ca. 1935. Trucks parked in front of Griffin Fuel Company, 1910 Commerce St. Snoqualmie Falls Power Company Transfer House, 250 So. 19th St., in background right. (filed with Argentum)
Griffin Fuel Co. (Tacoma); Fuel--Tacoma--1930-1940; Fuel trade--Tacoma--1930-1940; Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Snoqualmie Falls Power Co. Transfer House (Tacoma);
ca. 1935. Griffin Fuel Company. Man above cab with tool loading Griffin Fuel Company truck inside shed. It appears that the man is loading the truck with sawdust, one of the forms of fuel offered by the 46 year old company.
ca. 1935. Bone-Dry shoes. A man with a pipe poses in a aura of blinding light, possibly for a catalog layout, circa 1935. He wears knee high, laced boots, shaped to fit his legs snugly. The boots are possibly Alpine hiking boots or hunting boots. Bone-Dry specialized in work and sport shoes and boots.
ca. 1935. Griffin Fuel Company. Man pulling lever on coal chute to release coal into truck. These are automatic gravity bunkers filled with coal. The company was begun by Fred L. Griffin Sr. in 1889 as a horse drawn delivery company. It was called Griffin Transfer in the early days. By 1904, they moved to Commerce Street and concentrate solely on fuel deliveries. (T. Times 12/10/1935, pg. 5)
ca. 1935. Griffin Fuel Company. Three men loading oil into tank trucks. Railroad tank cars in background behind covered fuel transfer structure. Griffin was celebrating its 46th year anniversary. They had laid in the largest fuel order in Tacoma history for area residents to purchase this winter.
ca. 1935. Shell Burner Oil Truck from J.P. Myers and Company and C.S. Barlow and Sons parked in front of Myers Company Office at 1912 Wilkeson. The background around the truck has been whited out to display the truck more effectively for advertising purposes. (WSHS)
ca. 1935. Rows of completed boots line the shelves at the Bone Dry Shoe factory. The Tacoma company was most famous for making sturdy, long lasting work boots. In the thirties, much of the work was still done by hand by skilled shoemakers.
ca. 1935. A drawing of a Bone-Dry manufactured work boot, used for advertising copy. Bone-Dry Shoes in Tacoma manufactured high quality work boots and sport boots. In the thirties, much of the shoe making was still done by hand by skilled artisans.
ca. 1935. Exterior view of Winthrop Hotel from the southwest. Building by W.E. Stoddard and Roland Borhek, Associated Architects, 1924. (filed with Argentum)
Hotel Winthrop (Tacoma); Hotels--Tacoma--1930-1940;
ca. 1935. Grocery Store interior. Sign: "For Your Convenience Please Take a Basket and Serve Yourself." Studio records give address as "12th and No. L Sts.," likely Thomas E. Boze Grocery, on No. 11th and L. (Argentum)
ca. 1935. Rowen's Lake City Store, exterior view of two story brick store with flat above. Photograph taken for Younglove Grocery Company. Banner sign above the awning states that Rowen's is a member of the I.G.A. chain of stores. The store was a family owned affair and the Rowens also lived upstairs.
Rowen's Lake City Store (Lakewood); Grocery stores--Lakewood--1930-1940;
ca. 1935. Three men pose by a streamlined aerodynamic Texaco oil truck in front of Davis Motor Truck Company. Davis Motor Truck Co. manufactured Diamond T trucks. (filed with Argentum)
Davis Motor Truck Company (Tacoma); Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Diamond T trucks;
ca. 1935. Griffin Fuel Company, founded in 1889. Two men beside truck in driveway. Snoqualmie Falls Power Company Transfer House, 250 So. 19th St., in background. Griffin Fuel was celebrating its 46th anniversary.
Griffin Fuel Co. (Tacoma); Fuel--Tacoma--1930-1940; Fuel trade--Tacoma--1930-1940; Trucks--Tacoma--1930-1940; Snoqualmie Falls Power Co. Transfer House (Tacoma);
ca. 1935. Around 1935, three unidentified men stopped in at Rowe's Cabaret, 1104 So. K St., where an unidentified bartender served them a refreshing beer. Rowe's is listed in the 1935 City Directory as a "Beer Parlor." It was owned by Guy S. Rowe. (filed with Argentum)
ca. 1935. Unidentified young girl playing with toy Griffin Fuel trucks in front of a fireplace, circa 1935. One of the trucks is filled with toy coal, another with toy logs. (filed with Argentum)
ca. 1935. A little boy sports a huge smile as he is photographed playing with Griffin Fuel Company toy trucks, circa 1935. The two on the floor in front of the table are loaded with toy coal and toy wood. (filed with Argentum)
In this photograph from February 1935, an unidentified shoemaker pounds nails into the sole of a leather high-top work shoe or hiking boot at his workbench in the Bone Dry Manufacturing Company building at 2115 Pacific Avenue. Bone Dry manufactured top quality boots in Tacoma for nearly 40 years. Built in 1919, the Bone Dry building, now occupied by McGranahan Architects, still reveals its history in the paths wore in its wooden floors by several generations of cobblers and pattern cutters.
In February of 1935 an unidentified shoemaker at the Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company, 2115 Pacific Avenue, used a sharp blade attached to his index finger to cut the leather for a high-top work shoe or boot. The blade is attached to the index finger of his right hand with a leather band. Bone Dry manufactured top quality boots in Tacoma for nearly 40 years. In 1943 their Paul Bunyan Pack Boot, which was "waterproof as a glass jar and warm as a fur-lined overcoat" sold at Abercrombie & Fitch for $25 per pair. Built in 1919, the Bone Dry building became the home to McGranahan Architects in 2000.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Shoe maker at stamping machine places iron sole mold on piece of leather between press. Other molds sit on shelf below "Master Wood Welded Brand" maple block.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Leather pieces for high-top work shoes or hiking boots are stitched by women and men shoe makers at industrial sewing machines in large room of factory. TPL-1687
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Shoe maker working at machinery with vise and handles to hold leather high-top work shoes or hiking boots which the company specialized in. He is affixing side leather onto the sole.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Shoe maker cuts pattern for toe of boot as part of the assembly process in making leather high-top work shoes and hiking boots which the company specialized in. Several patterns and pieces of leather on table.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Three shoe makers cutting patterns for leather high-top work shoes or hiking boots which the company specialized in. Three men cutting patterns at table which is well lit with large windows and overhead lights.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Two men working beside window at shoe crafting machines surrounded by racks of leather work shoes, boots which the company specialized in.
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. One of three shoe makers stops for photographer in cutting room. He is wearing an apron and leaning over a workbench. A leather wrapped finger contains cutting blade. (Also see images #7 and 10).
George Miller, Jr, a shoemaker at the Bone-Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company factory in Tacoma, 2115 Pacific Ave., used a heavy duty industrial sewing machine in February, 1935, to sew the welt and insole to the upper of a boot. For nearly 40 years, craftsmen and craftswomen at Bone-Dry produced "corks", the standard footwear for loggers, and various other styles of boots and shoes. The Bone-Dry factory building is now home to McGranahan Architects. TPL-8549
Bone Dry Shoe Manufacturing Company. Individual assembly process of making leather high-top work shoe and hiking boots which the company specialized in. Four men working at shoe crafting machines.