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D619-1

Jessie (Mrs. Frank) Stephens and an unidentified man holding a rifle stand beside a 200 pound big buck bagged by Mrs. Stevens and tied to the running board and fender of their automobile. Mrs. Stephens (listed in the T. Times as Stevens and the 1935 City Directory as Stephens) lived at 3916 No. 32nd Street in Tacoma. This was the third year in a row that she shot a deer, and also her third year hunting, not a bad record! (T. Times 11/2/1935, pg. 11) (For another picture from this series, see T34 image 1)


Deer hunting--Tacoma--1930-1940; Deer; Antlers; Stephens, Jessie;

D820-1

In September of 1937 the Tacoma Humane Society was able to purchase a new ambulance with donations by a number of generous Tacoma animal lovers including Mrs. Norton Clapp and the estate of Sarah J. Mink. Harold A. Dennison, the caretaker at the society's shelter, gave the first ride in the new truck to a little white dog that had been found beaten and tied in a gunny sack lying in a ditch. The truck was equipped with four metal cages of various sizes and a monoxide chamber that could be used to put badly injured animals to sleep. (T.Times, 9/22/1937 p.4)


Dogs--Tacoma--1930-1940; Dogcatching--Tacoma; Animal shelters--Tacoma; Tacoma-Pierce County Humane Society (Tacoma); Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Dennison, Harold A.;

D964-3

ca. 1937. The puppies of Ed Griffin's champion English Mastiff "Broomcourt Nell." In the beginning of September of 1936, there was only one mastiff in the Northwest. By Sept. 9, 1936, there were 11 with the addition of 10 puppies. The father was Roxbury Boy. Seven of the pups were female and 3 were male.


Dogs;

D718-1

Seven year old JoAnn Wasson poses with the Shirley Temple doll that she received as a prize from the Tacoma Times during their subscription drive. The Times had offered a free Shirley Temple doll to any little girl who signed up five new subscribers. The doll was dressed exactly like Shirley in the film "Curly Top." Shirley Temple was the biggest child star of all time, topping out the box office hits list at number 1 from 1935- 1938. (T. Times 10-20-1936 p.3)


Dolls; Children playing with dolls; Wasson, JoAnn

D718-3B

JoAnn Wasson, age 7, holds the Shirley Temple doll that she just received from the Tacoma Times as a prize in their subscription drive. On October 14, 1936, the Times started a new subscription drive, and offered a "Genuine Shirley Temple Doll" to every little girl in Tacoma that could sign up 5 new subscribers to the paper. JoAnn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wasson of 1425 No. Anderson St. Photograph is cropped version of D718-3 (T. Times 10-20-1936 p.3)


Dolls; Children playing with dolls; Wasson, JoAnn

D1732-A

Enjoying the sunshine on Easter morning in 1937 are churchgoers at the First Congregational Church, 209 So. J St. The many children present, all dressed in their Sunday best, seem to indicate that this may have been the various Sunday School classes at the church. A few of the girls have been identified as front row, left to right: Jean Williams (with lily plant), possibly Joan Finch, Marjory Long, possibly Kathryn Burr, Jane Parker, and Virginia Lee (Wendy) Wagner in polka-dotted dress with hands on wall. Seymour S. Todd (standing, second row at far left) was a teacher at Stewart Junior High School.


Easter--Tacoma; First Congregational Church (Tacoma); Congregational churches--Tacoma; Children--Tacoma--1930-1940; Todd, Seymour S.; Williams, Jean; Long, Marjory; Parker, Jane; Wagner, Virginia Lee;

TPL-4583

ca. 1941. Mayor Harry P.Cain, seated at desk, speaks with a group of intently listening men in his office at (Old) City Hall. Bob O'Neil, Public Utilities Commissioner, is seated to Cain's left.


Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; O'Neil, Robert D.; Municipal officials--Tacoma--1940-1950;

TPL-4584

ca. 1941. Governor Arthur B. Langlie waves at the end of a speech. Born in Lanesboro, Minnesota, Mr. Langlie was Mayor of Seattle when he resigned on January 11, 1941, to become Governor of Washington. A Republican, he succeeded Democrat Clarence D. Martin. Mr. Langlie was a three-term governor from 1941-45 and 1949-57. He served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention from Washington in 1944 and 1948 and delivered the keynote address during the 1956 Convention in San Francisco. Governor Langlie passed away in 1966 and is interred at Acacia Memorial Park, Seattle. Sepia photograph taken about 1941. ALBUM 10.


Governors; Langlie, Arthur B., 1900-1966;

TPL-4900

Dedication of new paving on Pacific Avenue. Mayor Joseph J. Kaufman, cutting the ribbon, Abner Bergersen to his right in photo, Ira Davisson second from left in photo.


Mayors - Tacoma - 1939-40 - Joseph J. Kaufman (circa 1884-1965)Tacoma Streets - Pacific Avenue

TPL-4903

ca. 1957. Rowland Pontiac - Cadillac dealership. New Cadillacs in showroom, used Pontiacs, Cadillacs and other automobiles in carport area and outside. Neon service sign, moved here from Commerce St. side of old downtown location, at far right in photo. Rowland Pontiac-Cadillac was located on South Tacoma Way, the city's "auto row." Irwin-Jones Motor Co.'s Truck Department was the former occupant of this site.


Rowland Pontiac-Cadillac Co. (Tacoma); Automobile dealerships--Tacoma--1950-1960; Pontiac automobile; Cadillac automobile; Electric signs--Tacoma--1950-1960;

TPL-4907

Actress Shirley Temple rides with a man in the back seat of an open automobile in a field parade at a sports stadium. The California World's Fair event may be a San Diego Padres baseball game. A uniformed policeman stands guard over 11-year-old Miss Temple.


Actresses; Temple, Shirley, 1928- ; Stadiums; Parades & processions--1930-1940; Grandstands;

TPL-4911

Queen Phyllis Hale of the 1946 Tacoma Postwar Jubilee draws a winner from a large barrel and then hands the slip to Mayor Val Fawcett. James Peterson and Ed Gazecki look on from behind Miss Hale at left in photo. A brand new car was given away on the 4th of July at the big celebration held at Stadium Bowl. According to the News Tribune, Easeador W. Giedd was the luckiest of the estimated 25,000 spectators at the combination fireworks and musical show. (TNT 7-5-46, p. 1, 18-article on celebration) ALBUM 14.


Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Fawcett, Clarence Valdo, 1900-1965; Hale, Phyllis; Beauty contestants--Tacoma--1940-1950; Peterson, James; Gazecki, Ed;

TPL-4918

Tacoma Narrows Bridge. View across ruined bridge from the east after the bridge collapsed on November 7, 1940. At this angle the damage cannot be readily seen. Before its collapse, the center span of 2,800 feet rose in a high arch 195 feet above Puget Sound waters. Motorists had apparently complained since the bridge opened about the rocking motion of the bridge but attempts to quell the vibration failed. (T.Times 11-7-40, p. 1)


Suspension bridges--Tacoma; Tacoma Narrows Bridge (Tacoma);

TPL-4919

Tacoma made history on November 7th, 1940, when her undulating Narrows Bridge, the Galloping Gertie, collapsed into the Sound due to a structural flaw. It would be ten years before the replacement bridge, built largely from four million in insurance settlements, would open.


Bridges--Tacoma--1940-1950; Suspension Bridges--Tacoma; Tacoma Narrows Bridge (Tacoma);

TPL-4922

ca. 1949. Second Narrows Bridge construction photo circa 1949. Debris flies through the air as a blast removes the old approach from first bridge.


Tacoma Narrows Bridge (Tacoma); Bridges--Tacoma--1940-1950; Bridge construction--Tacoma--1940-1950; Blasting--Tacoma;

TPL-5057

ca. 1895. Considered to be the most beautiful home in Tacoma, the Hewitt mansion was designed by architect Andrew J. Smith for Henry Hewitt Jr., one of the founders of the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Company. The interior of the three story "castle" was filled with ornately carved woodwork of cherry, maple, oak and birch. Much of the interior woodwork was brought west from Milwaukee, where the house was designed. Tacoma of 1889, the year that the house was built, did not have a local industry that could accommodate the elaborate plans for the Hewitt house. The home passed through a succession of owners. Although still in excellent shape, the mansion was demolished in 1957 to make room for the parking lot of the Central Lutheran Church.


Hewitt, Henry J.--Homes & haunts;

TPL-5102

Mayor C. V. "Val" Fawcett was visited in his office at (old) City Hall by three young women from Olympia dressed as cowgirls. The young women were graduates of the Class of 1947 and had recently won a popularity contest in Olympa. They called on Mayor Fawcett to invite all Tacoma and vicinity residents to Olympia's grand 4th of July show. L-R, Ruth Stubbs, Mayor Fawcett, Martha Strange and Audrey Strandness. (T.Times, 6/13/1947, p.4) ALBUM 14.


Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Fawcett, Clarence Valdo, 1900-1965; Stubbs, Ruth; Strange, Martha; Strandness, Audrey;

TPL-5111

Tacoma Giants owner Ben Cheney with former outfielder Hank Sauer during a spring training visit to the Tacoma team's parent club, the San Francisco Giants.


Baseball players--Tacoma--1960-1970; Sauer, Hank, 1917-; Cheney, Ben B., 1905-1971;

TPL-5114

ca. 1935. Mayor George Smitley, standing, buys a ticket for a civic event. Seated are reportedly members of the city government. This sepia photograph appears to have been taken in the unidentified woman's parlor circa 1935. George A. Smitley was mayor of Tacoma for one term, from 1934-1938. ALBUM 11.


Mayors--Tacoma--1930-1940; Smitley, George A., 1872-1956;

TPL-5118

ca. 1938. Mayor John C. Siegle, second from left seated on far side of table, at a banquet. Name of the organization is not known. Sepia photograph taken probably in 1938. Several of the men, including the mayor, are wearing buttons/badges. As mayor, Dr. Siegle was invited to many civic and social functions, sometimes as a guest speaker. ALBUM 11.


Mayors--Tacoma--1930-1940; Siegle, John C., 1885-1939; Banquets;

TPL-5176

ca. 1941. Harry Cain, Mayor of Tacoma and later United States Senator, visits the State Capitol in Olympia. The man he is shaking hands with appears to be Lt. Governor Victor ("Vic") Meyers, an ex- bandleader, who is on the left. Others in the group were not identified. ALBUM 13


Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Shaking hands--Olympia;

TPL-5179

Future Tacoma Mayor "Big John" Anderson (seated) sells tickets for a group excursion. Buyers look at Northern Pacific Railroad timetables. This undated photograph was possibly taken in the late 1930's or early 1940's. ALBUM 14.


Anderson, John H.;

TPL-5181

First broadcast from new studio at Labor Temple. Mayor Harry P. Cain participated in the first broadcast from the Labor Temple's new studio in March of 1942. L to R: Edward J. Jansen, Dr. Warren E. Tomlinson of College of Puget Sound, Marjorie Cain, Mayor Harry P. Cain, Norman Schut, Building Service Workers Union #38 President. Photograph ordered by the Building Service Workers Union #38. ALBUM 13 (Additional identification provided by a reader)


Radio broadcasting--Tacoma--1940-1950; Mayors--Tacoma--1940-1950; Cain, Harry P., 1906-1979; Cain, Marjorie Dils, 1908-1994; Tomlinson, Warren E.; Schut, Norman; Jansen, Edward; Labor Temple (Tacoma);

TPL-5186

ca. 1950s. Copy portrait of NBC-TV news anchor David Brinkley. Date of original photograph not given but probably in mid-to-late 1950's. By then, Mr. Brinkley was already well known as a journalist who, along with Chet Huntley, had anchored NBC's television coverage of the Democratic and Republican presidential nominating conventions. The Huntley-Brinkley Report debuted in October, 1956 and ran successfully until 1970. The show pioneered a new method of reporting the news, giving both a global and national feel, with the two men broadcasting from different cities. After Mr. Huntley's 1970 retirement, Mr. Brinkley proceeded to comment on NBC's Nightly News and then anchor This Week with David Brinkley until 1997. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bush in 1992. ALBUM 7.


Brinkley, David; Television broadcasting;

D8151-15

A group of six men dressed in matching sweaters and slacks and the Lakewood Arena floor manager stop for a portrait, prepared to assist novice skaters attending the masquerade party given by the Lakewood Club. (T. Times, 4/22/1939, p. 8)

D8856-1

Dedication of Salt Water State Park. Four men representing the Young Mens' Business Club with Belle Reeves standing beside a large rock with dedication plaque.

D8906-4

Mary Ball Chapter of D.A.R. (Daughters of the American Revolution) at the home of Mrs. P. C. Smith. Seven women wearing dresses are posing on front steps of house with colonial columns, large American flag hangs in background.

D8911-3

Dock scenes of "Lake Frances of Tacoma" ship. Unloading cargo of Narrows Bridge equipment. Web-like mast structure, automobile, crates and supplies in foreground. Artistic, vertical view.

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