Women's History Month
home
Why we
celebrate
Women in King County
history
Noteworthy Washington
women
Women
who
changed America
Women's history
quiz
Executive's
Proclamation
Where
you can
learn more
|
|
Women
in King County history
From the earliest pioneer
days to the modern age, women have played a
significant role in King County history. Here is a
sampling of some of the women who made history
happen.
All
photos and text are from Woman's Place: A
Guide to Seattle and King County History, by
Mildred Tanner Andrews, published in 1994 with
support from the
King County Landmarks and Heritage Commission.
For more information on Woman's Place
or the people and places included in that book,
visit your local library or contact the King County
Historic Preservation Program at
206-296-8689.
Daughters of US
War Veterans drill team, named for officers
from Fort Lawton who lost their lives in the
Philippines in the Spanish-American War. 1930s.
(Courtesy of Everett Public
Library)
|
|
Mayor Bertha
Knight Landes breaks ground for the Civic
Auditorium, now the Seattle Center Opera House
(Courtesy of Special Collections Div. UW, Neg.
#343)
|
|
Women of Japanese
descent had clubs and clubrooms at the downtown
YWCA. While their mother take classes or
socialize, these girls in supervised day-care
are at play on the roof. (Washington State
Historical Society, Photo by Asahel Curtis, Neg
# 29753)
|
In 1915, Alice
Seaton took over Rural Route I in Bothell. She
also cared for her husband, four children, and
two horses. (UW Libraries, Washington
Women's Heritage Project
records).
|
|
During World War
II, Seattle hospitals employed African American
nurses who formed the Mary Mahony Club. (Photo
courtesy of Esther Hall Mumford)
|
|
|
» More King County women in
history
» Next
page
|