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Northwest Asian Weekly – Seattle; Seattle Post-Intelligencer – Seattle (print edition 1863-2009, online only edition 2009-) [1] Seattle Weekly – Seattle; The Stranger – Seattle; The Voice of the Valley – Maple Valley
The old Seattle Times building in downtown Seattle is on the National Register of Historic Places.. Seattle's major daily newspaper is The Seattle Times.The local Blethen family owns 50.5% of the Times, [5] the other 49.5% being owned by the McClatchy Company. [6]
The Census Bureau adopted metropolitan districts in the 1910 census to create a standard definition for urban areas with industrial activity around a central city. [11] At the time, Seattle had the 22nd largest metropolitan district population at 239,269 people, a 195.8 percent increase from the population of the equivalent area in the 1900 census. [12]
Seattle (/ s i ˈ æ t əl / ⓘ see-AT-uhl) is a city on the West Coast of the United States.It is the seat of King County, Washington.With a 2023 population of 755,078 [2] it is the most populous city in both the state of Washington and the Pacific Northwest region of North America, and the 18th-most populous city in the United States.
The Seattle Times originated as the Seattle Press-Times, a four-page newspaper founded in 1891 with a daily circulation of 3,500, which Maine teacher and attorney Alden J. Blethen bought in 1896. [2] [3] Renamed the Seattle Daily Times, it doubled its circulation within half a year. By 1915, circulation stood at 70,000.
Windermere [43] / North Seattle 1910 [44] Of the area the Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Atlas designates as "Windermere", many consider the area west of Sand Point Way to be a separate neighborhood, Hawthorne Hills. 26: Laurelhurst: North Seattle [43] 1910 [44] [69] 27: University District (U District) North Seattle [43] 1891 [44]
The Seattle Times. Seattle History : 150 Years: Seattle By and By. p. 1. Archived from the original on 7 May 2006 and Ibid (27 May 2001). "The settlers saw trees, endless trees. The natives saw the spaces between the trees". The Seattle Times. Seattle History : 150 Years: Seattle By and By. p. 2.
The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on October 23, 2013 "150 Most Influential People in Seattle/King County History: Nominees", The Seattle Times, 2001, archived from the original on 2014-11-16; Keiko Tanaka (2001). "Early Telephone Use in Seattle, 1880s–1920s". Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 92 (4): 190– 202.