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The historic Lowell M. Hidden and W. Foster Hidden houses have helped shaped the face of Vancouver, Washington. [2] The Hidden family has been present in Vancouver since the 1860s with Lowell Mason Hidden being the first to arrive from New England in 1864. [3] In 1871, Lowell M. Hidden started the Hidden Brick Company.
The Washington Brick Machine Company was a brick manufacturing company which operated in Washington, D.C. starting in 1874. [1] Its bricks were machine made and were used extensively across the city in major buildings still standing including the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Arts and Industries Building and National Building Museum.
The factory in Taylor, Washington, was near heavy glacial clay deposits in an 80-foot (24 m) high bank used to make the brick, and could produce 100,000 bricks a day in 1907. [3] Hydraulic mining was used to extract clay from the hill. [4] The factory produced 58 million bricks in 1917. [5]
Schools in Vancouver, Washington (1 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Vancouver, Washington" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total.
Centralia, Washington: 1857 Residence New Dungeness Light Station: Sequim, Washington: 1857 Lighthouse Davidson House: Steilacoom, Washington: 1858 Residence T. G. Richards and Company Store: Bellingham, Washington: 1858 Commercial Oldest brick building in the state built with brick from San Francisco Colonel Granville & Henrietta Haller House
The station's depot was built by the non-profit Amtrak Depot Committee, which began raising funds in 1987 and aimed to open a permanent station in time for the state centennial in 1989. [12] The committee raised $500,000 through government grants, business contributions, individual donations, and the sale of engraved bricks that were later laid ...