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BOLAND-B5715

Summit View Farms Two-story wood framed farmhouse with wood and wire fence as pictured in April of 1922. This farmhouse was one of several photographed by Marvin Boland that was located in the Summit View farming community of Pierce County. G6.1-107


Farmhouses;

BOLAND-B5722

Log buildings, looking rather dilapidated, on a Summit View farm in 1922. Vines planted close to one building have grown to become entangled with lattice-like structures. G6.1-110


Log buildings; Vines; Farms;

BOLAND-B5750

For over 60 years the Narcissa Whitman Fountain graced Wright Park. Erected in 1899 at a cost of $400, partially donated by the school children of Tacoma, the fountain was made of handsome bronzed iron with two gourd-like drinking cups within easy reach of the children for whom the fountain was intended. Atop the fountain stood the statue of a woman in Greek robes bearing a water vessel. The fountain was dedicated to Narcissa Whitman, a pioneer teacher and Christian missionary who was killed by the Cayuse Indians. The statue disappeared from the top of the fountain in the 1960s, and Metro Parks removed the fountain some years later. The Parks Department still has the fountain in storage. (Chechopoulos: History of Wright Park, p. 7-8) G41.1-125; TPL-486


Wright Park (Tacoma); Sculpture--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5754

April, 1922, view of one end of a large boiler, manufactured by the Birchfield Boiler Co., 2503 E. 11th St. The company had opened at this Tideflats site in March of 1921 and was run by H.E. Warren, President, and E.E. Birchfield, Vice-President. They built steel heating boilers and performed welding and boiler repairs. Birchfield boilers were in heavy demand in 1922. The company had been receiving orders at the rate of one per day since May 1st and the plant was forced to put on a double shift to handle the demand. Later they would expand into building steel ships. G36.1-136 (TDL 6-26-22, p. 6-article)


Birchfield Boiler, Inc. (Tacoma); Boilers; Boiler industry--Tacoma;

BOLAND-B5788

Members of the Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine posed for a group portrait on April 30, 1922. Better known as the Shriners from Afifi Temple, they were dressed in traditional uniform. A total of 139 uniformed nobles would be journeying to San Francisco by special train in June for the 48th annual imperial council session. That was expected to be one of the largest delegations in attendance. The Afifi Shriners were led by Frank D. Oakley, Tacoma attorney, who was elected in December of 1921 as the temple's leader or potentate. G23.1-081 (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 6-4-22, 8-E)


Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (Tacoma); Fraternal organizations--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5790

Four members of the Afifi Shrine, wearing traditional costume and fezzes, posed outdoors on April 30, 1922. The group may have included attorney Frank D. Oakley of Tacoma, who was Afifi Shrine's potentate. G23.1-079


Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine (Tacoma); Fraternal organizations--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5848

The 33rd Swedish Baptist Conference of Washington was in session May 4th-7th, 1922, at the Forsta Svenska Baptist Church located at 1201 South "J" Street. Attendees were photographed congregated on and along the stairs leading to the wood framed church. Charles Asplund was the church's pastor. Built in 1900, this church was added to the Tacoma Register of Historic Places in 2005. TPL-3869; G22.1-039; BU-14402


Meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930; Religious meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930; Forsta Svenska Baptist Church (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B5870

Mrs. Harry Zimmerhackel, state president of the Colorado P.T.A., was in Tacoma for the 26th annual national convention of the P.T.A. & National Congress of Mothers. The convention opened on May 8, 1922, with headquarters at the First Methodist Church. 39 states were represented with some 250 delegates. Mrs. Zimmerhackel was a member of the National Executive Board. G67.1-129 (TNT 5-6-22, p. 1-article; TDL 5-9-22, p. 2-National Executive Board)


Zimmerhackel, Harry--Family; Parent-Teacher Association; Meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5871

Mrs. Eugene Crutcher of Nashville, Tennessee, arrived in Tacoma in May of 1922 to attend the 26th annual national convention of the P.T.A. and the National Congress of Mothers. Mrs. Crutcher, pictured above with fur stole, was on the group's National Executive Board as vice-president. The information on this Boland photograph was incorrectly inscribed listing Mrs. Crutcher as representing Colorado. G1.1-046 (TNT 5-11-22, p. 1-alternate picture)


Meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930; Parent-Teacher Association; Crutcher, Eugene--Family;

BOLAND-B5878

Both pedestrian and cars are blurred as this view of 17th & Pacific looking north was captured on May 8, 1922. This section of Pacific had at least two hotels visible with a third, the Japanese-owned Hotel Rector, on Broadway. The Savoy Hotel on the right was listed in the 1922 City Directory as being on 1535 1/2 Pacific Ave. and owned/operated by B. Bertleson. On the left side was the Hotel Lewis at 1522 Pacific Ave., owned by the Hotel Operating Co. of Seattle. There rooms advertised as "new and modern" could be had for as little as $1.00. The Hotel Rector, far left of the photograph, was listed at 1541 Broadway and owned by K. Nakatsukasa. Rooms were available for 50 cents and up. At the time, there were several other downtown hotels owned by Japanese, including the Madison Hotel, Central Hotel, Hotel Victoria, and the Hotel Dewey. TPL-5550


Commercial streets--Tacoma--1920-1930; Hotels--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5896

Tree stumps. Pipes and a Zysset burner lead to a large tree stump on a Summit View farm in May of 1922. Pieces of wood shavings are stuffed in the burner's ground-level opening in preparation for firing. The problem of removing tree stumps had previously entailed much hard labor and expense. The Zysset burner had been tested extensively and claimed to burn through a four-foot stump in 24 hours. It was possible to rid a clearing of stumps efficiently and relatively quickly using only the stump's own wood shavings and no other fuel in addition to a two-inch pipe to supply an air draft. TPL-560; G75.1-068 (TNT 5-11-22, p. 13-article)


Tree stumps; Pipes (Conduits);

BOLAND-B5900

Northern Pacific cars loaded with logs at the St. Paul & Tacoma yard in May of 1922. The logs appears to be the same length as the flatcars. G75.1-055


Lumber industry--Tacoma--1920-1930; St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co. (Tacoma); Logs; Northern Pacific Railway Co. (Tacoma); Railroad cars--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B5953

A driverless automobile is parked under towering trees with a sign advertising "The Lakes" on May 19, 1922. This is in reference to the Benbow Inn at The Lakes (Resort) located between Tacoma and Mount Rainier near Kapowsin. Cottages and a large inn were situated on the property along Lake Tanwax. They catered to families providing recreational activities and relaxation for all. This photograph was used in an article describing Benbow Inn which ran in the News Tribune a couple years later, on July 31, 1924. G38.1-057 (TNT 7-31-24, B-2)


Automobiles--Kapowsin; Trees--Kapowsin; Signs (Notices); Benbow Lakes Resort (Kapowsin);

BOLAND-B5972

Sawmill operations. There are no walls in this part of St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co.'s new sawmill but an open beamed ceiling provides cover for the tracks below. This was Mill "C" which would start operating on May 22, 1922. St. Paul & Tacoma had spent much money in getting their plant in the best condition. The entire plant was modernized, Mills "A" and "B" electrically updated, and new docks and additional warehouses built. G36.1-035 (TDL 5-23-22, p. 7-article)


Lumber industry--Tacoma--1920-1930; Sawmills--Tacoma--1920-1930; St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co. (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B5984 1/2

Stadium High School Senior Class Play. The Stadium Class of '22 presented "Sherwood" as the senior class play in May of that year. Dressed as jovial Friar Tuck and holding a sturdy staff is Edward Hamilton. He, along with Egbert Brix as "Little John," were noted by a News Tribune review for being "enjoyed particularly for the comedy which they added to the play." This photograph, and others, appeared in the 1922 Tahoma yearbook. (1922 Tahoma, p. 92) (TNT 5-20-22, p. 7-article) G64.1-050


Hamilton, Edward; Actors--Tacoma; Stadium High School (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B6052

Ceremonies marking the site of the first hospital in Tacoma at 2511 No. Starr were observed on June 1, 1922. Bunting covered the marker laid on a granite boulder and more flowers wait to be laid nearby. The Tacoma Women's Club, assisted by the Pierce County Medical Association and the staff of Tacoma General, took part in the ceremony occurring at the corner of Tacoma Avenue and Starr. Mrs. Percy C. Smith, president of the Women's Club, stands behind the woman in foreground, possibly Dr. Mary Perkins of the Pierce County Medical Association. Dedicated on April 29, 1882, and named after Fanny C. Paddock, wife of Episcopal Bishop John Paddock, the hospital was located in a building that was formerly a "dance hall." Mrs. Paddock, who died on route to Tacoma, had collected $500 from friends in New York to establish a hospital here. After her death, more money was sent as a tribute. The hospital was relocated to 312 South "J" St. in 1888 and made a final move to 315 Martin Luther King Jr. Way (then "K" St.) and name change to Tacoma General Hospital in 1912. G38.1-078 (TNT 5-31-22, p. 15-article; TDL 6-2-22, p.1-article)


Monuments & memorials--Tacoma;

BOLAND-B6422

How to Teach Religion was one of the classes taught at the College of Puget Sound's summer session in 1922. Members of Professor Miller's class posed on August 2nd on the steps of the main building. The school had been established in 1888 by the Methodist Episcopal Church. G67.1-016


College of Puget Sound (Tacoma)--1920-1930; Students--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B6543

These are believed to be buildings in an unidentified Tacoma shipyard. This September, 1922, photograph also shows the nearness of railroad tracks to the buildings to make it easier for lumber to be transported. G36.1-085 (print has deteriorated)


Boat & ship industry--Tacoma--1920-1930; Railroad tracks--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B6564

Berry and chicken farm. This unidentified farm was located in the Puyallup Valley in September of 1922. A large and well-ventilated wood chicken coop has a roof with an overhang to provide shade for its inhabitants. The coop was located next to a wire fence separating it from unidentified foliage, possibly berry bushes. The owner of this farm probably had two good sources of income: berries and poultry. Over $500,000 worth of eggs had been shipped out during the past season from local farms possibly like these and red raspberries and blackberries were profitable as well. (TNT 10-17-22, p. 1-article on Puyallup's products)


Poultry houses; Chickens; Farms;

BOLAND-B15575

This is part of the damage resulting from a fire near the Mineral Lake Logging Co. Camp 17 in 1926. It looks like there was a significant loss of timber, including the blackened logs above. Not shown is a company railroad bridge made of logs which was partially destroyed in the fire.


Mineral Lake Logging Co. Camp 17; Lumber industry--Washington--1920-1930; Logs; Fires;

BOLAND-B15583

Ornate living room believed to be part of the George & Minnie Dickson residence, 501 Tacoma Avenue North, in September of 1926. Focus is on the beautiful Steinway Duo Art Reproducing Player Piano and bench in the center of the photograph. Room is brightly lighted with a fringed lamp and overhead lights. Hardwood flooring is partially covered by area rugs. Photograph ordered by Sherman, Clay & Co. G40.1-003 (Identification of piano provided by a reader)


Pianos; Lamps; Rugs; Living rooms--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B15654

1926 Western Washington Fair. This view, taken on September 19, the last day of the 1926 fair, is of an Acme Transfer & Storage Co. truck in the foreground with the fair's Grandstand and barns in the rear. Acme Transfer & Storage was a local Tacoma firm headquartered at 901 Tacoma Avenue South that was operated by Fred L. Sheldon. The truck is plastered at least on the one side showing with signage indicating the types of jobs accepted. G74.1-073; TPL-6343


Fairs--Puyallup--1930-1940; Western Washington Fair (Puyallup); Grandstands--Puyallup; Barns--Puyallup; Trucks--Puyallup--1920-1930; Acme Transfer & Storage Co. (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B15710

Tacoma Silver Fox Farm owner George H. Jensen and daughter Barbara Ellen perch on the running board of his new Oldsmobile Six sedan in late September of 1926. They are holding prize brush and white-tip foxes from the same litter. The man in the sedan with another fox was not identified. Mr. Jensen, who had recently accepted delivery of the car from Winthrop Motors, was planning a 3000-mile trip in it to inspect foxes for registration for the American National Fox Breeders Association. He was expected back by November 1st to get his own foxes ready for the national fox show in Portland. (Tacoma Sunday Ledger, 10-3-26, 10-G-alt. photograph)


Jensen, George H.; Jensen, Barbara Ellen; Oldsmobile automobile; Foxes--Tacoma--1920-1930; Tacoma Silver Fox Farm (Tacoma); Fur trade--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B15945

Ferry "Wollochet" docked at the Skansie's Shipbuilding Co.'s dock on November 12, 1926. It had been built by the Gig Harbor firm the previous year. TPL-680; G37.1-171


Ferries--1920-1930; Skansies Shipbuilding Co. (Gig Harbor); Boat & ship industry--Gig Harbor; Piers & wharves--Gig Harbor;

BOLAND-B16021

1926 exterior view of the Allen C. Mason Intermediate School. Named after a Tacoma pioneer, lawyer, real estate developer and former school principal, Mason Intermediate (later renamed Mason Junior High and Mason Middle School) opened for classes on February 1, 1926. It was also the opening day for the new Captain Robert Gray and Franklin B. Gault Intermediate Schools. Mason Intermediate was the fifth of the six intermediate schools built with funds from a 1923 bond issue. Students were drawn from several north end elementary schools including Washington, Jefferson, Lowell and Point Defiance. Portables were deemed necessary within four years of the school's opening due to the burgeoning enrollment. The school underwent additions and improvements over the years until a new Mason School was constructed in 2003 at 3901 N. 28th. G47.1-055; BU-11, 426 (Olsen: For The Record, p. 133-34)


Mason Junior High School (Tacoma); Public schools--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B16057

1926 exterior of the Morton M. McCarver Intermediate School. McCarver was Tacoma's third intermediate school and opened its doors to 600 students in late 1925. It was named for Tacoma founder and one of the school district's first directors, General Morton Matthew McCarver. The Gothic-style building was designed by architects Hill & Mock who also designed the Allen C. Mason Intermediate School. It was renamed McCarver Junior High in 1928 and added elementary school classes in 1938 when Lincoln Elementary School closed. In 1968 McCarver became an elementary school entirely when the junior high classes were eliminated. G47.1-060; BU-11, 428 (Olsen: For The Record, p. 127-28) TPL-10454


McCarver Junior High School (Tacoma); Public schools--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B16410

Star Coal exhibit. This exhibit of Star and Burnsright Coal was one of several displayed at the Western Retail Lumbermen's convention held at the Winthrop Hotel, February 24-26, 1927. G31.1-099


Exhibits--Tacoma--1920-1930; Meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930; Hotel Winthrop (Tacoma);

BOLAND-B16416

This small sample house was one of two built on the rooftop of the Winthrop Hotel overlooking the downtown business district in late February of 1927. In the background, near left, are visible parts of the Washington Building, Peoples Store and Puget Sound National Bank. The Pythian Temple and Rhodes Brothers Department Store are near right rear. This is believed to be the model building constructed by the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co. to show how structures can be built using grades of local Washington woods not now in great demand. The other house, not pictured, was built by the West Coast Trade Extension Bureau to show that short lengths of lumber can be used for high-class construction work. Both houses were built for the annual three-day convention of the Western Retail Lumbermen's Association, opening Thursday, February 24, 1927, at the Winthrop Hotel. 600 retail lumbermen were expected to attend. G36.1-102 (TNT 2-23-27, p. 1, p. 7)


Model houses--Tacoma--1920-1930; Cityscapes; Business districts--Tacoma--1920-1930; Hotel Winthrop (Tacoma); Meetings--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B16456

View of Cushman Hospital and neighborhood taken from McKinley Hill on March 6, 1927. This hospital for veterans was located in Tacoma's east side. It originally housed the Puyallup Indian School. In January of 1929, Cushman would close as a veterans hospital and reopen as a tuberculosis unit for the U.S. Indian Service. G8.1-097


Cushman Hospital (Tacoma); Hospitals--Tacoma--1920-1930; Neighborhoods--Tacoma--1920-1930;

BOLAND-B16506

Tanker "Socony" docked in Tacoma in mid-March of 1927 at what is possibly the City Waterway. Several large companies had tanks (receiving stations) on the City Waterway at this time: Shell Oil, Associated Oil, and Standard Oil. The three tanks in the picture may have belonged to the General Petroleum Co. G49.1-075 (TNT 4-2-26, p. 1-article on plants on waterway) Photograph ordered by Allen Lubricating Co.


Tankers--United States; Storage tanks--Tacoma--1920-1930;

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