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WIL (D)-025

A house and barn on Lopez Island. Lopez Island spans 30 square miles and produced crops of grain, hay and orchard fruit. Photograph c. 1903.

WIL (D)-026

Inter-Island Telephone Company agent W.H. McCrary's estate on San Juan Island, near Friday Harbor. Photograph c. 1903.

WIL (D)-047

Cowboy Buffalo Vernon wrestling a steer at the Round-Up rodeo event in Pendleton, Oregon, 1910. The following year, steer wrestling or, "bulldogging," became an official event at the Pendleton Round-Up. Photograph by W. S. Bowman, September, 1910.

WIL (D)-063

Ella Lazinka at the first Round-Up, Pendleton, Oregon, 1910. Lazinka took 14 minutes, and nine and a half seconds to run the three day relay at one mile each day, and won the first relay against noted cowgirl Bertha Blancett. Photograph by W. S. Bowman September, 1910.

WIL (D)-070

The 18 acre Billy Turner Ranch orchards in Wenatchee Valley, overlooking the town of Wenatchee, Washington. The Turner Ranch contained 15 acres of orchards that averaged 90 trees to the acre which produced apples, peaches, pears, apricots and prunes. Photograph by B. C Collier, c. 1908.

WIL (D)-077

Wheat warehouses in Ritzville, Washington with two teams of horses hitched to wagons for transporting the sacked wheat. Ritzville exported 1,856 cars of wheat and 563 cars of flour between 1901 to 1902. Photograph c. 1903.

WIL (D)-096

Steam plow on John Hoffman's farm in Eureka Flats, near Waitsburg in Walla Walla County, Washington. Hoffman, a German immigrant, owned 8,000 total acres of wheat producing farmland in Walla Walla County before retiring in 1903 at the age of 51. Photograph by the Holt Manufacturing Company, Stockton, California, c. 1903. 

WIL (D)-114

Overhead perspective of F. G. Monroe ranch workers branding cattle three and a half miles Southwest of Sprague, Washington. Photograph by T.T. Richardson, c. 1908.

WIL (D)-123

Sacks of grain await shipment at Davenport, Washington, where more than a million bushels of wheat were exported in 1901 and as many as 15,000 and 20,000 bushels were produced in one season. Davenport is the county seat of Lincoln County in what the Coast magazine, called part of the "Big Bend Wheat Country" of Eastern Washington. Photograph c. 1902.

WIL (D)-125

Teams of horses hitched to a threshing combine on the Robert Gunning ranch near Davenport, Washington. The wind guard on the rear of the combine keeps air from upsetting the threshing (separation) process and stores the chaff from the grain. Photograph by Paige, c. 1908.

WIL (E)-029

Elevated perspective of Friday Harbor looking east. By 1903, Friday Harbor was the commercial center and county seat of San Juan County. Photograph c. 1904. 

WIL (E)-037

Front Street in Port Angeles, Washington, located in Clallam County, featuring a Tailor, Palace Bakery, Paper and Paint, Laundry, City Hotel and Bar, Gem Restaurant, Matthew's Pharmacy, Port Angeles Grocery and Fulmer's Studio. Port Angeles was incorporated in 1890 and is the county seat of Clallam County. It is located on the shores of the Strait of Juan de Fuca near the Olympic Mountains. Photograph by C.E. Fulmer, c. 1907.

WIL (F)-010

The Richardson Store and Post Office in Lopez Island on Richardson Bay. First settled by George Richardson in 1873, the post office was established in 1891, replaced in 1928, destroyed by fire in 1990 and not rebuilt. Photograph c. 1904. 

WIL (F)-022

Olympia High School (also known as William Winlock Miller school) at 12th and Columbia in Olympia, Washington. The site was donated by Mary M. Miller, in memory of her husband, Gen. William Winlock Miller. Designed by Seattle Schools architect James Stephens, the school opened in 1907 and was destroyed by fire on July 2, 1918 before a scheduled demolition. Photograph c. 1909. 

WIL (F)-026

Three adults and a child outside the San Juan County Bank in Friday Harbor, Washington located on the San Juan Islands. The oblique angle reveals a false-front on the building's facade to appear taller. Photograph c. 1906. 

WIL (F)-115

Twenty five foot tall bronzed statue of Brigham Young, Salt Lake City, Utah. The statue stood at the intersection of Main and South Temple streets from 1897 to 1993, when it was moved just north of the intersection. Photograph c. 1907.

WIL (F)-130

Four people posing outside the perimeter of the Bannock County Court House in Pocatello, Idaho with the Bonneville Elementary School in the distance. Bannock County was established in 1893 and the courthouse was built in 1902. Photograph by W. P. Havenor, c. 1909.

WIL (F)-131

Masted ships docked at The Puget Mill Company in Port Gamble, Washington located in Kitsap County. Photograph taken December 17, 1899. 

WIL (F)-134

Unidentified street in Davenport, Washington located in Lincoln County featuring The Lucas Brothers Hardware Store on the Turner Block, the Davenport Trading Company Department Store on the McMillan Block, the J.H. Berge building and Granger Groceries. Photograph c. 1907. 

WIL (F)-144

Main Street looking east in Ritzville, Washington located in Adams County. Palace Lodging, Yakima Bar, Dr. Lemman Dentist, Rosenoff & Company Drugs and Myers Shepley Company businesses are all visible. Photograph c. 1908.

WIL (F)-150

Capital Square in Olympia, Washington featuring a band shell, fountain and walking paths. Photograph c. 1907. 

WIL (F)-152

People standing outside of the Kane Brothers general merchandise store in La Center, Washington, located in Clark County near the foothills of the Cascade Mountain Range. Wooden crates litter the ground, a sign for Lowe's Paint and a partially obscured sign which may say "German American" is to the left of the doorway. Photograph c. 1909.

WIL (F)-155

Interior of the Dudley Shoe Company in North Yakima, Washington, featuring three glass case displays and shoes stored in tall shelves equipped with rolling library ladders. Photograph c. 1909. 

WIL (F)-157

Interior of the Dunstan Brothers store in Fall City, Washington located in King County 26 miles east of Seattle on the Snoqualmie River. The recorded owners J. O. and W.H. Dunstan may be posing. Advertisements for Lilly's Flower Seeds, dyspepsia (indigestion) medication and UMC Cartridges are visible. Photograph c. 1909.

WIL (F)-162

Exterior of the Quilcene Megaphone newspaper office in Quilcene, Washington located in Jefferson County on the Olympic Peninsula. The man sitting outside is possibly the Megaphone's editor Milton F. Satterlee, former publisher of the Quilcene Queen, the Port Townsend Weekly Democrat, Port Townsend Daily Herald, the Quilcene Mining Record, the Port Townsend Weekly Mirror, the Daily Call and finally the Quilcene Megaphone in 1909. The press was powered by the water wheel out front. Photograph by E.C.D., c. 1910.

WIL (F)-166

New Palace Billiard Hall, Dr. O.K. Wolf offices and the Palace Theater in Vancouver, Washington located in Clark County. The theater was owned by C. Engleman and seated 381. Text on program: "1: Music, Xylophone Piano Orchestra 2. Moving Picture, A cry from The Wilderness or a tale of the L(sp?) and the Midnight Sun 3. Illustrated Song, Sweetheart Days 4. Moving Picture, A Just Reward . Mad Dog 5. Illustrated Song, Red Wing 6. Moving Picture, A Midnight Disturbanee. An Energetic Street Cleaner. Matinee Admission 10 C. A poster for A Night in Bohemia hosted by the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks hangs in the doorway. Photograph by Anderson Studio, c. 1909.

WIL (F)-170

The Chehalis United Methodist Church in Chehalis, Washington, located in Lewis County on Market Boulevard. Advertisements for Mail Pouch tobacco and Wrigley's Spearmint Gum as well as partially cleared land are visible. Photograph by Drummond Studio, c. 1909.

WIL (F)-175

Our Lady Star of the Sea Catholic Church at the corner of 5th and Washington Avenue in Bremerton, Washington, located in Kitsap County. The church was built in 1901 in a ceremony officiated by Bishop Edward J. O'Dea and active before being replaced in 1921. 

WIL (F)-176

The Staeger Brothers Book Store and offices of an inactive post office, Dr. C.D. Powell, the Chehalis Bee-Nugget Newspaper and the Sterling Lumber Company, in Chehalis, Washington located in Lewis County. The Staeger Brothers store features advertisements for Kodaks, music, art goods and stationary. To the right of the building, there is a kiosk for Paramount Studio, featuring a series of photo portraits. Photograph by Drummond Studio, c. 1909. 

WIL (F)-177A

Program for the dedication of St. Boniface's Church in Uniontown, Washington, located in Whitman County. Construction of the church began in 1893 and was finally completed in 1905 under the direction of Father J.A. Faust, who is pictured on the right. Photograph c. 1907. This is an alternate layout of the same images used in WIL (F)-177B.

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