| Cover Story | Plant Life | On Fitness | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |
WRITTEN BY PAUL DORPAT |
| Snow Struck | ||||||||||
Lake Union froze over and a procession of skaters trekked the length of the boardwalk that followed the bed of an abandoned coal railroad (near the line now of Westlake Avenue) to the south end of the lake. It was safe to skate until the 15th, when the thermometer first rose above freezing. With the skates, sleds were then also surrendered, but only temporarily. In three days more the sky opened and again dropped the fun stuff you see here 18 inches of it. The photographer, Theodore E. Peiser, was nearly as fresh to Seattle as this snow. In 1884 the oversized gear and glass-plate routines of photography were both rare and elaborate enough to gain attention. Here, everyone seems to be posing for Peiser. The commercial photographer set his tripod at the waterfront foot of Columbia Street with his back to Elliott Bay. Peiser recorded some of the best views of Seattle in the 1880s. There might have been many more, but his "Art Studio" on Second Avenue between Marion and Columbia Streets was destroyed along with his equipment and negatives in the city's "Big Fire of 1889." The loss is especially grievous given this claim Peiser made on the flip side of one of his surviving prints: "The largest and finest assortment of views of Seattle and Sound towns, logging camps, etc., for sale by the copy or in large quantities, at reasonable prices." Paul Dorpat specializes in historical photography and has published several books on early Seattle.
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| Cover Story | Plant Life | On Fitness | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |