As the Association of Washington Business celebrates its 120th birthday, we are looking back at twelve decades of milestones in advocacy for Washington’s employers. From the founding of small businesses to the establishment of iconic global companies, AWB has been there for our state’s employers every step of the way.
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1904
The Citizen’s Alliance, as AWB was known at first, formed in Seattle. The first headquarters is in the Lumber Exchange Building. By 1913, the name would be changed to Employers Association of Washington.
1905
PACCAR begins when William Pigott, Sr. founded Seattle Car Mfg. Co. to produce railway and logging equipment at its plant in West Seattle.
1907
The Citizen's Alliance changes its name to
The Employers' Association of Seattle.
1907
Two teenage entrepreneurs with a $100 loan start the American Messenger Company. It would become the world’s largest package delivery service, UPS.
1911
Weyerhaeuser opens its first headquarters next to the offices of the Northern Pacific Railway in Tacoma. It would be their corporate headquarters for the next 60 years.
1912
UW rowing coach Hiram Conibear recruits English boatbuilding brothers Dick and George Pocock to make racing shells for his varsity crew. The Pocock brothers go on to make racing shells for other schools, as well as pontoons for Boeing.
1912
Pendleton Woolen Mills, based in Pendleton, Ore., expanded into Washington with the purchase of a weaving mill in Washougal, just across the Columbia River. The company would join AWB seven years later in 1919.
1913
The Employers' Association of Seattle changes its name to
Employers Association of Washington.
Decade Two: 1914 - 1923
1914
The Employers Association of Washington seeks to expand its scope of work beyond Seattle, where the organization was founded, noting that...
"...now is the opportune time for state-wide work, believing that in unity of action there is strength and that much better work can be done for all our members, especially those in the out-lying districts of the state, by uniting under the banner of The Employers Association of Washington.”
1914
The Smith Tower officially opened. At 462 feet it was the tallest building west of Ohio. It was the brainchild of New York industrialist Lyman Cornelius Smith, who was also the namesake of the Smith-Corona typewriter. The tower has changed hands 12 times over the years. Famed "Keep Clam" restaurateur Ivar Haglund, who bought it in the 1970s, was reportedly the only owner ever to make money on his investment, according to HistoryLink. The Smith Tower was the tallest structure on the West Coast until construction of the Space Needle in the 1960s.
1915
The Employers Association of Washington
secures space at the new Columbia Building in Olympia to serve as a headquarters during the legislative session. The so-called Legislative Intelligence Bureau allowed the association to produce briefs on measures coming before lawmakers, and publish a weekly bulletin, presaging the Fast Facts newsletter that would be launched decades later.
1916
William Boeing incorporates Pacific Aero Products Co. for $100,000. He buys 998 of the 1,000 stocks issued and moves the operation to a shipyard he bought in 1910. On April 26, 1917, William Boeing changes his company’s name from Pacific Aero Products Co. to Boeing Airplane Co.
1917
By an 8-1 margin, voters in Pierce County bonded themselves for $2 million to buy almost 69,000 acres of land to be donated to the federal government for a permanent army base, which became known as Fort Lewis. The first recruits moved into their newly constructed barracks just a few months later.
1918
The United Dairymen's Association of Washington is formed. By 1925 they have begun using the trade name Darigold. Today the company is still a cooperative, known as the Northwest Dairy Association, with about 300 dairy farm members in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. Each independently owned and managed member farm is an owner of Darigold.
1920
The Employers Association of Washington board of trustees formally approves changing the name of the organization to Federated Industries of Washington.
1921
Board members discuss the idea of moving the association's headquarters to Olympia, but won't follow through for another four-plus decades. The headquarters remains in the Alaska Building in Seattle, the city’s first skyscraper, which today houses the Courtyard by Marriott Seattle Downtown.
Decade Three: 1924-1933
1924
A legislative bureau founded by the Federated Industries of Washington (an early iteration of AWB) expands to include loggers, bankers, and manufacturers. It provides information and analysis on bills and legislative activity.
E. H. Guie (pictured here), former state House speaker, is named its first legal advisor.
1927
Pierce County voters pass a bond measure to buy 771 acres for a new airfield. Through a series of ownership changes and mergers, its name would evolve from Tacoma Field, to McChord Field, to McChord Air Force Base,and eventually Joint-Base Lewis-McChord.
It was named after Col.
William C. McChord,
a military aviation pioneer.
1928
After six years of construction, the Washington State Legislative Building is completed. It is made up of more than 173 million pounds of stone, brick, concrete, and steel, and its 287 foot height would make it the fourth tallest masonry dome in the world (at the time). It cost the state $7 million ($128 million by today’s dollars).
1929
Future AWB manager Ed "Deke" Davis (second from left) leads the state House of Representatives as
Speaker of the House.
According to the Washington State Archives, this is the earliest picture in existence of the newly-completed House of Representatives chamber.
1931
In the midst of the depression, National Association of Manufacturers president John Edgerton tries to raise spirits during a Seattle conference co-hosted by the Federated Industries of Washington:
"The further you get from Wall Street the less you hear depressive talk... If we could stifle Wall Street's stock reports it will do more to kill off depression than any other one thing."
1932
Alaska Airlines was born when two different companies started flying in Anchorage: McGee Airways and Star Air Service. The companies merged in 1935. After several other mergers, the company was renamed Alaska Airlines in 1944.
Decade Four: 1934-1943
1934
A young outdoorsman from Orcas Island named Eddie Bauer invents the Bauer Shuttlecock, which popularized badminton in the United States. A year later, he invents the first quilted down parka after nearly dying of hypothermia during a fishing trip to the Olympic Peninsula.
1938
Folksinger Ivar Haglund opens Seattle's first aquarium on Pier 54. Noticing that his patrons often came with an appetite, Haglund starts selling red clam chowder and fish n' chips from the site. It was an instant success that began his career as a restaurateur with a penchant for publicity and a motto of "keep clam." He opened the first "Ivar's: Acres of Clams" restaurant in 1946.
1939
Near the end of the Great Depression, the Federated Industries of Washington joins with other groups in sponsoring the second annual Pacific Coast Manufacturers' Conference in Los Angeles.
The slogan for the two-day gathering, which attracted more than 60 manufacturers, including 14 from Washington state, is "A Coast-to-Coast Hook-Up for Recovery."
1940
The Tacoma Narrows Bridge is dedicated over a four-day celebration in July. At the time, it was the 3rd largest suspension bridge in the world. But by November, it would become better known as "Galloping Gertie," as engineering oversight and icy winds caused it to rip itself apart. There were no human casualties.
1941
Gov. Arthur Langlie is among the dignitaries to attend as Weyerhaeuser dedicates the world's first tree farm: 120,000 acres of land near Montesano, to experiment with reforestation and fire control. The Clemons Tree Farm included roads, lookout towers, telephone networks and a public education program.
1941
Sunset Field - which had been leased by the City of Spokane to the U.S. government for $1 a year - is renamed Geiger Field after Major
Harold Geiger, a famous Army pilot. The field is renamed Geiger Air Force Base in 1949, and it eventually becomes Spokane International Airport, but its airport code remained GEG.
1942
Work begins on the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, to ease the pressure on Seattle's Boeing Field and Tacoma's McChord Field (which were commandeered by the military). Sea-Tac's first runway was completed in 1944 and officially opened to the public in 1949.