COMPOUND OBJECT (4 Items)

Telegrapher for the Northern Pacific Railway in Tacoma Item Info

Karin Crelling, research essay...
Karin Crelling, research essay - application/pdf
PDF
Gary Emmons, transcript
Gary Emmons, transcript - application/pdf
PDF
Gary Emmons, audio
Gary Emmons, audio - audio
AUDIO
Karin Crelling, appendix
Karin Crelling, appendix - application/pdf
PDF
Title:
Telegrapher for the Northern Pacific Railway in Tacoma
Creator:
Crelling, Karin
Date Created:
2017
Description:
Gary Emmons was in a unique position in the 1960s, working for the Northern Pacific Railway as a telegrapher. He was witness to the change from manpower to computers. The telegraph station at McCarver Street in Tacoma, Washington was one of the most important stations in the area. Trains would not leave Tacoma, unless they had received their instructions from this station. This paper will provide a brief history of not just the McCarver Street station, and how it operated, but also other institutions, that were intricately connected to the Northern Pacific Railway here in Tacoma; institutions such as McKinley Hill Hospital, the Great Tacoma Shops, Union Station and, very briefly, the decline and the revival of downtown Tacoma and the restoration of Union Station, as well as the present campus of the University of Washington, Tacoma. This research will cover a span from approximately 1910 to 2000 and follows loosely the interview conducted with Col. Gary Emmons, USAF, Ret.
Subjects:
Tacoma Railroads Military Mechanization 20th century 21st century
Location:
Downtown
Latitude:
47.246605
Longitude:
-122.436963
Source:
Tacoma Community History Project
Type:
record
Format:
compound_object
Source
Preferred Citation:
"Telegrapher for the Northern Pacific Railway in Tacoma", Tacoma Community History Project, University of Washington Tacoma Library
Reference Link:
https://erika-b.github.io/tchp/items/chp201701.html
Rights
Rights:
Individuals may use project materials for scholarly or research purposes, according to the provisions of fair use, but reproducing, publishing, or broadcasting any oral history project materials requires permission. For more information, see http://content.lib.washington.edu/tacomacommweb/using-projects.html
Standardized Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/