Historical Records Of Washington State: Records And

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Historical Records of Washington State:Records and Papers held at RepositoriesCOMPILED FOR THE BOARD BY THE STAFF OF THE WASHINGTONSTATE HISTORICAL RECORDS AND ARCHIVES PROJECT1981THE WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL RECORDS ADVISORY BOARDRICHARD C. BERNER, SeattleALBERT H. CULVERWELL, SpokaneEARL T. GLAUERT, EllensburgHOWARD LOVERING, SeattleSIDNEY F. McALPIN, Olympia ChairmanJAMES D. MOORE, Mount VernonNANCY B. PRYOR, OlympiaJAY W. REA, CheneyJAMES SCOTT, BellinghamTHE WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL RECORDS AND ARCHIVESPROJECT STAFFProject Administrator and Supervisory Editor:JOHN F. BURNSEditors:TIMOTHY E. ECKERT, LAWRENCE R. STARKAssistant Editors:LYNN ELLEN STARK, B. TOYLYN COLLIER, KENNETH MUNSELL, KRISTIN RAVETZComputer Systems Coordinator:DAVID W. HASTINGSData Entry Coordinator:KATHLEEN M. WILCOXKeyboard Operators:DANA BERGLUND, LINDA SPROULL, CINDY GIBSONRegional Supervisors:TIMOTHY E. ECKERT, RICHARD S. HOBBS, DAVID W. HASTINGS,LAWRENCE R. STARKSurvey Team Leaders and Field Workers:ERIC ANDERSON, JAMES M. BAILEY, MICHAEL BETZ, GAIL BROWN, SCOTTCLABAUGH, B. TOYLYN COLLIER, MICHAEL DOLE, CYNTHIA FLATLEY, STEVE GOBAT,MARY GRADY, NANCY GREEN, LYNN HARRISON, CRAIG HOLSTINE, ANN K. HOYT,ELIZABETH JAHNKE, GARY KARNOFSKI, KAY LANDOLT, JANICE LARSON, WAYNELAWSON, BARBARA LYNCH, VIRGINIA MILLER, STEPHANIE OGLE, BEVRAPATTERSON, SARA PATTON, LEE PENDERGRASS, CHARISSE PETERS, GREGORYRANCE, KRISTIN RAVETZ, JULIE REUWSAAT, KATHLEEN RILEY, MICHAEL SULLIVAN,VANNETTA UPSHAW-CASH, KATHLEEN WAUGH, ALFRED WILLIS,PAUL WHEELWRIGHTSecretary:KATHLEEN M. WILCOX

PREFACEIn 1976 the first Washington State Historical Records Advisory Board was appointed by the governor at the request of the National HistoricalPublications and Records Commission, known in archival circles as the NHPRC. The Board's charge was to begin a program statewide thatwould improve access to archives and manuscripts material for researchers, and to generally suggest remedies to improve the condition ofhistorical records-keeping in Washington State.Responding to this assignment the Board devised a plan for the first comprehensive historical records survey in any state since the end of theoriginal historical records survey of the Depression Era.Understanding that a thorough knowledge of what historical records existed in the state was a precondition to addressing other problems, theBoard decided to put a premium on such identification. The staff of the Washington State Historical Records and Archives Project wasfortunate to be entrusted by the Board in 1977 to launch such a survey process and to publish the results. This was done with the substantialsupport of grant funds provided by the NHPRC.I order to involve concerned citizens with the project, the first step taken was to hold a series of workshops across the state to provide basiceducation on archival and records management techniques to public officials and private records custodians. The individuals attending theworkshops were then able to assist the survey workers in completing their inventories. Through the balance of 1977 and 1978 staff surveyorsand countless contributors from the agencies and organizations being surveyed labored mightily to uncover historical records materials andorganize them sufficiently to compile listings. In their work they braved the hazards of dirt, rodents, unstable structures and extremes of coldand heat. Their efforts were magnificent. Over 1,500 institutions were contacted, and survey data compiled on over 25,000 record groups,collections and series of records and papers. The field workers' listings were then edited and indexed by editorial staff, and processed using theSPINDEX III system of computer programs developed by the National Archives. Utilizing this system will also allow Washington State datato be automatically incorporated into the national data base of historical records currently under development by the NHPRC, an ancillarybenefit that may have tremendous impact on the availability of archives and manuscripts for research in the years ahead.About one quarter of the data assembled appears in this volume, over 6,400 descriptions of collections in over 250 large and small repositoriesin the state. Three other volumes contain the remainder of the data. One is a hardcopy publication that describes records held in theWashington State Archives and its system of regional depositories. Two further guides will be produced in Computer Output Microfiche(COM), one to public records held by agencies such as courthouses, city halls, and special districts in the state, and the other describinghistorical records and papers held by private organizations and individuals. Collectively they will constitute the most comprehensive collectionof data on historical records in one state anywhere in the nation. Our hope is that these publications will promote access to primary sourcematerial essential to the study of the history of the state and its localities and regions. We believe that advantage will also accrue to thoseinvolved with contemporary problems. Lawyers and public officers involved in issues of the day will gain better knowledge of a body ofresources that can assist them in their work. By having this data available, countless dollars in terms of research hours will be saved. That isour purpose, to enhance access to historical materials, both for scholars and for contemporary researchers, in order that their task may be madeeasier and that the citizens of the state, and ultimately the nation, might benefit.The staff of the records project could not have begun to complete this work without the aid of hundreds of organizations and individualsthroughout the state. The sage advice and support of past and present members of the advisory board was critical to the project's success. Tothe chairman, Sidney McAlpin, and members Richard Berner, Al Culverwell, Earl Glauert, Bruce Harding, Phil Lothyan, Howard Lovering,Jim Moore, Nancy Pryor, Jay Rea, George Scott, Jim Scott, Bruce LeRoy, Nat Washington, and Karyl Winn go many thanks. Variousinstitutions throughout the state generously provided facilities from which the project could operate. Central Washington University graciouslyagreed to allocate space for headquarters activities. Field offices and other services were provided by the State Archives, University ofWashington, Washington State University, Eastern Washington University, Western Washington University, Whitman College, Everett andSkagit Valley Community Colleges, the state departments of General Administration, Social and Health Services and Transportation, theEastern Washington State Historical Society, the Benton-Franklin Governmental Conference, the Chelan County Government, and KCPQ-TV.Individuals who offered key assistance included Georgia Allison, Linda Stosalovich, Janet Brown, Ladd Allison, Terry Abraham, variousmembers of the Du Pont Historical Society, Sandi Diebold, Sister Rita Bergamini, Gary Lundell, Nigel Adams, Edward Harrington, KentRichards, Sally Maddocks, the students in Bill Scofield's class at Yakima Valley College, and State Archives staff members Dave Owens,"Doc" Ellenwood, Mike Saunders, and Pat Hopkins. So many others also helped that space does not allow individual mention. Thecontributions of officials in the thirty-nine county government auditor's, clerk's and other offices, in over two hundred municipal governments,and in the various local government associations, were essential to our inventory of public records. Similarly, the assistance of librarians,curators and organization leaders was critical to our completion of the survey of private sector materials. To those anonymous contributors, aswell as the organizations and persons listed above, goes enormous gratitude on our part.Finally, I must cite the records project staff for their outstanding performance. Most selflessly devoted many overtime hours for which theywere not compensated, under working conditions that sometimes approached the impossible. Through this they bore the mental and physicalstresses with great perseverance and excellent humor. No finer group of individuals has ever worked together. To them goes my personal deepand heartfelt thanks. What success this project has had, and what benefits the publications will bring, is due principally to their extraordinaryefforts.JOHN F. BURNSProject Administrator and Supervisory

USER’S INTRODUCTIONThis guide presents a reasonably comprehensive listing of archival holdings found throughout the State of Washington. Not included arematerials held at the State Archives and its system of regional depositories, which are listed in a companion volume. Also excluded are a greatmany small and single-item collections and record groups held at three larger repositories, the libraries of the University of Washington,Washington State University, and the Washington State Historical Society. Omissions have been made only at these three institutions.Researchers are advised that these libraries have internal guides and finding aids which can supplement the listings in this guide.The guide is organized in alphabetical order based on city names, with individual institutions listed alphabetically within each city. Holdings ofinstitutions appear as alphabetical lists of the manuscript collections and record groups located at each respective institution. Some exceptionsto alphabetical order appear, principally where a university archives and a manuscripts repository are combined. In these cases the guidegenerally employs an alphabetical listing of holdings of each component.Users will note a system of hierarchic numbers which identify each entry and also govern arrangement of the guide. These numbers are basedon a system developed by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission for the purpose of arranging and indexing guides. Useof these numbers is restricted to guides and the numbers are not employed by the holders of the actual records to identify materials in theircustody.Examination of the alphabetical order of collections will disclose that this sequence is obscured by the use of normal word order in titles, asopposed to the inverted form often seen in bibliographic citations. Users will also note that traditional, library-oriented title rules have not beenused, as such prove unfeasible in a compilation such as this. Consequently, titles follow pragmatic practices which allow a restructuring oftitles, the creation of titles in cases where none exist, and the general intent of presenting information rather than form.General rules for titles are these:1) Titles should be similar to those used by repositories.2) Titles should show the provenance of records, that is, the agency which created or collected the records.3) If the repository itself appears to be the only identifiable agent of provenance, the "institution-as-collector" title is used.4) In cases where no title other than a descriptive phrase is available, it is generally presented in upper case letters.The presentation of information about individual collections also departs from the traditional form of annotated bibliography. Instead, thisguide employs a computer-aided feature which places recurrent "headers" in positions which identify each component of an entry. Some data ispresented without these headers, especially birth and death dates, which simply appear in the upper right-hand position of an entry, identifiableas vital dates by the abbreviations "b." and "d." Occasional variant titles also appear without the computer-generated header, positioned inindentation below the main title.Certain abbreviations are employed throughout the guide. The most commonly used are "c.f." and "l.f.," two units of measurement usedextensively by archivists to express quantity, either as cubic feet or linear feet of shelf space. This guide occasionally uses the convention ofexpressing very small quantities as "0.1 c.f." In other instances, small quantities have been expressed in item count, if such information wasavailable to the editors of the guide.Users should also be aware that certain conventions have been used for the data identified by the header “finding aids." Nomenclature in thisarea of archival practices is chaotic, with a wide variety of names used to identify similar types of descriptive devices. Often the editors of thisguide have used the general term “inventory," even if the finding aid in question might be more properly called by some other name. Usersshould be aware that the varied terms for the finding aids all essentially mean a detailed list, usually kept typewritten pages, but occasionally oncards. Those doing research at archival institutions should expect to encounter instances in which the terms used for finding aids may differfrom those presented in thisguide.

26800000250400003Aberdeen Public LibraryAnacortes Museum, Autograph Books CollectionAberdeen Public LibraryAnacortes Museum of History and Art1880's -1940'sDate:Volume: 10 c.f.1885-1898Date:Volume: 3 volumesPhotographs, draft histories, diaries, maps, and othermaterials, chiefly the collection of a disbanded localhistorical society.Personal autograph books.250400004Anacortes Museum, Bills and Receipts Collection26800001Anacortes Museum of History and ArtHISTORICAL RECORDS1870's -1945Date:Volume: 0.1 c.f.Aberdeen Public Library1880's -1940'sDate:Volume: 10 c.f.Includes accounts of land purchases by W.G. Beardfrom the 1870's to 1883, and other items.Maps, diaries, a manuscript on the Olympic Peninsulaby Lucille Cleland, photographs by George Wolfe, anearly businessman, historical research materials of AnnCotton, various draft histories of Grays Harbor County,and other documents.2504000052504000001872-1940Date:Volume: 0.3 c.f.Anacortes Museum, Documents CollectionsAnacortes Museum of History and ArtAnacortes Museum of History and ArtAnacortes Museum of History and ArtDeeds, marriage licenses, leases, legal complaints, andstock certificates.1860's Date:Volume: 11 c.f.250400006Materials from Anacortes, Fidalgo Island, WhidbeyIsland, Guemes Island, and other islands along the ferryroute. Photographs, business records, miscellaneouspersonal papers, scrapbooks, and maps, all chieflyconcerned with Anacortes, Washington, and vicinity.Anacortes Museum, Letters CollectionAnacortes Museum of History and Art1853-1942Date:Volume: 0.1 c.f.A letter (1892) from the Oregon ImprovementCompany to the Anacortes City Clerk regarding a waterfranchise, a letter (1895) to Douglass Allmond, andvarious speeches and poems.250400001Anacortes Chamber of Commerce, RecordsAnacortes Museum of History and Art1890-1892Date:Volume: 1 volume250400007Anacortes Museum, Map CollectionMinute book.Anacortes Museum of History and Art1870Date:Volume: 1 c.f.250400002City of Anacortes, RecordsWashington Territory west of the Cascade Mountains(1870), plat of Anacortes (1890), Sedro (1891), FidalgoCity (now Dewey Beach) (1890's), and other maps.Anacortes Museum of History and Art1890's -1920 (approx.)Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.City council resolutions (1907), ordinances (1915-16),and election-related records from the 1890's, along witha 1905 voter register.1

250400008250400013Anacortes Museum, Photograph CollectionD. Matson, PapersAnacortes Museum of History and ArtAnacortes Museum of History and Art1860's Date:Volume: 3 c.f.1890's Date:Volume: 1 volumeThe collection depicts Skagit County and Anacorteshistory, focusing on buildings and economic and socialactivities, along with two albums on the travels of A.D.Malet, a Victoria, British Columbia, businessman.Log of patients served by Matson (1892) while aphysician at Lincoln, Nebraska, along with Matson'sautobiography and Civil War recollections, apparentlycomposed in the late 1890's, while practicing medicineat Bellingham, Washington.250400009250400014Anacortes Museum, Registers, Bankbooks, andLedgers CollectionMrs. M. Watkinson, PapersAnacortes Museum of History and ArtAnacortes Museum of History and Art1892-1967Date:Volume: 1 c.f.1907Date:Volume: 1 volumeBankbook from Anacortes First National Bank (1890's),record book of Fern Hill Cemetery listing burials (189294 and 1967) and lots sold (1892-1966), and T.B.Childs' accounts (1901-11).Diary of an Englishwoman's trip to America; entitledBritish Baker Diary.250600000Anacortes Public Library250400010Anacortes Public LibraryAnacortes Museum, Scrapbook Collection1850's -1940'sDate:Volume: 1 c.f.Anacortes Museum of History and Art1880-1962Date:Volume: 28 volumesLibrary board records and a photograph collectionassembled by the Skagit County Oral History Project.Chiefly clippings; subjects include: San Juan Islands,Anacortes history, Indians (ca. 1900), 7 volumes ofstate and local history compiled by Alice Cahail, aWCTU scrapbook on the evils of alcohol; scrapbook ofthe Anacortes Chamber of Commerce (1962), andAnacortes Parent-Teacher Association scrapbooks(1947-58).250600001Anacortes Library, RecordsAnacortes Public Library1909-1941Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Records include library board minute books (1909-41),an accounting ledger (1909-18), and an accessions book(1911-12). Records include library board minute books(1909-41), an accounting ledger (1909-18), and anaccessions book (1911-12).250400011Anacortes Public Schools, RecordsAnacortes Museum of History and Art1892-1903Date:Volume: 0.1 c.f.250600002Report cards, graduation certificates, enrollment lists,and an honor roll, all associated with elementaryschools at Anacortes, Washington.Skagit County Oral History Project, PhotographCollectionAnacortes Public Library2504000121850's -1940'sDate:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Farmer Four Telephone Company, RecordsApproximately 250 negatives detailing Skagit Countyhistory, collected to supplement Skagit County OralHistory Project interviews.Anacortes Museum of History and Art1908-1919Date:Volume: 1 volumeCorporate minutes of a small telephone company,apparently located in Skagit County, Washington.2

270400000270400004Anderson Island Historical SocietyAnderson Island Precinct, RecordsAnderson Island Historical SocietyAnderson Island Historical Society1855Date:Volume: 9.2 c.f. plus 5 volumes1916-1935Date:Volume: 5 volumesAnderson Island history; will also accept materialsconcerning the Puget Sound area. Area voter registers,community organization records, a general photographcollection, and materials concerning the evacuation ofadjacent McNeil Island for use as a federal prison.Poll books.270400005Washington Territory, RecordsAnderson Island Historical Society2704000011855Date:Volume: 1 itemAnderson Island Historical Society, McNeil IslandCollectionA proclamation calling for volunteers during the IndianWar of 1855-56, asking for eight companies andshowing the levy from each county.Anderson Island Historical Society1936Date:Volume: 0.2 c.f.340400000U.S. District Court orders for the condemnation ofprivate lands on McNeil Island for use by the McNeilIsland Federal Penitentiary including abstracts-of-title,property descriptions, and a list of land owners.Arlington Public LibraryArlington Public Library1914-1950Date:Volume: 2 c.f.270400002Records of the Stillaguamish Pioneer Association,along with local history reference materials.Anderson Island Historical Society, HistoryCollectionAnderson Island Historical Society3404000011905Date:Volume: 7 c.f.Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Association, RecordsArlington Public LibraryPhotographs, scrapbooks, financial records, andephemera detailing Anderson Island history, ferries, andfarming. The collection also includes the logbook(1938-39) of the tugboat Pioneer, minutes of UtopianSocial Club (1908), and financial records of theAnderson Island Social Club (1926-69).1914-1950Date:Volume: 6 volumes plus 1 c.f.270400003Newspaper clipping scrapbooks on Arlington historycompiled by local historian and millowner, Will Verd,along with photographs, correspondence, a scrapbookon the Arlington Volunteer Fire Department (1906-36),and pioneer association minutes (1916-50).Anderson Island Historical Society, PhotographCollection355200000Anderson Island Historical SocietyMount Rainier National Park1890's -1977Date:Volume: 2 c.f.Mount Rainier National Park1897Date:Volume: 110 c.f.Photographs (some glass plates), postcards, andstereopticon pictures of early Tacoma (buildings, streetscenes, and railroad yards), Anderson Island (pioneers,buildings, homes, schools, ferries, and family groups),and Alaska.Administration Records of the park administrationwhich have historical reference value, along with maps,photographs, diaries of park employees, collected draftwritings about the park, and other similar materials, allconcerning Mount Rainier National Park.3

355200001355200006E.A. Kitchen, PapersMount Rainier National Park, RecordsMount Rainier National ParkMount Rainier National Park1934-1936Date:Volume: 6 c.f.1905-1977Date:Volume: 72 c.f.Diaries of Kitchen, a naturalist for the Wildlife Divisionof the United States Department of the Interior,stationed at Mount Rainier National Park, recordingeach day's events and his observations of birds andwildlife.Correspondence, reports, plans, maps, and other recordsof the park administration, concerning such subjects asaccidents, park boundaries, mines within the park,concessions, development plans, exhibitions andinterpretation, fires, general information, geographicnames, historical and archaeological sites, legislativehistory, memorials and dedications, mining history,monthly and annual reports, natural history, summitclimbs, visitor activity, and weather reports.355200002James Longmire Family, PapersMount Rainier National Park3552000071850's -1950'sDate:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Mount Rainier National Park, UnpublishedManuscript CollectionMining certificates, a narrative biography of JamesLongmire, and other accounts of this pioneerWashington family, which established a resort, calledLongmire, within the present area of Mount RainierNational Park.Mount Rainier National Park1950's Date:Volume: 4 c.f.Research reports, theses, and dissertations on variousnatural history subjects indigenous to the park, and topark development and history.355200003F.E. Mathes, PapersMount Rainier National Park3552000081896-1922Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Mount Rainier Protestant Church Committee,RecordsGeological accounts of Mt. Rainier and its glaciers,including a 1896 U.S. Geological Survey map of Mt.Rainier, a 1906 park map, and a 1915 topographicalmap of the mountain.Mount Rainier National Park1943-1966Date:Volume: 1 volumeA notebook of records of the church, showing minutes,members' names and addresses, financial records, andcorrespondence.355200004Mount Rainier National Park, Map CollectionMount Rainier National Park3552000091910's Date:Volume: 10 c.f.PUBLICITY AND HISTORY PAMPHLETS(COLLECTION)Maps compiled by the Army Corps of Engineers, theU.S. Geological Survey, and park personnel, depictingthe park and specific areas within it.Mount Rainier National Park355200005Pamphlets and brochures prepared for publicinformation, containing notes on natural history, parkhistory, local history, local Indians, and parkinformation1897Date:Volume: 15 cfMount Rainier National Park, PhotographCollectionMount Rainier National Park1894Date:Volume: 20 c.f.General photograph collection about the park andrelated activities.4

355200010360500001Eugene Ricksecker, PapersAsotin County Historical Society, Map CollectionMount Rainier National ParkAsotin County Historical Society Museum1903-1910Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.1911-1920Date:Volume: 1 c.f.Letters, contracts, maps, and reports concerningRicksecker's survey of Mount Rainier National Park(1903-13), the first for road development.Maps of Asotin County; two maps show location ofschools throughout the county.360500002355200011SURVEY NOTES (COLLECTION)Asotin County Historical Society, PhotographCollectionMount Rainier National ParkAsotin County Historical Society Museum1904-1938Date:Volume: 3 volumes plus 1 c.f.1880Date:Volume: 3 c.f.Three volumes of land survey notes detailing parkboundaries and topographical features; also surveys ofroads and trails (1904-38).A photograph collection of general thematic content,with emphasis on the area of Asotin and Clarkston,Washington, and Lewiston, Idaho.355200012360500003O.A. Tomlinson, PapersJoe Mackey, Photograph CollectionMount Rainier National ParkAsotin County Historical Society Museum1929-1941Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.1899-1900Date:Volume: 1 volumeCorrespondence and reports of Tomlinson,superintendent of Mount Rainier National Park, relativeto administration, policy, and special projects.Album of photographs related to Spanish-American warin the Philippines.375400000355200013Mukleshoot Tribal CouncilJohn Zug, PapersMukleshoot Tribal CouncilMount Rainier National Park1850's Date:Volume:1903-1913Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Various historical materials, many in copy, pertainingto tribal people.Road survey reports (1903-05), narrative reports onroad construction progress (1906), cost reports (1911),cost estimates (1913), miscellaneous reports andcorrespondence (1907-13), and survey field books(1908-09), all concerning park road construction.375400001Mukleshoot Indian Tribe, Census RollsMukleshoot Tribal Council3605000001860's -1921Date:Volume:Asotin County Historical Society MuseumTribal rolls and school census records of theMukleshoot.Asotin County Historical Society MuseumDate:Volume:1880Principally photographs and maps of Asotin County,Washington.5

375400002378800003Mukleshoot Indian Tribe, Tribal HistoryCollectionBusiness and Professional Women's Club,ScrapbookMukleshoot Tribal CouncilWhite River Valley Historical Society Museum1850's Date:Volume: 2 c.f.1945-1971Date:Volume: 2 c.f.Copies of various documents relating to Mukleshoottribal history; also various histories, articles, andclippings, in addition to oral history tapes of tribalelders.Photos, correspondence, reports, and other materials ofan Auburn, Washington, women's civic group.378800004George Meade, Papers375400003White River Valley Historical Society MuseumMukleshoot Tribal Council, Records1914-1920Date:Volume: 1 c.f.Mukleshoot Tribal Council1977Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Records of meetings of this tribal council.Ledgers, legal documents and financial records andcourt records relative to cases heard by Meade as aJustice of the Peace at Auburn, Washington.378800000378800005White River Valley Historical Society MuseumHelen Gildersleeve Reynolds, PapersWhite River Valley Historical Society MuseumWhite River Valley Historical Society Museum1847-1970'sDate:Volume:1897-1970Date:Volume: 0.3 c.f.Materials pertaining to the White River Valley.Historical reference files, and assembled collections ofphotographs, scrapbooks, family histories, businessrecords, and public records; along with records of threevolunteer associations, with all materials predominantlyfrom the towns of Auburn and Kent.Correspondence and an unpublished manuscript entitledOld Tom's Cane, concerning the story of Tom King,pioneer settler and witness to the White River Massacreof 1855.378800006White River Valley Historical Society, Businessand Public Records Collection378800001Auburn Chamber of Commerce, RecordsWhite River Valley Historical Society MuseumWhite River Valley Historical Society Museum1883-1925Date:Volume: 30 volumes1908-1971Date:Volume: 2 c.f.Assembled collection of records from schools,municipal governments, farmers, storekeepers and adoctor, all apparently from Auburn and Kent.Correspondence, photos, newsclippings, reports,constitution, blue prints and other materials relative tothe Chamber's activities, which range from businesspromotion to beautification.378800002Auburn Volunteer Fire Department, RecordsWhite River Valley Historical Society Museum1925-1969Date:Volume: 23 volumesLog books, minutes, and house dues of the department.6

378800007442400000White River Valley Historical Society Museum,Family Histories CollectionBattle Ground Branch - Fort Vancouver RegionalLibraryWhite River Valley Historical Society MuseumBattle Ground Branch - Fort Vancouver RegionalLibrary1880's -1960'sDate:Volume: 1.2 c.f.1950's Date:Volume: 0.5 c.f.Principally drafts of family histories, along withassorted correspondence, photos, clippings, and legaldocuments relative to the early settlers in the WhiteRiver Valley, Washington. Families representedinclude: Alvord, Ballard, Berlin, Bissell, Blomeen,Cavanaugh, Fawcett, French, Gove, Ham, Hart,Hollingsworth, Hoye, King, Leadman, McKean,Meeker, Moe, Neeley, Reynolds, Russell, Sich,Strolicker, Throop, Traeger, and Van Winkle.Materials pertaining to Battle Ground and ClarkCounty. Historical reference file of reports, clippingsand ephemera pertaining to Battle Ground history.442400001Battle Ground Branch Library, HistoricalReference Collection378800008Battle Ground Branch - Fort Vancouver RegionalLibraryWhite River Valley Historical Society Museum,Historical Reference File1950'sDate:Volume: 0.5 c.f.White River Valley Historical Society MuseumEphemera, clippings, scrapbooks, draft histories andreports relative to Battle Ground history; also includessome materials from the Battle Ground CommunityStudy, a project of the Office of CommunityDevelopment of the University of Washington.1847-1970'sDate:Volume: 2 c.f.Primarily pamphlets and ephemera, with somecorrespondence, land title documents, draft writings,photographs, organizational minutes, and legal papers,all generally relative to Auburn, Kent, and the WhiteRiver Valley.561000000Bellevue Community CollegeBellevue Community College3788000091967Date:Volume: 1 c.f.White River Valley Historical Society Museum,Photograph CollectionWhite River Valley Historical Society MuseumCommunity Relations Office College maintains ascrapbook as a historical reference tool.1860's Date:Volume: 4 c.f.561000001Bellevue Community College, ScrapbooksA general collection of photographs, principally fromthe area of Auburn, Kent and southern King County.Bellevue Community College3788000101967Date:Volume: 1 c.

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