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Description

Since it’s a beautiful, warm summer day here in Seattle, this month’s episode features a short history of a beautiful lake with a mysterious island. You’ll find this lake on the southwestern corner of Snohomish County, on the edge of Edmonds and Mountlake Terrace, just north of Shoreline, Washington. Come with us to take a dip in the cool, refreshing waters of Lake Ballinger! 

Learn about the development of this area in the late 1800s through 1920s, with Hugh McAleer, the Bartholomew and Ballinger families, and the role of the Interurban Streetcar line on the Seattle suburbs in 1910, as it expanded from Greenwood in Seattle up to Everett, WA. We also dip a toe into the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition of 1909, and the rise of the progressive movement's land conservation efforts led by Gifford Pinchot. For Show Notes visit our Webpage

We are always looking for “invisible histories” of the Pacific NW so if you have a good story idea please reach out at invisiblehistoriespnw@gmail.com

Image: Lake Ballinger from the Interurban line, Seattle ca. 1909, Asahel Curtis, courtesy of Paul Dorpat.

Music:

Lady of the Lake (1917) Victor Band and Emma Howells Burchenal

https://archive.org/details/78_lady-of-the-lake_victor-band-emma-howells-burchenal_gbia0013588b

Song of the West - Voices of America Series

​Recorded July 2024

Audio edited by Elke Hautala

Cari Simson and Elke Hautala formed Invisible Histories to visually and viscerally connect the public to experiences from the past. Their Invisible Histories podcast unearths diverse local stories and forgotten places. www.invisible-histories.com


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