- 5.5.3--WIL (H)-065
- Item
- 1906
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Puyallup hop picker with child secured in a wooden cradle inside a lean to shelter, beside a basket in the process of being woven. Photograph by M. D. True, c. 1906.
188 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Puyallup hop picker with child secured in a wooden cradle inside a lean to shelter, beside a basket in the process of being woven. Photograph by M. D. True, c. 1906.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The view of Mount St. Helens from Spirit Lake. Photograph by E.M. Strait (Castle Rock, Wash.) c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Chinese dock worker carrying six 50 lb. bags of flour made in the United States. He was just one of hundreds of laborers who had met an incoming ship at Shanghai and were employed to unload cargo. Photograph c. 1907.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The Adna Mill Company in Adna, Washington, six miles west of Chehalis on the South Bend branch of the Northern Pacific Railroad. In the early 1900s, Adna consisted of two general merchandise stores, two hotels, a blacksmith shop, one Evangelical church and a public school. The Adna Mill had an average capacity of 60,000 feet of lumber and 830,000 shingles per day and employed 90 men. Photograph c. 1909.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Unpaved road between Port Angeles and Lake Crescent in Clallam County which included stops at Lake Sutherland. Photograph by Leo Hettzel, Port Angeles, c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Child on unpaved road near Kelso, Washington. Photograph by J.R. Hargrave, c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Timber hoisted on a Lamb Cableway above the Black Creek, a branch of the Wynooche River near Montesano, Washington. The Lamb Cableway was invented by Hoquiam resident Frank H. Lamb to lift logs from waterways to high land where they can be skidded to railroads and navigable waters. Photograph c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Logger William Hepfinger pictured skidding lumber in South Aberdeen, Washington, to be shipped by rail to St. Louis for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904 for Hepfinger's "Western Washington Exhibit." Photo copyright William Hepfinger, c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Logger William Hepfinger pictured beside lumber in South Aberdeen, Washington, to be shipped by rail to St. Louis for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904 for Hepfinger's "Western Washington Exhibit." The banner hung on the lumber reads, "The State of Washington." Photo copyright William Hepfinger, c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Fishermen using the brailing method to gather salmon from the water at the Cattle Point fish trap off of the San Juan Islands. Photograph c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Fishermen emptying nets of salmon at the Cattle Point fish trap off of the San Juan Islands. Photograph c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Fishermen hauling in fishing nets with salmon at the Shultz & Gross trap near Roche Harbor, Washington. Photograph taken August 2nd, 1901.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Orchard land in Wenatchee Valley, Washington. Photograph by J. D. Wheeler, c. 1908.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Wheat field on the Alfred Leach ranch in the Gallatin Valley, Montana. Photograph by Schlechten, c. 1908.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Laborers in a sheep shearing corral owned by Lloyd and McKerlie near Ellensburg, Washington. Ellensburg is located in Kittitas County where thousands of sheep were wintered in the low lands of the south and eastern parts of the county along the Columbia and Yakima Rivers. Sheep were normally shorn in the springtime when its heavy fleece would not be needed to keep the animal warm. Photograph by Paultzke, Otto W., Ellensburg, c. 1908.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Waterfront street in the town of Friday Harbor, Washington in the San Juan Islands featuring signs for Saloon Best 5 Cent Beers, Office Pacific Steam Laundry and Soda Fountain with fruits, candies and ice cream. By 1903, Friday Harbor was the commercial center and county seat of San Juan County. Photograph c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Third and Union intersection in Seattle, Washington looking east. The Federal Building is at right, followed by the Post-Intelligencer Building and the White Building. The Antlers Hotel is midway down the block at left with the Crary Building in the distance. Photograph by Webster & Stevens, c. 1909.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The Friday Harbor Drug Store in Friday Harbor, Washington located on the San Juan Islands advertising drugs, books and photo supplies. The building on the right has a poster announcing a July 4th Whatcom celebration. Photograph c. 1907.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Group of school children and teachers outside of The Lopez School House on Lopez Island, Washington, located in the San Juan Islands. Photograph c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
People standing and sitting outside of The Hotel Webb, at the intersection of First Street and Railroad Avenue in Shelton, Washington, located in Mason County. The building was destroyed by fire in 1907, killing eleven and injuring twenty, and replaced by proprietor Henry Faubert with the tile block constructed Hotel Sheldon. Photograph c. 1907.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Unidentified three story building with triangular brick corbeling in Pocatello, Idaho containing the G.H. Sherburne Dentist Office and a hardware and pharmacy store on the first floor advertising drugs and Kodak film processing. Photograph c. 1902.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The Pendleton High School in Pendleton, Oregon, located in Umatilla County and maintained at this time by County Superintendent of Schools Frank K. Welles. Photograph c. 1908.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The Clark County Courthouse in Vancouver, Washington, built in 1892 to replace the courthouse destroyed by fire in 1890. The building was designed by Seattle architect W.A. Ritchie featuring red bricks, metal shingles on the roof and Richardsonian Romanesque bands of Tenino stone. The building was torn down and replaced in 1941. Photograph by Waggener, James, c. 1906.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Holland's Drug Store, Dr. G.E. Barton Dentistry and C.E. Bingham and Company Bank on the Bingham-Holland Block, located on the southwest corner of Metcalf and Woodworth St. of Sedro-Wooley, Washington in Skagit County, built in 1905. Photograph by Marsh c. 1908.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Group of people and horses outside of the Mohler Mercantile Company building in Mohler, Washington, located in Lincoln County. The covered porch is labeled "E. Yake Co." and the pediment of the building features decorative latticework with a five pointed star. Photograph c. 1900.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Family outside of the Adna Hall, L.W. Field General Merchandise Store and Post Office in Adna, Washington located six miles west of Chehalis in Lewis County.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Queen Anne style residences of R. F. Lytle and J. Lytle in Hoquium, Washington located in Grays Harbor County, featuring wraparound porches, turrets and half-timbering. R.F. Lytle was the president of the Hoquiam Lumber & Shingle Company and the Lytle Logging & Mercantile Company. Photograph by J. O. Stearns, Hoquiam, c. 1903.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
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)-177A.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
Children outside The Blackman Brothers and Company Wooden Repair Shop, Dr. F.J. Kayler dentist office and The Pullman State Bank on the PSB Block at the corner of Alder and Main Streets in Pullman, Washington, located in Whitman County, built in 1892. Photograph c. 1906.
Part of The Coast Magazine Photographs
The Union Loan and Trust Company building, Centralia, WA. Photograph by Gordon, George W., c. 1909.