Preview up to 100 items from this collection below. This early 20th century magazine celebrated Seattle’s popular bungalow houses with photographs and architectural plans of selected homes. Use our map to see featured bungalows that still exist today.
Man with back to rail at entrance to Post Alley, 1st Ave. and Pike St., Pike Place Market, April 1967
Man with back to rail at entrance to Post at 1st and Pike
Identifier:
Date: 1967-04
View this itemI-5 from Madison St. overpass, April 22, 1967
Seattle; Freeway; View S.E. from Madison
Identifier: spl_wl_fnh_00016
Date: 1967-04-22
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 5, no. 9, Sept. 1916
Home of William C. and Frances E. Kiesel at 3102 35th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144 featured on pages 541-552. Home of Andrew C. and Maude S. Schneider at 2218 3rd Ave W, Seattle, WA 98119 featured on pages 569-576.
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1916_5_9
Date: 1916-09
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 5, no. 12, Dec. 1916
Home of Harry W. and Elizabeth Thurlow at 2567 5th Ave W, Seattle, WA 98119 featured on pages 755-764.
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1916_5_12
Date: 1916-12
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 3, no. 9, Sept. 1914
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1914_3_9
Date: 1914-09
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 3, no. 8, Aug. 1914
Home of Frank J. and Anna N. Zorn at 2317 46th Ave SW, Seattle, WA 98116 featured on pages 469-477. Home of Oliver C. and Maude W. McGilvra at 1520 38th Ave E, Seattle, WA 98112 featured on pages 478-486. Home of George H. and Lillian B. Hitchings at 3202 S Irving St, Seattle, WA 98144 featured on pages 508-513.
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1914_3_8
Date: 1914-08
View this itemKing Street Station, ca. 1911
During the early 1900s, there was increasing interest in connecting railroads with Seattle. The high demand and competition between railways resulted in two railway stations being built directly next to each other at 4th Avenue and Jackson Street. King Street Station (which is depicted in this postcard) was constructed in 1906 and can be distinguished by its tower. Union Station, originally known as the Oregon and Washington Station, was constructed in 1911. (Alternative names for Union Station include the Union Depot and the Northern Pacific Great Northern Depot.) Confusingly, both stations were sometimes referred to as "union stations" due to the fact that multiple railroad lines were shared within the same terminal. For a good example of the differences between Union Station and King Street Station see spl_pc_01011 where Union Station appears in the foreground and King Street Station appears in the background.
Identifier: spl_pc_01013
Date: 1911
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 6, no. 2, Feb. 1917
Article on pages 67-86 discusses Lake Washington Ship Canal and its impact on homes in the region, particularly in Lake Forest Park.
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1917_6_2
Date: 1917-02
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 5, no. 8, Aug. 1916
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1916_5_8
Date: 1916-08
View this itemBungalow Magazine, v. 2, no. 6, Jun. 1913
Home of Bert A. and Abbie Northrup at 8312 Fauntleroy Way SW, Seattle, WA 98136 featured on pages 7-10. Home of Lucious J. and Josephine Conkey at 2016 33rd Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144 featured on pages 11-14. Home of Elizabeth Ryer at 2000 32nd Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144 featured on pages 15-20. Home of Solomon E. and Margaret F. Barr at 5447 41st Ave SW, Seattle, WA 98136 featured on pages 21-24. Home of Max and Edith L. Hardman at 2207 11th Ave E, Seattle, WA 98102 featured on pages 25-29. Home of Charles B. and Mary Ernst at 6323 19th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98115 featured on pages 30-33.
Identifier: spl_bm_531811_1913_2_6
Date: 1913-06
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