Seattle Genealogical Society August 2025

Image of a German town with a map of Germany overlayed on top with the wordsFinding Your German Immigrant in Germany

SECOND SATURDAY SERIES RETURNS SEPT. 13

Focus of Presentation to be German ImmigrantsWe are excited to welcome back Kimball Carter, CG®, for the opening session of our fall Second Saturday speaker series. Kimball will guide attendees in discovering the places of origin of their German immigrant ancestors. Using U.S. and German records, Kimball will demonstrate practical strategies with case studies that will help advance your research.

Members Can Access Past Presentations on the SGS Website Although our popular Second Saturdays and Virtual Sundays have been on summer hiatus, many past presenations are available on the SGS website members pages.Kimball Carter, CG® has more than 45 years of family history research experience. A retired graphic artist and creative director, he now volunteers at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City, helping patrons with German ancestry, identifying immigrant hometowns, and Colonial American research.

Sign Up Today!

Come Early for the Membership Meeting There will be a membership meeting just before the Second Saturday presentation on Sept. 13 from 12:30 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. The tentative agenda will include information regarding the America 250 writing contest and updates on our new website.

photos courtesy Roman Kraft / Unsplash, Library of Congress, David Rumsey Map Collection, David Rumsey Map Center, Stanford Libraries and location icon created by kmg design / Flaticon

 CYBELE O’BRIEN NAMED 2025 SGS VOLUNTEER FOR SPRING QUARTER

Cybele O'Brien

Cybele O’Brien Cybele O’Brien has been nominated as our Spring Quarter Volunteer for 2025. This award considers volunteer activities performed during the months of April, May, and June, but O’Brien has been supporting our Society throughout this past year. When she began her role of Secretary in February 2024, she had little guidance as to the scope of the job. She quickly learned how to document the business of the board with her accurate and comprehensive minutes. This requires preparation as well as finalization of the document each month.

O’Brien also assisted the Director of Technology in moving documents onto a new shared drive and improving the organization of its files. She has maintained the digital Bi-laws and Policy Manuals which have replaced binders kept in the library. O’Brien has been timely in her role of managing societal communications including writing numerous thank-you letters and distributing daily Society emails. The Board is grateful for all her work this past year and unanimously nominated her for this recognition.

This award recognizes the time O’Brien spent in Zoom and in-person sessions training the incoming secretary. She shared her knowledge as well as numerous tips learned through experience. Her updated job description has served as a road map during this transition.

O’Brien joined the Society in the 2020-2021 membership year. She is an avid family historian and enjoys traveling. We hope that she finds some time this summer to make new genealogical discoveries.

NEW CLASS TO HELP YOU WRITE AS YOU RESEARCH Got a brick wall? Join past SGS president Jill Morelli and she beta tests a new workshop: Write As You Research. This class will provide a methodology for identifying possible solutions to brick walls. Writing genealogical problems accumulates all known information in one place, aids identifying gaps and overlaps, and provides a written report for future readers. Get started writing more! This workshop provides a format for genealogical reports.

Save the date:
August 20, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Registration fee: TBD (discount for SGS Members)
Registration opening SOON!

STATE LIBRARY CLOSURE: NOW WHAT?The Washington State Library in Tumwater closed to the public on July 1 due to a lack of state funding. This means there is limited access to the library’s genealogical material for researchers.Leslie Vogel of SGS’s Pacific Northwest SIG shared these tips for researchers at the July meeting and agreed to share them with eNews.

How to Access WSL RecordsContact the Library:
Patrons can still email askalibrarian@sos.wa.gov (which probably will not be a genealogist) or leave a voicemail at 360-704-5221 and within one week they will answer your questions.

Interlibrary Loan:
Some items can be accessed via interlibrary loan to local libraries. Access information through their online catalog to determine if the item is available.

  • Books: Many of the books in the rare and special collections, territorial materials, northwest collection, genealogical collection and reference materials can not be accessed through inter-library loan.
  • Newspapers on Microfilm may be borrowed but only a few local libraries have a microfilm reader available to view them. The only library in the Seattle Public Library with a microfilm reader is the downtown central library!!!

Newspapers via InterLibrary Loan:
The Washington State Library serves as the depository “for newspapers published in the state of Washington thus providing a central location for a valuable historical record.” [RCW 27.04.045] The WSL has 6,500 newspaper titles on 50,000 reels of microfilm from 1850s to present. They had four microfilm readers onsite.

With a Washington State Library Card (apply on the website) patrons can access some digital newspaper databases such as Newsbank. Request through inter-library loan. For more information visit the website.

  • Each library may request up to 10 reels per customer per library for in-library use only.
  • Check the status of the microfilm readers prior to ordering!

Newspapers Available Digitally:
Washington newspapers can also be accessed on Washington Digital Newspapers. Consult this guide to find WSL Newspapers.


Other Digital Resources Through WSL

CONGRATULATIONS TO MICHELLE CHIACHIERE, CG

Michelle Chiachiere

Michelle
Chiachiere
SGS member Michelle Chiachiere was recently informed by the Board for Certification of Genealogists that her portfolio was to the standards required for receipt of the credential Certified Genealogist. This rigorous credentialing process requires the submission of multiple examples of her work and is peer-reviewed by at least three judges. As well as being a member of SGS, Chiachiere is also a member of the Puget Sound chapter of the Association of Professional Genealogists, and graduate of SGS’s Certification Discussion Group. Chiachiere takes clients and can be found at her website.

THE SEMIQUINCENTENNIAL IS COMING!
THE SEMIQUINCENTENNIAL IS COMING!

Next year, 2026, marks the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States of America! State and national planning is already underway. Seattle Genealogical Society will be sponsoring a writing contest, My American Story, and more details about that will be shared in the coming months. But, that’s just one way we want to celebrate this milestone. If you are interested in volunteering to be a judge for the writing contest, assist with brainstorming or planning events, or have programing ideas please contact Lisa Oberg, SGS Vice President at vicepresident@seagensoc.org.


SGS CALENDAR OF EVENTSGood Shepherd Center, Suite 302
4649 Sunnyside Ave N
Seattle, WA 98103
206 522-8658

Hours :  Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday   ** 10:00 a.m .- 3:00 p.m. **

 Always check the SGS Website Calendar of Events for the meeting links, registration, or for last minute updates or changes to the schedule. Be advised you may need to register in advance to join a meeting.  

 All times listed are Pacific Time unless otherwise noted

Monday, Aug. 4, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Monday, Aug. 4, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., NEW-ish! Organizing for Genealogy SIG, Share information and discuss organization tips, techniques, and habits to enhance your genealogical journey. Contact Susan McKee at sgsOrganizingsig@seagensoc.org to join. 

Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.,  Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual), Share information and discuss Pacific Northwest genealogical research. Register on the SGS website

Monday, Aug. 11, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.

Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025, 6:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m., NEW! Ancestry Users SIG (Virtual), The Ancestry Users Special Interest Group is for people who use Ancestry.com (and AncestryDNA) to research their family histories. Email SGSAncestrySIG@seagensoc.org.

Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Publishing SIG, Participate in writing and publishing the SGS Journal twice a year. Email SGSPubSIG@seagensoc.org.

Monday, Aug. 18, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-noon, “Pass It On” Writers’ Group, Create your family history and share with others in an effort to improve your writing. This group is currently accepting new members. Send queries to SGSPassItOn@seagensoc.org.

Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, 6:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., SGS Library Evening Hours, Come by and join host, Lisa Oberg, for a quiet, comfortable place to work on your genealogy research. Every 3rd Wednesday of the month.

Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m., Write As You Research! (Beta Offering), Join Jill Morelli as she provides a methodology for outlining problems and identifying a solutions. This workshop provides a format for all of your genealogical reports. Cost: TBD, registration opening soon

Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Write It Up! SIG (Virtual), Join this group  to share and discuss writing projects, resources, and ideas. To join or learn more, contact Sheyna Watkins at sgsWriteItUpSIG@seagensoc.org.

Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025, 6:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., SGS Quarterly Program Planning (Virtual), be a part of SGS’s strategic planning effort, collaborate with the leaders of our education programs (e.g., SIGs, field trips, classes, seminars, discussion groups). Register here.

Monday, Aug. 25, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.

Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Mexican SIG (Virtual), Share information and discuss Indigenous North American, Spanish, Cuban, and Hispanic genealogical research. Email Diane Hughes-Hart at SGSMexSIG@seagensoc.org to join.

Thursday, Aug. 28 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Eastern European SIG, Learn about researching family history from the Balkans to the Baltics and in between. For more information email sgseasterneuropesig@seagensoc.org.

Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Monday, Sept. 1, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., NEW-ish! Organizing for Genealogy SIG, Share information and discuss organization tips, techniques, and habits to enhance your genealogical journey. Contact Susan McKee at sgsOrganizingsig@seagensoc.org to join. 

Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.,  Pacific Northwest Interest Group (Virtual), Share information and discuss Pacific Northwest genealogical research. Register on the SGS website

Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025, 6:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m., Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Genealogy SIG (Virtual), explore the intersection of artificial intelligence and genealogical research Email SGSAISIG@seagensoc.org.

Saturday, Sept 6, 2025, 10:00 a.m.- 12:15 p.m., FamilySearch SIG, Discover the many ways to use the FamilySearch website in your research. Meeting includes instruction and time for Q&A. Email SGSFamilySearchSIG@seagensoc.org to join the mailing list. NOTE: New starting time!

Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025,  1:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m., DNA Workshop, with Cary Bright and Craig Gowens. To participate you need to be on the SGS DNA Interest Group email list. Contact Cary Bright at sgsdnasig@seagensoc.org to join. 

Monday, Sept. 8, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Brags & Bricks Social Interest Group (Virtual), Join us for an informal social gathering. Share your recent genealogical successes and challenges, or just come to hang out with other genealogists. See SGS Calendar for more information.

Monday, Sept. 8, 2025, 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m., SGS Board of Directors Meeting (Virtual), All SGS members are welcome to attend. SGS is an all volunteer organization. Please be involved. Members must sign in to website to see Zoom link.

Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m., Tech Tuesday (Virtual), informal consultation time on DNA, genealogy software, or genealogy-related technical issues. All are welcome. No appointment necessary. Bring us your problem; we’ll try to help.

Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025, 6:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m., NEW! Ancestry Users SIG (Virtual), The Ancestry Users Special Interest Group is for people who use Ancestry.com (and AncestryDNA) to research their family histories. Email SGSAncestrySIG@seagensoc.org.

Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m., MAC Computer SIG,  Jointly sponsored by SGS and Fiske. Meetings address topics and resources for Macintosh (Apple) computers and the Reunion genealogy software program. A link to login will be sent to the MAC SIG email list. If you would like to join, send an email to macusersig@seagensoc.org to be added to the email list. 

Thursday, Sept 11, 2025, 7:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m., Publishing SIG, Participate in writing and publishing the SGS Journal twice a year. Email SGSPubSIG@seagensoc.org.NO AUGUST MEETINGS FOR …

The following groups/meetings will not be held in August. 
• Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Genealogy SIG
SGS Board of Directors Meeting 
• Irish SIGOUR NEIGHBORS AND BEYONDEast European Family History Conference
Foundation for East European Family History Studies 
Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025, 7:30 a.m.

More than 60 sessions will be presented in 8 tracks: Polish, Russian, Germans from Eastern Europe, German, Austro-Hungarian, Jewish, DNA and General Eastern European. Early-bird rates available until July 7. Get more informataion and register.


Family Tree Maker SIG
Eastside Genealogical Society
Friday, Aug 15, 2025, 10:30 p.m.–12:30 p.m.


Join Eastside Genealogical Society and SGS to learn and share tips and tricks for using Family Tree Maker by Software MacKiev. The meetings open about 15 minutes in advance. You can join and/or leave whenever you have to, and you may email your question(s) in advance or bring them up during the meeting.

“Summer Seminar 2025: Researching Your German Roots”
The Genealogical Forum of Oregon and the German American Society of Portland
Saturday, Aug. 16, 2025, 10:30 a.m.
At the German American Society of Portland, 5626 NE Alameda St., Portland, Oregon


Join us for a full-day seminar on researching German records with Katherine Schober, founder of Germanology Unlocked. This in-person seminar is oriented to researchers at the beginner and intermediate level of experience with German records. Get more information and register (early bird pricing ends today).


“Mt. Angel Octoberfest”
Mt. Angel, Oregon
Thursday, Sept. 11 – Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025


The dates have been set for this year’s “largest folk festival in the Northwest.”A full schedule along with a listing of the venues, food & drink, activities, as well as ticket information can now be found online.“Genealogy Week”
The Rogue Valley Genealogical Society

Monday, Sept. 22 – Saturday, Sept. 27, 2025

This RVGS event is open to all and will feature a virtual presentation each morning on a different topic, while hosting on-site afternoon help sessions at their library. See the Genealogy Week flyer for class list and registration.

Join SGS Today * to renew your membership: log in on the Members Home page
and click the green renew membership button.
August 1, 2025

SGS eNews! comes out the first of every month. contact eNews!

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Yakima Valley Genealogical Society Washington State Digital Archives

Yakima Valley Genealogical Society

1901 S. 12th Avenue

Union Gap, WA 98903

Phone: (509) 248-1328

Email: yvgs@yvgs.net

Yakima Valley Genealogical Society

General Meeting will be held in the library

Date: Saturday, August 02, 2025

Time: 10:00 a.m.

Kathy Sizer will be giving a presentation on the Washington State Digital Archives.

She will be talking about all the different records available there on-line and how to use the site.

Carla Adams

Social Media

Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society Legacy Family Tree SIG August 2025 Meeting

Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society Legacy Family Tree SIG Meeting
Tuesday, August 2, 2025, from 7:00 pm to 8:30 pm virtual via Zoom

This month we will be watching and discussing Part 3 of 3 of the video “What’s New in Legacy Family Tree 8?”

We meet monthly  to share tips & tricks, problems & solutions. Sometimes we will watch videos or share our screens to aide in learning more about using Legacy Family Tree software.

Everyone is welcome to attend and participate in the learning. If you are just thinking about trying Legacy for the first time, you’ve been using it for a year or two or you are an old pro with many years of experience using Legacy this is the group for you. If you have any suggestions for future topics, please send them in.

We look forward to meeting with you, every month on the First Tuesday at 7:00 PM Pacific Time
Download: Meeting invite with Links

Meeting Invite with Links in file attached below:

Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system.

Monthly Calendar Reminder: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/tZYpfuyuqDovHNwtBgxtQjWKOjDQ8k5Q9bPD/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGqqjIvHNKUtR-PRpwQBor4Z-7wpn5Ygo1KiD3iGzRiaDTdGehmA-p0RemJ

Join Zoom Meeting:
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Meeting ID: 824 9566 1568
Passcode: 715731

One tap mobile:
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Dial by your location:
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Meeting ID: 824 9566 1568
Passcode: 715731

Find your local number:
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Let’s Talk About: The Mayflower Society

In 1620, a brave group of 102 men, women, and children sailed across the Atlantic on the Mayflower in search of a better life. 
In 1897, the General Society of Mayflower Descendants was established to pay homage to the Pilgrims through preservation and education.

The General Society of Mayflower Descendants is committed to research on the lineal descent of the Mayflower Pilgrims and education about the Pilgrims who traveled aboard the Mayflower in 1620. The Society provides education and understanding of why the Mayflower Pilgrims were important, how they shaped western civilization, and what their 1620 voyage means today and its impact on the world.

Think you’re eligible to join this Society? Want to know more? Visit www.themayflowersociety.org. All your questions will be answered and your interest heightened! 

The Society also offers a channel on YouTube……. several short videos will help you know more about this group and their goals. One really good vid is “Things They Left Behind,” presented by the Gov. General, Lisa Pennington. 

Let’s Talk About: The State of Lincoln?

We in Eastern Washington were almost in the state of Lincoln. A Spokane proposal in 1907 called for a new state, Lincoln, to be created from eastern Washington, northeastern Oregon and Northern Idaho. Are we sad or glad this apparently never happened???

The good folks of Eastern Oregon were frustrated with being coupled with Portland. The citizens of north Idaho felt they had nothing in common with their capitol, Boise, or the entire southern half of the state. And many of those in Eastern Washington know themselves to be Republicans but Washington always seems to fall to the Democrats in elections due to the “Cascade Divide” of our state. 

How come this didn’t happen nor likely never will? Wikipedia gives the answer: “Multiple senators at the time objected to naming a territory after a single man, acknowledging Washington Territory (named in 1853 for George Washington) as the sole exception.” 

Put this factoid in your trivia folder for when you get invited to be a contestant on Jeopardy. 

President’s Award for Outstanding Achievement Nominations Due August 1

Nominations for the Washington State Genealogical Society President’s Award for Outstanding Achievement are due by August 1, 2025. The announcement will be made August 21, 2025 at the WSGS Virtual Annual Meeting.

The President’s Award for Outstanding Achievement is designed to single out that rare individual, society or organization who has demonstrated exemplary service above and beyond expectations.

The ideal recipient of the President’s Award for Outstanding Achievement has:

• Exhibited long-term, consistent service in the field of genealogy, family or local history, the genealogical community, records preservation or made an important single contribution in those areas that will endure into the future.
• Demonstrated a high degree of energy, commitment, flexibility, and professional conduct.
• Provided significant support and impact to the local genealogical community time and time again.
• Exhibited personal influence and example to society members and/or the general public with their unselfish service.
• Supported or advanced local or statewide genealogical research.

Nominations may be submitted by any individual, local society or organization, regardless of WSGS membership. Nominees do not have to have been officers in their local societies.

Previous recipients of this prestigious award include:

  • 2015 – Fred Pflugrath, Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society
  • 2016 – Margie Wilson, Skagit Valley Genealogical Society
  • 2017 – Joanne Egbert Calhoun, Wenatchee Area Genealogical Society
  • 2018 – Ann Olson, Olympia Genealogical Society
  • 2021 – Helen McGreer Lewis, South King County Genealogical Society (posthumous)
  • 2022 – Jill Morelli, Seattle Genealogical Society
  • 2023 – Karen Mitchell, Clallam County Genealogical Society
  • 2024 – Roxanne Lowe, Grays Harbor Genealogical Society

Additional information, including the nomination form, is available here. Questions should be directed to Info@wasgs.org. Please type “President’s Award” in the Subject Line.

Seattle, City of Vice

SEATTLE, CITY OF VICE.

By Karen Treiger

(Klondikers carrying supplies ascending the Chilkoot Pass, 1898)

The discovery of gold in Alaska set off a period of vibrant economic growth in Seattle.  The money that flowed through Seattle during the years of the Alaska Gold Rush stimulated the city’s merchants and businessmen to expand.  By 1905, when the Klondike Gold Rush had pretty much petered out, Seattle businesses were in control of 90% of ships that traveled back and forth to Alaska.

(Photo: S. S. Humbolt, ready to sail from Seattle to Nome during the 1901 gold rush, Photo by Asahel Curtis, UW Special Collections (TRA511))

The gold business shifted to the salmon business. Fresh Alaskan salmon was, and still is, a huge seller all up and down the Pacific Coast.  However, canned salmon became the successor to the gold that flowed southward into the continental U.S.  The salmon arrived in Seattle and was shipped by rail to all parts of the country.

Seattle, in the early 20th century, after the Gold Rush saw a burst of people moving here. The Census count of Seattle’s population in 1910 was 237,000 (194% increase from 1900).  On top of that, between 10,000 and 15,000 more people lived in Seattle for some part of the year.  For example, those that passed through on the way to Alaska, the seasonal migrants who worked in logging camps, mills, farms in Eastern Washington and those who worked in canneries in Alaska. (Berner, 32)

The economic growth followed the population and there was a boom in Seattle. Many businesses were thriving. Among the businesses that thrived during this period was the “Vice” business.

Richard Berner, in his book Seattle 1900-1920: From boomtown, through urban turbulence, to restoration, describes Seattle at the turn of the 20th century as a city full of vice and corruption. When covering the 1911 recall election, McClure’s Magazine wrote:

“‘There arose in Seattle a small coterie of tenderloin capitalist – men who cultivated vice intensively and organized it in a way to wring from it the largest profits.’  According to a recent report of the Federal Immigration, [McClure’s] continued, Seattle was ‘one of the headquarters of the white slave trade.’” (Berner, 29)

To paint the picture even further, Berner quotes more of the McClure Magazine article:

“The city seemed to have been transformed almost magically into one great gambling hell.  All kinds of games simultaneously started up, in full public view.  Cigar stores and barbershops did a lively business in crap-shooting and race-track gambling, drawing their patronage largely from schoolboys and department store girls.  . . . All over the city ‘flat joints’, pay-off stations, and dart-shooting galleries were reaping a rapid harvest . . .  in the thirty or forty gambling-places opened under the administration of Hi Gill.”  (referring to Mayor Hiram Gill)

With all this money to be made in the “vice” business, two Seattle businessmen, Mr. Tupper and Mr. Gerald, built a huge brothel on Beacon Hill.  These men needed additional land to build the brothel, so Gill’s city council leased them eighty adjoining acres of city land.  The editor of the Post Intelligencer wrote that “Gillisim” (a term coined for actions under Hiram Gill’s administration) “has allowed the enforcers of law and order to enter into lewd partnership with breakers of the law. . .  It has fostered and encouraged a species of government and official favoritism wholly at variance with the sprit and genus of American political institutions and American law.” (Berner, citing the PI, 73)

(Photo: 500 room brothel on Beacon Hill, built during the Hiram Gill administration, 1910, HistoryLink.Org, UW Special Collections (UW8235)).

Reading these descriptions of Seattle makes me wonder what my ancestors thought about all this.  By 1911 when Mayor Hiram Gill was recalled, Paul and Jenny Singerman had been in Seattle for three decades and were a well-established and respected family. Victor Staadecker and the Friedlander family were relative newcomers to Seattle, having arrived six and five years earlier.  Did they vote for the recall of Mayor Gill?   A vote for recall meant a rejection of the flourishing vice business and the corrupt Police force that fostered and allowed it. I don’t know.

Chayim Leib Steinberg arrived with his son Sam in 1910, right in the middle of all this craziness, with the rest of the family arriving in 1911.   With their Jewish religious way of life and lack of English language skills, I imagine they didn’t have a clue what was going on.   

By this time, Seattle was a mixture of many cultures – Whites of European descent, Japanese, Chinese, African Americans, and Jews.  The populations lived (mostly) separately but they joined together to make Seattle the place it is today. 

This brings us back to the beginning – the Alaska Gold Rush brought the city together and became the engine of economic expansion that led to Seattle’s future growth and development. The Gold Rush set the stage for future business success and for the city we live in today. Seattle’s mix of people from different cultures enriches life for everyone.   

Karen Treiger is the author of My Soul is Filled with Joy: A Holocaust Story (2018) and author of the upcoming book, Standing on the Crack: The Legacy of Five Jewish Families from Seattle’s Vibrant Gilded Age (Publication date 8/12/25).

Her website is: Homepage – Karen Treiger – Author

Her weekly blog about the history of Seattle and stories about her ancestors can be found here: Ancestry, Genealogy, Legacy, History: Stories of Five Jewish Families in Seattle

SOURCE:

Berner, Richard, Seattle 1900-1920: From boomtown, through urban turbulence, to restoration.

Tacoma Pierce County Genealogical Society DNA SIG July 2025

Tacoma-Pierce County Genealogical Society DNA Special Interest Group Meeting
Tuesday, July 29, Starting at 7:00 pm via Zoom

We will discuss anything to do with DNA. No plan, so whatever questions you might have.

Download: 1745378587_DNASIGMeetingInvite.pdf

Calendar reminder: TPCGS DNA Special Interest Group Meeting

Every month on the Fourth Tuesday beginning at 7:00 PM Pacific Time

Please download and import the following iCalendar (.ics) files to your calendar system.

Monthly: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/tZYqdeyrrz0iEtx-c_J3gNfcI8mebT1zajLo/ics?icsToken=98tyKuGqqTkvGdWTuBGPRpwQB4joZ-nzmCFHj7dF0RzaKXNUTAX1H7pPN7BLQcLR

Join Zoom Meeting:
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Meeting ID: 827 2531 6888
Passcode: 811780

One tap mobile:
+12532050468,,82725316888#,,,,*811780# US
+12532158782,,82725316888#,,,,*811780# US (Tacoma)

Dial by your location:
        +1 253 205 0468 US
        +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
Meeting ID: 827 2531 6888
Passcode: 811780

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kIKCyZLQy

Clark County Genealogical Society Surplus Book for Sale

The Clark County Genealogical Society (CCGS) announces a searchable list of surplus books for sale on our website. You may also download a pdf of available titles. All books are on display in our library.

There are two ways to purchase a book.

In person: purchase from a Librarian at the CCGS Library with cash or a check.

By mail: contact Denise Erkkila at denisee@ccgswa.org to determine book availability and total cost (book, sales tax, USPS postage). Payment is by check only.

We hope you take a look and find something that will support your research!

Please come and visit our library in Vancouver, WA. The library is open from 10 am to 3 pm, Tuesday through Friday, and from 11 am to 3 pm on the second Saturday of each month.

Questions? Call 360-750-5688 or send an email to info@ccgswa.org.

Clark County Genealogical Society

3205 NE 52nd Street

Vancouver, WA 98663

Website: https://www.ccgs-wa.org/