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Sept 20, 2008 - Grab a Piece of History


Lowell_Skoog

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mtneerA-1938-ibc.jpg

 

Inside front cover of 1938 Mountaineer Annual. Left: copper printing plate; right: printed page. Artwork by Clark E. Schurman. (Note: This item will not be available at the History Grab.)

 

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The Mountaineers History Grab!

 

 

Before moving to the club's new Magnuson Park facility the Mountaineers History Committee is disposing of extra materials that won't be moved. On Saturday, September 20, collectors and history buffs will have a chance to obtain some of these materials:

 

1. Mountaineer Annuals, 1920s-1990s

 

The History Committee has hundreds of Mountaineer Annuals that need to go. We have pulled aside all the annuals we need to keep. Extra copies will be made available at the History Grab.

 

2. Halftone Printing Plates, 1910s-1960s

 

Photos in early Mountaineer Annuals were printed using halftone plates, each made by engraving an image on a copper sheet mounted on wood. The History Committee has pulled aside a selection of these plates that we'll be keeping, but there are hundreds more that we don't need to keep. For mountaineering and history buffs, these plates are unique collectibles.

 

3. Logistics

 

Materials at the History Grab will be made available in several ways. Some items will be free for the taking. Others will be offered for sale at a fixed price and still others may be offered in a silent auction. Details are being worked out by the History Committee and all proceeds will go to Mountaineer historical projects.

 

Come grab a piece of mountaineering history!

 

Where:

The Mountaineers clubhouse

300 Third Ave. West, Seattle

 

When:

Saturday, September 20, 2008, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.

 

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Update:

The Mountaineers History Committee is continuing to prepare for Saturday's "History Grab" event at the Mountaineers clubhouse.

 

While selecting photo/printing plates that we'll be keeping, we discovered a second plate of the 1938 inside-cover pictured above. This artwork was used on both the front and back covers, so two plates were made. (Note that the second plate is not as clean as the one shown above. A qualified printer would probably know how to clean it, but I have not looked into that.)

 

We'll be offering the second plate in a silent auction on Saturday. The silent auction will conclude at 2:30 p.m. If you'd like to bid on this item, make sure to come to the History Grab before the auction closes. We may be auctioning other items as well, but final decisions haven't been made yet.

 

There are hundreds of photo plates of various quality for you to look at--probably close to a thousand of them. Hundreds of Mountaineer Annuals will also be available spanning many decades--although there are no complete sets available. If you're interested in Northwest mountaineering history, I think you will enjoy this event.

 

Details:

The Mountaineers History Grab

300 Third Ave. West, Seattle

Saturday, September 20, 2008, 12 to 5 p.m.

(All proceeds from this event support Mountaineer historical projects)

 

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Thanks, Lowell. Aside from two crates of free, 'new' WWII pitons (pretty decent, actually), there were some vintage stoves and other equipment dating back from the turn of the century, including a full bottle of WWII era bug juice and an unopened roll of malted milk tablets, plus loads of cool old copper photographic plates (I loaded up with about 20). A fine day of mountaineering archeology.

Edited by tvashtarkatena
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For me one of the best parts happened in the morning while we were setting up for the sale. After we pried open the crates of WWII pitons, Frank Fickeisen, one of our History Committee members, picked up his cell phone and called his old friend Duke Watson (this guy) and gave him all sorts of grief about the pitons. Duke shipped the pitons from Alton, Illinois to his wife in Seattle in the spring of 1944, when he was commander of the Army's Seneca Rocks Climbing School. Duke remembered this and Frank kidded him that, like a bad nickel, he was never going to be rid of those pitons, now that we'd found them again. That was over sixty years ago!

 

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