Oregon Historical Society
Research Library
1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97205
Phone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
E-mail: libreference@ohs.org



Guide to the Seattle Public Library Moving Image Collection, 1931-1976


Mic 3





Finding aid prepared by Nancy Kauffman

Finding aid encoded by Sharon M. Howe., 2004
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Funding for preparing this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.


Overview of the Collection

 
Repository Name:
 

Oregon Historical Society
Research Library

1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97205
Phone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
E-mail: libreference@ohs.org

 
Collection Number:
 

Mic 3

 
Collector:
 

Seattle Public Library

 
Title:
 

Seattle Public Library Moving Image Collection

 
Dates:
 

1931-1976 (inclusive)

 
Quantity:
 

156 reels of 16mm film

 
Languages:
 

The collection is in English. 

 
Summary:
 

The collection is comprised primarily of an early television series, The Washington State Reporter, which was produced by the National Bank of Commerce and aired on KING-TV (Seattle, Wash.) from November 1951 to circa 1956. The collection also includes other non-fiction television programs from circa 1950 to 1976, most notably one on Vietnamese immigrants and several on Seattle topics, as well as home movies dating from 1931 to 1963.

 

Biographical Note

The first commercial program to be broadcast in Seattle was on Thanksgiving Day 1948 on station KING-TV, which was the only television station in Seattle until 1952. Programs were produced locally during the early years of television (nationwide programming did not reach the West Coast until 1951), and were often produced by the sponsors. Such is the case with The Washington State Reporter , which was produced by the National Bank of Commerce (NB of C) from 1951 to circa 1956.

The Washington State Reporter is an early non-fiction television program that featured a reporter (first Charles Herring, then Richard Ross) on location in towns and other sites throughout Washington state, Alaska, and the Pacific Rim countries, interviewing local business people, leaders, and citizens about industries, economic growth, and other issues. The series apparently started as The Overseas Report, which was filmed in Europe in November 1951 and broadcast on KING-TV between November 1951 and February 1952. The series then became The Washington State Reporter in 1952 and focused on business and industry in Washington State. The series expanded its coverage to Alaska in 1953 and to Asia in 1954, but still continued its Washington programs in 1954 and 1955. Footage from The Washington State Reporter series was also reused and edited to create other programs for broadcast in the mid-1950s.

Content Description

The collection is composed primarily of an early television series, The Washington State Reporter, which was produced by the National Bank of Commerce and aired on KING-TV (Seattle, Wash.) from November 1951 to circa 1956. The programs cover Europe, Asia, and Alaska, as well as Washington state. The collection also includes other non-fiction television programs from circa 1950 to 1976, most notably one on Vietnamese immigrants in Pullman, Wash., and several on Seattle topics. This group also includes a sea life documentary for children. All except two were produced in Seattle. The collection includes four home movies dating from 1931 to 1963, primarily on family trips and community events in Washington state, but one features dances of the Kwakiutl Indians of British Columbia. Most of the films are in black-and-white, but a few are in color, as noted in the descriptions.

Arrangement

No numbering system was inherited with the collection. Oregon Historical Society Research Library staff sequentially numbered the films in the collection upon acquisition. Each single reel of film was copied onto a single preview tape. The collection is arranged in the following series and subseries.

  • Series A: The Washington State Reporter, 1951-1956
    • Subseries 1: Europe, 1951-1952
    • Subseries 2: Washington State, 1952-1956
    • Subseries 3: Alaska, 1953-1954
    • Subseries 4: Orient/Far East, 1954
    • Subseries 5: Compilation Programs and Commercials, circa 1954-circa 1956
  • Series B: Other Films, 1931-1976
    • subseries 1: Professional Films, circa 1950-1976
    • subseries 2: Amateur Films, 1931-1963

Administrative Information

Custodial History 

The Oregon Historical Society acquired the collection by donation from the Seattle Public Library. Custodial information prior to the Seattle Public Library is unknown at this time.

Acquisition Information 

The Seattle Public Library donated the collection to the Oregon Historical Society on March 3, 1986 (Accession no. 17606). One film, A New Life, was donated to the collection on April 21, 1989 (Accession no. 19259)

Processing Note 

Each single reel of film was copied onto a single preview tape. Minor repairs were made to some of the original 16mm films as they were transferred to videotape. Some of the total 156 reels are duplicates and are not included in the reel counts for each series and subseries.

Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available 

Preview videotapes are available for the entire collection unless otherwise noted in the container list.

Restrictions on Access 

The collection is open to the public and available for viewing on videotape.

Restrictions on Use 

The Oregon Historical Society is the owner of the materials in the Research Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from the Research Library before any publication use. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.

Preferred Citation 

To cite the entire collection: Seattle Public Library Moving Image Collection, Oregon Historical Society Research Library. To cite individual titles: [Archive number], [Title], Seattle Public Library Moving Image Collection, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Related Information

Bibliography 

Brooks, Tim and Earle Marsh. “A Short History of Network Television” in The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. 6th edition. New York: The Ballantine Publishing Group, 1995.

The Seattle Times, 1996. “TV’s Magical Early Days,” Aug. 25.

Additional Reference Guides 

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer television program listings for 1950-1955 were reviewed for broadcast dates and content details. A program schedule was assembled and is available at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Subjects

This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings.

 
Alaska
Asia
Asia, Southeastern
East Asia
Orient
Seattle (Wash.)
Washington (State)
Agriculture—Washington (State)
Banks and banking—Washington (State)
Dams—Washington (State)
Forest products industry—Washington (State)
Industries—Alaska
Industries—Washington (State)
Recreation—Washington (State)
Advertising
Documentary
Educational
Home movies and video
Other Creators :
Cinema Services Corp.
National Bank of Commerce (Seattle, Wash.)

Detailed Description of the Collection

The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.


 

Series A:  The Washington State Reporter, circa 1951-circa 1955

95 reels of 16mm film
Programs about Washington, Alaska, the Far East, and Europe. They ran under several alternative titles: The NB of C Reporter, The NB of C Reporter in Washington State, The National Bank of Commerce Reporter in Washington State, The Alaska Story, and The Washington State Reporter in the Far East . Unless otherwise noted, each film in this series is one reel with a running time of approximately 11-12 minutes. The subseries that follow are arranged chronologically in the order in which each series first aired, then by archive number within each subseries.
 
Description
Subseries 1:   Europe, 1951-1952
 
2 reels
This series of programs is in two parts; each part is comprised of visits to several European countries, in particular where there were U.S. Air Force Military Air Transport bases. The segments were filmed in November 1951. It appears that these segments were originally broadcast individually Nov. 27, 1951, through Feb. 19, 1952, and then may have been repackaged into these two longer programs for later broadcast.
06674 SEPL:   Overseas Report : [Military Air Transport Bases], 1951
 
Two parts: Part 1 is 37 minutes, Part 2 is 44 minutes
Reporter Charles Herring and Cameraman Wally Hamilton spent 39 days in Europe visiting Military Air Transport Service bases, talking with people stationed there from Washington state and with local people living there about world issues, particularly communism and the possibility of a third world war. Part 1 visits the Azores Islands, Tripoli, Athens, Turkey, and Rome. Part 2 visits Frankfurt, Berlin, Paris, London, and Scotland. Appearing: Wayne Bacon, Sgt. Clyde Neer, Cpl. Gerald Ennis, 1st Lt. Donald Stay, Robert J. Corkery of the U.S. Displaced Persons Commission, Brig. Gen. Robert C. Oliver.
Subseries 2:   Washington State, 1952-1956
 
65 reels
This series of programs covers people and industries in Washington state. It was broadcast from approximately February 1952 through 1956.
06570 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Quincy, [1954]
 
Covers the economic growth of Quincy, Washington (Grant County), following the opening of the west canal of the Grand Coulee Dam, bringing irrigation to the arid farmland. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Ray Young, farmer; Randall Marney, manager of National Bank of Commerce Quincy branch; Jack Weber, president of Quincy Irrigation District.
06576 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Trade Fair, 1954
 
Covers the Third Annual Washington State International Fair in Seattle, where merchants representing 22 countries from the Pacific Rim and South Asia brought their products for sale in the American market. The program features dolls and figurines from Japan. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Clarence L. Helford, National Bank of Commerce, and representatives from Guam, Mexico, South Korea, Pakistan, Vietnam, and Indonesia.
06578 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Air and Sea Lanes, [1955]
 
Discusses the importance of Seattle as a seaport in the shipping industry. Also covers the growth of the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Reporter: Richard Ross. Appearing: Captain Sowata, pilot.
06579 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Air Tractor—Lamson, 1954
 
Focuses on lesser-known aspects of the aviation industry, including profiles of a woman aviator, Jenny S. Richardson, in Yakima and the Lamson Aircraft Company, which provides engineering support to companies that use aviation in their business (such as aerial farming). Reporter: Richard Ross. Appearing: Jenny S. Richardson, aviator; Robert Lamson, Lamson Aircraft; Al Baxter, inventor of flying crop duster; Doug [Rude], production manager; and Bob Ward, mechanic.
06581 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: SEATAC, circa 1952
 
Covers the features and facilities of the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, including statistics on passengers, employees, and airlines. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Bret Patterson; Earl S. Bigler, airport manager; and Capt. R. H. Sterens, pilot.
06582 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Rebuilding of a Town, circa 1952
 
Focuses on Forks, Washington, on the Olympic Peninsula, and the effects of a September 1951 forest fire on the town and its residents. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Fred Marquist, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson, Mrs. Charles Moore, George Beck.
06583 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Yakima, 1955
 
Shows the Yakima Valley and its diverse industries, including cattle and sheep ranching, agriculture, orchards, grain production, hop growing, dams on the Columbia River, and irrigation systems. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer/editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services.
06584 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Federal Reserve, circa 1954
 
Profiles the Seattle branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Shows how checks and bonds are processed and how money is sorted, refreshed, and destroyed. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Royal E. Everson, assistant manager for Federal Reserve Bank.
06585 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Bank Moving Day, 1956
 
Covers the day that the National Bank of Commerce moved from the 1925 Medical/Dental building into its new building on the Tremble block of downtown Seattle. Includes a brief history of the Seattle business district beginning from the 1920s to 1956. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services. Appearing: Dudley Carter, axe sculptor.
06587 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Aberdeen [Oil Refinery Dispute], 1954
 
Discusses an oil refinery dispute in Grays Harbor County near Ocean City centering on the land rights of the oil company and the original homesteading family of Samson Johns. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Laura Cloud family and Flora Straum family.
06588 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: City of Longview, 1953
 
Focuses on Longview and its wood products industries and lumber mill operations, including the Long Bell Lumber Co. and Weyerhaeuser Co. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: F. M. Morris and J.M. White, Long Bell Lumber Co., and Everett H. Bartow, Weyerhaeuser Co.
06589 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Clearbrook, circa1955
 
Profiles the Clearbrook Riding Academy in Seattle, a horse named Good Friday, and a traveling blacksmith. Reporter: Richard Ross. Appearing: Jim McCleave, horse owner; James R. Scott, blacksmith; and Bobby Peterson.
06590 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Lynden, circa 1953
 
Covers Lynden, its Dutch settlers, agriculture, bulb growing, and interviews Saul Lewis, the editor of the Lynden Tribune. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Lyman Judson, Paul Green, Saul Lewis and his sons, William Lewis and Julian Lewis.
06591 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: The Atomic City, 1952
 
Discusses the growth of Richland, a U.S. government city built to serve Hanford Atomic Works in 1943 and a recent $180 million expansion program. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Burt Sellen, manager of National Bank of Commerce, Richland branch; George R. Prout, vice president, General Electric; David F. Shaw, manager, Hanford Operations, Atomic Energy Commission; and Francis J. McHale, chief security officer.
06592 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Hanford, 1954
 
Covers Richland, Washington, hometown of the Atomic Energy Commission and the 600-square-mile Hanford nuclear plant. Discusses security, employee housing, and process of changing uranium into plutonium. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services. Appearing: Francis McHale, chief security officer, and David F. Shaw, manager, Hanford Operations, Atomic Energy Commission.
06593 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Waterville Wheat Farm, 1952
 
Visits the wheat farm of Carl Jenson in Waterville, Washington, with an emphasis on the machinery needed for modern wheat farming. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Carl Jenson, Melvin Jenson, Roy Wise, Hans Poulson, and Donald Jenson.
06594 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Farm in a Day, 1952 June 3 (broadcast)
 
Documents the Columbia Basin Project, the construction of a complete farm near Moses Lake, Wash., in 24 hours. Shows how the agriculture industry for the region has been improved by bringing irrigation water from the Grand Coulee Dam to convert desert to farmland. Reporter: Murray Morgan. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Dave Crockett. Appearing: Donald D. Dunn, farmer (and family); W. C. Bell, president, Western Retail Lumbermen’s Association; Paul Kirk, architect; and Michael Strauss, Bureau of Reclamation.
06596 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Grain, circa 1953
 
Covers the Kerr & Gifford Co. grain exporters, the Centennial Flour Mill in Granger, Washington, and a feed lot in the Yakima Valley. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Carl Walker, Kerr & Gifford Co.; Don Jenny and Ollie Dodd, Centennial Flour Mill; Bill Fleming, rancher.
06597 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Aplets—Liberty Orchards, 1953
 
Visits the Liberty Orchards Company in Cashmere, Washington, and shows the cooking and processing of Aplets fruit candy. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: “Miss NB of C;” Joseph Raskie; Mark Balaban, owner of Liberty Orchards; Cashmere Apple Blossom Court: Carolyn Ellis, queen, and Joanne Heffner and Hazel Coppers, princesses.
06598 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Wenatchee Valley Apples], 1955
 
Gives an overview of the apple industry in the Wenatchee Valley of Chelan County, from planting to harvesting to packing and shipping. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services.
06599 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: 4-H Dairy Farm, 1955
 
Discusses the importance of dairy farming and 4-H clubs in Washington. Shows the processes and equipment of a modern dairy farm in Snohomish County. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Arthur M. Temples, dairy farmer, with children, Jim and Geraldine; and J. Floyd Saxman, dairy farmer.
06600 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Wheat, 1955
 
Shows the wheat industry in Douglas County, Washington, from planting and harvesting to marketing and distribution. Describes differences between old and new growing methods and equipment. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services.
06602 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Trade Fair, 1955
 
Covers the International Trade Fair in Seattle, where representatives from Pacific Rim countries come to sell their products and participate in cultural interchange. Gives an overview of the previous three trade fairs held in 1951, 1952, and 1954. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen.
06603 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel], circa 1952
 
Profiles the Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel Corporation, a scrap metal yard and steel processing plant in Seattle. Shows the processing and melting down of scrap into finished steel. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: C. H. Beatty, general superintendent; L. G. Knight, employee; and Vernon Crosson, Industrial Relations, all of Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel Corp.
06604 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Medicine Close to Home, circa 1953
 
Covers the medical and dental schools in the University of Washington Health Science Building. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Dr. Hugh Jones, Dr. Mario Starlasey, Dr. Stanley Bennett, Dr. Conrad Fong, Dr. Nils Erickson, and Dr. Edward Turner, dean of the Medical School.
06606 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Skiing and Sailing, circa 1955
 
Covers skiing and boating recreational attractions in the Seattle and Puget Sound areas. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Services.
06607 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Sailboats, 1954
 
Shows the Elliott Sail Race in Seattle and discusses other types of boats and boat races. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Bob Watts, Bill Black, Walt Widel, Denney Watts, and Bob Hubner.
06609 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Ski Show, circa 1953
 
Highlights the Snoqualmie Summit Ski Area, where, each weekend, high school students take part in classes and races at a ski school. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Hal Killman, administrative director, and Lee Baron, ski instructor.
06610 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Highway Patrol, 1952
 
Details the work done by the State Patrol at Snoqualmie Pass. Discusses accidents, road conditions, and maintenance crews and their equipment. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Sgt. J. E. Baker, patrolman, and James A. Pride, chief of State Patrol.
06611 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Washington Displaced Persons], circa 1952
 
Discusses the Displaced Persons Program, which brought people from Eastern Europe to the United States in the years after World War II. Includes interviews with some of the 2,000 displaced persons brought from East Poland, Latvia, and Germany. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Kaz Malinowski, Janus Amptmanus, Joseph Sanick, Morris Gordon, and Fred Patterson, National Bank of Commerce.
06612 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Traffic Safety: “Light Up Your Bumper”], circa 1952
 
Covers the “Light a Bumper” campaign in Washington. Shows people adding reflective strips to their car and bicycle bumpers, as well as to clothing, road stripes, and traffic signs. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: “Miss NB of C;” Mike Myland and Wendell Lacroix, Sharpell High School students; Sergeant J. E. Baker, State Highway Patrol; Bill Sheffield, Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.; Paul Lemke, Traffic Control Signs Co.; George Roost, National Advertising Co.; and Fred Patterson, National Bank of Commerce.
06613 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Wonders of Clay, circa 1953-1955
 
Profiles the clay industry in Washington. Shows a clay mine along the Green River and visits the Gladden McBean & Company clay plant in Renton. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Mary Helen Herring, and J. G. Anderson and E. H. Whitney, Gladden McBean & Company.
06615 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Mysteries of Salmon, 1953
 
Reports on the work of the Fisheries Research Institute of the University of Washington and its study of the salmon life cycle in Alaska and Pacific Northwest waters for the purpose of determining the number and size of salmon for the fishing industry. Shows use of fish traps, attaching tags, and measuring fish. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Dr. William Thompson.
06617 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Trade Fair, 1954
 
Same as 06576 SEPL. Covers the Third Annual Washington State International Fair in Seattle, where merchants representing 22 countries from the Pacific Rim and South Asia brought their products for sale in the American market. The program features dolls and figurines from Japan. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Clarence L. Helford, National Bank of Commerce, and representatives from Guam, Mexico, South Korea, Pakistan, Vietnam, and Indonesia.
06619 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: State Legislature, 1953
 
Two parts, 12 min. each
Part 1 covers the opening of the 33rd session of the Washington State legislature, including the inauguration of Governor Arthur B. Langlie. Part 2 covers the end of the session, with interviews of senators and representatives about business accomplished and not accomplished during the session.Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Governor Arthur B. Langlie, Rep. Julia Butler Hanson, Supt. of Public Instruction Pearl Wanamaker, Sen. Matt Washington, Sen. Mike Gallagher, Sen. Robert R. Greive, Sen. David Cowen, and Sen. Barney Dahl.
06621 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Tugboats on Puget Sound], circa 1952
 
Profiles on the work done by tugboats in Puget Sound, focusing on the tugboat Sandra Foss. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Capt. John Gordon, Oliver Johnson, and Bob Sanford.
06622 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Gold Leaf, Tatoosh Island, Cape Flattery Lighthouse, 1954
 
First segment is an interview of “Pappy” Camp, master craftsman in gold leafing. Second segment follows a boat ride by way of Neah Bay to Tatoosh Island, shows passengers being unloaded to island by hoist, and visits the Cape Flattery Lighthouse and families of the lighthouse keepers. Reporter: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Nesky “Pappy” Camp, gold leaf artist (and wife), and Warren Burtoh, lighthouse keeper.
06623 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [U.S./Canadian Customs], 1952
 
Examines the duties carried out by the customs and immigration officers in Canada and the United States, including the Blaine, Wash., border crossing. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Thomas E. Murphy, deputy collector of customs, and John P. Boyd, district director, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
06624 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Clams—Amusement and Industry, 1953
 
Highlights commercial and non-commercial clam digging on Copalis Beach in Grays Harbor County and tours the Pioneer Cannery. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: “Miss NB of C” and Gill Bodey.


06626 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Clams—Amusement and Industry, [1953]
 
Highlights commercial and non-commercial clam digging on Copalis Beach in Grays Harbor County and tours the Pioneer Cannery. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: “Miss NB of C”, Gill Bodey.
06628 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Giants of the Sky—Fairchild Air Force Base, circa 1953
 
Follows a crew of bomber pilots at Fairchild Air Force Base near Spokane, Wash., as they prepare for a simulated mission with a B-36 bomber. Reporter: Charles Herring. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Charles A. Bondley, Jr., Commanding General of the 57th Division; Captain Jewels Bomberg, pilot; Jordan Erickson; Nate Grimmer; and James Sureman.
06629 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Furs, [1954]
 
Covers the raising of minks and the processing of mink pelts at Harmond Fur Farm, then visits the Seattle Fur Exchange auction and shows what buyers look for in fox, muskrat, beaver, and mink pelts. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harmond, Harmond Fur Farm.
06630 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Seattle Fire Department, [1954]
 
Shows a day’s work for the firemen in the Seattle Fire Department, including a call to an apartment fire, fire prevention, and training the public in fire safety. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Robert “Bob” Rogers, Assistant Fire Chief, and Mr. Fitzgerald, Fire Chief.
06631 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Transit System Show, [1954]
 
Gives an overview of the operations of the transit system in Seattle, including maintenance of busses and trolleys, the dispatcher’s office, training of bus drivers, lost and found, and fare increases. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Lloyd Graber, general manager of Seattle Transportation System, and Ben Chenilt, bus driver.
06632 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Bo Bo and Seattle Bridges, 1954
 
Visits Bo Bo, the gorilla, in the home of the Loman family (who raised him from infancy) in Anacortes, Washington, and then shows him in his new home at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. Second segment covers the operation of the University Bridge in Seattle and interviews the bridge tender about drawbridge controls and mechanisms. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Director: Dave Titus. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Mrs. Roy Loman (and children Bill, Claudia, and Susan); Ed Johnson, director of Woodland Park Zoo; and Merle Gregory, bridge tender.
06633 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Electronics Show, 1954
 
Focuses on electrical devices that are changing the way the world works, with interviews of students and professors at the University of Washington School of Electrical Engineering. Shows launching of rocket, electronics in medicine, playing tic-tac-toe with computer, and use of IBM machines in business. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: “Miss NB of C”; Roy Lesuik, assistant professor of mathematics; Wesley Olsen, assistant supervisor, and Austin Dustmond, executive officer, School of Electrical Engineering.
06634 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: A Trip to the Zoo, [1953-1954]
 
Visits the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle and shows various zoo animals, including the elephant named Wide Awake. Discusses new exhibits and future plans for the zoo. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Chet Herring, son of Charles Herring, and Edward Johnson, zoo director.
06635 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Port of Seattle, [1954]
 
Details the activities of the Port of Seattle and discusses its importance as the gateway to Alaska and the Orient and in establishing trade with Japan to keep them from trading with Communist countries. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Frank Elliot, manager of Seattle Foreign Trade Zone No. 5; F. Fitzgerald, superintendent of Fisherman’s Terminal; and Warren Lambert, managing director of the Port of Seattle.
06636 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Seattle Curling Club], undated
 
Shows the Seattle Curling Club playing at Civic Ice Arena. Demonstrates and explains the Scottish game that became popular in Seattle and Tacoma. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Des Marbold, president, and George Cookston, former president, Seattle Curling Club.
06637 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Logging, circa 1955
 
Shows the logging operations at the Weyerhaeuser St. Helens Tree Farm, including selecting the trees, felling, bucking, loading log trucks and trains, and cutting and rigging a spar tree. Interviews with loggers preparing for work and being fed in the cookhouse. Reporter: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Joe Bowers, camp foreman, and Morris Frye, Pete Danshaw, and Paul Preston, loggers.
06639 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Tree Farming, 1955
 
Focuses on tree farming in Washington State, showing selective and clear cut harvesting practices, seeding, planting, and thinning methods. Discusses climate, timber growth, and multiple use forest management. Visits the Nisqually Tree Nursery and Voights Creek Tree Farm in Thurston County. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: John Bushart and Norman G. Jacobson.
06640 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Forest Products, 1955
 
Covers aspects of the wood products industry such as lumber and sawmills, pulp and paper, mass production of furniture, use of waste wood, steam production, and research in Longview and Cowlitz County, Wash., featuring Weyerhaeuser Company. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06641 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Christmas Trees, 1952
 
Details Christmas tree farming in western Washington and visits the Douglas Fir Christmas Tree Company in Shelton. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Jerry Peabody, tree seller.
06643 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: More Paper, More Jobs, circa 1953
 
Tours the Soundview Division of the Scott Paper Company in Everett, Washington. Shows the pulp-making process, quality control tests, the construction of Scott’s new $17 million paper mill, and dedication ceremony. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: “Miss NB of C”; Paul Baldwin, Scott’s West Coast administrative officer; Howard Wright, contractor; David Watley, project engineer; William Coster, mill superintenden; Bill Sherwood, laboratory tester; Robert Theme, Scott’s West Coast technical director; Arthur Armstrong, personnel manager; Leo Burden and John Carlson, production; Henry Dennis; Andrew Price, NB of C chairman of the board; G. Willing Pepper, Scott vice-president; Raymond C. Matier, Scott executive vice-president; U. N. Dickey, Scott executive; and Rev. Gordon W. Lind.
06645 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Navigation on the Columbia, circa 1955
 
Covers the history of navigation on the Columbia River, commercial traffic, the building of canals around Celilo Falls, operation of ferries at Wenatchee and Richland, and the construction and operation of McNary Dam. Reporter: Richard Ross. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Director: Dave Titus. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service Appearing: Colonel F. S. Tandy, Corps of Engineers.
06647 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Power on the Columbia, 1955
 
Focuses on the dams on the Columbia River, including Grand Coulee, Chief Joseph, Rock Island, McNary, and The Dalles. Discusses the generation of power and how the building of dams enabled the building of aluminum plants in Washington, such as the Alcoa Aluminum plant in Wenatchee. Shows President Eisenhower dedicating McNary Dam. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: William Farron, director of installation for General Electric; President Dwight D. Eisenhower; and Richard Earnhardt, project engineer, Army Corps of Engineers.
06649 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: McNary Dam, 1954
 
Details how the McNary Navigation Lock and Dam has changed the landscape and commerce of southeast Washington and the navigation of the Columbia and Snake Rivers. Shows Lake Wallula covering what was the town of Wallula, relocated to higher ground in 1953. Reporter: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Colonel F. S. Tandy, Corps of Engineers.
06662 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Columbia Basin [compilation], circa 1954
 
33 minutes
A compilation of stories from the Columbia Basin. The Grand Coulee Dam segment discusses power generation, plant security, and irrigation. The Quincy, Washington, segment discusses the effect of irrigation on farming. The last segment, on Richland, discusses the growth of the city as a result of the Hanford Atomic Works and a recent $180 million expansion program. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Art Newberry, supervising engineer of Grand Coulee Dam; A. F. Darland, supervising engineer of Grand Coulee Dam; Major A. E. Hutton, security officer at Grand Coulee Dam; Ray Young, farmer in Quincy; Jake Weber, president of Quincy Irrigation District; George R. Prout, vice president of General Electric; David F. Shaw, manager of Hanford operations office of Atomic Energy Commission; and Francis J. McHale, chief of Atomic Energy Commission security division.
06672 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Orthopedic, circa 1953
 
Focuses on the Children’s Orthopedic Hospital in Seattle and its move from a cottage on Queen Ann Hill to its present location on East 45th. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: “Miss NB of C”; Dr. Vernon Spickard, chief of staff; Lillian Thomson, hospital superintendent; Mrs. J. Irving Callwell, daughter of hospital founder, Anna Clise; and Mrs. Reginal H. Parsons, charter board member.
06680 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Petroleum, circa 1954
 
Details the construction of Shell Oil’s oil refinery at March Point in Anacortes, Washington. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: O. Herring, Shell Oil public relations.
06686 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Columbia River Navigational History], 1955
 
Covers the history of river transportation and commerce along the Columbia River, including an interview with a Native American about the coming of the white man and shots of Celilo Falls, The Dalles Dam, and McNary Locks. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer: Al Amundsen. Appearing: Colonel F. S. Tandy, Corps of Engineers.
06688 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Seattle Annexation and Darrington, circa 1954
 
Details the annexation of Darrington to Seattle, the second largest annexation in Seattle’s history, and includes interviews of residents. Reporter: Charles Herring. Appearing: Carl Olson, publisher of North Seattle Star; William Fellows; R. C. Beyers; Mrs. Ed Fox; R. B. Blanton; W. L. Schuyler; Mr. and Mrs. James Schuyler; Nels Brucehead; George Bowman, Sr.; and George Bowman, Jr.
06689 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Northwest Glass Company and Andre J., circa 1953
 
Profiles the Northwestern Glass Company in Seattle, which pioneered the electric melting of glass. Also has a brief interview of Andre J., a French national in NB of C’s foreign department, speaking about exporting apples. Reporter: Charles Herring. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Andre J., NB of C’s foreign department; DeLaurie Carl Smith, Northwestern Glass Company; and Edward S. Campbell, president of Northwestern Glass Company.
06690 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: [Puget Sound Bar] Pilots, circa 1952
 
Shows Ediz Hook Pilot Station at Port Angeles. Discusses the route of the Japanese vessel, Hikawa Maru , and pilots in general. Reporter: Charles Herring. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Captain Stevens;Captain William Henshaw; Captain Hyde, station manager; Chris Waters, boatman; and Jack Miller, cook.
Subseries 3:   Alaska, 1953-1954
 
15 reels of 16mm film
This television series, which covered people and industries in Alaska, was referred to as either “The Alaska Story” or “Alaskan Reporter.” Charles Herring and cameraman Joe Raskie spent six weeks in Alaska filming the series, which was broadcast from approximately Oct. 12, 1953, through Jan. 11, 1954. It is not known whether this collection is complete for the Alaska series.
06580 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Elmendorf Air Force Base, 1953
 
Visits the Elmendorf Air Force Base and Fort Richardson Army Base in Alaska and discusses the military importance of the bases in defending the U.S. against enemy attack. Major General Joseph H. Atkinson speaks about the location of Alaska in relation to Russia’s air bases. Shows F-94 all-weather jet interceptors and interviews Major Robert Bell about jet plane operation. Shows alert drills and field demonstrations by the 65th Fighter Interceptor Squadron, the A Battery of the 96th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Gun Battalion, and the K Company of the 196th Infantry Regiment. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Major General Joseph H. Atkinson and Major Robert Bell.
06595 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Silver Harvest, 1953
 
Shows salmon fishing in Alaska aboard the scow Martin, with interviews of trap tenders. Also discusses the salmon industry of southeast Alaska and shows purse seining. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Lloyd Sun, Harry Doan, and Morris Benson, trap tenders; Captain George Thomas; Stan Swanson, Territorial Department of Fisheries; and Herb Heathering.
06658 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Kotzebue, [1953]
 
Shows the town of Kotzebue, Alaska, the farthest northern point visited by the NB of C crew. Shows drying of seal meat and cooking of Beluga whale meat. Discusses the medical and educational services and interviews orthopedic surgeon Dr. Phillip Moore at Mount Edgecumbe Medical Center. Also interviews native resident Chester Civic about life in Kotzebue. Reporter: Charles Herring. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Dr. Phillip Moore, Chester Civic, and Alex Marx.
06660 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Juneau, Alaska’s Future, [1953]
 
Visits Juneau, the capital of Alaska. Discusses its limited access by air and sea, its street system, weather, and the impact of the closure of the Alaska-Juneau Mine. Includes shots of Mendenhall Glacier. Interviews territorial governor B. Frank Heintzleman about economic issues, including timber, oil, water power, transportation, communication, and defense industries. This was the concluding episode of The Alaska Story. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Henry Mead; Douglas Mead; and B. Frank Heintzleman, territorial governor of Alaska.
06661 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Gillnetting on Bristol Bay, [1953]
 
Details the red salmon fishing industry and canneries on Bristol Bay, Alaska. Shows gillnetting for salmon, interviews fishermen, and tours the Red Salmon Canning Co. Reporter: Charles Herring. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Tony Doomab, A. R. Carlson, and Lawrence Larson, fishermen.
06663 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Fairbanks Gold Mining, 1953
 
Focuses on the boomtown atmosphere of Fairbanks, Alaska, and interviews the owner of the Pioneer Saloon in Livengood. Shows gold mining using the placer method, panning, and dredging, with interviews of gold miners. This was the first episode in the Alaska series. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Voice-over narrator: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Phillip Penwick; Charlie Erickson, owner of Pioneer Saloon; Tom Carr, gold miner; and Andy Nyland, gold panner.
06665 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Alaskan Soil, [1953]
 
Covers frontier farming in the Matanuska Valley, north of Anchorage, Alaska. Interviews two farm families, one operating a dairy farm and one a truck farm. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Voice-over narrator: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Max and Dorothy Sherrod, farmers, and Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Creamer, dairy farmers.
06666 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): [Transportation], 1953
 
Describes the forms of transportation used in 1950s Alaska, including the railroad system and tunnels, bridges and tracks between Fairbanks and Seward, major road systems (the Richardson, Glen, and Alaska Highways), and sea and air transportation. Includes interviews with a ship captain and bush pilot Noel Wien (broadcast Dec. 7, 1953). Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Voice-over narrator: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Jimmie Leeds, Arlene Sherman (Leeds’s wife), Merrill D. Stewart, and Noel Wien, bush pilot.
06667 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Anchorage, 1953
 
Describes the growth of Anchorage in the 1950s following the growth of military facilities at Elmendorf Air Force Base and Fort Richardson. Interviews civic leaders, businessmen, labor leaders, and townspeople about the future of Anchorage. Shows footage of construction projects, and old and new buildings (broadcast Oct. 12, 1953). Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Arnold Link, Angie Hebert, Bradford Phillips, Bob Baker, Jack Anderson, Bob Wood, and Alfred Orr.
06668 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Fairbanks Gold Mining, 1953
 
Focuses on the boomtown atmosphere of Fairbanks, Alaska, and interviews the owner of the Pioneer Saloon in Livengood. Shows gold mining using the placer method, panning, and dredging, with interviews of gold miners. This was the first episode in the Alaska series. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Voice-over narrator: Richard Ross. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Phillip Penwick; Charlie Erickson, owner of Pioneer Saloon; Tom Carr, gold miner; and Andy Nyland, gold panner.
06669 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Alaska Salmon Canning, 1953
 
Visits three salmon canneries: KD Fish Company in Petersburg, Juneau Cold Storage, and Nakat Packing Corp. in Waterfall. Shows the canning process and discusses how machines have increased production (broadcast Nov. 16, 1953). Reporter: Charles Herring. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Chris Dahl, owner of KD Fish Co.
06670 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Alaska Tourists, 1953
 
Shows tourist attractions in Alaska, including Nome, a riverboat on the Chena River in the Fairbanks area, Mount McKinley National Park and the hotel and lodge there, wild game including ptarmigan, Dall sheep, silver fox, and grizzly bears, hunting and fishing, New Year Lake, Wilson Lake, and Sitka and its churches. Features cameraman Joe Raskie’s wife and son and Charles Herring’s wife. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Jim Binkley, skipper of the Godspeed riverboat; Mary Binkley (wife of Jim); E. W. Lawson, Mt. McKinley Hotel; Marge Sexton, Mt. McKinley Lodge public relations; Pete Simple, Indian guide; Mrs. McCallumsfield (of Albuquerque, New Mexico); Mildred McAllister (of Santa Barbara, California);Bob Ellis, president of Ellis Airlines; Mrs. Joseph Raskie (and son); Mrs. Charles Herring; Rev. John Scotty, St. Michael’s Cathedral; John Sloban, head bishop of Alaska’s Greek Orthodox church; and Bill Hamlinand Anna Hope, church guides.
06671 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): Feature Stories of the North, [1953]
 
A compilation of stories from Alaska, including construction of the Eklutna Dam, tourist activities, wildlife, Lake George Glacier, Eskimo life, lodge at Mt. McKinley National Park, interviews with a totem pole carver, a tour guide, and the head of Alaska’s Greek Orthodox Church. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Casper Mather, totem pole carver; Pete Simple, tour guide; and John Sloban, head bishop of Alaska’s Greek Orthodox Church.
06676 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): [Alaska Compilation], [1953]
 
A compilation of stories from Alaska, including construction of the Eklutna Dam, tourist activities, wildlife, Lake George Glacier, Eskimo life, lodge at Mt. McKinley National Park, interviews with a totem pole carver, a tour guide, and the head of Alaska’s Greek Orthodox Church. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Charlie Erickson, owner of Pioneer Store; Tom Carr and John Jurick, gold mining partners; Andy Nyland, gold panner; Mack and Dorothy Sherrod; H. D. Cavin, manager of Ketchikan Pulp Mill; and B. Frank Heintzleman, territorial governor of Alaska.
06678 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (The Alaska Story): [Alaska Fishing Industry], [1953]
 
A compilation of stories about the Alaska fishing industry, including gillnetting on Bristol Bay, purse seining, Naknek River salmon canneries, shrimping in Petersburg, and an interview with a shrimp boat skipper. Reporter: Charles Herring. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Appearing: Lawrence Larson; George Thomas; Earl Bennett; Earl Homer; Mrs. Jerry Frink, shrimp boat skipper; and Marion Frink.
Subseries 4:   Orient/Far East, 1954-ca. 1956
 
8 reels of 16mm film
This television series covered cities and countries of the Pacific Rim and was referred to at the time as either the “Orient” or “Far East” series. The series was broadcast Oct. 10, 1954, through December 1955 (possibly into 1956), and included visits to Hawaii, Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Japan. There were at least 12 chapters in the series, of which only eight are included in this collection. Television listings in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer state that this was the fourth season of The Washington State Reporter.
06605 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Honolulu [Hawaii, Part 1], 1954
 
Visits Honolulu, Hawaii, the mid-ocean stopover point for commerce and goods flowing to and from the Orient. Features the pineapple industry, including planting, harvesting, and canning (shows the Dole Cannery). Also covers the flower industries of lei making and orchid growing (broadcast Oct. 10, 1954). Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: Bill Malayhee.
06651 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Japan [Chapter 12—Japan, Part 2], circa 1954
 
The second part of the visit to Japan focuses on “expanding personal and economical relations with Japan.” Covers Japan’s history of isolation and its feudal system, and how it has been influenced by Western and Chinese cultures. Shows the Buddhist and Shinto shrines of Kyoto, the Festival of Kapa in Tokyo, and mandarin orange groves on the Izu Peninsula. Shows the art of steel inlaid with gold and silver, lacquer creations, wood block printing, and ceremonial story telling by geishas in a tea house. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06652 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Hong Kong [Chapter 10], circa 1954
 
Details the major industries of post-World War II Hong Kong, including money changing and financial institutions, textile manufacturing, and the fishing industry. Also discusses refugees from mainland China and the resulting poverty, housing shortages, and water supply problems. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: H. Owen Hughes, Hong Kong Chamber of Commerce.
06653 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Japan [Chapter 11—Japan, Part 1], circa 1954
 
The first part of a visit to Japan discusses the country’s position as a maritime nation, the Westernization of the country, and the modern transportation system of Tokyo. Also covers the industries of textiles, iron and steel, and Canon Camera. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06654 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): [Chapter 2—Philippines, Part 1], 1954
 
Focuses on the reconstruction of the war-ravaged cities of the Philippine Islands. Features the people and industries of the cities of Manila and Baguio and shows street scenes, people making silver jewelry, a school, weaving, hand-carved items, and banking institutions (broadcast Oct. 31, 1954). Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06655 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Singapore [Chapter 7], 1954
 
Addresses the post-war revival of Singapore and Southeast Asia. Discusses the Hindu, Buddhist and Moslem religious influences on Singapore and shows several temples. Discusses the modern influence of Christianity and visits the Singapore Boys Town, established in 1948 by the Brothers of San Gabriel. Profiles Singapore’s tin and rubber industries (broadcast Nov. 21, 1954). Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06656 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Orient—Pacific Summary [Final Chapter], circa 1954
 
This is the final chapter of this series, and is a compilation of highlights from the cities and countries visited in the Orient/Far East Series, including the Philippines, Singapore, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Wake Island, and Hawaii. Discusses the things the Pacific Rim cities have in common, such as volcanoes, monsoons, rice, coconuts, tropical forests, sugar cane, pineapples, and ancient crafts such as wood carving, weaving, wood block printing, silk spinning, and embroidery. Reporter: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06683 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter (Orient/Far East): Hawaii [Part 2], 1954
 
The second part of the visit to Hawaii focuses on Pearl Harbor, the sugarcane industry (with extensive shots of it being processed at the Ava Plantation), and economic growth due to sugar, pineapples, and tourism (broadcast Oct. 17, 1954). Reporter: Richard Ross. Appearing: Herbert M. Taylor, vice president, Bishop National Bank.
Subseries 5:   Compilation Programs and Commercials, circa 1954-circa 1956
 
3 reels of 16mm film
This Subseries includes two programs on Washington state and Asia that used footage from The Washington State Reporter series. It also includes one compilation reel of commercial advertising spots for the National Bank of Commerce that were broadcast during The Washington State Reporter series.
06675 SEPL:   Our Pacific Neighbors, circa 1956
 
22 minutes  :  color
A compilation of material taken from the Orient/Far East series of The Washington State Reporter, surveying the Pacific Rim countries of Singapore, Japan, Philippines, and Hong Kong. Includes scenes and discussion of snake charmers; rubber plantations; the Pacific climate in connection with growing orchids, pineapples, bananas, and coconuts; rice growing; Moslem, Buddhist, Hindu, and Christian religions; education; the importance of marketplaces; American influence; Hawaii and tourism; ports and trade. Commentator: Richard Ross. Director: Dave Titus. Photographer: Joseph Raskie. Writer and director: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service.
06679 SEPL:   The Washington State Reporter: Commercials, circa 1954
 
15 minutes
NB of C commercial breaks for The Washington State Reporter programs, narrated by Richard Ross.
06682 SEPL:   This Is Your State, circa 1955
 
A compilation of material taken from The Washington State Reporter covering various aspects of Washington state. Includes segments on wheat harvest; apple growing; 4-H dairy farming; cattle ranching near Ellensburg; mink farm; the Port of Seattle; trade fair; transportation; state patrol; firemen; tugboats; pulp mill; clay mining; brick factory; steel mill; dams; fishing; skiing, sailing, and boat racing; clamming; NB of C financing; and the Washington legislature. Reporter: Charles Herring. Director and photographer: Joseph Raskie. Music (with vocals): Walter Robertson. Writer and editor: Al Amundsen. Producer: Cinema Service. Appearing: “Miss NB of C”.

 

Series B:   Other Films, 1931-1976

14 reels of 16mm film
This series includes both professional and amateur films, almost all of which were produced in Washington state. In addition to a documentary on Vietnamese immigrants in Pullman, Wash., and several on Seattle topics, the professional films include a sea life documentary for children. All except two were produced in Seattle. The collection includes four home movies dating from 1931 to 1963, primarily on family trips and community events in Washington state, but one features dances of the Kwakiutl Indians of British Columbia.
 
Description
Subseries 1:   Professional Films, circa 1950-1976
 
10 reels of 16mm film
05019 SEPL:   A New Life, 1976
 
11 minutes  :  Sound; color
Focuses on the lives of the Dang family, who were among the 130,000 Vietnamese who fled to the U.S. shortly before the fall of Saigon. Interviews with the family, tutors, and a resettlement worker illustrate the family’s new life in Pullman, Washington. The Dang family’s struggles with language, menial jobs, and financial worries typify the Vietnamese immigrant’s experience. Producer, editor, and still photographer: Rocky L. Pearson. Sound editor and graphics: Mark K. Tang. Translator and historian: Nhiem thi Dang. Technical advisors: Robert A. Curry and Donald E. Zimmerman. Guitarist: George C. Mattson, Jr. Graphics: Johnny E. Pearson. Appearing: The Dang Family, Nhiem thi Dang, Cuong thé Dang, Nancy L. Kassel, Nguyen Mung, and Arthur E. McCartan.
06338 SEPL:   We Like It Here, circa 1950-1959
 
55 minutes
Discusses Seattle’s suburban sprawl and the deterioration of downtown and the older neighborhoods. Interviews focus on shopping downtown and at Pike Place Market; traffic problems on Highway 99 and Highway 10; neighborhood improvement; the historic Hotel Kalmar; the airport and Boeing Airplane Co.; freeway development; downtown transportation problems and future plans; the need to refurbish Pioneer Square historic area; green spaces and landscaping; the future of Pike Place Market; and a new site for a civic center. Writer and narrator: Bob Schulman. Narrator: Bill Corcoran. Research assistant: Elise Kelleher. Executive producer: Lee Schulman. Producer: Kit Spier. Photographer: Al Stenson. Additional film: Tom Welty. Director: Jack Fearey. Appearing: Reverend Rudolph Debbeck (and family); Talbot Wagg, Seattle urban renewal program; Victor Steinbrook, University of Washington College of Architecture; Ralph Potts, Seattle historian; Wheeler Gray, chairman of Seattle Area Industrial Council; John Spade, Seattle City Planning Commission; Norton Clapp, president of Weyerhaeuser Company; David Young, Metropolitan Savings and Loan; George Pappas, owner of The Busy Bee; Frank Mastodi, cobbler; Bob DeMartini, retail division manager of Standard Oil Company; Mark Tobey, artist/painter; Robert Durham, architect for Century 21; and Ed Monroe, King County commissioner.
06577 SEPL:   Headquarter City, circa 1960-1969
 
An animated history of Seattle, covering its growth and progress in the context of American history and developments in industry. Writer, narrator, producer, and director: Philip M. Evans. Art: Bob Cram. Photography: Richard Larson. Sound: Lew Lathrop. Technical production and animation: Commercial Productions.
06601 SEPL:   Tidepool Critters, undated
 
29 minutes
A children’s program that examines sea animals that live in tide pools, such as starry flounder, skate, dogfish shark, perch, shrimp, shore crabs, worms, clams, and screw snails. Includes footage both in the studio and outside in the mudflats. Two commercial spots: one features the son of a National Bank of Commerce employee swimming, with voice-over narration about NB of C services; the other is for Darigold milk and features a clown with an Italian accent. Producer: Al Bright, (a KVOS-TV department of public affairs production). Appearing: Dr. Charles Flora, Western Washington College; “Beachcomber George;” and Jerry van Camp, son of NB of C employee.
06625 SEPL:   Ellensburg: Washington’s Rodeo City, circa 1956
 
29 minutes
Covers the Ellensburg Rodeo, which takes place every Labor Day weekend. Shows rodeo events such as bronc riding, trick and fancy riding and rope spinning, calf roping, steer wrestling, bareback riding, rodeo clowns, rodeo queen and her court, and Yakima, Wenatchee and Nez Perce Indian tribes. Also shows parade on Main Street featuring floats, Indian dancers, and mounted posses. Writer and narrator: George Prescott. Photographer: Fred Milkie. Director: Noel Johnson. Producer: Don McQuade.
06657 SEPL:   Folk Dance, undated
 
11 minutes  :  Color
Members of the Folk Dance Federation of California perform folk dances of Russia, Czechoslovakia, Palestine, Scandinavia, Italy, United States, Latin America, and Mexico. Filmed outdoors with dancers in folk costumes. Producer: Folk Dance Federation of California.
06673 SEPL:   Ellensburg, Washington’s Rodeo City, ca. 1956
 
29 minutes
Covers the Ellensburg Rodeo, which takes place every Labor Day weekend. Shows rodeo events such as bronc riding, trick and fancy riding and rope spinning, calf roping, steer wrestling, bareback riding, rodeo clowns, rodeo queen and her court, and Yakima, Wenatchee and Nez Perce tribes. Also shows parade on Main Street featuring floats, Indian dancers, mounted posses. Writer and narrator: George Prescott. Photographer: Fred Milkie. Director: Noel Johnson. Producer: Don McQuade.
06677 SEPL:   Lost Cargo, circa 1955-1959
 
90 minutes (3 reels)
Discusses the state of the Port of Seattle and the reasons for its decrease in business, including inadequate pier facilities, labor costs, the port’s bad personality, railroad rates, lack of leadership, citizen apathy, and conflicts of interest. Covers the history of the Port, shows the current decay of the waterfront, and compares the Port to the more prosperous and improved ports of Longview, Portland, and San Francisco. Discusses a waterfront improvement plan, to be completed in 1960. Narrators: Charles Herring and Carroll Ellerbe. Writer: Bob Schulman. Director: Kit Spier. Camerman: Tom Welty. Additional film: Ted Simpson and Al Stenson. Script assistant: Elise Kelleher. Producer: Lee Schulman. Appearing: Maurice J. “Bud” Webber, Clarence Carlander, and Captain Tom McManus, Port commissioners; Jim Gibbs, editor of Marine Digest; Webster B. “Web” Anderson; Howard M. Burke, Port manager; Phillip Bailey, Seattle Argus; Roy “Swanny” Swanson, laborer; Darrell Cornell, Pacific Maritime Association; Fred Tolan, traffic consultant; Captain Nicholas Lidstone; Dick Everest, chairman of Seattle Citizens Port Committee; D. E. Skinner, president of Alaska Steamship Company; and Warren G. Manusen, chairman of U.S. Senate Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee.
06681 SEPL:   Machine Shop Work—The Steel Rule, undated
 
Explains and demonstrates how to use many types and variations of measuring tools in a machine shop. The most commonly used are the steel rule and micrometer calipers for measuring dimensions such as length, width, diameter, depth of slots and holes, and the pitch of a screw. Director and visual aids: F. E. Brooker. Technical consultant: J. W. Barrett. Producers: The Federal Security Agency, U.S. Office of Education, and U.S. Educational Committee (C. F. Klinefelter, chairman; W. M. Arnolt, J. R. Coxen, R. W. Hambrook, L. S. Hawkins, Allen W. Horton, E. L. Kirchner, W. P. Loomis, C. E. Rakestraw, S. M. Ransopher, and Tom Watson.
06685 SEPL:   The People Business, circa 1962
 
27 minutes
Covers the growth of the tourism industry in Washington State following the 1962 Seattle Worlds Fair. Tourism is Washington’s fourth largest industry. Includes shots of such attractions as Rocky Reach Dam, Leavenworth, Wenatchee Apple Blossom Festival, Spokane Lilac Blossom Festival, Ellensburg Rodeo, Sequim Irrigation Festival, Hanford Atomic Energy plant in Richmond, Port Townsend, Greater Seattle Summertime Sea Fair, Seattle Center and the Space Needle, Mt. Baker ski area, Yakima motels, Snoqualmie Pass Lodge, Alderbrook Inn, Ocean Shores, Anacortes, Grand Coulee area, and the Columbia River. Interview with H. DeWayne Kraeger, former head of Washington State Department of Commerce and Economic Development, focuses on the competitive economic split between eastern and western Washington. Interview with Peter Sellyers of the Society of Travel Writers addresses need for more modern accommodations. Writer and narrator: Bob Schulman. Photographer: Ralph Umbarger. Sound engineer: Stan Carlson. Additional film: Bob Horn. Script assistant: Margaret Gregory. Producer: Kit Spier. Director: Chuck Snyder. Executive producer: Lee Schulman. Managing director: Sam Sharkey. A Crown Stations Production. Sponsors: Timber Division, Crown Zellerbach Corp.; Chevrolet Division, General Motors; Automobile Club of Washington; Associated Grocers; and Pacific Northwest Bell. Appearing: H. DeWayne Kraeger, consultant and economist; Peter Sellyers, travel development consultant; and Max Benjamin, artist (and family).
Subseries 2:   Amateur Films, 1931-1963
 
4 reels of 16mm film
04943 SEPL:   Dances of the Kwakiutl, circa 1950
 
5 minutes  :  Color
Shows ceremonial dances of the Kwakiutl Indians of British Columbia, in masks and costumes.
06586 SEPL:    [Home movie—San Juan Islands, construction of mall, rodeo], circa 1955
 
13 minutes  :  Color; silent
Unidentified home movie, possibly by an employee of KVOS-TV. The first segment is footage of the San Juan Islands (signs identify Lopez Island, Shaw Island, and Orcas Island), and shows a woman sketching and painting, a mountain in the distance, a sign for KVOS-TV, local paintings displayed outdoors, and people walking along the water front. The second segment shows the construction of a strip mall, with shots of signs for Sherwin Optical Co., Burien Loan Co., Colonial Dress Shop, Blessing-Miller Jewelers, and Foster’s Funusual. The third segment shows a rodeo with cowgirls, Indians, a parade, riding a horse around a track, wagons, roller skating, gymnastics, performing dogs, and bucking broncos.
06618 SEPL:   Vacation Pleasures of the Pacific Northwest [home movie of Mount Rainier National Park], 1931
 
18 minutes  :  Silent
Home movie of Mount Rainier National Park. Shows bus ride from Seattle to Rainier National Park and scenes of Paradise Inn, Mt. Rainier, Tatoosh Range, ice caves under Paradise Glacier, Skyline Trail, Edith Glacier, train to Big 4 Mountain, Stillaguamish Gorge, Big 4 Inn, Big 4 Glacier, and Canyon Creek Lodge. Photographer: Dr. E. W. B. Merrith [?]. Appearing: Dr. Carrie Benefiel, Dr. Roberta Wimer-Fox, Dr. H. F. Morse, and Dr. and Mrs. Kint and son Dick.
06620 SEPL:   Rose Show, 1963
 
12 minutes  :  Color; silent
Shows preparation of roses for displaying in flower show, judging of roses, and winners. Also shows people with roses in their rose gardens.