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Snapshots: Before the Air Force...

Snapshots: Before the Air Force…

Share ….there was the Army Air Service. The United States Army Air Service was the forerunner of the Air Force and established in May, 1918 after the United States entered World War I. The first U.S. aviation squadron to reach France was the 1st Aero Squadron, an observation unit, which arrived in France in September, […]

Cementiri de l'Est, Barcelona

Snapshots: The Spanish Mason

Share  Check out all the relief carvings behind the statue (ladder, shovel, compass, level, etc.). If this isn’t an example of a Mason, then I don’t know what is.

Lakeview Cemetery

Snapshots: The mailman

Share    Martin W. Hubbard was the first postmaster of Hubbard from 1850 – 1887.  Hubbard started his work career as a logger before becoming the postmaster. Local mail was distributed from his home and any mail heading to Seattle, was rowed across Lake Washington. Interestingly enough, research has shown that most loggers at that […]

Illegible headstones? There's an app for that

Illegible headstones? There’s an app for that

Share Popular consensus seems to be that cell phones are far too prevalent in daily life. Tweeting, texting, music, surfing, games – the list is endless. Some might even say phones have become more toy than tool. Aside from basic functions and some photo capabilities, it’s certainly not much help in old graveyards, right? Well, […]

William T. Scott, coal miner

Newcastle Coal Miners’ Cemetery, Part II

Share  Part II: Stories, Stones, and Symbols   Note: This article is the second half of Newcastle Coal Miner’s Cemetery.   Newcastle Cemetery headstones bluntly attest to the difficult mining life and temporary respite offered by various brotherhood communities. Thanks to the ring of trees protecting the site, most of the carvings have escaped the inevitable Pacific Northwest erosion.  William […]

Snapshots: Ada's piano

Snapshots: Ada’s piano

Share Little is known about this marker raised… “…In sweet memory of Ada, beloved wife of W. H. Plachy. July 10, 1869 – July 22, 1895” Ada was 26 years old when she died. Her husband was a civil engineer and the first water pipeline surveyor for the Seattle area. Note: the piano shown is […]

Photo courtesy Bob Cerelli

Newcastle Coal Miners’ Cemetery

Share Part I: The Hidden History The next time you fly into Seattle at night, look east beyond the twinkling street lamps and Interstate 405’s golden traffic ribbon. Smack in the middle of evening suburbia is a vast, ragged expanse of pitch black. There are no lights here and if local legislators keep getting their […]

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