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Newspaper clippings collection: King County

 Collection
Identifier: 1000-049

Scope and Contents

The majority of the newspaper clippings in this collection date from the 1960s to 1980s, with only a few subjects having earlier dates. The oldest article, "King County Faces the New Year" (1934) is in the King County folder. Another early article, "Coroner’s Job Grows Fast; Budget Doubled in Five Years" (1939) is in the Coroner folder. The articles are predominantly from The Seattle Times and Seattle Post-Intelligencer, but also include articles from smaller newspapers such as the Journal of Commerce, West Seattle Herald, White Center News, and Duwamish Valley News. Clippings in this collection do not cover Seattle topics, which are included in other Seattle Room clippings files.

Dates

  • Creation: 1934-1991

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open and available for use.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright restrictions apply.

Full Extent

6 Linear Feet (13 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

  • License: This record is made available under an Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Creative Commons license.

Abstract

Newspaper clippings of articles relating to King County, ranging in date from 1934-1991, divided by subjects ranging from Art to Zoning.

Arrangement

The collection is arranged alphabetically by subject. Subjects that include more than one folder are arranged chronologically.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Clippings were compiled by Seattle Public Library staff over the years.

Processing Information

Acknowledgement of Harmful Content
The Seattle Public Library Special Collections Department is committed to creating an inclusive archive that documents the history of our diverse communities in a respectful manner. Our collections include historic materials that may contain images and outdated language which can be harmful due to issues such as racism, colonialism, sexism and homophobia. This content can provide important insight into the creator and context of the historic materials but can also reveal hurtful biases and prejudices.

We may decide to use or retain harmful language in our description when the terms have been used by the creator(s) of the materials to describe themselves or their community; when we have reused description created by the donor; when we have transcribed information directly from the materials; and when using national standards such as Library of Congress Subject Headings, which allow for standardized searching and retrieval of records. When including language from the original material in our finding aids or descriptions, we will indicate that this material comes directly from the original item by putting the language in quotes or prefacing it with a note that says the description is transcribed from the item or provided by the creator.

We will continually review our finding aids to identify harmful language and encourage you to contact us at specialcollections@spl.org if you find language that causes concern.

Title
Newspaper clippings collection: King County, 1934-1988
Author
Finding aid prepared by Special Collections staff
Date
June 2019
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • November 2022: Revised by Heather Marker

Repository Details

Part of the Seattle Public Library, Special Collections Repository

Contact:
1000 4th Ave.
Seattle WA 98104 United States
206-386-4636