Griffin Meeting Minutes (Loose)
- File
- 1918-08-14, 1931-02-14
Part of Griffin Fuel Company Records
Loose pages of company meeting minutes from Aug. 14, 1918 and Feb. 14, 1931.
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Griffin Meeting Minutes (Loose)
Part of Griffin Fuel Company Records
Loose pages of company meeting minutes from Aug. 14, 1918 and Feb. 14, 1931.
Part of Byrd Family Papers
Part of Byrd Family Papers
Apartment Building for John Buffelen
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Architect George L. Ekvall was born in Tacoma, Washington in 1896 and certified as an architect in 1925. Ekvall was a member of the American Institute of Architects, the Olympia Lions Club and the Olympia Art League. Notable architectural work Ekvall was associated with was the Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Tacoma, the Federation Forest monument to the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs and the Medical-Dental Tower, a proposed but never constructed Tacoma skyscraper.
John Buffelen was born in the Netherlands in 1862 and came first to Milwaukie and then to Tacoma while working in the lumber industry. Buffelen became a central figure in industrial lumber manufacturing in Tacoma's tide flats area, with his corporations the Buffelen Lumber & Manufacturing Co., the Buffelen-Hubert Furniture Co. and the American Wood Pipe Co. in addition to constructing several apartment buildings in the city. Buffelen attracted a good deal of press later in life from funding multiple failed attempts to cross the Pacific by plane.
Series comprises four blueprints for a proposed apartment building for industrialist John Buffelen designed by Tacoma area architect George L. Ekvall. The stucco building is three stories with a basement, attic space and spanish tile roof. The building was located at the west corner of 5th and Yakima Street, which was located caddy corner from the Buffelen residence at 509 North Yakima St. currently occupied by the Vista Palms Apartments.
Circular of General Information Regarding Mount Rainier National Park
Part of Local Writings and Publications
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
One of eight technical drawings for the Mottau Building, created by Gaston C. Lance and Ambrose J. Russell on June 20, 1933. Mrs. Robert Mottau was the builder of this structure, whose occupants included the Totem Food Store, K Street Pharmacy and Paulson's Radio and Appliances. The building was demolished in 2000.
SOYP, Tribe of (Socks Outside Your Pants)
The collection consists of the first edition of the Book of SOYP containing reports on annual outings of the Tribe of SOYP. Includes six tipped in images of group activities on Mt. Rainier.
Vol 1. No. 1, published at Mystic Lake, Mount Rainier National Park, includes poetry, editorials, news, classifieds, and articles related to mountaineering.
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Eight technical drawings for a proposed but unbuilt City Hall building, created by George Ekvall on February, 1937. Public Utilities Commissioner Ira S. Davisson requested the plans but they were rejected by the City Council three months later.
Architect George L. Ekvall was born in Tacoma, Washington in 1896 and certified as an architect in 1925. Ekvall was a member of the American Institute of Architects, the Olympia Lions Club and the Olympia Art League. Notable architectural work Ekvall was associated with was the Holy Rosary Catholic Church in Tacoma, the Federation Forest monument to the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs and the Medical-Dental Tower, a proposed but never constructed Tacoma skyscraper.
Candidates, Flyers, Results, Sample Ballots, c. 1934-c. 1938
Includes 1934 Unofficial General Election Results and an Index to Voting Precincts Booklet, January 1938.
Tacoma Amateur Astronomers Yearbook
Part of Local Ephemera Collection
Newspaper Clippings, c. 1913-1939
Part of Japanese Americans in the Pacific Northwest Collection
Carsten Packing Company Abattoir
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
Series of 21 technical drawings for the Carsten Packing Company created by the Henschien, Everds & Crombie Architects & Engineers firm on June 10, 1939. The company was based in Chicago, Illinois at 59 East Van Buren St. and they specialized in meat processing plants. The company also designed packing plans for the Frye & Co. plant in Seattle and Oscar Mayer in Iowa City. The Carsten Packing Company had been active since 1897. In 1954, the company was sold to an Eastern firm and renamed to the Hi-Grade Packing Co. In 1990, executives in Seattle closed the Tacoma processing plant and on October 24, 1996 the structure was destroyed by fire.
Washington State Federation of Music Clubs
Convention program of 18 pages with local advertising for the "Nineteenth Annual Convention" April 17-20, 1940. Convention theme: "Music, the Bridge to Inter-Racial Harmony". Contains list of all Federated Clubs of Washington state inside front cover.
Part of George M. Miller Papers
Part of Perry Keithley Papers
Part of Tacoma Police Department Records
Includes Salary Campaign (1926) and appointment of John Knowles as Special Police Officer (1941)
Dupont School Building Addition
Part of Lost Tacoma Project Collection
One of 32 technical drawings created for the Dupont School Building Addition, created by William Mallis on September 8, 1941. The addition was built in 1943 before the school was turned into the Laughbon High School, closed due to school boundary disputes. Finally, the structure was converted into a theater before being destroyed by fire in 1969.
William Mallis was born in Auchterarder, Scotland and received architectural training during a four year apprenticeship in Perth, Scotland. After working under John H. Felt, one of the most prolific school designers in Kansas, Mallis moved to Seattle in 1918 and worked as a structural draftsman for the Pacific Coast Company. From that point, Mallis worked independently as well as a partner with Joseph H.D. DeHart on a wide variety of public institutional buildings across Washington State.
Part of Local Ephemera Collection