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Marvin Boland Photographs
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BOLAND-B11054

The first real "egg machine" ever displayed on the Pacific Coast drew lines of interested Western Washington fairgoers on October 2, 1924, Egg Day at the fair. Visitors were encouraged to take a free peek at the "most wonderful mechanism in all the world." No one appeared disappointed in discovering the secret behind the enclosed stand: the remarkable "egg machine" was a Leghorn hen on her nest. The "egg machine" was on display at the Western Washington Fair in Puyallup from September 29 to October 5, 1924. G74.1-079 (print has been damaged) (TNT 10-3-24, p. 15)


Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Fairs--Puyallup--1920-1930; Exhibitions--Puyallup--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B11113

On October 10, 1924, the large staff, mostly male, of the U.S. Internal Revenue office posed for a group portrait in front of the Tacoma Public Schools' Central Building at South 8th & Tacoma Avenue South. The Internal Revenue in Tacoma was headed by Collector Burns Poe. G24.1-018


Government employees--Tacoma; Internal Revenue Service (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B11148

Kimball's Gun Store. On October 15, 1924, the window display at Kimball's Gun Store featured Remington products, including rifles, shotguns, game loads, gun grease plus an assortment of hatchets, knives, and lanterns. In addition, Kimball's also carried socks, tennis, baseball and golf goods. Kimball's was believed to be owned by Howard A. Steele. G56.1-030


Kimball's Gun Store (Tacoma); Merchandise displays--Tacoma--1920-1930; Window displays--Tacoma--1920-1930; Rifles;

BOLAND-B11149

A two-tiered stand of cigarettes is dramatically highlighted against a black background in this October 15, 1924, photograph by Marvin Boland. Both tiers, believed to be made of wood, are octagon-shaped and may revolve. The stand features the Chesterfield brand of cigarettes. Photograph ordered by Northwest Grocery. G32.1-041


Merchandise displays--Tacoma--1920-1930; Cigarettes;

BOLAND-B11255

Bethany Presbyterian Church. The original Bethany Presbyterian Church, located on the same site, was destroyed by fire in early November of 1923. The ruins were razed and a new Bethany Presbyterian rose from the ashes of the old in remarkably quick time. Construction was started in April of 1924 and the church was completed less than seven months later at a cost of $35,000. The new Bethany Presbyterian had a brick veneer trimmed in stone and stained glass windows retrieved from the Allen C. Mason mansion. The imposing structure stood at the corner of Verde and North 41 St. G22.1-148 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 9-21-24, 4B-article)


Bethany Presbyterian Church (Tacoma); Presbyterian churches--Tacoma;

BOLAND-B11329

On November 16, 1924, C.P. (Clarence) Johnson is partially hidden by the shining new Dodge Bros. business coupe he recently purchased from Griffith Motor Co., Dodge Bros. dealership in Tacoma. The vehicle, with Mrs. Johnson at the wheel, is parked outside their home at 4606 South Park Ave. Mr. Johnson is a painting foreman at Todd Shipyards. This is the second Dodge Bros. car the couple has owned. Photograph ordered by Griffith Motor Co. G11.1-134 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 11-23-24, 6-G)


Dodge automobile; Johnson, Clarence P.; Johnson, Clarence P.--Family; Griffith Motor Co. (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B11405

Four members of Stadium High School's first team demonstrate football positions on their home field of Stadium Bowl a few days prior to the big November, 1924, inter-city clash with Lincoln High. Harold Pirret did double duty as a tackle and end. Samuel Hansen was selected to lead the Tigers into battle as their captain and played both halfback and on the line. Robert Warnick, according to the Tahoma yearbook, played aggressively and well. Frank Jurich, left end, also won praise from the school yearbook for his quick feet, fine tackling and blocking and secure pass catching. (From L-R Pirret, Hansen, Warnick, Jurich) . The Stadium season would come to an end with a 3-0 loss to Lincoln who took home the Mark L. Davis' trophy. G46.1-033 (1925 Tahoma yearbook, various pages)


Football players--Tacoma--1920-1930; Stadium High School (Tacoma); Stadium Bowl (Tacoma); Pirret, Harold; Hansen, Samuel; Warnick, Robert; Jurich, Frank;

BOLAND-B11408

Although the "first teams" of various sports seemed to get most of the attention, there were other teams worthy of mention as well. Athletes of these teams played just as hard and with as much enthusiasm as their brethren. The group pictured above on November 25, 1924, was the Midget team from Stadium High School. They were practicing within the confines of Stadium Bowl. G46.1-037


Football players--Tacoma--1920-1930; Stadium High School (Tacoma); Stadium Bowl (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B11462

Stadium High School track team. Cold December weather in 1924 did not deter these Stadium High School athletes from posing inside Stadium Bowl in traditional running gear. Stadium would be defeated in the annual interscholastic meet with Lincoln by a 72.5 to 56.5 score. Jack Cavin (second from right, back row) would be the high point man with 16 points to his credit. G46.1-020


Track athletics--Tacoma--1920-1930; Stadium High School (Tacoma); Stadium Bowl (Tacoma); Cavin, Jack;

BOLAND-B11507

Inexperienced safecrackers failed to blow open the massive safe at Bye Thompson Motor Sales, 3320 South G Street, on early Friday morning, December 5, 1924. The thieves abandoned their efforts when the explosives they used broke the windows in front of the safe and threw the office into disarray, but only succeeded in blowing off the combination dial on the safe's door, not in releasing the bars holding the door in place. This was the second time in less than a year that Bye Thompson Motors had been robbed; on December 18, 1923, thieves somehow carried away the company's 1000 pound safe and blew it open several blocks away. That robbery netted the thieves $362. This photograph was taken at the scene of the crime on December 5, 1924. G24.1-056 (TNT 12-5-24, p. 1)


Safes; Robberies--Tacoma; Bye Thompson Motor Sales Co. (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B11555

Dressed in an elegant sequined gown, Miss Esther Stayner is pictured in this late December, 1924 print as she prepares to play the baby grand piano at the Rialto Theater. Miss Stayner had been named organist at the Rialto and had given her first concert on November 1, 1924. She succeeded Alice Piercy in the job. Miss Stayner was photographed on the stage with massive curtains as the backdrop. A framed "window" with accompanying foliage is also part of the decor. She had spent the three previous years at the Clemmer Theater in Spokane. G40.1-052B (TDL 10-31-24, p. 5-article)


Pianists--Tacoma; Pianos; Stayner, Esther; Rialto Theatre (Tacoma); Women--Clothing & dress--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B1606

ca. 1920. Smelter operations at ASARCO. Steam rises as ore is poured via hoisted ladle onto giant cylinders at the American Smelting & Refining Co.'s plant in Ruston circa 1920. Other large ladles are on the floor waiting to be filled with ore. TPL-899; G37.1-184


American Smelting & Refining Co. (Tacoma); Smelters--Tacoma--1920-1930; Industrial facilities--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B1639

ca. 1920. Smelter operations at ASARCO. These employees of the American Smelting & Refining Co. (ASARCO) are carefully monitoring what may be the pouring of molten ore in this circa 1920 photograph. It seems to have caught the attention of several other workers in the area. TPL-2351; G37.1-191


American Smelting & Refining Co. (Tacoma); Smelters--Tacoma--1920-1930; Industrial facilities--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B2654

Group portrait of well-dressed men and women on stage with piano and harpist, taken in late January of 1920. Photographer Marvin Boland's notes indicate that this is the "St. Cecelia Club." The St. Cecelia Club opened their season with a reception and musicale at the Tacoma Hotel on October 24, 1919, and would hold fortnightly receptions. Mrs. B.B. Broomell was president. (TNT 10-17-19, p. 11-article)


Men--Clothing & dress--Tacoma--1920-1930; Women--Clothing & dress--Tacoma--1920-1930; Harps; Pianos;

BOLAND-B2726

In March of 1920, a steam donkey on a sled was photographed for the West Fork Logging Co. The donkey was used for pulling logs in from the woods. In its simplest form, a donkey was just a steam engine with a drum and a steel cable. The winch was used to pull in logs or load them. In this case, the boiler is mounted, along with the drums, on a sled to make the unit portable. The steam donkey replaced the logging horses and oxen with the power of steam. It was faster, cheaper and more reliable than animals. The West Fork Logging Co. was located in Mineral, about 14 miles north of Morton in Lewis County. It was owned and operated by L.T. Murray. G75.1-093; TPL-9856 (Labbe & Goe, Railroads in the Woods)


West Fork Logging Co. (Mineral); Lumber industry--1920-1930; Steam donkeys; Donkey engines;

BOLAND-B2758

On March 5, 1920, cameras rolled as the electric powered "Olympian" pulled out from Tacoma and made history. This marked the formal opening of the Cascade division for electrically operated trains driven by 3000-volt current supplied by the glacier streams of the Cascades. Over 100 guests from Tacoma and Seattle (railroad officials, newsmen and politicos) were aboard a special pilot train that preceded the Olympian. The Olympian made its maiden electric powered ascent through the passages of the snow draped Cascades to its summit where the special train was sidetracked so the Olympian could continue on to Chicago. The special train would travel to Cle Elum and back to Tacoma. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul train reached speeds up to 60 mph with barely any effort and without puffs of black smoke. It descended as smoothly as it ascended, proving that cross country electrical trains were viable. G44.1-080 (TDL 3/6/1920, pg. 3; TNT 3-6-20, p. 1) TPL-2376


Railroad cars--Tacoma; Railroad locomotives--Tacoma; Railroad companies--Tacoma; Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Co. (Tacoma); Railroads--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B2863

Fisher Flouring Mills Co. facility. The office staff and delivery drivers of Fisher's posed by their Tideflats plant in April of 1920. The company's vehicles, including a truck piled high with sacks of flour, are arranged in a row. Employees are standing in front of a railroad car. The firm, located according to the 1920 City Directory as on the "West Waterway," was managed by H.B. Clark. Products produced, according to advertising on a large company truck, included poultry feed, calf meal, "morfat" and "morpork," and dairy feed. G34.1-130


Fisher Flouring Mills (Tacoma); Flour & meal industry--Tacoma--1920-1930; Trucks--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B2872

The largest commercially made tire, size 44 x 10, was on display in front of the Orton Brothers Motor Company in Sumner on May 3, 1920. The all-weather Goodyear tire, which weighed 225 lbs., was mounted on the back of a flat-bed truck. Passersby could instantly see the significant difference between the size of the truck tires and the giant Goodyear model. The man leaning against the truck is probably one of the Orton brothers. William J. and Charles W. Orton were also in the fruit growing business. G32.1-094 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 5-9-20, C-9)


Tires; Signs (Notices); Trucks--Sumner;

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-B3069

At midnight on January 16, 1920, the United States went "dry." Overnight, breweries and distilleries closed their doors as the 18th Amendment made the manufacture, sale or transport of alcohol illegal. America was thirsty and enterprising individuals stepped forward to fill the void with alcohol made from home made distilleries, or "stills." Many of these apparatus, such as the one pictured at (Old) City Hall, were confiscated in Pierce County. (TDL 8/15/1920, pg B-5) G24.1-077


Prohibition--Tacoma; Stills (Distilleries);

BOLAND-B3117

George McCartney was photographed in September of 1920 working at a bench making repairs on a flat iron in the service department of the Blue Bird Electrical Shop. A silver coffee percolator waits for repair on the workbench. The year old company was located in the Chamber of Commerce building at 773 Broadway. It was the only plant of its kind in Western Washington and had one of the most complete electrical manufacturing departments in the Northwest. The manufacturing department was established at a cost of $10,000 and could make custom electrical equipment, a job formerly only performed back East. They were also involved in the electrical design and installation in new construction, had their own service department and maintained a staff of consulting electrical engineers. (TDL 9/19/1920, pg. B-7)


McCartney, George; Blue Bird Electrical Shop (Tacoma); Electric household appliances industry--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B3282

Photographer Marvin Boland's notes indicate that this was the bank vault at the Scandinavian American Bank in December of 1920. At that time the bank was building a 16-story structure at 1019 Pacific Avenue. While the new building was being constructed, the bank conducted business at a temporary location at South 13th and Pacific. The bank failed in January of 1921 and construction stopped. The building remained unfinished until 1925 and is now known as the Washington Building. G34.1-019


Scandinavian-American Bank (Tacoma); Banks--Tacoma; Vaults (Strong rooms)--Tacoma;

BOLAND-B3345

Miss Louise Bushnell White, sponsor, stood on the launching platform to pose for pictures on December 14, 1920 after smashing the customary bottle of champagne on the USS Omaha at Todd Shipyards in Tacoma. She was chosen to represent her home city of Omaha partially because she was a descendant of David Bushnell, inventor of the one-man submarine during the Revolutionary War. Posing with her on the platform are (order unknown) C.W. Wiley of Seattle, pres. of Todd Drydocks Inc., William H. Todd of NYC, pres. Todd Shipyards Corp. (believed to be left) and J.A. Eves of Tacoma, VP and general manager of Todd Drydock and Construction Corp. This was the 27th launching at the Todd yard. The Omaha was the longest vessel to be launched in the Northwest (at 550 feet, 6 inches) and the first ever to be launched bow first. It was a scout cruiser, the first of 10 scheduled to be built for the Navy, 3 currently under construction at Todd. The Omaha (CL4) was built as Hull #30 and delivered to the US Navy on February 24, 1923. It was scrapped in 1946. (TDL 12/15/1920, pg. 1+, 12/14/1920, pg. 1) G37.1-172; TPL-9554


White, Louise Bushnell; Launchings--Tacoma--1920-1930; Todd Dry Dock & Construction Corp. (Tacoma); Boat & ship industry--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B3478

Six-piece Carmody's Orchestra. The six men, looking very alert, prepare to burst into music in this December 29, 1920, photograph. They may have been practicing for a New Year Eve's gig. TPL-1648; G40.1-041


Carmody's Orchestra; Musicians;

BOLAND-B3590

This was the recently built home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Tinker as pictured in January of 1921. Mr. Tinker was the head of Puget Sound Bank & Trust. The modified English style home was located at 44 Orchard Rd. on Prospect Hill. Built on an elevated lot with an unobstructed marine view, the home featured hollow tile and cream colored stucco. The Tinkers did not stay long at this elegant residence; Mr. Tinker would die in Florida in 1925 but not before selling his North End home in 1923 to Bertrand & Dorothy Buckmaster. Mr. Buckmaster was also in the banking business as the president of Pacific First Federal Savings & Loan and North Pacific Bank Note Co. G29.1-045; BU-10,363 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 2-6-21, B-5)


Tinker, Homer--Homes & haunts; Houses--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B3800

An unidentified mill in Tacoma's Tideflats was photographed by Marvin Boland in March of 1921. No workers are in sight. Piles of lumber are stacked throughout the yard. G36.1-043


Lumber industry--Tacoma--1920-1930; Mills--Tacoma;

BOLAND-B4007

Four Mack trucks form a small convoy as they transport small tanks in May of 1921. Several soldiers are atop of the parked vehicles. The men, trucks and tanks were probably photographed at Camp Lewis. The Tacoma Sunday Ledger had reported on February 27, 1921, that one of the newest arrivals at Camp Lewis was the Fourth Company of Tanks, consisting of 25 tanks, 25 Bull Dog Mack trucks and 88 men and officers. The trucks were all 5-ton Macks which were used to transport the 6-ton American Renault-make tanks on long journeys and in actual warfare, would carry them to the frontline. All privates in the Fourth Company of Tanks were either machinists or automobile mechanics and would be fully capable of keeping the Mack trucks in top shape. TPL-2507; G69.1-153 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 2-27-21, C-1-article)


Trucks--Camp Lewis; Mack trucks; Tanks (Military science)--Camp Lewis;

BOLAND-B4200

This image is that of Tacoma's skyline in June of 1921. It was taken looking due west from the industrial Tideflats area. Pierce County Courthouse with spire is visible as well as the (new) Central School with tower. G27.1-067


Cityscapes; Pierce County Courthouse (Tacoma); Central School (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B4219

This unidentified family of three is camped under the shade of tall trees at Manitou Park in South Tacoma in mid-June of 1921. A canvas tent is rigged over an automobile and folding chairs provided for relaxing. Two bottles of milk rest on top of a small table built onto the car's running board. Visitors to the park praised it for its beauty and cleanliness and it was a favorite stopping point for thousands of out-of-state tourists. The 10-acre Manitou Park was divided into three sections with three acres set aside for free camping for tourists only. Locals were invited to use a three-acre section for picnics or enjoy four acres of green lawns and shade trees. TPL-5859; G41.1-013 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 6-19-21, E-7; TNT 7-18-21, p. 3-article)


Camping--Tacoma--1920-1930; Manitou Park (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B4221

Kitchen and dining room - Manitou Park, a ten-acre park located on the outskirts of South Tacoma. Three acres were set aside only for tourists for camping purposes. The Metropolitan Park board had erected a dining hall with ten tables, four stoves, piped-in water and made the ground level for tents. Surrounded by towering trees, the open-air kitchen featured a large fireplace while the adjacent dining room was framed on all sides. Although many visitors brought their own small portable stoves, they were welcome to use the camp's dining facilities, especially when it rained. G77.1-011 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 6-19-21, E-7; TNT 7-18-21, p. 3-article)


Camping--Tacoma--1920-1930; Manitou Park (Tacoma);

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