Overview of the Collection
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Repository Name:
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City of Seattle Seattle
Municipal Archives
PO Box 94728 600 Fourth Avenue, Floor 3 Seattle, WA 98124-4728 Phone: 206/233-7807 Email: archives@seattle.gov http://www.seattle.gov/cityarchives
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Collection Number:
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5602
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Creator:
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Washington
(State). Municipal Court (Seattle)
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Title:
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Seattle Police Court Liquor
Records
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Dates:
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1916-1926 (inclusive)
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Quantity:
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11 volumes
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Languages:
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Collection materials are in
English
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Summary:
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Police Court records relating to
alcohol-related offenses during Prohibition.
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Historical Note
Seattle’s Police Court was the forerunner to the current Municipal
Court. The first judicial officer for Seattle was appointed by the City Council
in 1875 from among the King County Justices of the Peace serving the Seattle
Precinct. In 1886, a charter amendment made each Seattle Precinct Justice a
Police Justice with jurisdiction over ordinance violations. The 1890
Freeholders Charter officially established a Police Court in the city. This
provision was repealed in 1892, after an 1891 state law created a Municipal
Court system that included a Justice Court and Police Court.
The Police Court was a “court of limited jurisdiction” under the purview
of the city of Seattle. (In contrast, the county was the parent agency for the
Justice Court.) One of the justices of the peace in the Seattle Precinct was
appointed to serve on the Police Court in addition to his duties on the Justice
Court. The Police Court heard violations of state law that occurred within the
city limits, as well as violations of City ordinances. It dealt with
misdemeanors, traffic offenses, minor civil suits, and small claims, and also
heard liquor-related cases during Prohibition.
The court was called by varying names over the years. Before 1891, it
seems to generally have been known as the Police Court. From 1891 to 1897, it
was called the Municipal Court, and then again was referred to as the Police
Court until 1928, when it was once again called the Municipal Court. It
retained that name from then on, except for 1954-1955, when it was called the
Municipal Police Court.
The currently constituted Municipal Court was created in 1955 under
Chapter 290 of the Washington State Laws. It has exclusive original
jurisdiction over violations of all city ordinances, collects fines and
forfeitures relating thereto, and hears cases related to misdemeanor defined by
State statute that occur within the City limits. Municipal judges are elected
by the qualified electors of the City of Seattle.
Prohibition in Washington State began in 1916, three years before the
U.S. Constitution was amended to outlaw the manufacture, transportation, and
sale of alcohol on a national level. The state law was less draconian – county
auditors were allowed to grant permits to import limited amounts of alcohol –
but was still widely violated. Bootleggers and rumrunners did a thriving
business supplying Washingtonians with illegal liquor, and many people built
stills to manufacture their own. Until Prohibition was repealed in 1933,
Seattle civic leaders cracked down on this activity to varying degrees. Mayor
Hiram Gill was among the more severe, establishing a widely criticized “Dry
Squad” to raid businesses and homes suspected of violating the ban.
Content Description
Court dockets and index dealing with liquor-related cases heard in the
Police Court. Series are described more fully below.
Arrangement
The Seattle Police Court Liquor Records are arranged into two
series:
5602-01: Docket Record of Liquor Cases, 1917-1926
5602-02: Liquor Docket Index, 1916-1926
Use of the Collection
Restrictions on Access Records are open to the public.
Preferred Citation [Item and date], [Title of collection], Record Series 5602-[XX]. Volume
[number], Page [number]. Seattle Municipal Archives.
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.
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Washington (State). Municipal Court (Seattle) |
| Seattle
(Wash.) |
| Alcoholic
beverages--Washington (State)--Seattle |
| Law enforcement--Washington
(State)--Seattle |
| Municipal
courts--Washington (State)--Seattle |
| Prohibition--Washington
(State)--Seattle |
| Court records--Washington
(State)--Seattle |
Detailed Description of the Collection
The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in
the collection.
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5602-01:
Docket Record of Liquor
Cases, 1917-1926
10 volumes
Separate Police Court docket summarizing cases related to
illegal possession of alcohol prosecuted under municipal and state prohibition
laws. Volumes contain information on both court cases and search warrants. Case
information includes case number, blotter number, defendant name and address,
defense attorney, bail, date and details of complaint, plea, and judgment.
Search warrant information includes date issued, date returned, officer’s name,
and items seized. Requests for search warrants seem to have decreased in the
later years of this series.
Volume 1 is missing. Volume 11 contains shorter and less
detailed forms than the earlier volumes.
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Container(s)
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Description
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Dates
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1917/01-1917/08 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1917/08-1918/01 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1918/02-1918/07 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1918/07-1919/03 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1919/03-1919/08 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1919/08-1920/04 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1920/04-1920/12 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1920/12-1922/01 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1922/01-1924/04 |
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Docket Record of Liquor
Cases
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1924/04-1926/02 |
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5602-02:
Liquor Docket Index, 1916-1926
1 volume
This index to the Docket Record of Liquor Cases (5602-01) lists
cases related to illegal possession of alcohol by defendant name. Each entry
includes the name and date, as well as the volume and page number where the
case may be found in the Docket Record. Defendants are organized by first
letter of their last name and then listed in order of their case number.
Defendant names include both personal names and buildings (apartments, hotels,
addresses). There are a large number of entries for the baggage rooms at King
Street Station and Oregon & Washington Station (now known as Union
Station).
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Container(s)
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Description
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Dates
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Liquor Docket
Index
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1916-1926 |
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