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She has also written for <em>Seattle</em> magazine and the <em>Oregon Historical Quarterly</em>. She is the author of <em>Olmsted in Seattle: Creating A Park System for a Modern City</em>, general editor and contributor to <em>Seattle at 150: Stories of the City Through 150 Objects From the Seattle Municipal Archives</em>, and co-author of <em>Waterway: The Story of Seattle’s Locks and Ship Canal</em>.</p> <p><strong>Marie McCaffrey</strong>, Co-founder and former Executive Director (2007-2023)</p> <p><strong>Walt Crowley</strong> (1947-2007), Co-founder and Executive Director (1997-2007)</p> <p><strong>Paul Dorpat</strong>, Co-founder and Historian (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Nick Rousso</strong>, Managing Editor (Seattle) – Nick Rousso is the managing editor of HistoryLink. A Seattle native and former sports editor at the <em>Seattle Post-Intelligencer, </em>he has enjoyed a varied career in restaurants, horse racing, and journalism. He has written a handful of stories for HistoryLink, including the colorful history of Vito's Restaurant and a profile of "Golden" Guyle Fielder, Seattle's greatest hockey player.</p> <p><strong>Priscilla Long</strong>, Founding Editor and Consulting Editor (Seattle) – Priscilla Long serves as founding and consulting editor of HistoryLink.org, the free online encyclopedia of Washington state history. She is an independent scholar, author of six books, and writes history, science, creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry.</p> <p><strong>Jill Freidberg</strong>, Digital Media Editor (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Steven Leith</strong>, Site Administrator/Technologist (Seattle) – Steven Leith was the original technical consultant and developer for the Historylink.org project and continues to consult on the website progress. He is a Seattle resident of 42 years and lives in West Seattle. Though semi-retired he finds time between writing and reading history to consult with and build websites for small business, nonprofits, and local writers.</p> <p><strong>Kiku Hughes</strong>, Executive Assistant (Kenmore) – Kiku Hughes is a Yonsei cartoonist based in the Seattle area. Her first graphic novel, <em>Displacement</em>, was published by First Second in 2020 and was an APALA Literature Award honor title and an Eisner Award nominee. She began working as executive assistant at HistoryLink in 2021.</p> <p><strong>Paula Becker</strong>, Historian (Seattle) – Paula Becker is the author of <em>A House on Stilts: Mothering in the Age of Opioid Addiction</em> and <em>Looking For Betty MacDonald: The Egg, The Plague, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle and I</em>, and co-author of <em>The Future Remembered: The 1962 Seattle World's Fair and Its</em> Legacy and <em>Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition: Washington's First World's Fair</em>. She has written for HistoryLink since 2001. Her 300-plus essays on the site document all aspects of Washington history. </p> <p><strong>Peter Blecha</strong>, Historian (Seattle) – Seattle native Peter Blecha has served as a staff historian and contributing editor for HistoryLink, writing more than 200 essays since 2001. He is the director of the Northwest Music Archives, the former senior curator at the Experience Music Project (EMP), and an award-winning author of seven books.</p> <p><strong>John Caldbick</strong>, Associate Editor and Historian (Whidbey Island) – John Caldbick was born in Seattle and worked for the <em>Seattle Post-Intelligencer </em>and United Press International in the 1960s and early 1970s. He graduated from the University of Washington School of Law in 1976 and practiced that profession for 30 years. In 2009 he retired from law and began a more enjoyable career as a staff historian for HistoryLink.</p> <p><strong>Frank Chesley</strong> (1929-2010), Historian (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Phil Dougherty</strong>, Historian (Sammamish) – Staff historian Phil Dougherty has written more than 300 essays for HistoryLink on topics ranging from the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition to a history of the nineteenth-century Nooksack chief Yelkanum Seclamatan, with a few humorous historical tales sprinkled in between. He has written two books, most recently <em>The Bartell Story: 125 Years of Service.</em></p> <p><strong>Glenn Drosendahl</strong>, Historian (Seattle) – Glenn Drosendahl worked at the Lewiston (Idaho) <em>Morning Tribune </em>before moving to the <em>Bellevue Journal-American</em> and then the <em>Seattle Post-Intelligencer</em> for its final 22 years as a newspaper. He has been a sports reporter and editor, the P-I’s reader representative or ombudsman, and a freelancer covering the restaurant business. He wrote his first essay for HistoryLink in 2000. </p> <p><strong>Linda Holden Givens</strong>, Historian (Auburn) – HistoryLink staff historian Linda Holden Givens is a Seattle native, granddaughter of Oscar William Holden, Seattle’s patriarch of Jazz, and the author of <em>Holden On To Family Roots – A Granddaughter’s Family and Genealogy Search</em>. A former IT project manager and business analyst, she now is a yoga instructor. She has written essays for HistoryLink on subjects ranging from video-game designer Roberta Williams to Ivan the Gorilla, and nineteenth-century horse racing near Olympia.</p> <p><strong>Mary T. Henry</strong>, Historian (Seattle) – Mary Henry is one of the founders of HistoryLink, a retired Seattle Public Schools librarian, author of <em>Tribute: Public Places Named for Black People,</em> the former editor of the Black Heritage Society newsletter, and archivist at Epiphany Parish. </p> <p><strong>Jim Kershner</strong>, Historian (Spokane) – Spokane-based staff historian Jim Kershner has written more than 250 essays for HistoryLink. He is the author of four HistoryLink books, including 2019’s <em>Transit: The Story of Public Transportation in the Puget Sound Region</em>. He is also the author of<em> Carl Maxey: A Fighting Life</em>, a finalist for the 2009 Washington State Book Award.</p> <p><strong>Kit Oldham</strong>, Associate Editor and Historian (Lacey) – Kit Oldham, a HistoryLink historian since 2002 and an editor since 2007, served as Senior Editor from 2013 through 2019. His more than 250 HistoryLink articles cover agricultural history, land-use regulation, transportation, politics, biographies, county and city histories, and many other topics. He is co-author of <em>Public Ports in Washington </em>and two other HistoryLink books.</p> <p><strong>Margaret Riddle</strong>, Historian (Everett) – Staff historian Margaret Riddle works to build Snohomish County essays on HistoryLink. She retired in 2008 after a 30-plus-year career as Historian in the Everett Public Library's Northwest Room. That same year she received the Robert Gray Medal from the Washington State Historical Society.</p> <p><strong>Alan J. Stein</strong>, Historian (Edmonds) – Alan Stein has been with HistoryLink from the very beginning. He has written more than 450 essays on a wide variety of subjects, and has authored or co-authored five HistoryLink books. He also writes the weekly "This Week Then" rundown on the front page, and directs HistoryLink’s presence on social media.</p> <p><strong>Cassandra Tate</strong>, Ph.D. (1945-2021), Historian (Seattle) – Staff historian Cassandra Tate wrote more than 200 essays for HistoryLink on subjects ranging from Lewis and Clark, abortion reform, and school busing to more offbeat stories about bootleggers and fireworks makers. She is the author of <em>Unsettled Ground: The Whitman Massacre and its Shifting Legacy in the American West</em>. </p> <p><strong>Chris Goodman</strong>, Consulting Technologist (Shoreline)</p> <p> </p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Contributing Historians (Partial List)</strong></span></p> <p><strong>Mildred Andrews</strong>, Ph.D. (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Laura Arksey</strong> (Spokane)</p> <p><strong>Happy Avery</strong> (Spokane)</p> <p><strong>Kathrine Beck</strong> (Seattle) – Fourth-generation Seattleite Kathrine Beck writes HistoryLink essays, mostly with an emphasis on true crime and show business. She is the author of numerous mystery and suspense novels, and a biography of Oregon author Opal Whiteley, and has worked in communications in the Northwest broadcasting, grocery, fisheries, and aerospace industries.</p> <p><strong>Clara Berg</strong> (Seattle) – Clara Berg is the Curator of Collections at the Museum of History & Industry (MOHAI). She oversees the care of the museum’s collection of 3-D artifacts and does research and presentations about its contents. In 2019 she curated MOHAI’s exhibit <em>Seattle Style: Fashion/Function</em>.</p> <p><strong>Karen J. Blair,</strong> Ph.D. (Ellensburg)</p> <p><strong>Warner Blake</strong> (Snohomish) – Renovating the former Saint Michael Church of Snohomish with artist Karen Guzak, Warner Blake began researching the town’s history, especially its nineteenth-century architectural heritage, which led to writing two books: <em>Early Snohomish</em> (2007) and <em>J. S. White Our First Architect</em> published in 2017. He is quite proud to be a writer for HistoryLink, covering Snohomish City.</p> <p><strong>Eleanor Boba</strong> (Seattle) – Eleanor Boba likes to explore the little-known stories of people and places. She has written HistoryLink essays on topics ranging from the sad case of a young Japanese immigrant girl to a World War II venereal disease treatment center in South Seattle to the 1978 King Tut exhibit and phenomenon.</p> <p><strong>David Cameron</strong>, <span class="s1">Ph.D.</span> (Index)</p> <p><strong>Oscar Rosales Castañeda</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Rita Cipalla</strong> (Seattle) – Rita Cipalla explores Washington’s lesser-known people and places, focusing on art, culture, and the Italian American community. She is the Northwest correspondent for <em>L’Italo Americano</em>, wrote for the Smithsonian News Service in Washington, D.C., and owns a consulting practice that helps education, cultural, and environmental clients tell their stories.</p> <p><strong>Becky Chan</strong> (Seattle) </p> <p><strong>Kathryn Nass Ciskowsk</strong>i (Orcas Island) – Living in the San Juan Islands for over 35 years, Kathryn (Kathi) Nass Ciskowski has submitted a variety of pieces to HistoryLink. Proud to be a descendant of Washington state pioneers, she has been a journalist, an educator, and now is committed to helping people research their family and community histories.</p> <p><strong>Trista Crossley</strong> (Spokane)</p> <p><strong>Erica Curless</strong> (Spokane)</p> <p><strong>Kim Davenport</strong> (Tacoma) – Kim Davenport is an educator, historian, and writer who specializes in the musical history of Tacoma. She has written two books for Arcadia Publishing's Images of America series, articles for the Washington State Historical Society's <em>COLUMBIA</em> magazine, and given numerous presentations for Tacoma Historical Society. She maintains a blog, TacomaMusicHistory.org, where she shares her own and her students' research.</p> <p><strong>Dotty DeCoster</strong> (1944-2015), (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Duane Colt Denfeld</strong>, Ph.D. (Fort Lewis)</p> <p><strong>Miguel Douglas</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Steve Dunkelberger</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Ed Echtle</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Stephen B. Emerson</strong> (Cheney)</p> <p><strong>David Eskenazi</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Sheila Farr</strong> (Seattle) – A Seattle native, Sheila Farr is an author, poet, and arts writer. Her books include <em>Fay Jones</em>; <em>Leo Kenney: Celebrating the Mysteries;</em> and <em>James Martin: Art Rustler at the Rivoli</em>. As the staff art critic for <em>The Seattle Times</em> from 2000-2009, she won a number of journalism prizes, including a George Polk Award.</p> <p><strong>Patricia Filer</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Louis Fiset</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Steve Fox</strong> (Everett) – Steve Fox has been researching and writing about Everett and Monte Cristo history for several decades, enjoying much time both in the field and the library. He has been involved with the city's Historical Commission, the Everett Museum of History, and Historic Everett.</p> <p><strong>Aaron Goings</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Marga Rose Hancock</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Ariana Heath</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Esther Altshul Helfgott</strong>, Ph.D. (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Brad Holden</strong> (Seattle) – Brad Holden is the author of a few books, including <em>Seattle Prohibition: Bootleggers, Rumrunners & Graft in the Queen City</em>, and enjoys finding relics related to local history, which he showcases on his popular Instagram page, Seattle Artifacts. He is a columnist for <em>Seattle</em> magazine, and his work has been featured in <em>Pacific Northwest </em>magazine. </p> <p><strong>Russell Holter</strong> (Tacoma) – Russell Holter is a regulatory compliance and linear cultural resource consultant whose interests include early transportation and extractive industries in Washington. He authored <em>The Fateful Fourth: The Story of America’s Worst Trolley Accident</em>, and co-authored <em>Rails to Paradise: The History of the Tacoma Eastern Railway from 1890-1919</em>. </p> <p><strong>Doug Honig</strong> (Seattle) – Doug Honig is an educator, historian, and freelance writer whose articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines. He has produced several documentary series on topics of Washington history for public radio and television. He served as communications director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington for 28 years and is author of <em>On Freedom’s Frontier</em>, a history of the ACLU’s first 50 years in Washington.</p> <p><strong>Michael Hood</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Antonia Kelleher </strong>(Edmonds)</p> <p><strong>Lisa Labovitch</strong> (Everett) – Lisa Labovitch has worked in the Northwest Room of the Everett Public Library since 2012. She is interested in researching the stories of women, LGBTQ+, and BIPOC residents of Snohomish County. She began writing for HistoryLink in 2019. </p> <p><strong>Peter LeSourd</strong> (1938-2023), (Pasadena, formerly Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Charles LeWarne</strong>, Ph.D. (Edmonds)</p> <p><strong>Louise Lindgren</strong> (Index)</p> <p><strong>Paul Lindholdt</strong>, Ph.D. (Spokane) – A contributing historian since 2012, Paul Lindholdt is a professor of English at Eastern Washington University. His work has been recognized by the Academy of American Poets and the Society of Professional Journalists. His ecological memoir <em>In Earshot of Water </em>won the Washington State Book Award for 2012.</p> <p><strong>Anthony Long</strong> (Tacoma) –</p> <p><strong>David Lynx</strong> (Yakima)</p> <p><strong>David F. Martin</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Bob Mayer</strong> (Everett) – Everett native Bob Mayer retired from a 40-year career as an electrical engineer at Western Gear in Everett and then at Boeing as an Associate Tech Fellow on the 787 and 747. In 2019 he began writing for HistoryLink about local ties to polar and ocean exploration, aviation, and industry. In 2022 he was one of four international panelists on a webinar hosted by Ohio State University's Byrd Polar Research Center. He also has written several history articles published by the <em>Everett Herald</em>. </p> <p><strong>Daryl McClary</strong> (Seattle) – Seattle native Daryl C. McClary has authored more than 200 essays for HistoryLink on a variety of unsettling events in Washington history, including aircraft accidents, capital crimes, fires, kidnappings, mining accidents, mountaineering mishaps, and shipwrecks. His expertise is the result of 30 years as a federal criminal investigator.</p> <p><strong>Casey McNerthney</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Patrick McRoberts</strong> (1952-2010), (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Cynthia Mejia-Giudici</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Lee Micklin</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Emilie Miller</strong> (Tulalip)</p> <p><strong>Lane Morgan</strong> (Bellingham) – Lane Morgan is a writer and editor based in Bellingham. She is the author of <em>Winter Harvest Cookbook </em>and <em>Greetings from Washington </em>and co-author of <em>Seattle: A Pictorial History</em>, <em>The Miracle Planet</em>, and <em>Pacific Northwest the Beautiful Cookbook</em>. Her blog using family correspondence to explore recent history is at morgancorrespondence.blogspot.com.</p> <p><strong>Rebecca Morris</strong> (Tacoma) – Rebecca Morris is an award-winning journalist and New York Times bestselling nonfiction author. She has published eight true crime books and writes about infamous crimes in Washington for HistoryLink.</p> <p><strong>Zola Mumford</strong> (Seattle) – Zola Mumford is a librarian, researcher, writer, and past Washington State Book Awards judge. She is curator of the Seattle Black Film Festival, a program of LANGSTON, a nonprofit arts organization. Occasionally she is a speaker or panelist on subjects ranging from archival research to film history to science fiction/speculative fiction. </p> <p><strong>Cynthia Nims</strong> (Seattle) – Seattle writer Cynthia Nims has been writing about food, with particular interest in seafood and Northwest food traditions, for more than 25 years. She served as editor of <em>Simply Seafood</em> magazine, food editor of <em>Seattle</em> magazine, and has authored more than 10 cookbooks, the most recent of which are <em>Oysters</em> and <em>Crab</em>. She even manages a blog post now and then, at www.monappetit.com.</p> <p><strong>Tamiko Nimura</strong> (Tacoma) – Freelance writer Tamiko Nimura has written about Japanese American history in Tacoma, Vashon Island, Seattle, Auburn, and Bainbridge Island, and covered BICPOC arts and artists in Washington for <em>Discover Nikkei</em> and the <em>International Examiner</em>. Her first book, <em>Rosa Franklin: A Life in Health Care, Public Service, and Social Justice</em>, was published in 2020 by the Washington State Legislature Oral History Program. </p> <p><strong>Jack & Claire Nisbet</strong> (Spokane)</p> <p><strong>David Norberg</strong> (Tacoma) – David Norberg teaches U.S. and Pacific Northwest History at Green River College in Auburn, co-authored <em>Contested Boundaries: A New Pacific Northwest History, </em>and is especially interested in the environmental history of the Pacific Northwest. He started writing for HistoryLink in 2018.</p> <p><strong>Janet Oakley</strong> (Bellingham)</p> <p><strong>Denise Ohio</strong> (Everett) – Writer and filmmaker Denise Ohio had her first novel published in 1988. She has since had essays, criticism, poetry, two more novels, and one textbook published. Her second feature film, the documentary <em>Verona: The Story of the Everett Massacre </em>(Virgil Entertainment, 2017), is currently available on your favorite streaming platform. Ohio is working on a multivolume fiction series set within the labor unrest of the early twentieth century.</p> <p><strong>Michael Paulus</strong> (Walla Walla)</p> <p><strong>Fred Poyner IV</strong> (Issaquah) – Fred Poyner IV is an independent historian and author of four books about public sculpture of the Pacific Northwest, including <em>Native American and First Nation Figures in Sculpture: North American Monuments, Memorials and Statuary of 50 Artists</em>.</p> <p><strong>Karen Prasse</strong> (Stanwood)</p> <p><strong>Boyd C. Pratt</strong> (San Juan Island)</p> <p><strong>Katie Pratt</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Junius Rochester</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Nick Setten</strong> (Seattle) – Nick Setten is a board member of the Friends of the Market and avid historian of the "Soul of Seattle." In 2017, he co-produced a photographic exhibition in Pike Place Market to celebrate its 110th anniversary. He started writing for HistoryLink in 2019.</p> <p><strong>Adam M. Sowards </strong>(Mount Vernon)<strong> – </strong>Adam M. Sowards is a historian, writer, and former professor who specializes in environmental history. He has written and edited five books, including the award-winning <em>An Open Pit Visible from the Moon: The Wilderness Act and the Fight to Protect Miners Ridge and the Public Interest</em> and, most recently, <em>Making America's Public Lands: The Contested History of Conservation on Federal Lands</em>.</p> <p><strong>Shanna Stevenson</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Kevin Ticen</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Traci Timmmons</strong> (Seattle) – Traci Timmons is a librarian and art historian who writes about Washington's art and culture for HistoryLink. She was the head of the libraries and archives at the Seattle Art Museum for 20 years, has been writing about art, museums, and libraries for the better part of thirty years, and is the co-author of the book, <em>The New Art Museum Library</em>.</p> <p><strong>Rosette Royale</strong> (Seattle)</p> <p><strong>Melinda Van Wingen</strong> (Everett)</p> <p><strong>Mike Vouri</strong> (San Juan Island)</p> <p><strong>Justin Wadland</strong> (Tacoma)</p> <p><strong>Lynn Weber/Roochvarg</strong>, Ph.D. (San Juan Island) – Contributing historian Lynn Weber/Roochvarg focuses her research for HistoryLink on events and people in the San Juan Islands. After retirement from a career in libraries and adult education, she assists local nonprofits with communications and other projects, and is the author of a book on public library services to adult learners.</p> <p><strong>David B. Williams</strong> (Seattle) – Seattle resident David B. Williams is a freelance writer focused on the intersection of people and the natural world. He has authored nine books, including <em>Seattle Walks: Discovering History and Nature in the City</em>, and written extensively for HistoryLink.org and HistoryLink.tours. He maintains a blog at geologywriter.com.</p> <p><strong>David Wilma</strong> (Seattle) – HistoryLink's deputy director from 2002 to 2007, David Wilma co-authored with founder Walt Crowley <em>Power For The People: A History of Seattle City Light</em> (2009) and <em>Hope on the Hill: The First Century of Seattle Children’s Hospital </em>(2010), other books on Northwest history, and several hundred Historylink.org essays. He researched and scripted the video documentary <em>The Power of Snoqualmie Falls (2010) </em>and corporate history research projects, and published five historical novels. </p> <p><strong>Hans Zeiger</strong> (Tacoma) – Hans Zeiger focuses on the history of Pierce County. He is the author of <em>Puyallup in World War II </em>and co-editor of <em>South Hill, Washington: A Community History</em>, both available from History Press.<em> </em>He is a trustee of the Washington State Historical Society. </p></div> </article> </div> </section> <footer id="footer"> <div class="footer-wrap"> <div class="signup-form"> <a href="https://lp.constantcontactpages.com/sl/UBfpeLp/Newsletter" class="button">Subscribe</a> <a class="button" href="/Pages/Donate">Donate</a> </div> <div class="tagline"> <p>The Free Encyclopedia of Washington State History</p> <ul> <li class="social"><a class="icon icon-podcast" href="/File/22657">Podcast</a></li> <li class="social"><a class="icon icon-insta" href="https://www.instagram.com/historylink/">Instagram</a></li> <li class="social"><a class="icon icon-facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/HistoryLinkorg/44553171204">Facebook</a></li> <li class="social" style="padding-top: 14px;"> <a href="https://bsky.app/profile/historylink.bsky.social"> <svg fill="none" viewBox="0 0 64 57" width="22" style="width: 22px;"><path fill="#000000" d="M13.873 3.805C21.21 9.332 29.103 20.537 32 26.55v15.882c0-.338-.13.044-.41.867-1.512 4.456-7.418 21.847-20.923 7.944-7.111-7.32-3.819-14.64 9.125-16.85-7.405 1.264-15.73-.825-18.014-9.015C1.12 23.022 0 8.51 0 6.55 0-3.268 8.579-.182 13.873 3.805ZM50.127 3.805C42.79 9.332 34.897 20.537 32 26.55v15.882c0-.338.13.044.41.867 1.512 4.456 7.418 21.847 20.923 7.944 7.111-7.32 3.819-14.64-9.125-16.85 7.405 1.264 15.73-.825 18.014-9.015C62.88 23.022 64 8.51 64 6.55c0-9.818-8.578-6.732-13.873-2.745Z"></path></svg> </a> </li> </ul> </div> </div> </footer> <script src="/bundles/common?v=CVFiwIc0ZjDVd0JPEr_2NB6aYULr3AFWrn_bbFNwEIQ1"></script> <script src="https://use.typekit.net/oaz3mpt.js"></script> <script>try { Typekit.load({ async: true }); } catch (e) { }</script> <script> function googleTranslateElementInit() { new google.translate.TranslateElement({ pageLanguage: 'en' }, 'google_translate_element'); } </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="//translate.google.com/translate_a/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit"></script> </body> </html> <!--built by Civilization-->