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LOOKING BACK: MONTH DAY

A South Sound history through words and pictures

Published: July 17, 2012 at 12:05 a.m. PDT
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Sumner E. Orr and E.J. Gauthier, proprietors of Tacoma’s all-night garage Gauthier & Orr, receive leases for six Union Oil stations from company officials E.C. Wilson, Tacoma agent, and N.W. Watson, special agent, on July 17, 1928. They exchanged the documents at Station No. 119 at 601 N. First St. The new owners planned to install lifts for grease work and to modernize equipment at each station. The six stations were located at South 58th Street and Union Avenue; South 25th Street and Jefferson Avenue; North First Street and Tacoma Avenue; South 21st and Pacific Avenue; East 11th Street and St. Paul Avenue; and 302 S. Puyallup Ave. (MARVIN D. BOLAND COLLECTION, TACOMA PUBLIC LIBRARY, 253-292-2001, SEARCH.TACOMAPUBLICLIBRARY.ORG/IMAGES)

A South Sound history through words and pictures

100 YEARS AGO TODAY: JULY 17, 1912

Starting out to make the circuitous east side approach and ascent of Mount Tacoma, P.V. Ceasar, George V. Ceasar, Frost Synder and Kenneth Ripley of Tacoma, Joseph Blake of New York and Jack Hoyt of Spokane, the last five Yale men, left Tacoma this morning and went by train to Nelson siding. The party took no pack train, expecting to transport the necessary provisions in true mountaineer style on their backs. Leaving the train, a trail will be struck across country to the Natches river, up the Natches trail to the Natches Pass and thence south to Bear Gap. From that point a line will be pursued across to Cowlitz Chimneys, up the Frying Pan river to Summerland on the east slope of the mountain.

75 YEARS AGO TODAY: JULY 17, 1937

The Tacoma Tigers and Yakima Pippins meet tonight in the second game of the Western International League series at Athletic Park. Tacoma’s own Floyd “Lefty” Isekite, will pitch for the Tigers. It will be Ladies’ and Knot Hole Gang night and a big crowd is expected.

50 YEARS AGO TODAY: JULY 17, 1962

Veteran X15 pilot Robert M. White flashed a record 58 miles into space today, becoming the first to qualify as an astronaut in a winged craft. Shooting skyward on a giant tongue of flame, White surpassed the little rocket research plane’s old mark by approximately 12 miles. “This is a fantastic view” he radioed exultantly as he floated weightless at peak altitude. White’s feat makes him the fifth American entitled to wear the wings of an astronaut, which go to those who vault 50 miles or more above the Earth.

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