Preservation News the newsletter of Historic Educate. Advocate. Preserve.

volume 38 issue 1 Great Events Coming Up! April 2012 Building Renovation Fair When: Saturday, April 14, 10 am – 4 pm Where: Hall, 153 14th Avenue Registration: $5 members/general public in advance or at the door; free for students In This Issue: Generously sponsored by 4Culture This is the second year of the Building Renovation Fair Membership News at our very own Washington Hall. Take this opportunity pg 2 to meet the region’s experts in old buildings—the salvage houses, restoration and renovation architects, contractors, Spring Members seismic repair firms, interior designers, and trades Woo Eugenia Meeting 2011 Building Renovation Fair at Washington Hall pg 4 people who appreciate working on the components of old houses in glass, wood, metal, tile and ceramics, Masonry, earthquake preparedness by A-FFIX, Interior Preservation plumbing, electrical, hardware, painting, plaster, and Storm Windows by Windovative Design, and Laser Advocacy in South wood windows. Scanning by Triad Associates. See page 6 for complete Lake Union Presentations this year include upgrading old kitchens information on the presentations and presenters. pg 5 by röm architecture studio, masonry repair by VanWell continued, page 6 Historic Theatres Fourth Annual Preservation Library Opens pg 5 Awards Ceremony

When: Tuesday, May 15, 5:30 – 8 pm; formal program at 6:45 pm

Where: Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N. Programs supported in part by Registration: $50 members; $60 general public; $25 students Includes appetizers, one glass of beer/wine, dessert, coffee/tea Generously sponsored by Key Bank On May 15 we host our fourth Annual Historic

Preservation Awards ceremony to acknowledge recent Soldwedel Zach Historic Seattle Projects Collage successes in the field locally. Enjoy wine, beer, and appetizers, accompanied by the melodious sounds of 2012 Award Recipients harpist Stephanie Taylor. Join with old and new friends Best Restoration Project Community Investment and colleagues who share a passion for preservation. Mary Olson Farm, Michael Malone Auburn Preserving Neighborhood Have desserts, coffee, and tea in the Chapel space with Best Rehabilitation Project Character a performance by pianist Dawn Clement to experience Christ Our Hope Church Totem House Red Mill the superior acoustics, followed by a presentation Exemplary Stewardship Heritage Education Publication by former Executive Director John Chaney on the Pacific Science Center The Future Remembered: Community Advocacy The 1962 SeattleWorld’s stewardship challenges and successes over 35 years of Seattle’s Volunteer Park Fair and Its Legacy GSC ownership. Jeffrey Ochsner introduces our 2012 Landmark Designation Living Landmark Preservation Award recipients. Paul Dorpat At the Dearborn House

Volunteer Recognition The 2011 Volunteer celebration was held on Sunday, January 22, Council of the 2012 at the home of John and Sue Historic Seattle DeRosa on Queen Anne Hill. (Sue Preservation was our 2007 Volunteer of the and Development Year). Their house is a handsomely Authority restored Arts & Crafts residence

Mary McCumber, Chair built in 1911 that provided a Karen D. Breckenridge perfect setting for nearly 70 people. Sharon Coleman Our award winners were: Fauna Doyle Volunteer of the Year: Bruce Jones James Fearn Advocacy Heroes: Colleen Dooley Johnson Doug Michael Herschensohn and Christine Lea Kate Krafft A Key to a Landmark House: Marvin Anderson Pete Mills Beyond Measure: Tom Wake, Michael Voris, and Rico Quirindongo Ron Moore Rick Sever Heroes of Washington Hall: Josh Morrison, Membership Update Marcia Wagoner Amaris Morrison, and Cecilie Hjorth Historic Seattle was pleased to end 2011 with a Kathleen Brooker, Executive Director Community Relations Connector: Marta Brace significant increase in both our number of members Hero of Good Shepherd Center: Ron Waldman and our annual membership income. Over the past Board of Directors Thank you to all of the volunteers who help us to year, we’ve focused on reaching out to lapsed members of the make things happen at Historic Seattle! and encouraging them to re-join. As a result of these Historic Seattle efforts, our roster of current members grew by over Preservation Foundation 40% between March and December 2011. Early efforts at growing our business membership Michael Herschensohn President Preservation News program have also been fruitful. We launched a Kathleen Brooker directory of our business members, the Preservation is a publication of Historic Seattle James Fearn Pages, in the Resources section of our website, and were Historic Seattle Staff Gary Gaffner delighted to welcome many new business members to Executive Director: Kathleen Brooker Mary McCumber Director of Real Estate: Kji Kelly Historic Seattle. Program Director: Larry Kreisman In 2012, our goal is to continue to grow our Director of Preservation Services: Eugenia Woo membership, and we need your help! We encourage you Manager of Volunteers and Events: Luci J. Baker Johnson to spread the word about Historic Seattle’s programs Good Shepherd Center Building Operations Manager: Matt Murray and advocacy, to purchase a gift membership, or to Membership Coordinator/Washington Hall Operations: Dana Phelan invite a friend to attend one of our free membership Bookkeeper: Natalie McGovern-Borchers meetings at historic sites. We will publish a list Office Administrator: Nancy Hopkins of current members in the Fall 2012 edition of Council and Good Shepherd Center Assistant: Cindy Hughes Preservation News and we hope that, with your help, tel: 206-622-6952 fax: 206-622-1197 that list will include many new names. e-mail: [email protected] If you have any questions about your membership web: www.historicseattle.org status, contact Membership Coordinator Dana Phelan at 206-622-5444, ext 225, or [email protected].  2   www.historicseattle.org At the Dearborn House

Transitions Matt Murray There’s been a staff change at the Good Shepherd n Mark Blatter Center. Matt Murray has been promoted to Building Come to In January, Mark Blatter, our Director of Real Operations Manager. Matt will take over the Victoria, BC Estate, left Historic Seattle to take on the position of responsibilities of long time Historic Seattle employee this Fall Executive Director for the Housing Resources Board Mark Willson who recently moved with his family to on Bainbridge Island. That organization has a track . Matt’s professional dedication and varied record for building and managing affordable housing in skill-set will continue to prove extremely valuable as

Kitsap County. For ten years, Mark was instrumental Historic Seattle eagerly moves into its 37th year of Dodge Wayne Entrance to Hatley Park in moving Historic Seattle ahead on the purchase and stewardship of the property. (now Royal Roads University) rehabilitation of the Cadillac Hotel and Washington There is still space left Hall and completion of the Chapel space at Good Grant Awards on our three-day archi- tectural heritage tour Shepherd Center. He also investigated leads for other Historic Seattle was successful in its recent requests for filled with splendid potential development projects for the organization. funding from 4Culture and the City of Seattle Office of buildings and interi- ors, fine dining, and Prior to his work at Historic Seattle, he served Arts & Cultural Affairs (OACA). We have been awarded outstanding lecturers as Executive Director of the St. Andrew’s Housing $40,000 for new exterior doors and interior finish and tour guides. Group, a nonprofit that developed affordable housing work at Washington Hall through 4Culture’s 2011 Arts Friday, September in east King County. With this new position, Mark is Membership Update Cultural Facilities Fund and $1,990 for our 2012 Design 28 through Sunday, returning to a field he strongly believes in—affordable Arts Lectures through the Civic Partners Fund of OACA. September 30. Consult the Events/Tours page housing. We are grateful to 4Culture and the City of Seattle for at www.historic Kji Kelly will expand his responsibilities and will not their continued support of our projects. seattle.org only continue his property and asset management of Pay a deposit online or Historic Seattle’s real estate portfolio but as the new At Our Properties Update: call (206) 622-6952 Director of Real Estate will lead the organization’s Heg/Phillips Chimney N continuing development of Washington Hall and will Restoration Completed be the point person for historic real estate opportunities and projects. Three contractors were invited to provide proposals to repair and restore both chimneys Nancy Hopkins on the west elevation of the Heg / Phillips Betta Peterson, our Administrative Assistant Apartments located at 711 – 713 East Union. during 2011, left to be with her husband, who is Scope of work included: the replacement of working in Japan. In February, we welcomed Nancy deteriorated and spalled brick; re-pointing Hopkins to our office. She has previously worked mortar joints; removal of moss; confirmation in business operations and as an executive assistant of structural integrity of chimney strapping with Washington STEM, as Administrative Director and tie-backs; repair and patch of chimney of The New School Foundation, and as Volunteer tops; and application of two coats of masonry

Coordinator/Public Relations Coordinator with waterproofing. The project was awarded to Kji Kelly Deaconess Children’s Services. Nancy has a Masters in Cantrell Restoration from Lake Stevens, Public Administration from Seattle University. She is Washington. In order to match new materials to the an articulate, intelligent, and thoughtful first contact existing, a brick and mortar submittal was reviewed for people calling the organization and an essential and approved prior to the pre-construction meeting. link to our smoothly tackling the work of various staff This exterior masonry work comes shortly after a members. comprehensive lead paint stabilization project was completed in the prior year.  3  www.historicseattle.org Education

Spring and Summer Programs Dard Hunter: The Graphics Works Learning from Historic Sites/ at a Glance Publication Debut Spring Members Meeting 4/14 When: Wednesday, April 18, 7 – 9 pm, lecture with book When: Friday, April 20, 12 – 1:30 pm Preserving Your Old House signing to follow Where: Woman’s Century Club (Harvard Exit Theatre) Building Renovation Where: Seattle Public Library Auditorium, 1000 4th Avenue 807 E. Roy Street, Capitol Hill; on-street metered parking Fair Registration: Free/donation Registration: Free/donation, light refreshments 4/18 Co-sponsored by the Book Club of Washington and Design Arts Most Seattleites have gone to movies Book Arts Guild Arts & Crafts Graphic at the Harvard Exit Theatre. Some come Design Lovers of the Arts Dard Hunter: The early to enjoy a drink and conversation Graphic Works and Crafts have in the cozy parlor, which owes its 1920s long been drawn 4/20 ambience to the Woman’s Century Club, a 120-year-old Learning from Historic to Roycroft books social club for women whose past members included Sites/Members Meeting by the remarkable Woman’s Century Club Bertha Landes, the first woman ; graphic imagery and painter E. Inez Denny; and Judge Evangeline Starr. 5/15 experimental typefaces Special Event New members include Historic Seattle members Sherri Fourth Annual Preserva- designed by Dard tion Awards Ceremony Schultz and Paula Becker, who have delved through the

Pomegranate Communications Pomegranate Hunter, who excelled as vaults to show off some of its treasures. 5/17 a designer, craftsman, Local Tour Founded in Seattle in 1891 by a group of forward- First Hill Neighborhood printer, typographer, and papermaker. A new book by thinking women led by suffragist Carrie Chapman Catt, Historic Seattle Program Director Lawrence Kreisman 6/7 the club produced yearly Arts and Crafts exhibitions Preserving Utility explains how a youth growing up in rural Ohio tapped from 1904 through 1909. In the 1920s the women Earthwise Salvage into progressive European design ideas, made them his raised the funds to build their own clubhouse—the 6/5, 6/12, 6/19 own, and succeeded in giving these designs national three-story Neoclassical red-brick building that today Design Arts exposure. Dard Hunter sought to explore new and Welcome to the Future houses one of Seattle’s best-loved movie theaters. In the Seattle Social and different ideas overseas rather than simply follow in late 1960s the building was sold, but the club retained Cultural Context in ‘62 the footsteps of the accepted theories at home. He Northwest Architects of the lifelong right to meet in the parlor, which it does to the Seattle World’s Fair adapted avant-garde German and Austrian Secession this day, presenting programs designed to connect and Modern Building concepts into a graphic design vocabulary that was Technology inspire women in the 21st century. Come learn about made available to the mainstream. The presentation the club’s history and how you can participate in its 7/19 showcases Hunter’s growth as a graphic artist and Local Tour current revitalization. For more information visit www. First Hill Neighborhood reveals the beauty, variety, and character-defining forms womanscenturyclub.org and typography that distinguish his work from others. 7/21 Learning from Historic Sites/Members Meeting Lawrence Kreisman, an educator and author in Tukwila Historical Society the field of architectural history and preservation, is Program Director of Historic Seattle. He is author of 8/11 Open to View Apartments by Anhalt, Art Deco Seattle, West Queen Anne Hofius Residence SOLD OUT School: Renaissance of a Landmark, Historic Preservation in Seattle, The Bloedel Reserve: Gardens in the Forest, The 8/16 Local Tour Stimson Legacy: Architecture in the Urban West, Made to First Hill Neighborhood Last: Historic Preservation in Seattle and King County, and co-author of The Arts and Crafts Movement in the

Pacific Northwest. Kreisman Lawrence

 4  www.historicseattle.org Advocacy

Preservation Advocacy in Western Building Update Events of Interest South Lake Union: The Boren Stabilization by WSDOT of the Western Building in Investment Company Warehouse Pioneer Square is scheduled to begin this spring. This Historic Seattle work will minimize potential damage to the building Council meetings while the tunneling work is in process beneath it. Third Thursdays at WSDOT will return the partially retrofitted structure 8 am at the to the property owner after the tunneling crew passes Dearborn House the area. To prepare for the full rehabilitation of the 1117 Minor Avenue building, the property owner’s project team has been (206) 622-6952 working closely with WSDOT and the City of Seattle. Eugenia Woo Eugenia The project’s architect is in the process of seeking Seattle Landmarks Preservation Board The architectural heritage of the Cascade neighborhood approvals from the Pioneer Square Preservation Board First and third and South Lake Union area is an eclectic one. Its existing for the renovation. Wednesdays at warehouses remind us of the area’s light industrial 3:30 pm history and they continue to define the streetscapes as Historic Theatres Library Opens Seattle Municipal the neighborhood’s physical fabric changes dramatically. Tower, 700 5th Ave, The Boren Investment Company Warehouse (334 Boren On Thursday, March 1, the Seattle Theatre Group 40th floor, Room Ave N.) remains significant to the community. Last fall, Historic Theatres Library officially opened to the 4060, unless other- Historic Seattle and the Washington Trust for Historic public coinciding with the anniversary of the opening wise announced. Preservation worked closely with South Lake Union and of Seattle’s Paramount Theatre on March 1, 1928—84 Historic Preservation Cascade neighborhood preservation advocates to support years ago. The library is located in the Paramount Dept. of Neighbor- the nomination and designation of the Boren Investment Theatre’s Office Tower adjacent to the theatre. hoods, 700 5th Company Warehouse (aka David Smith Furniture Building). The Seattle Theatre Group envisioned a historic Avenue, Ste. 1700, The building was threatened by planned new theatre library for the Paramount, Moore, and Seattle, WA 98124 development on the entire city block which includes Neptune Theatres. It required the gathering, sorting, (206) 684-0228 the designated landmark Troy Laundry Building (311- documenting, cataloging, and preserving of over 100 King County Land- 329 Fairview Ave N.). The Seattle Times sold the block years of historical data. Nearly 4,000 volunteer hours marks Commission to Touchstone Corporation which plans to redevelop were required to complete this project. Fourth Thursdays the site. Previous preferred alternatives presented to This valuable resource contains binders on a variety of at 4:30 pm, the Architectural Review Committee of the Landmarks topics: performers that graced the stages over the many 400 Yesler Way, Preservation Board (LPB) showed little more than decades; a journey through the peaks and valleys that Suite 510 the primary façades of one or both buildings being these theatres had to endure; wall hangings depicting Seattle, WA 98104, retained. With the successful designation of the the many challenges along the way; the visionaries unless otherwise Boren Investment Company Warehouse by the LPB responsible for these theatres; priceless memorabilia; announced. Con- in November 2011, revised plans were presented by and signed posters. Also included in the library are tact: King County the developer, showing a design that incorporates the converted CD/DVDs of performers and events, along Historic Preserva- two landmarks in a more compatible manner. Historic with Seattle’s Paramount Theatre opening night silent tion Program, Office Seattle continues to monitor progress of the proposed movie DVD, Feel My Pulse. of Business Relations plans. At its annual Volunteers Recognition Party in The library is open to the public on Tuesday and and Economic Development January 2012, Historic Seattle thanked neighborhood Thursday each week from 10 am – 3 pm. Admission (206) 296-8689 advocates Christine Lea and Colleen Dooley for is free. For more information, please contact Marian

their efforts in helping to save the Boren Investment Thrasher at [email protected]. Company Warehouse.  5  www.historicseattle.org Education

Building Renovation Fair anchoring the house to the foundation; bracing the continued from pg. 1 pony walls; and connecting the flooring system. It also covers plans available for structural work, including: Presentations at the Fair the Standard Earthquake Retrofit Plan of the City Timeless Style, Modern Living, 11 am of Seattle; permitting retrofit work; and Earthquake Carol Sundstrom, AIA, röm architecture studio Retrofit Training Classes for homeowners. Question Your kitchen is the hardest-working room in your and answer session follows. Carol Sundstrom home and upgrading it comes with a long list of Bruce Schoonmaker organized A-FFIX LLC & Earthquake decisions. Learn how to make choices that will work for Prepared.com in 1999 in response to the great need to secure your family today—and for decades to come—while homes and buildings in the Puget Sound region. The company has preserving, enhancing, or restoring your home's historic retrofitted over 400 homes and buildings. style. Learn how to incorporate elements that allow for aging-in-place, the basics for cabinet and countertop Interior Storm Windows for Old Buildings, 2 pm choices, and how those choices influence price. Van Calvez, MSE, LEED AP, Windovative Design LLC Question and answer session follows. Is it possible to save beautiful, historic windows and yet Marty Smith Architect Carol Sundstrom is the owner of röm architecture bring their thermal efficiency close to Energy Star levels studio. With over 15 years of experience, Carol’s projects have of performance? Van Calvez of Windovative Design been published in many books and magazines and she is the LLC answers, “yes.” He will explain how historic recipient of the 2011 AIA/HUD Alan J. Rothman Housing windows can be made to provide warmth, comfort, and Accessibility Award. energy savings without replacement to actually make your bungalow or mid-century residence cozy and Masonry Restoration, 12 pm comfortable in all kinds of weather. Marty Smith, Director of Business Development, Van Calvez, MSE, LEED AP, is the co-owner of Windovative VanWell Masonry Design LLC. The company’s current project is storm window Bruce Schoonmaker Learn about the function of masonry restoration installation at the iconic Pioneer Building in Pioneer Square. and what to look for on your building to see if restoration is necessary. The difference between old Laser Scanning as a Tool for Historic Preservation, 3 pm masonry and new masonry will be discussed and Brad Freeman, Triad Associates what materials are appropriate for historic homes and Collecting thousands of points a second, the 3D laser buildings. We will also discuss the difference between scanner creates a virtual photograph of any object it unreinforced and reinforced masonry buildings and scans. This “point cloud” is rich with data that can be what the requirements will be over the next 20 years used in a variety of applications. In this presentation, Van Calvez for mandatory seismic upgrades and how this is best you will learn how architects, engineers, contractors, accomplished. Question and answer session follows. and others are using the data collected with the 3D Prior to joining VanWell Masonry, Marty Smith was President of laser scanner to create virtual models and valuable Masonry Specialties, Inc., a Seattle masonry restoration contractor. information for historic preservation projects. Clients He has over 30 years of masonry restoration experience. enjoy a number of practical benefits—more detail, fewer delays, greater safety, better visualization, greater Preparing your Historic Home for Earthquakes, 1 pm access, less downtime, and more. Bruce Schoonmaker, A-FFIX LLC Brad Freeman is a Principal of Triad Associates with 39 years of It’s a given that historic older homes are vulnerable experience in surveying, mapping and project management. He is to earthquakes and we are guaranteed to experience actively involved in Triad’s 3D laser scanning projects putting this Brad Freeman earthquakes in Seattle sometime in the future. This high-tech tool to work on historic preservation projects. presentation covers the ABCs of securing your home:  6  www.historicseattle.org Education

New Books of Interest

Diana James. Shared Walls: Seattle Apartment Buildings, Paula Becker, Alan J. Stein and the HistoryLink staff. 1900 – 1939 (McFarland, 2012, $55) The Future Remembered : The 1962 Seattle World’s Fair National Trust’s Those of you who attended our and its Legacy (Seattle Center Foundation, 2011, $40) Preservation 2009 apartment building lecture and This is a colorful, well- Conference tour can now buy the book, Shared illustrated history of the people October 31- Walls: Seattle Apartment Buildings, and politics behind the staging of November 3, 1900 – 1939 (McFarland). It began Century 21 and the myriad mix Spokane as a collaborative project of Historic of international, national, themed Seattle members Diana James and and commercial buildings, and McFarland

Jacqueline Williams. The publication is Foundation Center Seattle exhibits that comprised the fair an excellent overview of the rise of multi-family housing, the during its six month run. It’s the perfect read before our June Spokane’s Davenport Hotel types of accommodation offered, the different architectural Welcome to the Future lecture series at Seattle Center. styles, floor plans, and progressive ideas incorporated in them, Beyond Boundaries and an account of individual buildings in Seattle. Barbara Johns. Signs of Home: The Paintings and is the theme for the Wartime Diary of Kamekichi Tokita (University of National Trust for Historic Preserva- Ron Tanner. From Animal House to Our House Washington Press, 2011, $50) tion’s 2012 National (Academy Chicago, 2012, $24.95) This book makes visible the Conference. Four This is a personal story about a couple’s exceptional paintings by Kamekichi days of educational commitments to restoring a decaying, Tokita (a Seattle Asian Art workshops, peer-to- peer networking, abandoned Baltimore brownstone. Neither Museum exhibit of his work and and field sessions. Ron nor Jill had any experience in home that of his friend and fellow sign The conference ex- renovation but they were not dissuaded painter Kenjiro Nomura recently plores preservation’s by naysayers. Instead, they undertook closed). It captures vignettes boundaries using University of Washington Press Washington of University

Academy Chicago Academy Spokane and the the impossible, faced financial ruin, of streets and alleys in Pioneer Inland Northwest as unexpected structural and materials issues, Square and the International District that he painted prior to a living laboratory to and sporadic impasses in their relationship with each other and the family’s internment during World War II. Of particular showcase preserva- their families. Historic Seattle and Elliott Bay Book Company interest to Historic Seattle members is that he and his wife tion successes and as a classroom for co-sponsor a reading and book-signing by Tanner on July 26. operated the Cadillac Hotel when it provided single room discussing preserva- Check the calendar at www.elliottbaybookcompany.com occupancy housing for local workers during the Depression. tion challenges. Once registration begins, the tour components Nick Russell. Glorious Victorians: Celebrating sell out quickly, so if Residential Architecture in British Columbia’s Capital you are interested, (Old Goat Press, Victoria, B.C., 2011, $34.95) Don’t forget to subscribe to put yourself on the This is a wonderful way to familiarize or check often our blog, information email list at http://www. yourselves with some of the fine www.main2seattle.wordpress.com for updates on local preservation news preservationnation. buildings we will see in late September org/resources/train- on our out-of-town tour to Victoria. ing/npc/sign-up-for- The book by heritage researcher and conference-updates. html. journalist Nick Russell is filled with Old Goat Press Goat Old excellent color images and information about 150 houses representing 150 years of the city’s evolving architecture, culture, and economy.  7  www.historicseattle.org Non-profit Org. U.S. Postage P A I D Seattle, WA Historic Seattle Permit No. 1129 Preservation Foundation 1117 Minor Avenue Seattle, Washington 98101

Upcoming Events Registration and Membership Form

MEMBER General Public & student EVENT REGISTRATION Pre-registration Day of event number Price number Price Number Price Total Preserving Earthwise Salvage (6/7) $ 15 $ 25 $ 10 $  Utility For even faster Design Arts Arts & Crafts Graphic Design Dard Hunter: The Graphic Works (4/18) Free/donation Free/donation Free/donation $ registration, Welcome to The Future Seattle Social/Cultural Context in ‘62 (6/5) $ 10 $ 15 $ 5 $ visit www. NW Architects of Seattle World’s Fair (6/12) $ 10 $ 15 $ 5 $ Modern Building Technology (6/19) $ 10 $ 15 $ 5 $ historicseattle. Series Pass (all three lectures) $ 25 $ 40 $ 10 $

org/events Preserving Building Renovation Fair (4/14) $ 5 $ 5 Free/donation $ yOUR OLD house  lEARNING Woman’s Century Club (4/20) Free/donation Free/donation Free/donation $ FROM Tukwila Historical Society (7/21) Free/donation Free/donation Free/donation $ Please note: HISTORIC SITES Member discounts are only applicable for pre- OPEN TO VIEW Hofius Residence (8/11) SOLD OU T registration received no later than three days prior to the event. After that, SPECIAL EVENT Fourth Annual Preservation Awards (5/15) $ 50 $ 60 $ 25 $ you will pay the public admission price. LOCAL TOURS First Hill Neighborhood (5/17) $ 25 $ 35 $ 20 $ First Hill Neighborhood (7/19) $ 25 $ 35 $ 20 $ First Hill Neighborhood (8/16) $ 25 $ 35 $ 20 $

HISTORIC SEATTLE MEMBERSHIP Event Total $

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Advocate $250 Guardian $500 Patron $1000 Grand Total $

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Signature (if charging) E-mail  Please detach and mail to: Historic Seattle, 1117 Minor Avenue, Seattle, WA 98101. You may become a member, renew your membership, make a donation and register for any of our events at www.historicseattle.org, www.historicseattle.orgusing a credit card. You may also fax this page to: (206) 622-1197 with your credit card informa- tion or you may phone in your membership and registration by calling (206) 622-6952.