Washington's Centennial Farms


Book Description

As part of the state's Centennial Celebration in 1989, the Washington State Department of Agriculture sponsored a program recognizing farms that had been in the same family for 100 years of more as centennial farms ... this brochure features three of the hundreds of centennial farms still farming today.




Addendum to Washington's Centennial Farms


Book Description

The Centennial Farm Recognition Program was a one-time effort conducted by the Washington State Department of Agriculture as a part of the state's Centennial celebration. This addendum includes profiles of 21 farms, identified in 1989, that met the criteria but did not meet the Washington Centennial Farm project deadline. Since the applications were received late, the Agency requested a revised application and would include the information in the Project's permanent records, although not in the Centennial Farm Book. With the 2014 project to reconnect with the original centennial farms, these additional farms were included as a separate addendum. The addendum farm information is current to 1989.










Sedro-Woolley, Washington


Book Description

From the inauspicious beginnings in 1884 of a town named Bug, the two communities of Sedro and Woolley grew together, consolidated in 1898 by a lifeline of three railways: the Seattle & Northern, Seattle & International, and Fairhaven & Southern. Nestled in the beautiful Skagit Valley, Sedro-Woolley was carved out of the rich forest that, along with the discovery of a coal vein north of the city, cemented the area's prosperity and attracted the first hardy frontier residents. Using more than 200 vintage photographs, this volume depicts the early settlers, businesses, homes, and churches of Sedro-Woolley. Other historic images depict changes in local transportation, from the only early means of travel available-the canoe-to the eventual trains that arrived three times a day and fostered commerce and community. Many of the images collected here were taken by the noted photographer Darius Kinsey and his wife Tabitha, who were residents of Sedro-Woolley at the turn of the century.




Centennial Farm


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The Waitsburg Family


Book Description

You always knew in a small town everyone was related to everyone else. The connections make the basis of The Waitsburg Family. Who was who? Who did they marry? Maybe the answer is here. The development of a small town seen through the individual connections of its first fifty years. The forceful removal of the Native American population by the American government of 1858 left a territory open for homesteading. The new settlers, looking for opportunity or escape from the strife of the American Civil War brought their dreams, possessions and their large families connected to one another.




Blue Mountain Heritage


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The Key Peninsula


Book Description

The Key Peninsula is a scenic finger of land that stretches south between Case and Carr Inlets in Washington State. Few people lived there before 1850, although Native Americans fished and hunted from temporary villages. Several communities, each with a unique history, took root near the various bays and inlets of the peninsula, and by the 1890s, many areas bustled with schools, post offices, mills, churches, and stores. Logging, orchards, and chicken farms supported these early pioneers. Cut off from the mainland, the waters of Puget Sound provided transportation. The famous Mosquito Fleet carried products such as fruit, seafood, chickens, eggs, and butter to Olympia, Tacoma, and Seattle until the advent of the ferries and, later, the bridges. Many of today's "oldtimers" are just two or three generations distant from the original hardy settlers, but the area's residents are proud of the heritage of this unique place they call home.




Old Ties, New Attachments


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