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  • Officer Mark Wubbena said Harvest is fond of taking cat naps in the middle of the day. Horses can sleep while standing but Wubbena recalled one time when Harvest caught him by surprise and dropped down on his feet for his nap. Harvest walked on top of the viaduct recently while it was closed for the first phase of its demolition. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Part crowds, part carrots for horses..beat
  • The Polar Star, a Coast Guard icebreaker, is being worked on while in dry dock on Seattle’s Harbor Island. (Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times)
    Coast Guardsmen honored for fixing i..aker
  • Dorothy Shaul and Leonard Metzger sorted misaddressed packages at the Seattle Post Office in 1950. Did someone mail you a Christmas present which you didn't receive? Chances are it sat among the 1,100 packages Seattle postal workers couldn't deliver. (The Seattle Times)
    Signed, sealed, not delivered
  • Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times
    Pike Place Market pop ups
  • (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Georgetown's Hat n' Boots
  • The eye-catching Federal Building on First Avenue. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Federal Building, Madison Street
  • The sound of cranes digging in the rubble and pounding on half-demolished walls was louder than the morning traffic going by. The Seattle Sketcher stood at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Union Street watching the wrecking ball come down on the shopping center adjacent to Rainier Tower. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Rainier Square tumbles down
  • The Fremont Bridge glows during a preview of the Bridge Lights project  The light display, installed under the bridge and on the bridge sidewalks, will be permanently lit. (Courtney Pedroza / The Seattle Times, 2018)
    Fremont Bridge centennial
  • The future of King Street Station is looking better than ever, and not just as a vital transportation hub. The city plans to transform 17,000 square feet of its empty third floor into a major community arts center. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Future King Street Station arts hub.tiff
  • Private railroad parlor car in Bellevue. (Johnny Closs / The Seattle Times, 1971)
    Parlor car
  • A motorist in a 1929 Model A drives to the post office through half a foot of snow that fell in Darrington. <br />
<br />
Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times
    Snowy Day in Darrington
  • EIGHTH STREET, looking southwest toward the harbor from its intersection with J Street. Along the street are the City Hall, the post office and many business establishments; at the harbor end is the railroad station. At its northeast end is the Eighth Street Bridge across the Hoquiam River. (The Seattle Times Co., 1951)
    Hoquiam, WA
  • The Bullitt Center, a six-story office building hailed as one of the greenest ever built. The roof is all made of solar panels. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    Bullitt Center, Madison StreetMadiso..nter
  • The Blue Angels’ “Fat Albert”, a C-130T,a Lockheed-Martin Hercules four engine aircraft, flies low over Lake Washington and the log boom. An all-Marine Corps crew of three officers and five enlisted men personnel operate the plane. It carries more than 40 maintenance and support personnel, their gear and spare parts to support the Blue Angels as they travel from town to town. (Greg Gilbert / The Seattle Times)
    Seafair Weekend and Fat Albert
  • This forlorn automobile stalled in front of The Seattle Times office. More than a foot of snow covered Fairview Avenue North and John Street. It also drifted through an open window into the car’s interior. The Times published its editions as usual despite the weather. (The Seattle Times, 1950)
    Snow way out
  • Seattle City Councilman Wing Luke, acting mayor for a week, signed his first official document in both Chinese – as Luke Wing Chung – and English. The document was a bond for a heating-equipment dealer’s license.  Luke is the first person of color on the Seattle City Council and the first Asian American elected to public office in the Pacific Northwest. (Times staff photo by Larry Dion, 1964)
    Councilman Wing Luke
  • The historic property at 619 Western Ave. escaped demolition when the state gave it an extensive upgrade to bring it up to code. Once restored, the building's six floors became prime office space and new tenants started moving in. (Gabriel Campanario / The Seattle Times)
    619 Western Ave.
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