one of the first dams on the Spokane River, built in 1910.

Other WWP dams (see below).
.
General Spokane history pieces:

A history of the Italian community in Spokane. Many Italians arrived around 1900-1910 to work in the rail yards. They began as strike-breakers, in many cases, but soon became an important and influential part of the city.

A history of the City of Spokane Valley. This is city ranks No. 10 in the state in population and is a glaring omission on our Cities and Towns suite.

The assassination of Spokane’s police chief John T. Sullivan in 1909. He was shot while sitting at the window of his house reading the paper. It’s a great story, which involves the Wobblies (he was the man who harshly put down the Wobbly Free Speech protests a year earlier). It’s also a great unsolved mystery story (nobody was ever prosecuted – but we can now say with fair confidence who did it).

A history of Fort George Wright in Spokane. This military base (now decommissioned and the site of a community college and a Japanese exchange college) was the home to thousands of black troops at the beginning of the 1900s, including those known previously as the Buffalo Soldiers. It also played roles in WWI and WWII – Clark Gable was stationed there briefly. A very rich subject, which could easily be divided into at least two or three pieces.

Architects (for each, a biography plus a timeline featuring a particular building.
Bio — John K. Dow and Clarence Z. Hubbell
Timeline – Paulsen Building

Bio — Herman Preusse and Julius Zittell
Timeline – Great Eastern/Peyton Building

Bio — Gustav A. Pehrson
Timeline – Paulsen Medical and Dental Building (next to Paulsen Building but built later)

Bio — Harold Whitehouse and Ernest V. Price
Timeline – Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist

Bio — Albert Held
Timeline – Terminal Building

Additional timelines: Historic preservation and adaptive re-use. (Note: convention of the National Trust for Historic Preservation to be held in Spokane in October 2012.)

Campbell House/Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture house museum
Carnegie Library/Integrus Architecture
Clemmer/Bing Crosby Theater
Crescent Department Store/mixed commercial
Lewis and Clark High School
Metals Building/mixed commercial
Monroe Street Bridge
Montgomery Ward/City Hall
Patrick Clark Mansion/ Law firm of Eymann Allison Hunter Jones
Spokesman Review Building (hold for Jim K)
Roberts Mansion Bed and Breakfast
Smith Funeral Home and Elks Lodge/mixed commercial
Steam Plant/restaurant

Slide show: History of Spokane housing to 1920s (modeled after the one already posted for Seattle)
General:
Indian teepees
Earliest wooden houses
Shanty town
Ethnic and working class enclaves:
Peaceful Valley (Finnish)
Hillyard (mixed)
Trent Alley (Chinese/Japanese)
Minnehaha (Italian)
Workers’ homes (several types)
Hotels/boarding houses, etc. for loggers, harvesters, miners, etc.
Bungalow era (Spokane is a major site for Craftsman Bungalows)
Pattern books (Ballard Plannery, etc.)
Apartment houses: Westminster; Culmstock Arms; San Marco, etc.

Specific houses/mansions (These are all architecturally important):
Browne
Burns
Campbell
Cannon
Clark, F. Lewis
Clark, Patrick “Patsy”
Cook
Corbin, Austin
Corbin, D. C.
Davenport
Finch
Finucane
Glover
Graves
Gray
Humbird
Hutton
Monaghan
Moore
Paulsen family penthouse
Roberts
Strahorn
Twohy
Wakefield

Slide Show: History of Spokane Downtown buildings through about 1920s
Downtown Spokane before and after fire of 1889
A few pre-1889 buildings:
Post-fire devastation
Tent city
J. T. Davie Brick Company
McGoldrick Lumber Company

Specific buildings (All built after the fire: For each, give architect, date, whether still standing, etc.) They might be grouped by category, e.g. banks; churches; theaters, etc. More could be added. Give architect, date, information on person for whom the building was named, etc.:
Auditorium Theater
Bennett Block
Calvary Baptist Church (African-American)
Carnegie Library
Central High School
Chronicle Building
Clemmer Theater
Crescent Department Store
Davenport Hotel
Davenport’s Restaurant/Hall of the Doges
Empire State/Great Western
Fernwell
First National Bank
First Presbyterian Church
Great Northern Depot
Hotel Spokane
Hutton
Lewis and Clark High School
Marble Bank
Masonic Temple
Metals/American Legion
Old National Bank
Our Lady of Lourdes Cathedral
Palace Department Store
Paulsen
Paulsen Medical/Dental
Review
Rookery (first)
Sacred Heart Hospital
Sherwood
Spokane & Eastern Trust Co.
Spokane Club
Spokane National Bank
Steam plant
Terminal Building/Interurban station
Union Station
Washington Water Power substation

Historic monuments of the Fairmount Memorial Association
Sheriff James Glispin – 2nd Chief of Police Dedicated May 11, 2006
James “Curly Jim” Silkoewoyeh Dedicated Sept. 13, 2006
Mary Archard Latham, M.D. Dedicated Mar. 30, 2007
Eugene B. Hyde – 1st Chief of Police Dedicated May 10, 2007
Francis H. Cook (needs Cyberpedia) Dedicated Oct. 26, 2007
Levi Hutton (needs Cyberpedia) Dedicated Apr. 3, 2008
Spokane County Law Enforcement & Firefighters Dedicated May 15, 2008
Pfc. Joe E. Mann – Medal of Honor Dedicated Oct. 14, 2008
Spokane’s Connection to the RMS Titanic Dedicated Apr. 15, 2009
Sheriff Floyd Brower Dedicated May 14, 2009
William H. Lewis – Police Inspector Dedicated May 10, 2010
Sonora Dodd – William Jackson Smart Dedicated June 20, 2010
Sgt. Bruce A. Grandstaff Dedicated Sept. 11, 2010
Catherine Sager Pringle (needs Cyberpedia) Dedicated April 14, 2011
Arthur L. Hooper Dedicated May 12, 2011
Stephen Liberty (Etienne Eduard Laliberte) Dedicated Sept. 9, 2011
• Spokane’s Greatest Human Tragedy (WHAT IS THIS?)

Spokane-area Artists
Clyfford Still (one of the fathers of abstract expressionism)
Ed Kienholz
Harold Balazs
Ruben Trejo
Timothy C. Ely
Ric Gendron
Mel McCuddin
Ken Spiering
Jo Fyfe
Lila Gervin
Sister Paula Turnbull (nun and sculptor)
Robert Helm (Pullman)
Ken Cory (metalsmith)

Spokane-area Writers
Sherman Alexie
Jess Walter
Vachel Lindsay
Dashiell Hammett (briefly)
Timothy Egan
Patrick F. McManus

Spokane mayors: 500-800 word timelines on the elections and who were they.
David Condon, to be sworn in Jan. 1
Mary Verner (2007 or 2006-2011)
Dennis P. Hession (2005 or 2006-2007)
James Elton West (2003-2005, or 2006) (can be funded under legislators?)
John Powers (2000-2003)
John Talbott (1998 or 1997-2000)
Jack Geraghty (1994-1998 or 1997)
Sheri S. Barnard (1990-1994)
Vicki McNeill (1986-1990)
James Everett Chase (1982-1986) (done)
Ron Bair (1978-1982)
David Rodgers (1967-1978) Also needs Cyberpedia
Neal Randolph Fosseen (1960-1967)
Kenneth Lawson (1960 – served for six months)
Frank G. Sutherlin, Jr. (1958-1960)
Willard “Duke” Taft (1955-1958)
Arthur Meehan (1946-1955)
Otto A. Dirkes (1945-1946)
Frank G. Sutherlin, Sr. (1937-1945)
Arthur W. Burch (1935-1937, died in office)
Leonard Funk (1929-1935, died in office)
Charles A. Fleming (1916-1917 and 1920-1929)
Spokane mayors (cont.)
Charles M. Fassett (1914-1917 and 1918-1920)
William J. Hindley (1911-1913)
Nelson S. Pratt (1909-1911)
C. Herbert Monroe (1907-1909)
Floyd L. Daggett (1905-1907)
L. Frank Boyd (1903-1905)
Patrick S. Byrne (1901-1903)
James Comstock (1899-1901)
Elmer D. Olmsted (1897-1898)
Horatio N. Belt (1894-1896)
Edward Louis Powell (1893-1894)
Daniel M. Drumheller (1892-1893)
David B. Fotheringham (1891-1892)
Charles F. Clough (1890-1891)
Fred Furth (1889-1890)
Isaac S. Kaufman (served briefly in 1889)
Francis M. Tull (March 7-13, 1889)
Jacob Hoover (1888-3/7/89, resigned)
William H. Taylor (1887-1888)
Anthony M. Cannon (1885-1886) Also needs cyberpedia
James N. Glover (1883-1884) Also needs Cyberpedia
Robert W. Forrest (1881-1882)

Spokane neighborhoods (Hillyard is done)
Browne’s Addition
Peaceful Valley
Vinegar Flats
Corbin Park
South Perry
Logan (Gonzaga)
Cannon Hill
Manito Park
Rockwood
Garland

Additional Spokane Topics
Expo ’74
The Mayor Jim West Scandal of 2005 (sting operation and recall).
Spokane Public Library and branches.
Downtown
Eastside
Hillyard
Indian Trail
Shadle
South Hill

Patrice Munsel: Metropolitan Opera star, Broadway star from Spokane (Cyberpedia)

May 26, 1903 — Theodore Roosevelt visit to Spokane
1898 –First automobiles arrive in Spokane. a Locomobile steamer and a rear- motor, tiller steered Hynes-Anderson; arrives in Spokane; crowds line the streets to see the strange machines.

Lewis and Clark High School, Spokane
Rogers High School, Spokane

Spokesman Review set: Cyberpedia and four timelines including (hold for Jim K)
1849 — Spokane Times founded (Spokane’s first newspaper)
1890 — The Spokesman Rev created through merger of Spokane Falls Review and Spokesman

Other Spokane biographies
Eleanor Barrow Chase (1918-2002) (wife of Spokane mayor, community activist)
Emmett B. Reed (1878-1961) pastor at Calvary Baptist Church of Spokane,
Tiger Jack Fox (1907 – 1954) boxer, Spokane
Adolphus Griffin (1868-1916) (Spokane editor)

5. Snohomish County Vision

Cities/Towns (incorporation timelines)
Gold Bar (incorporated Sept. 16, 1910)
Lake Stevens (incorporated Nov. 29, 1960)
Mill Creek (incorporated Sept. 30, 1983)
Sultan (incorporated June 28, 1905)

Everett Neighborhood Associations. Although there are 19 neighborhood associations in Everett, only one, Lowell, is on History Link. The “next up” should be:
Riverside
Bayside
Port Gardner

Other Essay Possibilities
Everett’s Jewish Community
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest
Everett Public Library
Everett Public Library 1934 Carl Gould building
Everett Fishing Industry (cyberpedia and timeline)
Snohomish County photographers
Photographer Frank LaRoche’s visits to Everett
Whaleback Bargeworks (1890s)
Lowell Paper Mill (1890s to 1980s)
Weyerhaeuser in Everett (from 1901 to the 1990s, mills A, B and C)
Puget Sound Pulp and Timber/Soundview/Scott Paper/Kimberly Clark — now gone

Slide Show: Picture history of Mukilteo Boulevard

Cybertour: Everett’s Hewitt Avenue Historic District

Authors
Max Miller (I Cover the Waterfront, etc.)
Seton Miller (Screenwriter, Here Comes Mr. Jordan and others)
Nora Burglon (children’s Newberry Award writer)

Everett’s Historic Districts
Rucker Hill
Hewitt Avenue
Rucker/Grand
Port Gardner

Timeline Events
Everett has first Norwegian sangerfest
Nov. 20, 1891 — East coast investors Charles Colby and Colgate Hoyt visit Everett
Jan. 6, 1893 — Great Northern line is completed near Stevens Pass
May 23, 1903 — President Teddy Roosevelt visits Everett
July 3, 1905 — Carnegie Library on Oakes and Wall opens
Feb. 29, 1910 — Inaugural trip from Everett to Seattle on interurban
July 2, 1921 — Big Four Inn opens
October 1924 — Everett Clinic formally organizes in
April 22, 1928 — Official opening of Everett Airport o

Oct. 25, 1931 — last 20 feet of pavement is completed for 4-lane highway from Everett to Seattle

Dec. 29, 1937 the Clough Hartley Mill burns

6. Science & Technology

Nobel Prize Winners
George Hitchings – 1988 Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine
Martin Rodbell – 1994 Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine
Linda Buck – 2004 Nobel Prize Winner in Medicine
Biographies
Carl Eugene Gustafson (Mastodon in Sequim and pre-Clovis people)
William Foege
Paul Allen (Institute for Brain Science)
Leroy Hood (Institute for Systems Biology and inventor of DNA sequencer)

Cyberpedia overview essays
Biotechnology in the Pacific Northwest

7. Arts Committee Vision (Paula Becker, Peter LeSourd, PL adjunct)

Individual Visual Artists
Chuck Close
Margaret Tompkins
James Fitzgerald
Jacqueline Barnett
Gordon H. Wood,
Alfredo Arrequin
Marita Dingas
Michael Spafford
Robert C. Jones
Fay Jones
Elizabeth Sandvig
Clyfford Still (one of the fathers of abstract expressionism)
Ed Kienholz,
Harold Balazs,
Ruben Trejo,
Timothy C. Ely,
Ric Gendron,
Mel McCuddin,
Ken Spiering,
Jo Fyfe,
Lila Gervin
Werner Lenngenhager

Institutions
Pilchuck School
Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture
Tacoma Art Museum
Museum of Glass
Henry Art Gallery (a Cyberpedia – we have inadequate content)
Anne Focke’s And/Or gallery
Pottery Northwest
Art Institute of Seattle
Cornish (evaluate content)

Performing Arts
Robert Joffrey
Mark Morris
Loretta Lynn in Washington (timeline)
Hip Hop in Spokane (dj James Pants, Isamu Jordan),
Kenny G (Garelick), who was a Garfield High grad,
Morten Lauridsen,

Performing-Arts Institutions
ACT
Pacific Northwest Ballet
Seattle Symphony (Cyberpedia; we have timelines)
chamber music
On The Boards
Seattle Children’s Theatre
Wenatchee Youth Circus
Seattle Chamber Music Society
Centrum in Pt. Townsend

Timelines
Knapp Orchestra & Jack Miller debuts electric guitar in Seattle 1933
Jazz “Insanity” congressional bill introduced 1933

Cyberpedias
Town Crier
Chautauqua 1918
Chautauqua 1919
Bud-Electro Guitars (Seattle made 1940s-1950s)
Sol Ho’opi’i’s Seattle days (the King of Hawaiian music)
Myers Music Shop (where Jimi & Quincy got first instruments)
Yogi Yorgesson (Tacoma’s comedy/music radio star)
Glenn White (audio engineer / author / UW instructor)
Camelot Records (1960s record co.)
Bob Reisdorff (founder of Dolton Records)
Sub Pop Records
Seattle Punk scene
Merrilee “Angel Of the Morning” Rush bio
Nancy Claire (’60s R&B singer) bio
KJR Radio
Seattle Musicians Union
Northwest Jazz overview
Rock Music in Seattle (Replace file 2374)
Peter Donnelly, Corporate Council For The Arts

Literary Arts
Poet Heather McHugh
Sam Hamill (many-book poet and founder of Copper Canyon Press)
Sam Green (poet laureate of state)
Sherman Alexie (also included in Spokane section)
Jess Walter
Vachel Lindsay
Dashiell Hammett (briefly — timeline),
Timothy Egan
Patrick F. McManus
poet Carolyn Kizer
poet Nelson Bentley
Angelo Pellegrini
Tobias Wolff
Denise Levertov
Raymond Carver
Tess Gallagher
Elizabeth Rider Montgomery Julesberg (West Seattle author of Dick and Jane books), David Guterson
Eugene O’Neill (briefly — timeline)
Jack Remick
Robert J. Ray
AA Poet Colleen McElroy (assigned)
Frank Herbert
August Wilson
Ivan Doig

Literary Arts Institutions
Copper Canyon press
Bookbinding/fine book arts

8. Environment

Agricultural History
Archeology & Geo. History

Biographies
Mike Town (Sno Cy suggestion)
David Weeks (Sno Cy suggestion)
Rick McGuire (Sno Cy suggestion)
Doug Scott (Sno Cy suggestion)
Bob Spring (Sno Cy suggestion)
Harold Engles (Sno Cy suggestion)
Gene Duvernoy DONE
Fred Cleator (Sno Cy suggestion) (ASSIGNED)
Bob Norton (Sno Cy suggestion)
Dwight Rocky Crandall
Mothers of Nature
Flo Brody
Maria Cantwell
Nina Carter
Joan Crooks (ASSIGNED)
Elizabeth Davis
Janet Dawes
Beth Doglio
Helen Engle
Karen Fant
Carol Fleskes
Dee Frankfourth
Karen Fraser
[Chris Gregoire]
Martha Konsgaard
Darlene Madenwald
Mary Martin
Mary McCumber
Donna Ossaward
Chris Peterson
Bonnie Phillips
Nancy Rust
Susan Saul
Lucy Steers
Betty Tabbutt
Lucy Steers

Sheri Tonn– She founded Citizens for a Healthy Bay in Tacoma. She is also a Phd chemist and served on the Puget Sound Water Quality Authority from start to finish.

Judy Turpin
Jolene Unsoeld
Wendy Wendlant

Committee Attendees Bio List
Dee Arntz (done)
Stu Bledso
Mark Bloom
David Bricklin
Harriet Bullitt
Benilla Caminti
Pam Crocker Davis
Joe Delacruz (done)
Marvin Durning
Gene Duvernoy
Brock Evans
Mitch Friedman
Denis Hayes
John McGlenn
David Ortman
Jerry Pollett
Jo Roberts
Jack Robertson
Bill Ruckelshaus
David Rudo
MaryAnn Tagney-Jones
Mel Tonasket
Margaret Tunks
Frank Urabeck
Ken Wiener
Tom Wimmer

Disaster and Cleanup
Environmental Organizations
Cascade Land Conservancy
Ducks Unlimited
Earth First
Earth Share
Farm & Environment
Heart of America
League of Conservation Voters
League of Women Voters
Loomis Forest
The Mountaineers
Mountains to Sound Greenway (assigned)
People for Puget Sound
Puget Sound Partnership
Puget Sound Water Quality Authority
Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
The Nature Conservancy
Trout Unlimited
Trust for Public Land
WA Audubon Society
WA Toxics Coalition
WA Wildlife & Recreation Coalition
WENPAC/LCV

Exploration Era

Exploring Nature
Game & Wildlife
Land Use
Legislation
Natural Resources

Parks:
State Parks
Larrabee State Park (near Bellingham) (DONE)

Seattle Parks
Spokane Parks
Tacoma Parks
Cemetery Parks
National Parks, Forests, and Monuments
North Cascades National Park (has timeline)
Olympic National Park (has timeline)
Gifford Pinchot National Forest
Okanogan National Forest
Colville National Forest
Umatilla National Forest
Olympic National Forest
Mt. Baker/Snoqualmie National Forest
Wenatchee National Forest
Mt. St. Helen’s National Volcanic Monument

Parks (no subcategory)
Ports
Rivers in Time
Science & Education
Water History
Weather

Environment to put under categories
Mima Mounds (Thurston County)
Mt. Rainier
Olympic Forest Reserve (TIMELINE)
Colonel Bob Wilderness (near Lake Quinault)
Henry M. Jackson Wilderness
Julia Butler Hanson National Wildlife Refuge (near Cathlamet)
Nisqually Wildlife Refuge
Goat Rocks Wilderness (west of Yakima)
William O. Douglas Wilderness Area (Yakima Cty)
Norse Peak Wilderness Area (east of Crystal Mountain)
Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area
Glacier Peak Wilderness Area
Lake Chelan/Sawtooth Wilderness Area
Pasayten Wilderness Area (Canadian boarder)
Buckhorn Wilderness Area (eastern Olympic Mountains)
The Brothers Wilderness Area (eastern Olympic Mountains)
Mount Skokomish Wilderness Area (southeastern Olympics)
Mount Baker Wilderness Area

9 . Cities & Towns (this includes an inventory of done and not done. It does not include an inventory of timelines except for incorporation timelines).

Cyberpedia Incorporation
Everett, city of X x
Ellensburg, city of X x
Aberdeen, city of X x
Arlington, city of x x
Bainbridge Island, city of x x
Blaine, city of x x
Bothell, city of x x
Bremerton, city of x x
Cathlamet, town of x x
Colfax, city of x x
Colville, city of x x
Coupeville, town of x x
Darrington, town of x x
Davenport, city of x x
Dayton, city of x x
East Wenatchee, city of x x
Edmonds, city of x x
Ephrata, city of x x
Federal Way, city of x x
Forks, city of x x
Friday Harbor, town of x x
Granite Falls, city of x x
Hoquiam, city of x x
Issaquah, city of x x
Kent, city of x x
Kirkland, city of x x
La Conner, town of x x
Lynnwood, city of x x
Monroe, city of x x
Moses Lake, city of x x
Mount Vernon, city of x x
Mountlake Terrace, city of x x
Mukilteo, city of x x
Oak Harbor, city of x x
Pasco, city of x x
Pomeroy, city of x x
Poulsbo, city of x x
Raymond, city of x x
Redmond, city of x x
Richland, city of x x
Ritzville, city of x x
Roslyn, city of x x
SeaTac, city of x x
Shelton, city of x x
Shoreline, city of x x
Snohomish, city of x x
Stanwood, city of x x
Vancouver, city of x x
Wenatchee, city of x x
Yakima, city of x x
Tacoma, city of x
Spokane, city of x
Auburn, city of x
Battle Ground, city of x
Bellevue, city of x
Bellingham, city of x
Black Diamond, city of x
Camas, city of x
Carnation, city of x
Cashmere, city of x
Centralia, city of x
Chehalis, city of x
Cheney, city of x
Chewelah, city of x
Des Moines, city of x
DuPont, city of X (Revise)
Duvall, city of x
Enumclaw, city of x
Index, town of x
Kennewick, city of x
Kettle Falls, city of x
La Center, city of x
Lake Forest Park, city of x
Leavenworth, city of) x
Long Beach, city of x x
Longview, city of x
Lynden, city of x
Maple Valley, city of x
Marysville, city of x
McCleary, city of x
Medina, city of x
Metaline Falls, town of x
Newport, city of x
Okanogan, city of x
Olympia, city of x
Port Angeles, city of x
Port Orchard, city of x
Prosser, city of x
Puyallup, city of x
Renton, city of x
Republic, city of x
Ridgefield, city of x
Seattle, city of x
Sequim, city of x
Skykomish, town of x
Snoqualmie, city of x
South Bend, city of x x
Sumas, city of x
Tukwila, city of x
Walla Walla, city of x
Wapato, city of x
Washougal, city of x
Waterville, town of x
Winthrop, town of X
Woodway, city of X
Yacolt, town of X
Yarrow Point, town of X
Brier, city of x
Burien, city of x
Ferndale, city of x
George, city of x
Lacey, city of x
Mercer Island, city of x
Port Townsend, city of Ass to ko x
Sammamish, city of Ass to PD x
Sunnyside, city of Priority x
Woodinville, city of X x
Concrete, town of
Rainier, city of
Airway Heights, city of
Albion, town of
Algona, city of
Almira, town of
Anacortes, city of X
Asotin, city of Priority
Beaux Arts Village, town of
Benton City, city of
Bingen, city of
Bonney Lake, city of
Brewster, city of
Bridgeport, city of
Buckley, city of
Bucoda, town of
Burlington, city of
Carbonado, town of
Castle Rock, city of
Chelan, city of Priority
Clarkston, city of X
Cle Elum, city of
Clyde Hill, city of
College Place, city of
Colton, town of
Conconully, town of
Connell, city of
Cosmopolis, city of
Coulee City, town of
Coulee Dam, town of
Covington, city of
Creston, town of
Cusick, town of
Deer Park, city of
Eatonville, town of
Edgewood, city of
Electric City, city of
Elma, city of
Elmer City, town of
Endicott, town of
Entiat, city of
Everson, city of
Fairfield, town of
Farmington, town of
Fife, city of
Fircrest, city of
Garfield, town of
Gig Harbor, city of Priority
Gold Bar, city of
Goldendale, city of Priority
Grand Coulee, city of
Grandview, city of
Granger, city of
Hamilton, town of
Harrah, town of
Harrington, city of
Hartline, town of
Hatton, town of
Hunts Point, town of
Ilwaco, city of Priority
Ione, town of
Kahlotus, city of
Kalama, city of
Kelso, city of
Kenmore, city of
Kittitas, city of
Krupp, town of
LaCrosse, town of
Lake Stevens, city of
Lakewood, city of
Lamont, town of
Langley, city of
Latah, town of
Liberty Lake, city of
Lind, town of
Lyman, town of
Mabton, city of
Malden, town of
Mansfield, town of
Marcus, town of
Mattawa, city of
Medical Lake, city of Priority
Mesa, city of
Metaline, town of
Metaline Falls X
Mill Creek, city of
Millwood, city of
Milton, city of
Montesano, city of Priority
Morton, city of
Mossyrock, city of
Moxee, city of
Naches, town of
Napavine, city of
Nespelem, town of
Newcastle, city of
Nooksack, city of
Normandy Park, city of
North Bend, city of
North Bonneville, city of
Northport, town of
Oakesdale, town of
Oakville, city of
Ocean Shores, city of
Odessa, town of
Omak, city of
Oroville, city of
Orting, city of
Othello, city of
Pacific, city of
Palouse, city of Hold Kit
Pateros, city of
Pe Ell, town of
Prescott, city of
Pullman, city of
Quincy, city of
Reardan, town of
Riverside, town of
Rock Island, city of
Rockford, town of
Rosalia, town of
Roy, city of
Royal City, city of
Ruston, town of
Sedro-Woolley, city of Have early
Selah, city of
Soap Lake, city of
South Cle Elum, town of
South Prairie, town of
Spangle, city of
Spokane Valley, city of
Sprague, city of
Springdale, town of
St. John, town of
Starbuck, town of
Steilacoom, town of
Stevenson, city of
Sultan, city of
Sumner, city of
Tekoa, city of
Tenino, city of Priority
Tieton, city of
Toledo, city of
Tonasket, city of
Toppenish, city of
Tumwater, city of
Twisp, town of X
Union Gap, city of
Uniontown, town of
University Place, city of
Vader, city of
Waitsburg, city of X
Warden, city of
Washtucna, town of
Waverly, town of
West Richland, city of
Westport, city of
White Salmon, city of
Wilbur, town of
Wilkeson, town of
Wilson Creek, town of
Winlock, city of
Woodland, city of
Yelm, city of
Zillah, city of

10. Sports

Boxing
Pete Rademacher — won the 1956 Olympic gold medal and then fought Floyd Patterson for the professional world heavyweight title in his first pro bout. The fight was at Sick’s Stadium and was one of the biggest sporting events in the city’s history. (Patterson won.) (Can go under Seattle)

Al Hostak — local Georgetrwn boy who won Middleweight Boxing Championship in 1938 by knocking out Freddie Steele at Memorial Stadium in 1938. (Can go under Seattle)

Fox, Tiger Jack (1907 – 1954) boxer, Spokane

Teams
Cougars
Everett Aquasox
Tacoma Rainiers
Tri-City Dust Devils
Spokane Indians
Yakima Bears

Football
Seattle Seahawks

Hockey – Junior League
Everett Silvertips
Seattle Thunderbirds
Spokane Chiefs
Tri-City Americans

Soccer

Other
UW crew Olympic championship 1936 (and other sports champions from state).

Bayliner, a company that mass-produced fast fiberglass power boats for cruising.

The history of the development of skiing facilities in the Cascades is a colorful one. The history begins with cross-country ski races and develops through ski jumping, the creation of the Snoqualmie and Stevens Pass ski areas, up through the development of Crystal Mountain, all done by local enthusiasts. Names include Webb Moffatt, Chauncy Griggs and Ray Tanner.

11. Northwest Indians

Each tribe, whether recognized or not, and each res. We are aware of this project and assign at any opportunity.

Northwest Indian Biographies
Chief Kamiakin
Chief Leschi
Chinook Jargon (assigned)
Comcomly (assigned)
Chief Seltice, Chief of the Coeur d’Alene.
Massalow (Kalispel) (assigned, but held up for possible funding)

Federally Recognized Tribes
Chehalis Confederated Tribes
Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation
Cowlitz Tribe
Hoh Tribe
Jamestown S’Kallam Tribe
Kalispel Tribe
Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe
Lummi Nation
Federally Recognized Tribes (cont.)
Makah Tribe
Muckleshoot Tribe (DONE)
Nisqually Tribe
Nooksack Tribe (also in Whatcom County list)
Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe
Puyallup Tribe
Quileute Tribe
Quinault Nation
Samish Nation
Sauk-Suiattle Tribe
Shoalwater Bay Tribe
Skokomish Tribe
Snohomish Tribe
Snoqualmie Tribe
Spokane Tribe
Squaxin Island Tribe
Stillaguamish Tribe
Suquamish Tribe
Swinomish Tribe
The Tulalip Tribes (DONE)
Upper Skagit Tribe
Yakama Nation

Non-federally Recognized Tribes
Chinook Tribe
Duwamish Tribe (recognized briefly then de-recognized)
Kikiallus Indian Nation
Marietta Band of Nooksack Tribe
Snoqualmoo Tribe
Steilacoom Tribe

Reservations with Date of Establishment
Chehalis Reservation — July 8, 1864
Colville Reservation — April 8, 1872
Hoh Reservation — September 11, 1893
Jamestown Klallam Reservation purchased June 1874
Kalispel Reservation — 1914
Lower Elwha Reservation — 1936-1937 (US proclaimed Jan 19, 1968
Lummi Reservation — January 22. 1855

Makah Reservation — April 19, 1879; terminated July 7, 1883 (but still have res. some history here….)

Moses Reservation (Columbia or Moses Columbia) — April 19, 1879; terminated July 7, 1883

Muckleshoot Reservation — January 20, 1857
Nez Perce — June 7, 1855
Nisqually Reservation — December 26, 1854
Nooksack Reservation — late 1870s or 1880s
Ozette Reservation — April 12, 1893
Port Gamble Reservation — 1936-1937
Port Madison Reservation (Suquamish) — January 22. 1855
Puyallup Reservation — December 26, 1854
Quileute Reservation — February 19, 1889
Sauk-Suiattle Reservation — 1982
Shoalwater Bay Reservation — September 22, 1866
Skokomish Reservation — January 26, 1855
Spokane Reservation — January 18, 1881
Squaxin Island Reservation — December 26, 1854
Stillaguamish Reservation — ?
Tulalip Reservation — January 22. 1855
Upper Skagit Reservation — two reservations, 1977 and 1982
Yakama Reservation — June 9, 1855

12. Political Biographies (If in Wa State Legislature can be Microsoft)

Eva Anderson, 1899-1972, Douglas County leader — Anderson served as superintendent of Douglas County schools, in the State House of Representatives, and held offices in both the Washington and National Education associations

E. Erle Hupp — a significant leader in the northeastern section of Eastern Washington and served for years in the Washington State Legislature as the representative from Pend Oreille County. Nomination from the Pend Oreille County Historical Society

William Owen Bush (1832-1907) — son of George W. Bush, famous farmer, represented Thurston Cy in legislature.

Chris Gregoire (assigned to CT, 2012)
Slade Gorton (assigned to John Hughes, for 2012)
John Martinez (assigned to Jen, 2012)

13. Ethnic Communities

Ethnic Communities Biographies

Tacoma AA biographies
Allen, Anna
Canada, Alberta
Dixon, Thomas
Franklin, Rosa
Mimms, Maxine
Moss, Harold
Scarborough, Marlee
Silas, Dolores
Stafford, Helen (1900-2002)
Stephens, Ron
Strickland, Marilyn
Tanner, Ernie (1890-1956)
Taylor, Virgina
Walker, Herman
Walton, Jim

Other ethnic biographies
Ray Meriweather Seattle AA architect
Washington State Federation of Colored Women (founded Spokane 1909)
Ed Gardner (AA Seattle athlete, runner)
Tomas Villenueva
Cox (Hawaiian) [should go to Nisbets]
Ah King (key Chinese American in King county)

Ethnic Groups/Organizations
Yakima Valley Japanese Americans
Italians in Spokane
Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest
Tacoma Chapter NAACP

Japanese Americans in Washington (per meeting with PL and Louis Fiset who will be writing many of these files)
Puyallup Assembly Center
Japanese American Redress Movement (assigned but in arrears)
Nihon Gakko (Seattle’s Japanese School)
Nippon Kan
JA farmers in Yakima Valley
Strawberry farmers, Bainbridge Island
Strawberry farmers, Bellevue
Japanese farmers in White River Valley, Kent Valley
Japanese farmers in Whatcom
Japanese Americans in Spokane during World War II
Seattle Camera Club (SPOKEN FOR-David Martin)
Biography ok Koike — Photographer
Biography of Matsushita
Biography of Roger Shimamura

[Gail Namura is working on Japanese American Women in the state]

Cyberpedia on Japanese Americans in Railroads, coalmining and oysters (could be different files)

Japanese American Citizens League (cyberpedia)
Japanese American martial arts (Joe Svinth) writes on martial arts history)

14. Military History (this one is in progress)

List of every military base — in progress
Yakima Firing Center
Everett Naval Station
Naval Station Bremerton
Naval Underwater Warfare Engineering Station
Whidbey Island Naval Air Station
Bangor Naval Submarine Base
Fairchild AFB
Thirteenth Coast Guard District
Group Port Angeles
Group Seattle
Marine Safety Office Puget Sound
Air Station Port Angeles
National MotorLifeboat School
Vessel Traffic Puget Sound
Army Corps of Engineers in Washington State

Metal of Honor recipients, the occasion, and something about them. Including those buried in Washington and where buried.

15. Important Buildings (that aren’t part of a committee project)

Walla Walla historic district (this should be a Cybertour)
Skykomish historic district Cybertour
Ransom Clark Cabin (1859) (part of Fort Walla Walla Museum complex)
Brechtel Building (1869) (oldest building downtown Walla Walla)
St. Patrick Catholic Church (1881) Oldest Walla Walla church building)
Whitman Memorial Building (1899) (Oldest Whitman College building)
Baker-Boyer Bank Building (1910) Walla Walla
Marcus Whitman Hotel (1928) “Walla Walla’s retort to the Davenport”
Whitman Mission grounds (as a place/or like building)

16. Crime

Daryl McClary is working along on a long list.

17. Biographies Outside another category

18. Seattle files

Biographies
Quintard Taylor
J. A. Moore
Sophie Frye Bass (for Paula)
Emily Inez Denny (for Paula)
Eliza Leary (for Paula)
Seaborn Collins (AA Seattle pioneer)
Young, Cecil (c. 1920-c. 1975) seattle AA pianist
Mona Jones (Seattle poet laureate under Norm Rice)

Cybers
History of Coffee in Seattle
St. Mark’s Cathedral
Seattle Eagles Hall
Theodora Home
Seattle Indian Health Board
Childhaven (formerly Seattle Day Nursery)
Northwest Center for the Retarded (centennial 1916)

Timelines
Election of Doug Jewett as City Attorney in the late 1970s — For over fifty years, whenever a City Attorney retired, his chief assistant would run for the office and be elected. Jewett was the first “outsider” elected to that position in over fifty years.

1914 Fisherman’s Terminal Dedication

April 26, 2012 – May 2, 2012

Book Store

On the Road

May 1 marks the beginning of National Historic Preservation Month, and this week HistoryLink.org highlights some of our favorite historic destinations throughout Washington — where the past still shines through. We start with our cybertour of Ellensburg, which wasincorporated in 1884. A gem of Kittitas County, downtown Ellensburg was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.

Traveling over the mountains to Western Washington, we arrive next at Port Gamble. This company town got its start in 1853, and was once home to the oldest continuously operating sawmill in the United States. It was named a Rural Historic Town in 1999, and you can tour its historic structures here.

But don’t rest yet: We still have to make our way to Tacoma. This city can trace its beginnings to 1852, with notable boosts in 1864 and 1868, followed by the announcement in 1873 that the city would become theterminus for the Northern Pacific Railroad. Much of the city’s late nineteenth-century boom is carefully preserved today in two downtown historic districts that you can explore via this cybertour.

Finally, we arrive in Snohomish County. Take a stroll along Everett’s bayside waterfront and learn about the city’s industrial past. Afterwards, head over to downtown Snohomish, home to historic buildings that date back more than a century ago, following the city’s incorporation under state law in 1890.

Honors Bestowed

This week, HistoryLink and some of our historians received some noteworthy awards, and we are very proud to share our successes with you. Our first honor came from the Puget Sound Association of Phi Beta Kappa, which bestowed us with its annual Pathfinder Award, given to those who “encourage others to seek new worlds to discover, pathways to explore, and untouched destinations to reach. ” Our thanks go out to PSA-PBK for this fine recognition.

We were honored three times by the Association of King County Historical Organizations. HistoryLink co-founder Paul Dorpat received AKCHO’s very first Living Legacy award. Our Seattle World’s Fair curriculum was chosen for its Heritage Education Award. And Paula Becker and Alan Stein — authors of The Future Remembered: The 1962 Seattle World’s Fair and Its Legacy — were given the Virginia Marie Folkins Award for outstanding historical publications. Thank you, AKCHO. This truly means a lot to us.

Give Big

Of course, HistoryLink would not be as successful were it not for our legion of readers who have enjoyed our site and have given us their support for more than 14 years. If you’d like to help make HistoryLink grow stronger and better, we urge you to mark May 2 on your calendar, when the Seattle Foundation holds its one-day GiveBIG campaign in support of local nonprofits.

Please donate to HistoryLink on that day, via a dedicated page on its website, and the foundation will “stretch” those funds, based on the total amount given. More support from you means more matching funds from them. Last year we received more than $5,000 in its GiveBIG campaign, and we hope to top that this year. Any help you can give, no matter how small, helps us immensely. And best of all, you get lots of new content in return. It’s win-win all around.

Past Events, Present Tense

Moving In: Exactly 40 years after the Louisiana Purchase, a few hundred American settlers in Oregon declared a provisional government on May 2, 1843, spurring settlement in the Northwest. On May 1, 1850, Schuyler and Eliza Saunders made their home at the future site of Chehalis. Fifteen years later, Mary Low Sinclair arrived in Cadyville, which later became the town of Snohomish.

Moving Out: On April 29, 1861, the steamer Cortez arrived in Portland with news from back east of the attack on Fort Sumter and the start of the Civil War. Three days later, Colonel George Wright, the officer in charge of all troops within Washington Territory and the state of Oregon, received orders to send three companies of soldiers from Fort Vancouver to San Francisco. Their duty was to guard the Pacific coast against the threats of Western secessionists.

Parks and Trails: On April 30, 1903, John Charles Olmsted stepped off the train in Seattle and was greeted by dignitaries and the press. Stepson of famed landscape visionary Frederick Law Olmsted — creator of New York’s Central Park — John came west to design a new park system for Seattle along with the grounds for the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition.

On the Rails: On the morning of April 30, 1910, electric interurban trains began to shuttle between Everett and Seattle. Twelve hours later, two passengers died in a fatal accident farther south on the chronically mismanaged Rainier Valley line between Seattle and Renton.

Flier Downed: On April 29, 1928, Spokane pioneer aviator Major John T. Fancher was fatally injured when an aerial bomb used in a demonstration exploded in his hand. A few months earlier, Fancher had been instrumental in bringing the 1927 National Air Derby and Air Races to Felts Field.

Inspired Sound: On April 28, 1940, experimental music pioneer John Cage debuted his “prepared piano” at Seattle’s Repertory Playhouse. The instrument was augmented with screws, bolts, nuts, and leather strips that dampened the strings and produced a cacophony of sounds. Exactly 28 years later, thousands gathered in Duvall to witness an even stranger musical performance: to hear what a piano sounded like whendropped from a helicopter.

Built and Manned: On May 1, 1941, Seattle opened the Service Men’s Club for military personnel visiting the city. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor a few months later, more support was needed for wartime personnel. In Tacoma, the Salishan Housing Project opened for war workers on May 1, 1943.

Moving Land: Exactly 20 years to the day after a smaller temblor onApril 29, 1945, a major earthquake jarred the region in 1965, causing seven deaths and extensive damage. A goldfish in Kirkland also had a near brush with catastrophe.

Snow and Sand: On May 1, 1963, Jim Whittaker — an REI sales manager — became the first American to reach the summit of Mount Everest. Exactly 38 years later, in much drier climes, Snohomish County residents Bill and Helen Thayer began a 1,600-mile walkacross the Gobi Desert on May 1, 2001.


Quote of the Week

When we build, let us think that we build forever. Let it not be for present delight nor for our use alone. Let it be such work as our descendants will look upon with praise and thanksgiving in their hearts.

–John Ruskin


Image of the Week

Beginning in May 1915, Moncton slowly disappeared from view.

Boilerplate for “how do I find xx essay?”

This is to answer your question as to how to find the essay on Spokane’s champion and historic trees. The easiest way is to use the quick search box at the top right of the front page and type in “spokane’s champion and historic trees” between quotes. Actually “Spokane’s champion” works just as well.  Quote marks not optional. If you type in Spokane trees (no quote marks), you will bring up all essays with both Spokane and trees in the keywords. For some searches this will bring up way too many essays. For example “Seattle park” brings up 74 essays and each one is on a Seattle park or on some aspect of Seattle parks. Seattle park (no quotation marks) brings up 466 essays, one, for example, on a Seattle building that includes a firm named James Parke & Co.

 Results for any search come up in three columns. Those are the three libraries. The Cyberpedia Library (overview essays) in the left hand column is organized alphabetically. The Timeline Library, the center column, is organized chronologically. When you enter an essay in the Timeline Library you can click through time by clicking “browse to next essay.”

It is also well worth going to the Advanced Search page, which is unlike any other Advanced Search page on the Internet.

You can go to the timeline bar and browse through the 1850s (or any timeframe). You can click on the county menu and see all essays pertaining to Spokane County (or any county). There’s a map search, by region. There’s a topic search (including Environment).

Try it and let me know if you have any questions.

Features

DocShare

This feature is a very simple file sharing and version tracking application.  It is geared to casual users and may assist in organizing content flow from many people.  It has limited features compared to a real project management application.  The video under the DocShare tab should explain enough.

Assignments 

This feature is a fairly detailed project management application that allows for file uploads, team creation and project status tracking.  To see or use the application a member must be defined in the iProject with a status.  Members are not automatically given access to the assignment feature.  The administrator of the site must enter the member’s information and choose a status level, only then can a member view and interact with the project application.  If there is enough interest and the online help is not enough, I will create a more detailed help file for this application.

iProject Web Demo : http://wp-pal.com/?page_id=7

This Week Newsletter

This week http://www.HistoryLink.org goes to the fair and has lots of fun, heads to the mall where shopping is done, takes a look back at some of our domes, and remembers a plane crash that demolished some homes, among other historical highlights.

Give Big

Mark your calendars for May 2, when the Seattle Foundation holds its one-day GiveBIG campaign to help out local nonprofits. On that day, any money donated to a specific organization (such as HistoryLink) will be “stretched” by the Foundation from a pool of matching funds. This campaign was very successful for HistoryLink last year and we hope it will be again this year. To learn more about GiveBIG visit http://www.seattlefoundation.org/GivingCenter/GiveBIG/Pages/Default.aspx. And we urge you to donate to HistoryLink that day, so be sure to bookmark our donation page at http://www.seattlefoundation.org/npos/Pages/HistoryLink.aspx.

Go See

As part of the 1962 World’s Fair anniversary festivities, the Museum of History and Industry has a new exhibit opening at Seattle Center that showcases the story of the fair as told by its colorful artifacts. This exhibit is curated by HistoryLink staff historians Paula Becker and Alan Stein, and we’d like to thank MOHAI for giving us the opportunity to help create what should be a fun experience for visitors to Seattle Center. Beginning on April 21, you can see the exhibit in the International Fountain Pavilion — located between the fountain and Key Arena — where it will be on display until October 21.

Early Warning

In our next update, HistoryLink.org hears news of a civil war, hops on the interurban, feels a tremor, and drops a piano, among other historic events.

Captains Robert Gray and George Vancouver meet off the Washington coast on April 28 or 29, 1792.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=5049

Schuyler and Eliza Saunders settle at future site of Chehalis on May 1, 1850.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=8649

Charles Terry homesteads site of Alki business district on May 1, 1852.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3142

Steamer Cortez reaches Portland on April 29, 1861, with news of the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9892

Following the outbreak of the Civil War, Colonel George Wright receives orders on May 2, 1861, to send soldiers from Fort Vancouver to San Francisco.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9893

Mary Low Sinclair arrives in Cadyville (future Snohomish City) on May 1, 1865.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=8327

John Olmsted arrives in Seattle to design city parks on April 30, 1903.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3290

Interurban rail service between Everett and Seattle begins on April 30, 1910.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=5341

Two passengers die in an interurban streetcar accident in Rainier Valley on April 30, 1910.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3087

A bomb explosion fatally injures Spokane pioneer aviator Major John T. Fancher during an air show in East Wenatchee on April 29, 1928.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9555

John Cage debuts his “prepared piano” in Seattle on April 28, 1940.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9422

Seattle opens Service Men’s Club on May 1, 1941.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9406

Salishan Housing Project in Tacoma opens for war workers on May 1, 1943.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=5474

Earthquake hits Puget Sound area on April 29, 1945.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=2064

Two inmates kill employee Benjamin Marshall in an attempted escape from the Washington State Reformatory in Monroe on April 26, 1951.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9154

PONCHO holds inaugural fundraising auction, to benefit Seattle Symphony, on April 27, 1963.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3892

Jim Whittaker, REI sales manager, becomes first American to reach Mount Everest summit on May 1, 1963.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=1281

Earthquake rattles Western Washington on April 29, 1965.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=1986

Goldfish survives bizarre earthquake experience on April 29, 1965.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3037

Piano dropped from helicopter in Duvall and thousands turn out to see it on April 28, 1968.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=1388

Weeks of protests erupt in Seattle beginning on May 1, 1970, against U. S. entry into Cambodia and to protest the killing of four Kent State students.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=2308

Construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline begins on April 29, 1974.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=3600

Seattle’s Crocodile Cafe & Live Bait Lounge opens its grungy doors for business on April 30, 1991.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=8443

Helen and Bill Thayer begin a 1,600-mile walk across the Gobi Desert on May 1, 2001.
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=9851

Enjoy,

Marie McCaffrey, Alan Stein, and the http://www.HistoryLink.org Gang

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April 19, 2012 – April 25, 2012

Summer of ’62

Fifty years ago this week, on April 21, 1962, the gates opened at the Seattle World’s Fair, and thousands of people poured in to catch a glimpse of the future. Billed as “America’s Space Age World’s Fair,” the Century 21 Exposition had plenty to see and do. A ride up to the top of the Space Needle was a must, as was a trip on the monorail. Exhibits, both foreign and domestic, captured the imagination.Performances and artwork stirred the soul. And newly introducedBelgian waffles sated the most ravenous appetites.

The fair traced its origins to the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, which Seattle City Councilman Al Rochester remembered fondly from his youth. Recalling the successes of the A-Y-P, Rochester advocated for a second world’s fair to commemorate the first, but the 1957 launch of Sputnik shifted the theme to science and technology as a way of showcasing Seattle’s strides towards Century 21. The space-age fair received broad support from localstate, and federal officials.

One goal of the fair was to have a civic center in place once the event was over. The site chosen for the fairgrounds was close to downtown, and had structures that could be modified for reuse. Older — and in some cases , derelict — buildings had to be torn down, but more people were concerned over the loss of homes less than a mile away that were being demolished for the construction of Interstate 5.

Planning progressed, and Seattleites watched as the Space Needle grew and the monorail pylons were put in place. The night before the fair opened, a twist party was held downtown. After that it was fun, fun, fun, all summer long and into the fall. And once the fair had ended, a civic center was indeed in place, and remains a lasting legacy well into the twenty-first century.

Over the next six months, visit HistoryLink.org each week as we showcase some of the many people and events that made the 1962 World’s Fair such a success. And for a more detailed look at the fair, be sure to pick up a copy of The Future Remembered: The 1962 Seattle World’s Fair and Its Legacy, written by Paula Becker, Alan J. Stein, and the HistoryLink Staff. You can purchase our book from the Seattle Center FoundationAmazon.com, your local Bartell Drugs, and a variety of bookstores.

Shopping Mall Debut

On April 21, 1950, crowds of consumers attended the opening ofNorthgate Mall for a new type of shopping experience. The mall was designed by John Graham Jr., who later became chief architect for the Space Needle. Northgate’s first president was Jim Douglas, who went on to serve as the Century 21 vice president of construction.

Northgate is considered to be one of the first regional shopping centers defined as a “mall,” although there were a number of predecessors. One was Bellevue Square, which opened four years earlier.

News Then, History Now

Long Walk: On April 20, 1825, Scottish naturalist David Douglasarrived at Fort Vancouver, one month after it opened on the north bank of the Columbia River in present-day Clark County. Later in the year, he made the first recorded ascent of the Cascade Mountains, and in 1826 he extended his exploration eastward and visited retired fur traderJaco Finlay, founder of Spokane House.

Long Talk: On April 24, 1877, General Oliver O. Howard met in aday-long council with Smohalla, an influential Wanapum spiritual leader. Howard told Smohalla that he and his followers must move onto the Yakama reservation. However, distracted by the Nez Perce War, which broke out a few weeks later, Howard took no steps to enforce the order and Smohalla ignored it.

Long Wait: On April 22, 1889, Duncan Hunter filed a homestead claim to 80 acres of dense forest in south Snohomish County, becoming the first non-Indian resident of what would become Lynnwood. Other homesteaders soon followed, but the city didn’t incorporate for another 70 years.

Ill Fate: One hundred years ago this week, two catastrophes occurred one day apart on opposite sides of the state. On April 24, the main administration building of the State Normal School — later Eastern Washington University — burned down in Cheney. The next day, the steamship Alameda inadvertently rammed Seattle’s Colman Dock and toppled its clock tower into Elliott Bay.

Jeers and Cheers: The first Earth Day celebration was held on April 22, 1970, to raise awareness of environmental issues. On that day, Washington Senator Henry M. Jackson — a leader on environmental legislation — spoke at UW and WSU, but was jeered due to his hawkish stance on the Vietnam War. Some students pelted him with marshmallows, but Jackson caught a few and threw them back, eliciting cheers.

Hemispheres: The Tacoma Dome opened its doors for business on April 21, 1983, and has held countless concerts, sports events, and conventions ever since. It is one of the largest wooden domed structures in the world, and upon the demise of Seattle’s Kingdome it became the largest dome in the state.


Quote of the Week

See you at the fair in Seattle
In the summer of ’62,
We’ll preview the Space Age, the World of Tomorrow,
I’ll be sharing, dear, with you.

– “Summer of ’62,” novelty song performed by Ronnie Draper and the Four-Do-Matics


Image of the Week

Opening day festivities for the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair were marred when one of the flyover planes crashed in a Mountlake Terrace neighborhood.