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TACOMA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 347 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TACOMA  , a

city and sub-
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port of entry, and the county-seat of Pierce county, Washington, U.S.A., on Commencement
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Bay of Puget Sound, at the mouth of Puyallup
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river, about 8o m. from the Pacific coast, and about 23 M . S.S.W. of
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Seattle . Pop . (189o) 36,006; (1900) 37,714, of whom 11,032 were
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foreign-born (including 1603 Swedes, 1534
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English-Canadians, 1474 Norwegians, 1424 Germans, and 1323 English; (191o, U.S. census) 83,743 . Tacoma is served by the
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Northern Pacific, the Chicago,
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Milwaukee & Puget Sound, and the Tacoma Eastern
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railways; the Chicago,
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Burlington & Quincy railway operates through trains to and from
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Missouri river points and Tacoma, over the Northern Pacific tracks, which are also used by the
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Great Northern and
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Oregon & Washington railways . There is electric railway connexion with Seattle . Tacoma is the starting-point of steamship lines to
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Alaska, to
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San Francisco, and to Seattle, Port Townsend,
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Olympia, Victoria, and other ports on Puget Sound . There are trans-oceanic lines to
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Japan and
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China, to the Philippines and Hawaii, and to
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London, Liverpool and
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Glasgow, by way of the
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Suez Canal . The city is situated on an excellent harbour and has 25 M. of waterfront . From the tidelands the city site slopes gradually to a plateauabout 300 ft. high, commanding
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fine views of Puget Sound and its wooded islands, and parts of the Cascade and Olympic ranges . Tacoma is the seat of Whitworth College (189o, Presbyterian), the University of Puget Sound (19c3, Methodist Episcopal), the Annie Wright Seminary (1884), a boarding and .day school for girls, and the Pacific Lutheran Academy and Business College . The Tacoma High School has an excellent
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stadium for athletic contests, seating 25,000 .

The city has a

Carnegie library (1899), with about 51,000 volumes . Among other public buildings are the court house, the city hall, in which are the rooms of the State
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Historical Society (organized, 1891; incorporated, 1897); the Federal
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Building; an armoury; the Chamber of Commerce, and several fine churches . The Ferry Museum, founded by Clinton P . Ferry, has interesting historical and ethnological collections . In 1910 the city had seven public parks (1120 acres), including Point
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Defiance, a thickly wooded park (about 64o acres), and, in the centre of the city, Wright Park, in which is the Seymour Conservatory . Tacoma is a sub-port of entry in the Puget Sound Customs
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district (of which Port Townsend is the official port), which is second only to San Francisco on the Pacific coast in the
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volume of foreign trade . The city has a large jobbing trade, a
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coal supply from rich de-posits in Pierce county, and abundant
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water-power from swift mountain streams, which is used for generating
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electricity for municipal and
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industrial use . In 1900 and in 1905 Tacoma ranked second among the cities of the state in the value of factory products . Lead smelting and refining (by one establishment) was the most important industry in 1905;
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lumber,
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timber and planing mill products, valued at $3,407,951, were produced in that
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year, and
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flour and grist mill products, valued at $2,293,587 . Other important manufactures were furniture,
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ships and boats, railway cars (the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound and the Northern Pacific systems having shops here), engines, machinery, shoes, water pipes, preserves and
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beer . In 1905 the
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total value of the factory products was $12,5or,816, an increase of 121.4% since 190o . The assessed
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property valuation of the city in 1909 was $54,226,261, being about 42 % of the actual valuation .

The site of Tacoma was visited by

Captain George Vancouver in 1792; Commencement Bay was surveyed for the
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United States government by
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Lieutenant Charles Wilkes in 1841, and the
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present city was founded by General Morton Matthew McCarver in 1868 and was at first called Commencement City . That name was soon changed to Tacoma, said to be a corruption of Ta-ho-ma or Ta-ho-
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bet,
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Indian terms meaning " greatest white
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peak," the name of the peak (14,526 ft.), also called Mt . Rainier about 50 M . S.E. of the city . General McCarver's
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original plat included what is now the first ward of the city, and is called the Old
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Town . In 1873 the Northern Pacific railway (completed in 1887) established its terminal on Commencement Bay, and named it New Tacoma . A town government, was formed in 1874, the place became the county-seat in 188o, and in 1883 the two " towns " were consolidated and incorporated as a city under the name Tacoma . In 1909 a new city charter was adopted under which the city government is vested in five commissioners (one of whom acts as mayor), each in charge of a city department .

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