Skip to content
About Us
Contact Us
Archived Newsletters
facebook
instagram
youtube
Search for:
Open Menu
Close Menu
Home
Log House Museum
Show sub menu
Plan a Visit and Tours
Current Exhibits
Rent the Log House Museum
Collections
Show sub menu
Donate an item
Browse Collection Online
History
Show sub menu
Alaska Junction
Alki & Duwamish Head
Alki Beach Self Guided Tour
Delridge History
Fauntleroy
South Park
White Center
Log House Museum
Videos
Show sub menu
Videos
Archived Videos
Support Us
Show sub menu
Membership
Volunteer
Donate
Sponsors
Home
Log House Museum
Plan a Visit and Tours
Current Exhibits
Rent the Log House Museum
Collections
Donate an item
Browse Collection Online
History
Alaska Junction
Alki & Duwamish Head
Alki Beach Self Guided Tour
Delridge History
Fauntleroy
South Park
White Center
Log House Museum
Videos
Videos
Archived Videos
Support Us
Membership
Volunteer
Donate
Sponsors
Delridge Photos
Gilmore Gas Station on Spokane Street, before the viaduct was built. Photo was taken facing southeast, and shows in the background nearby businesses and homes in Youngstown. Taken August 13, 1930. (Seattle Dept. of Engineering, SWSHS/Log House Museum FIC2005.0018)
Cooper School students in Youngstown crossing the new pedestrian overpass bridging busy Delridge Way. (SWSHS/Log House Museum FIC2006.0934)
The corner of Spokane Street and Delridge Way, facing west, in 1930. Shows construction of the streetcar viaduct and bulkhead to support Pigeon Hill; gas stations and fire station 36. (Seattle Department of Engineering, SWSHS/Log House Museum FIC2006.0932)
Aerial photo of the Delridge area, showing Cooper School, playfields, and surrounding housing. Circa 1975. (SWSHS/Log House Museum FIC2006.0923)
The locked open West Seattle bridge span with the celebration party banner clearly visible in 1984. Neighborhoods within West Seattle were greatly impacted when the bridge was hit by a freighter in 1978. It took six years to get the funds and build the current “high bridge”. (Photo by Chris Styron. SWSHS/Log House Museum 2005.32.343
22nd Avenue SW looking south from Charlestown Place on Pigeon Hill. Pigeon Hill was so named for the abundance of pigeons that roosted there, and fed on the spilled grain of the nearby flour mill. (Seattle Department of Engineering. SWSHS/Log House Museum FIC2006.0936)
Page Views:
531
History
Get Involved
Donate
Membership
Volunteer
Events
Words, Writers, & Southwest Stories:
2024 Annual Meeting
Seattle’s Forest: The West Duwamish Greenbelt
Newsletter
First Name:
Last Name:
Email address:
Leave this field empty if you're human:
The Log House Museum is open to the public on Friday and Saturday: Noon to 4pm.