With its shady conifers and sandy shores, Silver Lake has always been a beacon for sunny day fun.
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All in Everett Archives
With its shady conifers and sandy shores, Silver Lake has always been a beacon for sunny day fun.
Let’s look at a few aspects of the Everett waterfront, to look at the salty history of this city by the sea.
Let’s take a look at the history of music in Everett and some of the best acts that have played here.
In the great industrial city of Everett, before there was electric lights, or movies, or phonographs, or radio, there was baseball.
If you’ve ever met anyone from the Lowell district of Everett, then you know that they’re a different breed than your typical Everett resident.
A local favorite, this distributor of tasty dairy is still remembered fondly.
The people in this city who know the Van Valey house love it. Here’s why.
Today Highway 99 isn’t used as much as the Interstate. But in its day, “The Pacific Highway” was a sort of Route 66.
The smallish backpacks, once ubiquitous, still pop up everywhere. They never die.
All along the way, the port has mirrored the values of the people who live on this peninsula, and what they think of the waterfront at their doorstep.
The Equator has served many purposes, has assumed many practical forms, ship-wise. As such, it should be admired.
Before there were cars in Everett, there were the rails. The first train station in Everett was on Bond Street on the bayside of the city. A brick building on the northwest corner of Pacific and Colby was the northern terminus of the Interurban line.
The story of Everett hospitals begins in Quebec, Canada with a Catholic woman named Mother Joseph.
This mirrored edifice, a focal point of the Everett downtown skyline, houses the mayor’s office, the forest service, and some curious artistic artifacts.
The tale of a north Everett elementary school that became a retirement home.