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  • In this 1999 photo, a bulbous moon rises over the Seattle skyline, a prelude to the full moon, which was 24 percent brighter than normal because it coincided with the winter solstice and the lunar perigee. (Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times)
    Northwest Moon
  • Two members of the Seattle Prep football team practice kicking before the season opener against Bellingham High at Civic Stadium. (Seattle Times Archives, 1940)
    Kickin' it Old School
  • Looking north on Fourth Avenue in downtown Seattle, lights from automobiles glistened and winked as Christmas shoppers hurried on their appointed rounds. (Josef Scaylea / The Seattle Times, 1967)
    Rainy Night in Downtown Seattle
  • Sixty Girl Scouts and leaders from throughout the Pacific Northwest paused on the second annual San Juan Girl Scout Bike Hike from Mount Vernon. (Richard S. Heyza / The Seattle Times, 1963)
    Girl Scout Bike-Hike
  • Spring Refuge: Superior Judge William G. Long, talking refuge from court affairs, prepared to fling his bait across a placid lake inlet bordering the University of Washington Arboretum. (Vic Condiotty / The Seattle Times, 1955)
    Fishing at the Arboretum
  • Morning commuters from the Eastside exit the ferry Lincoln at the foot of East Madison Street in Seattle to catch a bus. (Seattle Times archive)(Seattle Times Archives, 1940)
    Ferry Run
  • The Fisher Flouring Mills Company warehouse stores flour. (Seattle Times Archive, 1930)
    Shifting Bulky Bags
  • Some of the original loops of the meandering Duwamish River were still visible in 1922 after dredging had opened up a straight, deepened waterway. (Seattle Times archives, 1922)
    Duwamish River, 1922
  • An automobile appears small on the cleared highway crossing Chinook Pass. (Seattle Times Archives, 1942)
    Between High Walls of Snow
  • Aerial view of construction of the Northgate Shopping Center on March 3, 1950. This view is looking southeast, with Fifth Avenue Northeast in the background and Northeast Northgate Way running left to right in foreground. The building under construction in the foreground is Northgate Hospital. (Seattle Times archive)
    Northgate Mall in the 1950s
  • The Dream Theatre was built on First Avenue near the foot of Cherry Street. (Seattle Times Archives, 1908).
    Dream Theatre
  • In Eatonville, one lives in the shadow of Mount Rainier. (Seattle Times Archives, 1971)
    Mount Rainier's Shadow
  • Division Street, the main business thoroughfare of the town of Grand Coulee (The Seattle Times Archives, 1937)
    Where Sagebrush Flourished
  • Some 500,000 bushels of wheat are piled on the ground beside this grain elevator at Lind, Washington. (Seattle Times Archives, 1952)
    Bumper Wheat Crop
  • Seattle Piers 50 and 51. (Seattle Times Archives, 1961)
    Sky View
  • Steadily growing commercial activity of Puyallup. (Seattle Times Archives, 1948)
    Downtown Puyallup
  • The 1714 takes a drink at Woodinville.  (The Seattle Times Archives, 1951)
    Water Stop
  • Coast Guard Grumman “Widgeon” alights on water in Strait of Juan de Fuca, displaying its amphibious characteristics. (The Seattle Times archives, 1943)
    Bastions of Puget Sound
  • Olympia, WA – Fourth Avenue east from Capitol Way. (Seattle Times Archives, 1950)
    Olympia, WA
  • Crane unloading 28,000 tons of alumina at Tacoma and Mead, near Spokane. (Seattle Times archives, 1967)
    Waterfront Crane
  • Seattle streets history. (Seattle Times Archives, 1946)
    Seattle Street View
  • Henry Peltier, shown here, opened a horse-shoeing business on the corner of Rainier Avenue and Jackson Street. (Seattle Times Archive, 1910)
    Seattle Ferrier
  • Members of the Seattle Bike Club. (Seattle Times Archives, 1930)
    Seattle Bike Club
  • 1900 Girls  intercollegiate basketball squad at the University of Washington. From left, top row, Winifred McGrath, Jessie Barlow, Pearl McDonnell; bottom row, Stella Brintnall, Blanche Winsor, Ann Mitchell, Bess McDonnell. (The Seattle Times archives)
    Girls Got Game
  • Frederick & Nelson’s sumptuous Christmas decorations made the store a destination through the holiday season. (Seattle Times archives, 1954)
    Beloved Frederick & Nelson
  • Adjoining buildings built more than seven decades apart at 2815 First Ave. (Seattle Times Archive, 1965)
    Old and New...70 Years Apart
  • The Bon Marche took shape in the shell of the Southcenter shopping city. (Seattle Times Archive, 1968)
    Southcenter Mall in Progress
  • The Arlington State Bank at Olympic Avenue and Third Street. (Seattle Times Archive, 1950)
    Arlington, WA
  • Looking norward from King Street, the Seattle skyline appears from the upper level of the Alaskan Way Viaduct. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1953)
    Skyline from the Viaduct
  • Looking north on Airport way. King County Airport. Boeing Field lay a short distance south of this point. (The Seattle Times archives, 1946)
    Georgetown Business Center
  • An early-day Swedish Hospital. (Seattle Times Archives, circa 1910)
    Swedish Hospital
  • Seattle City Light's power-control-center building. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1963)
    Seattle City Light
  • Aplets Cotlets Plant Cashmere, WA. (Seattle Times Archives, 1982)
    Cashmere, WA
  • Olympia State Capitol grounds fountain. (Seattle Times Archives, 1962)
    Roman-Style Fountain
  • Pacific Fruit & Produce Company's Enlarged Plant at Occidental Avenue and King Street. (Seattle Times Archives, 1938)
    Plant Buildings
  • Workers put finishing touches on elevated roadways looking north from Seneca Street (Seattle Times Archives, 1966)
    City Roads
  • Seattle Times composing room. (Seattle Times Archives)
    Seattle Times Composing Room
  • The expanded men's clothiers Lundquist-Lilly, Inc. storefront on Fourth Avenue. (Seattle Times Archives, 1941)
    Seattle Storefront
  • (Seattle Times Archives, 1960)
    Seattle Near First Avenue
  • The main thoroughfare in Sedro Woolley. (Seattle Times Archives, 1948)
    Sedro Wolley
  • The first state Capitol hosted the constitutional convention when Washington became the 42nd state. (Seattle Times Archives, 1939)
    First Washington State Capitol
  • The Pioneer Square Historical Preservation Commission learned a taller, three-light fixture might replace the Pioneer Square restoration area five-globe streetlight. (The Seattle Times archives, 1930)
    Three-Light Fixture
  • The twin peaks of Seattle's Smith Tower and King Street Railway Station loomed high above an outbound Northern Pacific. (Seattle Times Archives, 1967)
    Twin Peaks
  • The ferry Taku takes on vans for Alaska. (Seattle Times archives, 1969)
    Alaska Bound
  • Meteor Basketball Team Of 1904-They played boys' rules. Left to right, top row: E.C. Dohm, coach; Hazel Smith, Florence Thompson, Mrs. Thompson, Florence Pence, Mildred Shearer, E.H. King, manager, 4644 Sunnyside Ave., who owns picture. Second row: Zola Shamek, Hazel Mortimer, Caroyln Thompson, Garnet Pence, Estelle Keene. On floor, Ivah Pence, captain. (Seattle Times archives)
    Shooting Stars
  • The Seattle skyline from the King Street coal bunkers, the year the Smith Tower's steel frame was topped off. (Seattle Times Archives, 1913)
    King Street View
  • The art-deco ferry Kalakala is seen on Puget Sound in the mid-1930s. Decades later it was a popular attraction during the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair. (Seattle Times Archives, 1936)
    Art Deco Kalakala
  • Barricades block sidewalks of homes along the Ravenna Avenue sinkhole the day after it appeared. (Seattle Times Archive, 1957)
    Sinking Feeling
  • The 12 players on the 1907 Seattle High School touring baseball team were from the left: Top row – Charles Schmutz, pitcher; Jay Smith, second base; Wee Coyle, center field; James Agnew, pitcher | Middle row – Charley Mullen, first base; Ernie Maguire, shortstop; Harold H. Stewart, right field and team manager for the tour; Fred Hickingbottom, left field; Roy Hilton, infielder | Front row – Merton Hemenway, catcher; Harry Martin, third base, and Ten Million, left field. (Seattle Times archives)
    Seattle Boys Make Good
  • Seattle's first fire boat after the great fire of 1889. The Snoqualmie is in its slip at the foot of Madison Street. (Seattle Times Archives,1889)
    Fighting Fires Waterside
  • The boats in all probability made Ketchikan their home port to escape new state income tax laws. (Seattle Times Archives, 1932)
    Fishing Fleet at Ballard
  • The ferry Leschi arrives at the dock as a car goes by on July 13, 1941. (Seattle Times archive)
    Leschi Ferry
  • Alaskan Way Viaduct off-ramp. (Seattle Times Archives, 1961)
    Open to Traffic
  • Weathervane. (The Seattle Times archives, 1957)
    Western Winds
  • Seattle Trust Building (Haller Building). (Seattle Times Archives, circa 1920)
    The Trust Building
  • The box conveyor provided a constant supply of empties for the sorting table. Trucks unload boxes arriving from orchards. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1952)
    Yakima Fruit Growers Association
  • Seattle historic theater. (Seattle Times Archives, 1979)
    The Palace
  • Hotel Seattle. (Seattle Times Archives, circa 1900)
    Hotel Seattle
  • Puyallup thoroughfare. (Seattle Times Archives, 1954)
    Puyallup's Meridian Street
  • Ballard (Seattle Times Archives, 1946)
    Market Street
  • Newly-built all-steel Oriental Limited trains. (Seattle Times Archives, 1924)
    Traveling Train Exhibit
  • Hedlund Western Lumber Co. (Seattle Times Archives, 1931)
    Hedlund Western Lumber Co.
  • (Seattle Times archives, circa 1958)
    Making a Splash
  • Main building of the Lynden branch of the Washington cooperative Egg & Poultry Association. (Seattle Times archives, 1926)
    Western Farmers Assoc.
  • Gertrude Ederle, first woman to swim the English Channel. (Seattle Times Archives, 1926)
    Queen of the Waves
  • Even markets have a friendly atmosphere. This one is on Des Moines Way South. (The Seattle Times archives, 1972)
    Friendly Market
  • Among the most spectacular cloud formations is the "banner" or "cap," streaming off a giant peak, in this case, Mount Baker. White caps, such as this, rarely are constant; high winds pull them apart as quickly as they form. They often contain wind-blown powder snow. (Seattle Times Archive, 1961)
    Written in the Hills
  • (Seattle Times Photo Archive)
    Space Needle Triptych
  • Public Market Center, 1939. (Seattle Times archives)
    Public Market Center | Seattle | 1939
  • Firemen (from left to right): Captain L.P. Davis, Julius Matison And Albert Erickson. The horses are the famous team of Toby, Ceasar and Spider; Ceasar, in the middle, can't be seen. (Seattle Times archives, 1913)
    Steam Pump Truck
  • On April 19, 1962 three German high-wire aerialists of the Circus Berlin's Zugspitz ladder act thrilled World's Fair workers by trying out their act high above the fairgrounds on a steel cable. (Seattle Times Archive)
    World's Fair Circus Berlin's Zugspit.. Act
  • The Staatz Bulb Farm, Orting, Puyallup Valley. (Seattle Times Archives, 1955)
    Tulips Bloom in May
  • The Elks Club, at Fifth Avenue and Main Street, Ellensburg. (Seattle Times Archives, 1949)
    Ellensburg Service Club
  • Dairy barn. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1948)
    Washington Barn
  • Another flare was added to Seattle frontier of light when the twenty-one-ton sign of the New World Life Insurance Company was turned on for the first time. (Seattle Times Archives, 1931)
    New Neon
  • Long-boomed cranes hoisted materials high above the water from the western approach to the Hood Canal Floating Bridge near Port Gamble. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1959)
    Tall Job
  • The Lake Washington Floating Bridge spans the waters of the lake at night. (Seattle Times Archives, 1940)
    Lake Washington Floating Bridge
  • Automobiles looked like toys as they nestled beside 40-ton cranes on a barge going to Alaska. (Seattle Times Archives, 1960)
    Barging In
  • Motorists taking a ferry from Bainbridge Island to Seattle. Ferries carried 2,057 automobiles on this run. (Seattle Times archives, 1959)
    Waiting at Winslow
  • The newly paved Sunset Highway. (The Seattle Times Archives, 1935)
    Skirting Lake Keechelus
  • (The Seattle Times Archives)
    River Flows
  • Auctioneer Donne pointed his cane to the successful bidder as he sold this brick apartment building at 603 E. 43rd St., on June 21, 1958 in a State Highway Department auction of buildings in the Seattle freeway path. (The Seattle Times archives)
    Sold!
  • House movers lead this four-unit brick apartment building on oak rollers on 18-by-20-inch beams along East 43rd Street from Pasadena Place to a new site at Eighth Avenue Northeast and East (now Northeast) 43rd Street on Aug. 28, 1958. (Seattle Times archive)
    Seattle Homes Saved From the I-5 Wre..Ball
  • Wenatchee Avenue, a main travel artery, is parallel to the Columbia River. (Seattle Times Archives, 1949)
    Downtown Wenatchee
  • Whidbey Island. (Seattle Times Archives, 1951)
    A Whidbey Island Street Scene
  • Paine Field Chapel. (Seattle Times Archives, 1947)
    Paine Field Chapel
  • Sumner on the Stuck River. (Seattle Times Archives, 1949)
    Sumner, WA
  • Eighth Avenue and Virginia Street, 1928. (Seattle Times Archive)
    A.V. Love Dry Goods Company
  • A Garfield High School All-State basketball player, makes his debut as a trackman in the Bulldogs' dual-meet victory over Ballard at the West Seattle bowl. (Seattle Times Photo Archives, 1955)
    Track and Field
  • Players on the 1907 Seattle High School touring baseball team. (The Seattle Times Archives)
    Hitting the Road
  • Work of converting the former American Mail liners President Grant and President Jackson into Navy transports will start at the plant of Todd Seattle Dry Docks, Inc.  The Grant will be known as the U.S.S. Harris and the Jackson as the U.S.S. Zeilin. (Seattle Times archives, 1940).
    Seattle Ships to be Transports
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