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Captain Robert Gates Warner and Emma Marie Warner
Captain Robert Gates Warner and first daughter, Emma Marie Warner. Emma Marie was born May 29, 1911 and died August 5, 1965. Robert Gates Warner was the son of Robert and Emma Warner. Grandson of Eleanor and James Warner and grandson of Josiah and Mary Gates
1st Ave. looking north from James St. and the Pioneer Building, Pioneer Square district, Seattle, 1890
Caption on image: Front St. North from James. 1890. 506.
Shows the Starr-Boyd at left. Signs in image include: Canadian Pacific Ticket Office; W.P. Boyd & Co.; Merchants National Bank; A. Hansen Jeweler and Silversmith. 1st Ave. was known as Front St. at the time of this photograph.
Warner [3024]
PH Coll 273.73
Captain Robert Gates Warner
Captain Robert Gates Warner, son of Robert Sans Warner. Grandson of James and Eleanor Warner and Josiah and Mary Gates
Warner Family
The first family of Palma Sola, the Warner family, posed for this while still in Springfield, Massachussettes. This was just before the father, James Warner, inventor and manufacturer of the Springfield rifle, moved the family to Florida. James died in 1869. Standing, left to right: Eleanor and Warburton. Seated, left to right are: robert, George, James Junior, father James, then Kate and Eleanor with Harry
Correspondence from James Warner (MPCA) to Donald York (Chicago & Northwestern Transportation Company) re: Limited No Action Letter addressing PAH contaminated soil from a former creosote pit at former Republic Creosoting Co. site
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; Warner, James. (1995). Correspondence from James Warner (MPCA) to Donald York (Chicago & Northwestern Transportation Company) re: Limited No Action Letter addressing PAH contaminated soil from a former creosote pit at former Republic Creosoting Co. site. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/834
Warner, James Meech
A carte-de-visite card of James M. Warner, 1836-1897, an Union officer during the American Civil War.https://digitalcommons.lmunet.edu/allmcdv/1535/thumbnail.jp
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Letter from James F. Warner to Emmett L. Bennett Jr., January 04, 1965
Warner offers Bennett to write an article for the Fulbright Review on a Greek subject.Classic
Pioneer Place totem pole looking southeast toward the Olympic Block housing the Olympic Hotel and the ticket office for the Northern Pacific Railway, Seattle, probably between 1900 and 1908
Located at the intersection of James St., Yesler Way and 1st. Ave.
Signs in image include: Merchants Cafe, Olympia Beer, Olympic Hotel, Northern Pacific Ticket Office' Burlington Route Freight and Ticket Office.
Caption on image: 241 LH.
Warner [3018]
PH Coll 273.5
1888 Mt. Rainier climbing expedition, August 18th, showing Henry Loomis with Mr. and Mrs. Longmire and others at Longmire Springs with Mt. Rainier in the background, Washington
Caption affixed to verso: Longmire Springs, August 12th, 1888. Henry Loomis, near the bath house. Mrs. James Longmire second to the right. Picture by A.C. Warner.
From Robert Monroe's notes: The first photograph of Longmire Springs, probably made during the photographer's descent from the mountain on August 18, 1888. The figures l. to r. are: an unidentified man, Henry Loomis, an unidentified woman, Mrs. James B. Longmire, two children seated in foreground, and (in the chair) a Mrs. Johnson who was a guest of the Longmires.
Warner 711
PH Coll 273.491In 1888, photographer Arthur Churchill Warner was engaged by John Muir to join a Mt. Rainier climbing expedition as a working member of a small party that would also include Major Edward S. Ingraham, the Californian artist William Keith, a young scientist named Charles V. Piper, Henry Loomis, Norman O. Booth, Daniel Waldo Bass, young Joe Stampfler and John Hays who tended the horses, the guides Indian Henry and Philemon Beecher Van Trump. This would be the first historic use of a camera at the summit of the mountain. His personal account of this ascent was published in "The Mountaineer" in 1956. Unfortunately, many of the original negatives appear to have been lost, perhaps as a result of the devastating fire of 1889 not ten months after the Mt. Rainier photographs of August 1888
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