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(Seattle & Northern 1890)

Skagit River Journal

of History & Folklore
Subscribers Edition Stories & Photos
The most in-depth, comprehensive site about the Skagit.

Covers from British Columbia to Puget sound. Counties covered: Skagit, Whatcom, Island, San Juan. An evolving history dedicated to the principle of committing random acts of historical kindness
Noel V. Bourasaw, editor (bullet) 810 Central Ave., Sedro-Woolley, Washington, 98284
Home of the Tarheel Stomp (bullet) Mortimer Cook slept here & named the town Bug

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Mount Vernon Record

October 7, 1897 . . . Volume 4, Issue 48 [Published on Thursdays]
Publisher: Al Sebring

(sebring Illustrated Cover)
      Al Sebring, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription $1/year. Subscribe to five papers at once for $2.05/year. Seattle Weekly Times, the Record and Thrice Weekly World of New York. He claims the largest circulation of any paper in the county, but that is debatable since the Skagit News is generally recognized as the biggest seller in those early days. In the late 1880s and early '90s, Al Sebring was assistant editor for the Skagit News in Mount Vernon. He then rode the Populist tide and on Nov. 2, 1893, he launched the Record, initially using the plant and resources of the James Power's Avon Record, which had failed in the first days of "Hard Times." The nationwide Financial Panic of 1893 killed off many banks and newspapers. He rode out hard times for almost exactly four years until he joined the Mount Vernon Argus organization in the late fall of 1897, just weeks after this issue. Five years later, Sebring rose again when he launched the Sebring's Skagit County Illustrated magazine, a boon for we historians. It was used as a promotional piece back then to attract investment in Skagit county. Unfortunately the magazine only survived its inaugural issue of December 1902. You can look in used book stores for the reprint that the Washington State Genealogical and Historical Review published in 1983 with a cover price of $4. You can read a comprehensive history of Skagit county, that Sebring wrote in 1902 in his short-lived magazine, Sebring's Skagit County Illustrated in Issue 21 in the archives of our optional Subscribers Edition.
      In this issue of the Record, we separate the stories by the city or area to which they pertained. Our supplement notes or explanations are enclosed within brackets [ ].


Mount Vernon

Mount Vernon advertisements

Greater Mount Vernon area
(Davis Barn)
B.N.L. Davis's famous barn near the Great Northern trestle over the Skagit. Seattle Times painting


Rexville [Pleasant Ridge]

Burlington

LaConner
      [Ed. note: Please note that we spell LaConner without a space for consistency throughout our web pages. It was spelled both ways by both newspapers and authors back in those days. Angry adherents for both ways still rave on today. In this issue, Mount Vernon, our preferred spelling, was not used. Instead, Mt. Vernon was the preferred spelling then.]

West Skagit county rural

Sterling
[first upriver town in 1878, began as Ball's Landing]

Woolley and Sedro

Upriver

Puget sound

Alaska-Klondike

National news

Story posted on July 1, 2004
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You can read about our prime sponsors:
Read the history websites of our sponsors and supporters, who help fund research of local history:
Heirloom Gardens Natural Foods at 805B Metcalf street, the original home of Oliver Hammer.
Oliver Hammer Clothes Shop at 817 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years.
Bus Jungquist Furniture at 829 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 36 years.
Schooner Tavern/Cocktails at 621 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, across from Hammer Square.


Peace and quiet at the Alpine RV Park, just north of Marblemount on Hwy 20
Park your RV or pitch a tent by the Skagit river, just a short driver from Winthrop or Sedro-Woolley.


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