Monday, April 15, 2013

Week 3 Reading Response



While reading Native Seattle by Thrush, it came to my attention that the development of the city of Seattle was greatly being discussed. Looking at the life and death of Kikisebloo (Seeathl’s daughter) in 1896 and how the city and people developed around her, leaving her in the past as a ‘dying breed’ so to say. “When the funeral finally took place on 6 June, thousands of Seattleites lined downtown streets to watch the procession make its way to a full requiem mass at Our Lady of Good Hope. . . Her grandson Joe Foster . . . was the sole Indian present” (page 87). This shows that by this time in Seattle's history, there was very little Indian influence left.

The Great Fire in 1889 by some was seen as destroying the city, but others saw it as accelerating the growth that was already under way in Seattle. The boiling pot of glue made quite the flame in the development of the Seattle expansion after the Railroad Jubilee in 1883. The Northern Pacific Railroad had a huge impact on the development of Seattle, and it could be in part to a circulating image of Seattle by Mr. Glover.
 
Image courtesy of the University of Washington: University Libraries- Digital Collection "Seattle map, 1878"


It is quite interesting to look at how Mr. Glover’s bird’s-eye panorama of Seattle in the Spring of 1878 had such a large impact on how people viewed the city of Seattle. “. . . Panoramic city views from the nineteenth century usually bore little resemblance to the actual places they marketed, Instead . . . they ‘depart from reality so as to emphasize and exaggerate order, progress, prospects for future unlimited growth, and other themes dear to the hearts of urban boosters’” (page 67). I thought this was great because we had just been discussing this concept in class about how it is hard to judge a city off these “maps” because they are not exact and usually designed for prospector purposes rather than to be an actual map.


I found a somewhat reoccurring theme while reading in Spokane & the Inland Empire by Stratton. It seems that the essays are all describing development and growth of cities and the people who live in them, in the Spokane/Inland Empire area. The essays discussed wheat production and how the capabilities weren’t fully understood until about the mid 1860’s, or how labor development in the Spokane area was much different than that of other areas in the West while still experiencing the hardships caused by the market crash, etc., or how woman suffrage in the Pacific North West was beginning to gain voice in the 1860’s—especially through the voice of Abigail Scott Duniway.


Chapters 5 and 6 of Nearby History by Kyvig and Marty deal with unpublished and oral documents and the benefits found by using this type of document in historical research. They do suggest it is important to use published documents but also to remember to look for these unpublished documents in the archives and manuscript collections. Also mentioned are the difficulties with actually conducting oral interviews through video recording and the problems associated with oral documents. But as a graduate student and having a local archives building, it may be somewhat easier to use than if we were elsewhere.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Week 2 Reading Response



While working on this week’s reading assignment, a few things really stood out to me because of their relevance to us as students in this field.

On page 50 of Nearby History by Kyvig and Marty, the concept of selecting historical traces is really put into perspective. “Selecting historical traces for their authenticity, reliability, accuracy, credibility, and usefulness in relation to the topic under consideration is the most important task one faces after choosing a topic for research.” This is something I think is very relevant to where we all are at in our lives. We are students, we are learners, we are researchers. I think this is important to take note of because we can often get caught up in the historical trace just because it is historical and excites us, when we need to be focusing on what about that historical item makes it important to the task at hand- our research.

The book Native Seattle by Thrush is very intriguing to me. I was raised on the Kitsap Peninsula, across the Puget Sound from Seattle. This book is in part a refresher to me because we were taught much of the local history through grade school. One concept that seems to be repeated throughout the local history is the idea of the drastic life changes that occurred as European settlers moved into the coastal areas local to us. “Both peoples had their ‘world views’ enlarged by this encounter—each borrowed diet and dress, tools, techniques, and terminology from the other” (page 20). This reminds me of the name of the town I was raised in—Olalla, which means “place of many berries” from the native Chinook word “olallie.”



Seattle Ghost Signs--Pioneer Square: "Washington State Ferries". Courtesy of "Seattle Ghost Signs" on Facebook.com

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Testing

This is a test to see if I am understanding this program.