2020 Washington State Topic List - Washington State Historical Society - Washington State ...

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2020 Washington State Topic List - Washington State Historical Society - Washington State ...
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      2020 Washington State Topic List

       Washington State Historical Society

Each year National History Day selects a theme to help students direct
their research, and the 2020 theme is Breaking Barriers in History. This
topic guide lists notable people and events of Washington State history. It
shares where to find primary sources and suggests which search terms to
use. Reference the logo guide to find which organizations have relevant
items in their collections.
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         Logo Guide for Local and National Archives
National Archives, Pacific Alaska Region

University of Washington Libraries

Washington State Library

Washington State Archives

Center for Pacific Northwest Studies

White River Valley Museum

Providence Archives, Seattle

Wing Luke Museum

Museum of History and Industry

Washington State Historical Society

Washington State University Libraries
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Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture

Seattle Public Library

Whitman College

Spokane Public Library

Centralia Timberland Public Library

National Archives and Records
Administration

Susan B. Anthony House

Lewis and Clark College Library

Library of Congress

Oregon Historical Society Research Library
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Mourning Dove Publishes Cogewea

Mourning Dove was the pen name of
Christine Quintasket, an Interior
Salish author who collected tribal
stories among the Northern Plateau
peoples. Her novel Cogewea is the
first known published novel by a
Native American woman.

                                     Mourning Dove,
                                     Washington State University Library

Search terms: Mourning Dove, Christine Quintasket, Cogewea
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Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart
Esther Pariseau entered the convent of the Sisters of Charity of Providence
in 1843, taking the name “Joseph” in honor of her father. In 1856 Mother
Joseph arrived with four sisters in Fort Vancouver, after Bishop A.M.A.
Blanchet requested assistance. Under Mother Joseph’s leadership more
than thirty hospitals, schools, and homes were opened for orphans, the
elderly, and the sick in the Pacific Northwest.

Search terms: Esther Pariseau, Mother Joseph of the Sacred Heart
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Cannery Workers’ and Farmers’ Union Local 18257

From 1898 to 1946 the Philippines was a U.S. Territory. During these
decades, Filipino laborers immigrated to the U.S. mainland to work in
salmon canneries and harvest fields. In 1933, a few community members
of Seattle formed the Cannery Workers’ and Farm Laborers’ Union Local
18257. It was the first Filipino-led union organized in the United States.

Search terms: Filipino Cannery Workers, Filipino Americans, Silme
Domingo, Gene Viernes
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Federal Theatre Project, Seattle Division
The Federal Theater Project
employed artists and theatre
professionals during the Great
Depression and exposed many
Americans to live theatre for the
first time. Seattle had four theatre
units separated by content and
segregated by race. Its African
American Unit, the Negro
Repertory Theatre, gained a
reputation for its experimental        Federal Theatre Project, Seattle

productions and was considered         University of Washington Library
one of the best units in the nation.

Search terms: Federal Theater Project, Federal Negro Theater Project,
Pauline C. White, Sara Oliver Jackson, Joseph I. Staton, Washington
State Theatre, Seattle Repertory Playhouse
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    The Boldt Decision

    In the 1850s a series of treaties were passed that established the
    parameters in which settlers could populate lands traditionally occupied by
    Native Americans. The treaties also granted the tribes the right to continue
    fishing in their accustomed locations and traditional ways. As the human
    population increased, the fish populations decreased. And the State of
    Washington sought to regulate tribal fishing as it did commercial fishing,
    violating the treaty rights. In 1974 the United States sued the State of
    Washington on behalf of the tribes to uphold the treaties. Judge George
    Boldt oversaw the case.



   Search terms: Indian Treaties, Indian Fishing, Commercial Fishing,
    George Boldt, Fish Wars, Indian Affairs
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African American Pioneers of Washington State

Some of the earliest frontiersmen in the Pacific Northwest were African
American. And by the 1850s African American pioneers, like George
Washington Bush, settled in Washington State as an attempt to escape
racial prejudices. He and his family settled in what is now Tumwater.

Search terms: George Washington (founder of Centralia), George
Washington Bush, Bush Prairie James E. Chase, Hagin Family
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Dr. Nettie Asberry, Musician and Activist

Dr. Nettie Craig Asberry opened doors
for African American women through
social activism, in the early twentieth
century. She was the first African
American woman to receive a Ph.D.,
which she earned from the Kansas
Conservatory of Music and Elocution in
1883. She was also a founding member
of the Tacoma NAACP.

                                          Dr. Nettie Asberry,
                                          Washington State Historical Society

Search terms: Nettie Asberry, Tacoma NAACP
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The Founding of Pike Place Market

At the turn of the twentieth century in Seattle, farmers sold their
produce to wholesalers who in turn sold the goods to consumers.
Occasionally farmers made a profit, but often only broke even or
lost money. When Pike Place Market opened in 1907 it bypassed
the wholesalers and high prices and connected farmers directly
with consumers at an affordable cost.

Search terms: Pike Place Market, farms, agriculture, Wesley C. Uhlman,
Victor Steinbrueck, George R. Bartholick,
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May Arkwright Hutton and Emma Smith Devoe, Frenemies
Fight for Women’s Right to Vote
In 1909 both May Arkwright Hutton and Emma Smith Devoe agreed that
women in Washington deserved the right to vote. They did not, however,
agree on the campaign methods to win that right. Divided by mountains
and ideologies, Hutton and Devoe had to work past personal differences in
order to secure women’s suffrage.

Search terms: May Arkwright Hutton, Emma Smith Devoe, Washington
Equal Suffrage Association, National American Woman Suffrage
Association
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Suffragists and the Mountaineers Summit Mount Rainier
In July 1909 Washington
suffragists and members of
The Mountaineers jointly
climbed Mount Rainier and
planted a “Votes for Women”
pennant at the summit. The
expedition brought major
publicity to the women’s
suffrage movement in
Washington State.
                              On summit of Mount Rainier.
                              Washington State Historical Society

Search terms: Asahel Curtis, Dr. Cora Smith Eaton King, Edmond
Meany, the Mountaineers, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Washington
Equal Suffrage Association, National American Woman Suffrage
Association
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Susan B. Anthony and Abigail Scott Duniway Tour the Pacific
Northwest
In 1871 women’s rights leaders Susan B. Anthony and Abigail Scott
Duniway toured the Pacific Northwest, on a campaign for women’s suffrage
in Washington Territory. Duniway was a leading activist in Oregon,
founding the first women’s rights newspaper in the Northwest, The New
Northwest. She also served as Anthony’s tour manager in Washington,
studying how to run a suffrage campaign.

Search terms: Susan B. Anthony, Abigail Scott Duniway, The New
Northwest, National American Woman Suffrage Association, Washington
Equal Suffrage Association
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The Oregon Trail
The Oregon Trail was a historic wagon route that connected the Missouri
River to Oregon. It was laid by fur traders and trappers from about 1811 to
1840 and transferred about 400,000 settlers westward. Ezra Meeker,
Marcus Whitman, and Arthur A. Denny are all famous pioneers of
Washington to travel the Oregon Trail.

Search terms: The Oregon Trail, Ezra Meeker, Marcus Whitman, Arthur
A. Denny
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