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Month: August 2022

family history, music, Northwest Room

The Ring from Gunderson’s

–by Kim Davenport I spread the fingers of my left hand on the table and looked at the ring on my finger. The bright blue sapphire twinkled back up at me, as it seemed capable of doing in any light. As had become a habit, I folded my left hand into my right, took the ring between the thumb and index finger of my right … Continue reading The Ring from Gunderson’s

tacomahistoricalsocietyAugust 16, 2022Leave a comment

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Looking for a way to honor the holiday? Join us at Tacoma's War Memorial Park at 11am this morning for our annual Memorial Day Observance! Free, and all are welcome.
During the 1924 Memorial Day ceremony at Lincoln High School, Eunice Huseby, left, president of the Takolah Club, and Florence Anderson, right, president-elect, placed a floral wreath at the foot of the school's statue of Abraham Lincoln. The girls, dressed in white skirts and blouses, stood on a makeshift platform. The students at Lincoln had planned a ceremony that honored the school's namesake as well as veterans.
The entire student body assembled in front of Stadium High School on May 29, 1941 to observe the Memorial Day tribute to the eleven Stadium High students who died in the First World War. This view of the school courtyard was taken from the building's upper levels. Twenty four Stadium girls, walking 2x2, carrying a wreath between them, exited from the front door and walked toward the parking strip in front of the school. They placed wreaths at each of the eleven memorial trees and one at the plaque commemorating the eleven soldiers.
Members of the Delphinium Garden Club examine the hands of the old clock at (Old) City Hall on May 26, 1962. Mrs. Sigrid Holmberg, Mrs. Claude Purvis, and Mrs. Lee C. Garrison are assisted by Joe Mertz and E.F. Farrens, master clock expert from Portland. Mr. Farrens donated weekends to repair the clock along with his assistant, Mr. Mertz. The chimes and tower clock had stopped for three years and recently were re-started. The clock was reportedly "keeping beautiful time," although it may have been hard for a layman to detect since the hands were removed. A new set of hands would be made by the city's woodworking shop. The Delphinium Garden Club was financing restoration of the timepiece.
70 years ago today, on May 25, 1953, a long row of delivery trucks with accompanying drivers posed by the Columbia Breweries offices in Tacoma's downtown brewery district. Columbia Breweries, later to change its name to Heidelberg Brewing Co., was a long-time fixture in Tacoma. It was known for its Alt Heidelberg and Columbia Ale. The company finally closed its doors in 1979. That said, you can still find Alt Heidelberg alongside many other brews on tap at @7seasbrewing - keeping the tradition alive!
Rev. Jokatsu Yukawa, pastor of the Tacoma Hongwanji Buddhist Church, has donned protective gear and prepares to engage in kendo, a Japanese martial art. Rev. Yukawa is to the right in this sepia 1930's photograph; his masked opponent is not identified. The pair are practicing at the site of the Japanese Language School on Tacoma Avenue South, which had opened in 1921. Rev. Yukawa spent five years as the temple's minister, from 1928-1933. During his tenure, a $40,000 fund drive was initiated which culminated in the construction of the present church and junior members were organized in active Young Buddhist Association groups. He was promoted to serve a larger congregation in California and was replaced by Rev. Sensho Sasaki.
Mrs. Jess Dannen of the American Legion Auxiliary, Rhodes post, pins a "Buddy Poppy" on Tacoma Mayor J.J. Kaufman at (Old) City Hall on May 23, 1939. Mayor Kaufman was the first to buy a poppy during Tacoma's Poppy Days. These paper poppies were made by disabled veterans in a Walla Walla hospital and sold to raise funds for veterans relief.
Please join Tacoma Historical Society next Monday at 11am for the only Memorial Day observance within the Tacoma city limits, at War Memorial Park. The event is free and everyone is welcome.
Four unidentified men gaze at a long line of railroad flat cars stacked with mahogany logs in May 1925. The log train was bound for the Buffelen Lumber & Mfg. Co. The logs had arrived at the Port of Tacoma on the "Wheatland Montana" and were a product of the Philippines. The arrival of the logs marked a transition to direct transactions between the overseas grower and a Tacoma manufacturer. Prior to this, mahogany used in fine furniture, cabinets and other uses was brought here already processed in board form.

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