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MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: July 18, 2021
Edmonds Memorial Cemetery
After pausing last year’s annual event due to COVID-19, the Edmonds Memorial Cemetery Board is resuming the free Walk Back in Time event on Thursday, July 22 at 1 p.m. This public event will take a look at how the pandemic of 1918 impacted the small community of Edmonds, as told through the lives of five residents buried in the historic cemetery: a mill worker, a newlywed, a farmer, a mother of six, and a Freemason.
Guests can find out more about how the backdrop of WWI set the stage for this tragic event, which caused the loss of at least 50 million people across the globe, and how the residents of Edmonds responded. While our communities are returning to normal, we once again come together to take note of our local history with eyes toward the future.
Edmonds-memorialEdmonds-memorial-cemetery-boardWalk-backஎட்மண்ட்ஸ்-நினைவகம்எட்மண்ட்ஸ்-நினைவகம்-கல்லறை-பலகைநட-மீண்டும்MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: June 15, 2021 72
An advertisement announcing the opening of the Ritz Rink in Edmonds. (All images from the Edmonds Tribune-Review)
When the little village of Edmonds incorporated as a fourth-class town in August of 1890, even though there had been some hard times, the residents must have been filled with hope that the final decade of the 19th century would bring prosperity, growth and some needed culture to their community.
Certainly, at 5 o’clock in the evening on June 17, 1891, when the Great Northern track-laying engine rounded Point Edwards and came into view, the residents of Edmonds must have realized they were going to have a long-anticipated railroad connection to the outside world. Surely, it would help lead the way to prosperity.
SwedenWellingtonNew-zealand-generalNew-zealandSwedishStewart-murdockFred-fourtnerWilliam-cookAllenm-yostMax-hollowayJohn-archibald-bishTommy-marcyMY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: April 25, 2021
In 1910 – on the way to the waterfront mills in Edmonds
Nothing depicts the early days of the town of Edmonds more than timber. It was what brought many New England and Eastern people here; and also, the farmers from the Midwest. On the East Coast, they had pretty much depleted their own forests, and in the Midwest, the farmers were just plain worn out from fighting the weather, mainly in the form of dust storms and droughts.
Main Street in Edmonds in 1910. (Photo courtesy Edmonds Historical Museum)
To me, this photo is one of the best reminders of early day Edmonds, and the richness of the timber. And, if you enjoy eating at Chanterelle’s Hometown Bistro between Third and Fourth on Main Street, you should recognize it as it looked in 1910 the building is on the right in this photo. It really hasn’t changed that much. The building on the left is the former State Bank of Edmonds, and the office of C. T. Roscoe, Jr. is upstairs.
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