1012 S G ST, TACOMA

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1012 S G ST, TACOMA

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1012 S G ST, TACOMA

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1012 S G ST, TACOMA

102 Collections results for 1012 S G ST, TACOMA

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1012 S G ST, TACOMA

  • 27 images. Pierce County Court House Proctor & Dennis, arch. John T. Long, contr. -patterned after courthouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania designed by Henry Hobson Richardson -"Wilkeson and Pittsburg grey freestone, finished with Tenino bluestone" -three stories, 226 ft. x 102 ft., 230 ft. tower -opened 6/21/1893 -demolished in 1959 SEE ALSO: TPL Catalog/Clipping File
  • TDL 12/10/1889 p.4 More room wanted
  • TDL 1/29/1890 p.4 Court house plans
  • TDL 6/18/1890 p.5 New county court house
  • TDL 6/22/1890 p.12 (sketch)
  • TDL 8/29/1890 p.3 The new County Court House
  • TDL 5/9/1891 p.5 Why this delay?
  • TDL 6/25/1892 p.3 (progress)
  • TDL 11/29/1892 p.3 Boilers to be placed underground instead of in basement
  • TDL 1/1/1893 p.15 The year's brick buildings
  • TDL 3/24/1893 p.4 Finest in the state
  • TDL 4/29/1893 p.5 Still they quarrel
  • TDL 9/7/1893 p.5 Contractor Long sues
  • TDL 9/19/1893 p.3 In the new quarters
  • TDL 10/5/1893 p.5 (power plant for building)
  • TDL 8/1/1894 p.3 The Court House dispute
  • TDL 4/9/1900 p.1 Must pay John T. Long TDN 6/3/1905 p.23 To secure clock in courthouse tower; proposition to get the clock formerly in the Jones Block ...
  • TDL 2/8/1914 p.2 (excavation for underground addition)
  • TDL 2/15/1914 p.22 County getting room in alley (construction of underground storage area beneath alley - still visible in the County-City Bldg. parking lot)
  • TDL 3/22/1914 p.22 (il of court house employees)
  • TDL 5/17/1914 p.32 (il of underground addition)
  • TDL 12/7/1919 p.B8 (remodeling by Heath, Gove & Bell, arch.)
  • TDL 2/8/1920 p.5 (5th floor remodeling by Heath, Gove & Bell, arch. and C.A. Beil & Son, contr.)
  • TDL 11/21/1920 p.A1 Hangman's stairs of years ago unsealed
  • TDL 4/7/1925 p.1 County courthouse has "hanging" room where two men died
  • TDL 3/14/1926 p.A14 Elevator operator human encyclopedia T.Times 7/29/1926 Hurray! Pierce County Court House is paid for before it is worn out
  • TDL 12/5/1927 p.1 Kress bandits break jail
  • TDL 12/15/1927 p.9 Courthouse clock fine target - but
  • TDL 1/7/1928 p.10 Courthouse clock back on the job
  • TDL 2/26/1928 p.A9 Pierce jury rooms will be replaced
  • TDL 11/21/1928 p.3 New lights to be installed on Court House top T.Times 5/8/1930 County records in peril in firetrap courthouse
  • TDL 11/27/1930 p.1 Geo. Spencer escapes jail
  • TDL 5/26/1931 Rotogravure Sec. p.3 (il)
  • TDL 2/9/1932 p.C2 Court house is a real pioneer
  • TDL 10/16/1932 p.A7 Courthouse flag raising is lost art; tragedy that cost life years ago ...
  • TDL 11/20/1932 p.A1 He loves to watch 'em root
  • TDL 12/31/1933 p.A3 13,104 miles of ups, downs with nearly 5,000,000 passengers end for vet courthouse elevator man
  • TDL 1/6/1934 p.1 Long cord serves as elevator
  • TDL 6/26/1934 p.1 Time stands still for courthouse
  • TDL 7/27/1935 p.3 Hero found to fix court house clock
  • TDL 7/30/1935 p.1 He likes high jobs anywhere (il)
  • TDL 8/14/1935 p.1 Pigeon massacre brings protest
  • TNT 8/17/1939 p.1 Here's real jail bird (owl flies into jail area, stares at inmates)
  • TNT 10/16/1940 p.1 Millions respond to draft (interior il)
  • TNT 2/19/1941 p.20 Let elevator contract at court house
  • TNT 3/10/1941 p.16 Central heat studied for courthouse
  • TNT 9/25/1941 p.11 Water proves unpopular at court house T.Times 9/25/1941 Courthouse drinking water found to be contaminated
  • TNT 5/16/1942 Says county records face fire hazard
  • TNT 11/1/1942 p.B10 Remember this crew? (il of work crew c.1892) T.Times 1/18/1943 Courthouse colder than igloo; business frozen
  • TNT 6/25/1943 They recall early days T.Times 6/25/1943 2,000 celebrate 50th anniversary of Courthouse
  • TNT 2/10/1946 p.A1,A11 City's fire program pushed (interior il)
  • TNT 3/7/1947 p.16 Small fire at co. court house
  • TNT 4/4/1947 p.9 More parking space around court house
  • TNT 5/8/1947 p.8 Cave recalls older days
  • TNT 12/21/1947 County's Courthouse steeped in history (il)
  • TNT 8/11/1948 p.1 Human drama bathed in pathos at courthouse
  • TNT 9/3/1948 p.1 High climber (il of metal shingle repair on spire)
  • TNT 10/25/1948 p.1 For beauty's (?) sake (il of tree trimming operation)
  • TNT 1/20/1949 Organizer Peck set to save courthouse tower
  • TNT 4/18/1949 p.1 Asks tower be removed
  • TNT 4/19/1949 p.23 No decision yet on tower
  • TNT 4/21/1949 p.1 Architects rally to save courthouse tower
  • TNT 4/22/1949 p.1 Architects check tower quake damage (il) p.19 Courthouse tower gets new lease on its life
  • TNT 4/29/1949 p.15 Courthouse tower repair suggested
  • TNT 5/17/1949 Tower on Courthouse now appears doomed
  • TNT 6/21/1949 p.1 Call bids to save tower
  • TNT 6/26/1949 p.A7 Courthouse mystery bared, but unsolved ... hidden speaking tube (interior il)
  • TNT 7/24/1949 p.A14 Changing courthouse (il c.1893)
  • TNT 7/31/1949 p.A1 Courthouse tower to go (sketch)
  • TNT 8/2/1949 p.22 Take first step to raze tower
  • TNT 8/7/1949 p.A15 Canadian has solution to great tube mystery (il)
  • TNT 8/20/1949 p.14 Organizer Peck set to save courthouse tower (Nelson Peck)
  • TNT 8/25/1949 p.1 Fears felt for Court House
  • TNT 8/26/1949 p.1 View precarious Courthouse support (il)
  • TNT 8/27/1949 p.2 Says tower can be saved (architect Charles Pearson) p.14 Touch not that tower, cries "organizer" Peck
  • TNT 8/30/1949 p.1 Plans for removal of Courthouse near
  • TNT 9/8/1949 p.1 Call bids on tower p.3 Public spirited group out to save "the Tower"
  • TNT 9/17/1949 Would keep that tower
  • TNT 9/23/1949 p.5 Courthouse tower fight near climax
  • TNT 9/27/1949 p.1 Bids opened, decision on Courthouse delayed
  • TNT 10/2/1949 p.C15 Would keep old tower
  • TNT 10/25/1949 p.1 Postpone decision on tower
  • TNT 10/26/1949 p.33 Denies change in Stancer's stand
  • TNT 10/29/1949 Spectators limited
  • TNT 11/1/1949 p.1 Battle for tower fails: Engineer warns County courthouse is unsafe
  • TNT 11/10/1949 p.8 Tower work under way
  • TNT 11/11/1949 Fugitive freed (interior il)
  • TNT 11/20/1949 p.A5 Ready to start razing of Courthouse tower (il)
  • TNT 11/25/1949 p.24 Elevator service of County limited
  • TNT 1/30/1950 p.7 Bursting pipe at Courthouse (flood on third floor)
  • TNT 12/3/1950 p.A1 Pierce Co., City afoul fire law (interior il)
  • TNT 1/28/1951 p.A11 Streamlines his office (interior il of Sheriff's Dept.)
  • TNT 10/19/1951 p.1 Chips off Courthouse endanger passers-by
  • TNT 2/24/1952 Quarters crowded ...
  • TNT 10/19/1952 p.A4 Fire drills inadvisable
  • TNT 10/21/1952 p.3 Fifth floor jury room frowned on (safety concerns)
  • TNT 10/23/1952 p.A11 Fire hazard serious one (interior il of county jail)
  • TNT 10/26/1952 p.A8 Buildings inadequate
  • TNT 10/30/1952 p.A7 Building needs cited (il of cracked wall)
  • TNT 12/8/1952 p.1 County Commissioners seeking big bedrooms (for juries)
  • TNT 4/7/1953 First Pierce County seat located at Steilacoom (il)
  • TNT 4/28/1953 p.14 Court House floor sags
  • TNT 8/18/1953 Blaze halted in Courthouse
  • TNT 8/25/1953 Hero told to let Courthouse burn
  • TNT 9/25/1953 p.1 Blaze hits Courthouse
  • TNT 10/19/1953 Motion to fly stars, stripes passed fast
  • TNT 10/21/1953 p.C10 New flag back at Courthouse
  • TNT 2/7/1954 p.A10 Law books put sag in Courthouse
  • TNT 6/1/1954 p.1 Murderer attempts to escape
  • TNT 10/16/1954 Balky county lift leaves seven snared
  • TNT 3/6/1955 Parking will become tougher ...
  • TNT 5/22/1955 Courthouse steeped in history of Tacoma (il)
  • TNT 9/7/1955 p.5 Survey of Courthouse possible use ordered ([proposed as community center)
  • TNT 9/19/1955 p.1 Blodhounds hunt for Collins, 3 other County Jail escapees
  • TNT 9/28/1955 p.10 Court House lets off steam (il of steam trap)
  • TNT 10/10/1955 p.30 Parking for courthouse
  • TNT 4/1/1956 p.A1 Courthouse's old bones creak a little (il)
  • TNT 4/2/1956 p.1 Order survey of courthouse
  • TNT 4/29/1956 Remember when? (il of original courthouse construction crew)
  • TNT 7/10/1956 p.1 Ten prisoners in County Jail stage riot
  • TNT 2/22/1957 (il)
  • TNT 10/15/1957 p.1 Armed girl tries to spring boy
  • TNT 3/18/1958 p.13 New parking regulations at Courthouse
  • TNT 5/3/1958 p.18 Museum director fails to find famed gallows (missing from room 506)
  • TNT 7/6/1958 p.A1 Bootleggers laid out first courthouse gardens in 1928 under boss who still holds job (il)
  • TNT 2/8/1959 p.A6 Huge attic in courthouse was the hanging room in two or more executions around turn of the century (interior il)
  • TNT 3/10/1959 p.4 Final County session held in building
  • TNT 4/7/1959 p.C16,C17,C19,D5 1890 clamour for new courthouse brought combination of palace, castle and dungeon: In all her glory (il)
  • TNT 4/12/1959 p.A8 Alfred D. Elder's life spanned courthouse
  • TNT 4/22/1959 p.A1 Doomed to oblivion (il)
  • TNT 5/17/1959 Here's why (il of bldg. damage)
  • TNT 6/14/1959 p.A1 Memories of old County Courthouse will live in countless local homes
  • TNT 6/21/1959 p.A1 Onlookers gasp as stone walls crumble down (il of demolition)
  • TNT 6/28/1959 p.A17 Let's have another look at that address (il of demolition)
  • TNT 7/31/1959 p.1 Old Courthouse tower crumbles with scarely more than a shudder (il)
  • TNT 3/18/1973 Old Courthouse's "dignified" death (il,sketch) Seattle Times 4/13/1992 p. A1 Courting history; teacher discovers intrigue in Washington's county seats (haunted hanging room)
  • TNT 12/1/2002 p.A1 The art of architecture 720 ST711S Stone : ten thousand years ago and now / pen drawings and historical data by Muriel Cambern (il) 917.9778 C498C (il) 979.7 M364T p.77 (il) 979.72 H91 Vol.I p.420, Vol.II opp. p.90 (il)
  • Year Built: 1892
  • Decade Built: 1890s
  • Demolished: 1959
  • Style: Romanesque

1034-1

ca. 1936. Pierce County Courthouse. From the time it was built in 1892 till it was demolished in 1959, the Romanesque turrets of the Courthouse were a familiar landmark in Tacoma. The building was designed by Proctor & Dennis, architects, and was patterned after the courthouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania by Henry Hobson Richardson. It was an imposing structure for a city with large aspirations. The three story building was built of Wilkeson grey freestone finished with Tenino bluestone. Its focus was a tall clock tower that was damaged in the 1949 earthquake. A167500-36. (TPL-2532, TPL-4031 and TPL-6670)


Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Historic buildings--Tacoma;

A21114-1

The Pierce County Sheriff's Department force including patrolmen, detectives, and Pierce County Sheriff H.W. "Lee " Croft posed on the steps of the Pierce County Courthouse in December of 1945. Sheriff Croft (center, first row) was first elected to his position in 1942. He was a former logger, gold miner, heavyweight boxer, checkers enthusiast and longtime operator of the Croft Hotel on Pacific Ave. Lee Croft served two terms as sheriff and passed away in December of 1951.


Sheriffs--Pierce County--1940-1950; Pierce County Sheriffs (Tacoma); Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Croft, Lee

A21114-2

The Pierce County Sheriff's Department force including patrolmen, detectives and Pierce County Sheriff Lee Croft. The sheriffs force is standing on the steps of the Pierce County Courthouse. The courthouse, built in 1892 and designed by Proctor and Dennis architects, was patterned after the courthouse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It was finished with Tenino bluestone. The building was demolished in 1959.


Sheriffs--Pierce County--1940-1950; Pierce County Sheriffs (Tacoma); Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Uniforms; Croft, Lee

A31065-1

View of Pierce County Sheriff's office new medicine kit, kit is shown both opened and closed. Medicine kit has analgesic balm, liniment, Olympic Trainer athletic liniment, Red Cross bandages, ammonia inhalant, tweezers, scissors, swabs, gauze and other first aid items. Richard's Studio has combined two images, photo ordered by Gordon Hill, Pierce County Deputy Sheriff's Officer.


Sheriffs--Tacoma; Law enforcement--Tacoma; Law enforcement training--Tacoma; First aid--Tacoma; Emergency medical services--Tacoma; Pierce County Sheriffs (Tacoma);

A-644

On December 30, 1924, a crowd of last minute "shoppers" filled the office of Pierce County Auditor Freemont Campbell Jr. in a last minute attempt to get their 1925 automobile license applications filed before the January 1 deadline. By the 30th, scarcely half of the county's automobile owners had applied for their new licenses. Tacoma and Pierce County drivers who belonged to the Automobile Club of Western Washington could avoid the lines at the auditor's office in the Pierce County courthouse,1012 South G Street, by going to the automobile club's Tacoma office at 119 South 9th Street. (TNT 1/1/1925, pg. 11) (WSHS- negative A644-0)


Crowds--Tacoma--1920-1930; Pierce County Auditor (Tacoma)--1920-1930; Recording & registration--Pierce County--1920-1930;

A7029-1

Pierce County Sheriff's officers, George W. Kupka on right, flank Sheriff John C. Bjorklund on the Court House steps in January of 1938. John C. Bjorklund was in his second term. When re-elected in 1938, he received the largest majority ever given a candidate for any office in the history of Pierce County up to that time. Bjorklund was for many years the secretary of the Tacoma Longshoremen's Union and he was a familiar figure on Tacoma's waterfront. (filed with Argentum)


Bjorklund, John; Uniforms; Sheriffs--Pierce County--1930-1940; Pierce County Sheriffs (Tacoma); Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Kupka, George;

A7029-2

As the caption on this photograph indicates, this was the Criminal Force of the Pierce County Sheriff's Dept. in 1938. John C. Bjorklund (not pictured), the County Sheriff, was in his second term. When re-elected in 1938, he received the largest majority ever given a candidate for any office in the history of Pierce County up to that time. TPL-2512


Uniforms; Sheriffs--Pierce County--1930-1940; Pierce County Sheriffs (Tacoma);

A7029-3

On January 19, 1938, Pierce County Sheriff John C. Bjorklund posed on the steps of the old Pierce County Courthouse at 1012 South G Street with his 16-member staff. Sheriff Bjorklund is in the front row, second from the left. His criminal deputies donned blue caps, coats and high laced boots for this photograph. Marian Hager, stenographer, was the only female staff member. The names of the sixteen aides are listed in the newspaper caption. (TNT 1/19/1938, pg. 7-alternate photograph)


Bjorklund, John; Uniforms; Sheriffs--Pierce County--1930-1940; Law enforcement officers; Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Hager, Marian;

ANDERSON-026 Front

  • Pierce County Court House. Built in 1892 at 1012 So. G Street, it was demolished in 1959, after the new County-City Building was completed. circa 1907.
  • Printed on front: Pierce County Court House, Tacoma, Washington.

BOLAND-B10636

The view around South 11th in downtown Tacoma has changed dramatically since this photograph of the Pierce County Courthouse, located at 1012 South "G" St., was taken in August of 1924. The lush trees are gone and the buildings altered or demolished, including the courthouse itself in 1959. The lawn on the left side of the street is now part of Bates Technical College and the wooden sidewalk directly across it transformed into ordinary cement. The wood building at the corner of South 11th & Altheimer remains but now houses the CJ Johnson Bail Bonds. Where the courthouse once stood is now parking for the County-City Building. TPL-3269; G17.1-081


Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; Streets--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B10637

View of the Pierce County Courthouse in 1924 featuring the 230-foot stone clock tower. The massive Romanesque structure was built in 1892 and was patterned after the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania courthouse designed by Henry Hobson Richardson. At the far left is the First Presbyterian Church, 1001 South "G," which would be acquired the following year and transformed into Central Lutheran Church. Both structures and surrounding trees would be demolished with the courthouse falling in 1959 and the church in 1955. G17.1-078; BU-10,713


Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Courthouses--Tacoma; First Presbyterian Church (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B13069

On August 4, 1925, John B. "Kelly" Carlton was photographed outside the Pierce County Courthouse while enjoying a refreshing Orange Kist soda. "Kelly" was the "keeper of the key to the county cooler" as he was the county jailer. Orange Kist, a new soda manufactured in Tacoma by the Columbia Brewing Company, was introduced to consumers in August, 1925, with a barrage of advertising and promotional stunts, including a free giveaway of thousands of cases of the soda. Prohibition had driven Tacoma's breweries out of beer and into other product lines. On August 3rd a big truck with 3,000 bottles of the new soda for free distribution had backed up to the Courthouse and unloaded its cargo right into Kelly's waiting, and thirsty, arms. G33.1-065; TPL-6208 (TNT 8/4/1925, pg. 7)


Carbonated beverages; Eating & drinking--Tacoma--1920-1930; Carlton, John B.; Columbia Brewing Co.--Associated objects; Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B3068

Prohibition came to Washington State early, with its passage taking effect at 12:01a.m. on January 1, 1916. By 1920, local entrepreneurs were very savvy at brewing "moonshine" in homemade distilleries, or "stills." This pile was only the most recent installment of confiscated stills in Pierce County. (TDL 8/15/1920, pg B-5) G24.1-072


Prohibition--Tacoma; Stills (Distilleries);

BOLAND-B9296

Illegal stills at courthouse. Theodore Mohrbacher, Joe Desmond and Jack Bodaylea, left to right, of the county dry squad examine confiscated stills at the county courthouse on January 19, 1924. These are just a few of the dozens of huge liquor stills that will be converted into junk by jail trustees in the near future. The stills are now piled up in the lobby of the county jail. Stills can range in size from small tea kettle types to huge commercial boilers capable of holding hundreds of gallons of mash. The manufacture of alcohol was made illegal by the passage of the 18th amendment and the Volstead Act, which went into effect in January of 1920. Prohibition was abolished with the passage of the 21st Amendment to the Constitution in 1933. (TNT 1-19-24, p. 1) G24.1-074; TPL-9895


Stills (Distilleries); Mohrbacher, Theodore; Desmond, Joe; Bodaylea, Jack;

BOWEN G24.1-055

A pile of slot machines awaits the sledgehammer of Chief Deputy Sheriff John Piper on October 9, 1929 at the county courthouse. These were a sample of the 39 slots ordered destroyed following seizure by county officers from various places of businesses in Pierce County. A total of $244.85 in nickels, dimes and quarters was taken from the machines. This amount, less $10 for trucking, was turned over to the county school fund. The machines, minus their cash, were taken to the waterfront and dumped into Commencement Bay. (TNT 10-10-29, p. 17) TPL-8466;

BOWEN G24.1-088

Pierce County Sheriff Tom Desmond stands next to the what is left of a $12,000 still at the County Courthouse on October 23, 1930. Somehow thieves managed to spirit away part of the still, a seven-foot contraption with twelve compartments and twelve faucets. The grain alcohol still, capable of producing 250 gallons of grain alcohol a day, was seized in a raid at Point Fosdick on October 18, 1930. It was put in a corridor of the courthouse near the entrance of the jail. The seven-foot part went missing on the night of the 20th. Consequently, two deputy sheriffs were fired for "gross carelessness." (TNT 10-23-30, p. 1)

BOWEN TPL-6928

ca. 1949. Called both a "wonder of the age" and "an architectural monstrosity" the old Pierce County Court House stood at 1012 South G Street just northeast of the Armory. Modeled after the courthouse in Pittsburgh, PA, the brick walls were faced with stone quarried in Tenino and sandstone from Wilkeson. Included in the building plans were secret stairways, hideouts, a hanging room and dungeons that would have done credit to a 15th century castle. The four clock faces in the tower were each 8 feet in diameter and had concealed lights which enabled Tacomans to read the time by day or night. The county commissioner moved his offices in the as yet unfinished building on June 21, 1893. It was demolished in 1959. (TNT 4/7/1959 p. C-16) Bowen # 1062-1

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