HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018 Issue 1 - I'm Going Through, Black Miners Arrive in King CountyBlack & White
currently on exhibit
at RHM.
Board Report:
2018 goals and
schedule.
Collections
Report by Sarah
Samson, Curator
Museum Report
by Elizabeth P.
Stewart, Director.
A word about racial terms: Everyone ought to have the
prerogative to be identified by a term of their choosing, but in the
1890s African Americans were known in polite terms as “colored”
or “negro” (uncapitalized), or in more impolite terms. These
are not terms we use today, but in quotes I have preserved the
original language. In the eighth paragraph I have reproduced a
hateful term used by the person in history, because I believe it is
important to understand the impact a word like that can have in
an emotionally charged context. I welcome your comments.
In 1888 the largest single increase of African Americans in
Washington territory came about when labor recruiter James
Shepperson was sent South by the Northwest Coal Co. to
bring mine laborers to the Roslyn mine. A mine strike called by
the Knights of Labor had shut down the mine, and the company
planned to restart it with African American strike breakers. Three
hundred Black men from Virginia, North Carolina, and Kentucky
were determined to escape the terrorism of the post-Civil War
Also In This Issue...
RENTON HISTORICALSOCIETY & MUSEUM
Spring
March 2018
Volume 49
Number 1
Continued on page 5
2 4 103
“I'M GOING THROUGH”
Black Miners Arrive in King County
QUARTERLY
by Elizabeth P. Stewart
2 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
BLACK & WHITE
When do you wear black? When do you wear white? From its beginning fashion was
always more complicated than simply putting clothing on our bodies to protect us from
the elements. Trends in black and white clothing, and their associated meanings, differ
between communities and throughout time. Join us to learn about three trendsetters in black
and white fashion: the church, Queen Victoria, and Coco Chanel. The black and white fashions
featured in the exhibit were worn by Rentonites from the 1870s all the way up to the 1960s. The
exhibit will also delve into how black and white photos color our view of history. Most of the
artifacts have never been displayed before; you do not want to miss this exhibit!
From
JANUARY
30
to
MAY
19
RENTON GETS ITS FIRST
LANDMARK
Thanks to a new Historic
Preservation ordinance
passed by the Renton
City Council in 2017,
the F. W. Woolworth
Building (now the
Cortona Building) at 3rd
and Williams became the
City’s first landmark. On
November 30, 2017 the
Landmarks Commission
approved landmark
status for the building,
with Museum Director
Elizabeth Stewart as a
special commissioner.
The ordinance creates
an agreement between
SHEILA WOOD MOTTERN
1941-2017
Sheila Wood Mottern
passed away in
November 2017. Sheila
was a longtime volunteer
and collection worker
for the Museum, whose
extensive research into
the Klondike Gold Rush
continues to benefit staff
and researchers today.
A descendant of Robert
Henderson Wood, Sheila
became so fascinated
with her grandfather’s
and great-uncles’ foray
into Alaskan gold
mining that she spent
years uncovering the
the City of Renton
and the King County
Landmarks Commission
for preservation services
that makes property-
owners eligible for
tax breaks and grant-
funding. Here’s hoping
this is the first of many!
minute details of every
Renton Gold Rusher’s
experiences. The result
was a comprehensive
collection of stories that
might otherwise have
been lost. We are indebted
to your work, Sheila.
SPRING QUARTERLY, 2017 | 3
MUSEUM REPORT
QUARTERLY
Spring 2018
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Director
“Whenever I think about the past it brings back so many
memories.`” – Comedian Steven Wright
The idea for our current fashion exhibit, Black & White,
was stimulated in part by staff conversations about
how we remember the past. The Museum holds over
18,000 historic photos, most of which are black and white,
and thus we have a tendency to remember the past as a gray
place. But the Victorians who had those photos taken saw
them with different eyes. They knew that Auntie’s shirtwaist
was bright yellow and that grandmother’s dress was a
tasteful pastel, and that’s what they saw in their minds’ eye.
Similarly, for people of a certain age, television and movies
were also black and white, yet we all knew instinctively that
Rob and Laura Petrie’s home was tastefully decorated in the
colors of the day, with avocado green or harvest gold kitchen
appliances, and maybe a pop of color in the orange swag
lamp or the abstract painting on the wall.
But as time passes, the past becomes a landscape of
history, not memory. The danger is that we become nostalgic,
we quaint-ify the past, and forget that it was populated by
people not that dissimilar to us.
With Black & White we call into question, in a fun
way, these assumptions about history. The exhibit brings out
the best monochromatic fashions from our collection, and uses
them to explore the meanings of color—or lack of color—
through history. Because all colors have cultural meanings,
whether it’s the purity and piety of white or the soberness and
style of black. The exhibit ends with an experiment that we
hope will challenge your impression of the past as a dull sepia-
toned place; you’ll have a chance to look at black and white
photos of three pieces of clothing from our collection and see
if you can guess their actual color. The answers are around the
corner, where we exhibit the real clothing.
The past was full of the same conflicts, passions,
and joys that we experience today, and my recent research
into the arrival of African American miners to King County
also underlines that. White miners dreaded losing their jobs
to African Americans from the South, and White company
owners manipulated those fears to their advantage. It can be
difficult to look at how our ancestors really behaved under
duress, but when we do, we recognize—sometimes much to
our chagrin—some of the same challenges that we see around
us today. It’s healthy to look at the past as a place full of color
and human emotion, because that’s how it really was.
by Elizabeth P. Stewart,
Museum Director
Several episodes of “The Dick
Van Dyke Show” were colorized
in 2017, based on color references
in dialogue and the memories of
cast members and producers.
RENTON HISTORICAL
QUARTERLY
Sarah Samson
Graphic Design & Layout
Karl Hurst
City of Renton Print &
Mail Services
RENTON HISTORICAL
SOCIETY BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
Betsy Prather, President
Laura Clawson, Treasurer
Antoin Johnson, Secretary
Lynne King, 2019
Colleen Lenahan, 2020
Pete Kalasountas, 2020
Jessica Kelly, 2020
Elizabeth Stewart, Board Liaison
MUSEUM STAFF
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Museum Director
Sarah Samson
Curator of Collections &
Exhibitions
Kim Owens
Public Engagement
Coordinator
Nezy Tewolde
Office Aide
RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
235 MILL AVENUE S
RENTON, WA 98057
P (425) 255-2330
F (425) 255-1570
HOURS:
Tuesday - Saturday
10:00am - 4:00pm
ADMISSION:
$5 (Adult)
$2 (Child)
Black & White color experiment:
Can you tell what color this is?
4 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
The Board of Trustees for the Renton Historical Society
has many exciting projects coming up for 2018, and we
are looking for a few more motivated volunteers to help us
make them happen! This year we’ll be holding a bi-annual
Board retreat, revising the Museum’s Strategic Plan, and
organizing our annual autumn fundraiser on Wednesday,
September 26.
If you’re interested in strategic planning or
fundraising, if you would like to represent the Museum
at community events, if you have a legal and/or human
resources background, the Board of Trustees is a great
way to volunteer for the Museum. Serving as a trustee is
a great way to gain leadership skills and see behind-the-
scenes of one of the best small museums in King County.
Board members serve three-year terms and the Board meets
on the last Tuesday of every month, 5:30–7:00 pm. For
more information, contact Elizabeth Stewart at estewart@
rentonwa.gov or 425-255-2330.
Board Secretary Antoin Johnson
with Museum Director Elizabeth
P. Stewart.
UPCOMING
EVENTS
BLACK & WHITE
CURATOR'S TALK
April 5
6:00-7:00 pm
How are national and
international fashion trends
expressed in Rentonites'
clothing? Join Curators Sarah
Samson and Kim Owens to
learn more about the pieces
that made it into the exhibit,
and those that didn't.
REVEALING WOMEN'S
HISTORY THROUGH
FASHION
April 28
11:00 am-12:00 pm
Join Michelle Marshman, History
Instructor at Green River College,
for a visual tour of women's 20th
century history as illustrated by
changing women's fashions. We'll
hear how political and social
change, times of economic boom
and bust, and changing ideas
about women's roles, inform the
clothing women wear.
LA CAUSA BY LIVING
VOICES
March 31
11:00 am-12:00 pm
In the late 1960s a new
movement changed the lives
of Latin American farm
workers who fought for civil
rights, battled racism and
indecent working conditions.
Experience this important
chapter of history through the
eyes of one young woman.
At the time of her death on January 6, Cecelia Major was
the oldest living Renton High School graduate (Class of
1930). As active in adult life as she was in high school,
Cecelia volunteered at the Renton U.S.O. during WWII and
was a 99-year member of St. Anthony’s. She was proud
of her King County pioneer status, her coal mining roots
through her mother, and her Irish heritage. Cecelia was a life
member of the Museum and a tireless volunteer for us, for
which we are very thankful.
CECELIA CAREY MAJOR
1912-2018
We came to know Jean in 2009 when her daughter Joni
approached us about the donation of a truly unusual piece
of history: the beauty supply cabinet from Jean’s Beauty
Salon at 231 Wells Ave S. But Renton women knew Jean
well. As the owner and operator of the salon for 55 years,
she ensured that Renton’s business, professional, and
political women always looked their very best. The neon
business sign and the cabinet—both now in our collection—
commemorate an extraordinary Renton businesswoman.
JEAN RUFFALO NEWELL
1929-2018
BOARD REPORT
SPRING QUARTERLY, 2018 | 5
South. When they boarded trains for Washington territory they
had no idea what they would encounter.
This was the first of similar waves of African American
men and their families who settled in King County mine camps
in the 1880s and 1890s. Caught between unscrupulous mine
companies and unemployed White men, many learned coal
mining on the job, and they worked as if their lives depended on it,
because they did. They longed for the independent life promised
to them when they left the South, but they also did not want to
take food out of other families’ mouths to earn a living. Their
experience in the Franklin mine strike in 1891 is just one example
of African American miners’ flight from terror to paradise.
Born in Charlottesville, Virginia, James Shepperson
was an educated man who traveled the U.S. before settling
in Roslyn, WA in 1888. He quickly became well-known in
King and Kittitas Counties. Shepperson traveled repeatedly,
sometimes at great risk to himself, to southern states to promote
mining jobs in Washington. He was intelligent, well spoken, and
widely traveled; he had also been a member of the exclusively
Black Prince Hall Masons for many years. All these attributes
made him the ideal person to reach Black men in the South,
while steering clear of White employers.1
The 1870s through the 1890s represented a peak period
Continued from page 1 Cover photo:
25% of Coal Creek miners were
African American in 1890.
(RHM# 1983.074.1780)
“I'M GOING THROUGH”
African Americans traveled to Kennydale from miles around to attend the First Baptist Church. Rev. A. A. Franklin was the pastor.
(RHM# 1966.021.0036)
6 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
of White terrorism against African Americans in southern states, as
employers and farmers tried to hold onto Black labor as long and as
cheaply as they could. Many African Americans were technically
free but economically enslaved by a corrupt sharecropping system,
debt peonage, and justice and political systems designed to protect
White rights, all backed up by violence and designed to keep people
of color poor and without options.
It’s no wonder then that many men and their families
jumped at the chance to put 3000 miles between them and the
South. Ernest Moore described his grandfather John Hale’s desire
to get off the plantation just as soon as the Civil War ended: “I was
freed, but had no place to go…. We had a meeting in the shack, and
when all of our rags were tied and a few cooking pots were bundled
and tied, we walked down the road to our life of freedom.”2
By 1891 Hale was one of thousands of Black men
looking for a way out, and James Shepperson’s stories about
regular wages, job opportunities, and houses provided by the
Oregon Improvement Co. sounded like paradise. Hale and his
family made their way to the Northern Pacific Railroad station
in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1891, along with 650 other African
American men and their families. Shepperson neglected to tell
them they would be crossing picket lines made up of desperate
mine workers, but the facts slowly dawned on the men as they
rode the train. Fifteen Pinkerton guards started with them. In
Pasco, WA fifty more armed Pinkertons got on, and the truth was
unavoidable: Hale and the other men were told that miners in
Franklin, Roslyn, and Black Diamond were striking, and rifles
and carbines were distributed for self-defense. Several families,
The 1894 Franklin Mine disaster killed Black and White alike. Ike Clements (bottom, left) died trying to save other miners.
(RHM# 1966.999.0529)
“The man who for the past fifteen years has been more
instrumental than any one else in supplying concerns with
colored help to take strikers’ places is none other than James E.
Shepperson.” –Seattle Republican, 1 Jan 1904.
SPRING QUARTERLY, 2018 | 7
anticipating trouble, left the train in Yakima, choosing fruit-
picking over mining.3
On May 17, 1891 the train arrived in Tanasket, WA
where the men got off to walk to Franklin. (Women and children
continued on the train to Seattle, where they changed to a
Columbia Puget Sound train that took them through Renton,
Maple Valley, and Black Diamond to Franklin, arriving in the
evening.) Fearful of the Whites’ reception, the new miners sang
“I’m Going Through” as they walked, to give them courage:
“Come then, comrades, and walk in this way / That leads to the
kingdom of unending day.”4
White miners were initially calm at the arrival of the
strike-breakers. Some sincerely hoped to win over the African
Americans to their cause, and a committee of striking miners
was ready to meet them with copies of “a circular addressed
to all friends of united labor.”5 The company had prepared
temporary living quarters for them in the store, and the arriving
miners walked through town unmolested. A reporter described
their entrance to Franklin: “At a fence corner half a dozen men
were gathered. They stared silently and sullenly at the black
invaders… Not a word was said on either side…. From the hill
overlooking the upper town a crowd of perhaps a dozen men
looked down on the scene. At last anger found expression in
words and a woman shouted ‘Look at the nigger slaves.’”6 Those
words would be burned in the newcomers’ minds.
This was a critical moment for Franklin miners; a new
mine slope was about to be opened that would employ 250 – 300
men, and the Oregon Improvement Co. and the Knights of Labor
were in conflict about who would dictate the terms of mining
the new slope. Mine superintendent W. P. Williams summed up
the company’s position. “Shall we fill this mine with the old
men who have been living in this section for years and continue
the long experience of petty strikes, high wages, and union
dictation?” he asked, “Or shall we bring in an entirely new force
of men who will make a contract for reasonable wages and be
amenable to discipline?”7
The more optimistic among the White strikers believed
that both races could come together around issues of fair pay and
safe working conditions. “If we could only meet the colored men
and have a chance to talk with them, we feel sure we could induce
them to refuse to go to work, but we know that the company
will try to prevent us from talking with them,” one miner said.8
The company men knew that race hatred would be a barrier to
labor solidarity, and they used that fact to their advantage. While
striking miners fantasized about raising money to charter a train
and send them “home,” Black families knew they were stuck; with
no money and no friends or family in Washington territory, they
could not quit Franklin if they wanted to.9
The two sides settled into a suspicious impasse, with a
fenced line between the races manned by the company’s hired
security and Black and White guards; all were armed. Black
miners took up their jobs, their families settled into hand-built
shacks, and White miners continued to appeal to the Knights
of Labor and Western Central Labor Bureau for help. Striking
miners in Newcastle and Black Diamond kept their eyes on the
Franklin situation. As the impasse dragged on, White miners lost
Lime Kiln Club for the Black Miners’ Association in Newcastle, ca. 1890–1910. Sign over the door reads “Paradise Hall.”
(RHM# 1984.075.1887)
8 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
Footnotes on page 10
Headlines in Seattle newspapers tended to emphasize Black
wrongdoing in the Franklin situation, even when the coverage was
more dispassionate. (Seattle P-I, 30 Jun 1891, p.1)
Franklin miner and Renton resident John Hale (center), his
daughter Annie (left), and his wife Fannie (right). (From Ernest
Moore, The Coal Miner Who Came West.)
hope that African Americans would join them in the strike, and
by mid-June striking miners were increasingly desperate.
In defiance of the Western Central Labor Union, which
had been supporting striking miners for more than a month, a
group of representatives from different camps gave the Oregon
Improvement Co. an ultimatum: “Be it further resolved, That we,
the miners and mine laborers of King county, hereby agree to
let the coal companies have their choice of either employing all
white miners or all colored men, and we will not return to work
unless all white miners are employed.”10 Mine Superintendent
T. B. Corey was downright cheerful about this ultimatum, since,
in his words, “it made the issue one of race between the white
and colored miners, and not one of wages or conditions of work
between the coal companies and their employes [sic].”11
On June 27 the Oregon Improvement Co. moved eighty
Black miners to Newcastle, spreading the effects of labor disunity.
Armed White strikers, thinking that the African Americans would
be disabled by the loss of so many of their number, moved on
the Black encampment in the middle of the night. One African
American guard, Ben Gaston, “a fine athletic fellow of about 26
years,” was killed before the company guards repelled White
strikers and stopped the Black men from retaliating.12
All sides were on high alert the next night when the
company guards who had accompanied the Black miners to
Newcastle returned. Accounts differ, but all agree that striking
miners vented their frustration by firing on the train. The
guards shot back, provoking an armed turn-out of Black men.
Skirmishes continued throughout the night and day, until two
companies of the Washington state militia were called in. Before
the militia arrived, one White miner was killed, two severely
wounded, and two women were slightly wounded.13
The train carrying the militia companies arrived on June
29, and they were greeted by a posse of armed Black miners.
According to one observer, “They gave a cheer as it passed
them, for their tired eyes and grimy faces showed that they had a
long and anxious night’s watch.”14 With the militia encamped at
Franklin and Gilman, the two sides again settled into an uneasy
truce. The militiamen and Sheriff James H. Woolery tried to
enforce a blanket disarmament of all sides. At a mass meeting in
Pioneer Square, Judge James T. Ronald summed up the situation:
“I do not believe…that either side has a right to resort to force
against the other. Yet I believe this is a white man’s country. But
the negroes are here and must not be injured.”15
African American miners were wounded by public
sentiment that depicted them as the aggressors in the June 28th
riot, and they defended themselves publicly. R. B. Scott pointed
out that “those men at Franklin are black citizens. Many of them
wear the button of the [Grand Army of the Republic], and they
are not Haymarket rioters nor New Orleans Mafia.”16 Three
Black miners—John Bedell, Phil Taylor, and Prest Lovell—
cited African Americans’ long history in the U. S., beginning in
1619, and insisted, “hence we feel a right to work in any part
of our native country, and no true born American would raise
any objections.”17 J. H. Orr insisted that the “colored miners…
were worthy and peaceable citizens who came here to make their
homes and to build up the general interests of the people. All we
ask is to be treated as are other citizens.”18
On July 5, Black Diamond miners in the Knights of
Labor accepted the contract offered to them. By July 12, 200
men were working in the Franklin mine, twelve of them White,
and the Seattle P-I reported that “the dividing line between
the negroes and strikers is not so sharply drawn as formerly,
and both parties are beginning to mingle without restraint.”19
The militia’s Colonel J. C. Haines believed that Franklin and
Black Diamond were calm, and that any trouble would come
from Newcastle or Gilman, but by July 19 Black families were
moving into Newcastle without trouble, and the two races were
sharing the baseball field.20
Though the mutual animosity continued to bubble
under the surface, both sides found ways to make their peace
with it. When the riots began, John Hale knew his days were
numbered in Franklin, but he “argued himself out of leaving”
until 1910 when he and his family built a home near Campbell
Hill School in Renton.21 Others moved to Kennydale or the hills
of Renton where they could own their own plot of land away
from company towns. Those who stayed worked together with
Whites in the mines, and for many it was a good living. In 1904
United Mine Workers opened an integrated local chapter in
Franklin, and the union guaranteed that African American miners
would have access to any job in any mine in Washington state.22
The homes these families found were not paradise, but they were
getting a little closer to peaceful.
SPRING QUARTERLY, 2018 | 9
MEMORIAL
DONATIONS
November 16, 2017 - February 15, 2018
Virginia May Bagby
Louise George
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Bill Anardi & Darlene Bjornstad
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Della Pistoresi
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MEMORIAL
DONATIONS OF
$100 OR MORE
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& Steve Bertagni, Ed
& Jennifer Bertagni
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10 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
ENDNOTES
1 “Mr. James E. Shepperson,” A Picture of the First Grandmaster Prince Hall
Masons of the State of Washington, 185 – 186 (RHM vertical files).
2 Ernest Moore, The Coal Miner Who Came West (N.p.: Northwest Advertising,
Inc. 1982), 1-2.
3 Moore, Coal Miner Who Came West, 6-7. Later many insisted that they had
been brought to Franklin under false pretenses; they were promised free housing
and never told that they would immediately owe $50.00 each for transportation.
Daniel Webster, one of the recruits, and Rev. Hesekiah C. Rice, a Baptist
preacher, both described the conditions under which the men were transported.
“Dead Line Drawn,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 18 May 1891, p.1; “Fugitives
from the Camp,” Seattle P-I, 19 May 1891, p.2; “White and Black Men Talk;
Talks with Representative Men of Both Forces,” Seattle P-I, 19 May 1891, p.2.
4 Moore, Coal Miner Who Came West, 10.
5 “Coming of the Invaders; Miners Waiting to Meet Them on a Mountain Trail,”
Seattle P-I, 17 May 1891, p.1.
6 “Arrival of the Negroes,” Seattle P-I, 18 May 1891, p.1. Charles H. Johnson later
recalled this event in a letter to the editor, writing, “In Franklin alone, how long
would an old colored women last should she have been among white miners
(like one of their women) and stood in the highway and abuse every one that
passed, and even curse and swear at us?” “Miners’ Rights (From a colored
standpoint),” Seattle P-I, 5 Jul 1891, p.4.
7 “Causes of the Trouble; Superintendent Williams’ Statement of the Situation,”
Seattle P-I, 17 May 1891, p.1.
8 “What the Miners Say,” Seattle P-I, 17 May 1891, p.2.
9 “White and Black Men Talk,” Seattle P-I, 19 May 1891, p.2. Mine
Superintendents Williams and Corey touted the skills of the new miners, and
insinuated that there was no strike until the African American arrived to open
the new slope and Whites refused to work with them.
10 “Miners’ Ultimatum; All Colored or All White Men in King County Mines,”
Seattle P-I, 14 Jun 1891, p.8. WCLU initially perceived this ultimatum as
a break with the union, although in the end they did continue to support the
striking miners.
11 “Miners Warned Away,” Seattle P-I, 15 Jun 1891, p.8.
12 “Story of the Riot,” Seattle P-I, 30 Jun 1891, p.1.
13 “Red Riot at Franklin,” Seattle P-I, 29 Jun 1891, p.1; “Story of the Riot,”
Seattle P-I, 30 Jun 1891, p.1. Park Robinson, Franklin mine boss, was later
charged with the shootings of White miners Ed Williams and Thomas Morris; he
pled self-defense. “Robinson Released on Bail,” Seattle P-I, 30 Jun 1891, p.8.
14 “Arrival of the Militia,” Seattle P-I, 30 Jun 1891, p.8.
15 “The Mass Meeting,” Seattle P-I, 4 Jul 1891, p.2. Judge Ronald was elected
Mayor of Seattle in March 1892.
16 “The Mass Meeting,” Seattle P-I, 4 Jul 1891, p.2.
17 “From Colored Miners,” Seattle P-I, 4 Jul 1891, p.4. They went on to blame
new European immigrants as leaders of the opposition, saying “they come to
this country for their liberty and freedom, and before they are naturalized they
are ready to agitate strikes and lead riots.” Prest Lovell was killed in the 1892
explosion at the Roslyn mine.
18 “Miners’ Rights (From a colored standpoint),” Seattle P-I, 5 Jul 1891, p.4.
19 “Organizing Franklin Guard,” Seattle P-I, 12 Jul 1891, p.8.
20 “The Forces at Gilman,” Seattle P-I, 12 Jul 1891, p.2; “Negro Miners in Town,”
Seattle P-I, 20 Jul 1891, p.1.
21 Moore, Coal Miner Who Came West, 15.
22 Quintard Taylor, The Forging of a Black Community (Seattle and London:
University of Washington Press, 1994), 27, 68; “Northwest Improvement Co.,”
Cayton’s Weekly (Seattle), 27 Sep 1907, p.1.
I n preparation for our next exhibit On
the Battlefront and the Homefront:
Rentonites in the Great War, we
received a fantastic donation of a
WWI mess kit from long-time member
and volunteer Sarah Jane Hisey.
Hisey’s father, Jack Allison, a Scottish
immigrant, served in WWI with the
91st Division, 361st Infantry Regiment,
Company D Engineers. Known as the
“Wild West Division,” the 91st was
COLLECTIONS
REPORT
by Sarah Samson, Curator of
Collections & Exhibitions
comprised of men from Alaska, California, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. They mustered and
trained at Camp Lewis, WA and left via train for the front
lines in Europe on June 22, 1918.
Allison was a very deft draftsman, a skill his
superiors would put to use for building plans, battlefront
maps, and even the design for the official insignia for the 91st
Division. His skill as a draftsman did not shield him from
battle, however. He participated fully in the horrific trench
warfare of the Allied Meuse-Argonne Offensive in northeast
France. We were given access to a copy of his wartime diary,
and it vividly recounts the constant shelling, gas attacks, and
deadly German machine guns. After breaking through the
German line in France, Allison proceeded with his regiment
into Belgium where he experienced more trench warfare.
After the Armistice was signed in November,
Allison and his regiment fell back to France, rebuilding
infrastructure wherever they went. Though the Germans
were gone and French refugees were returning to their
homes, food and other supplies were scarce. The U.S.
Army had no permanent place for soldiers so they lived
an itinerant life, staying in barns or temporary “huts” and
suffering the cold, rain, and “a sea of mud.”
In total, Allison was away from Washington state
for nearly 11 months. He ran into three other Renton boys
while in Europe and he managed a two-week leave to his
home in Scotland after hostilities ended. He visited Scotland,
the place of his birth, as an American citizen; the U.S. had
offered immigrants a fast-track to citizenship for signing up
for Uncle Sam. Allison got his American citizenship less
than one month before he pulled out of Camp Lewis.
You can learn more about Allison and the other men
and women of Renton and their experiences during WWI
when the new exhibit opens May 29th!
Sarah Samson
Curator
SPRING QUARTERLY, 2018 | 11
Seattleite Timothy Egan, a National Book Award winner, dramatically tells the story of a 1910 forest
fire that galvanized public opinion about the wilderness. The wildfire stretched from Idaho through
Montana, Washington, British Columbia, and devastated towns along its way. It spurred the emerging
conservation movement and persuaded the public that more forests needed federal protection. As a result,
the newly formed National Forest Service proved its worth and set in place policies still in effect today.
As climate change increases the risk and severity of forest fires, it is important to understand the history of
current policies. Join the conversation at the Renton History Museum, housed in a historical Art Deco fire
station, where Egan will talk about his book and answer questions. No requests for book-signing, please.
On
JUNE
13
at
7:00 PM
BOOKMARKS & LANDMARKS:
THE BIG BURN BY TIMOTHY EGAN
MEMBERSHIP FORM
Please select a membership level:
Individual $30
Student/Senior $20
Family $40
Benefactor $75
Patron $150
Business/Corporate $175
Life membership $750
Basic memberships
Sustaining memberships
Name:
Address:
Phone:
Payment information
Visa or MC #:
Exp. date:
Signature:
Please make checks payable to the Renton Historical Society.
Please consider making a tax-deductible
donation! Your donations help us provide
new exhibits and exciting programs.
Donation: $
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Renton History Museum
235 Mill Avenue South
Renton, WA 98057
Phone: 425.255.2330
Fax: 425.255.1570
rentonhistory.org
Photo credit: Lisa Howe Verhovek
RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
235 Mill Ave. S
Renton, WA 98057
Detail of a dress reconstruction made by volunteers Bridget Shew and Cathy Lim for Black & White. They began with a photo of
Annie Custer from our collection, conducted research about ca. 1910 clothing, and created an amazing reconstruction of the dress.
IN HINDSIGHT...