Drucken Lesezeichen hinzufügen

Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA



 


Notizen:
Wikipedia 2016:

Bellingham is the largest city in, and the county seat of, Whatcom County in the State of Washington, United States. It is the thirteenth-largest city in the state, with 83,365 residents at the 2014 US Census, or sixth-largest by metropolitan area after Seattle-Tacoma, Spokane, the northern side of the Portland metropolitan area, the Tri-Cities, and Yakima. The boundaries of the city encompass the former towns of Fairhaven, Whatcom, Sehome, and Bellingham.

Bellingham is the northernmost city in the contiguous United States with a population of more than 50,000 residents. It is acclaimed for its easy access to outdoor opportunities in the San Juan Islands and North Cascades as well as proximity to the cities of Vancouver and Seattle. It is also famous for the large quantities of Canadian tourists and shoppers who visit daily to take advantage of relatively cheap gasoline, airfare and other products.

History:

The name of Bellingham is derived from the bay on which the city is situated. George Vancouver, who visited the area in June 1792, named the bay for Sir William Bellingham, the controller of the storekeeper's account of the Royal Navy.

Prior to Euro-American settlement, Bellingham was in the homeland of Coast Salish peoples of the Lummi and neighboring tribes. The first Caucasian settlers reached the area in 1854. In 1858, the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush caused thousands of miners, storekeepers, and scalawags to head north from California. Whatcom (Bellingham's original name) grew overnight from a small northwest mill town to a bustling seaport, the basetown for the Whatcom Trail, which led to the Fraser Canyon goldfields, used in open defiance of colonial Governor James Douglas's edict that all entry to the gold colony be made via Victoria, British Columbia.

Coal was mined in the Bellingham area from the mid-19th to the mid-20th centuries. It was Henry Roeder who had discovered coal off the northeastern shore of Bellingham Bay, and in 1854 a group of San Francisco investors established the Bellingham Bay Coal Company. The mine extended to hundreds of miles of tunnels as deep as 1200 feet. It ran southwest to Bellingham Bay, on both sides of Squalicum Creek, an area of about one square mile. At its peak in the 1920s, the mine employed some 250 miners digging over 200,000 tons of coal annually. It was closed in 1955.

Bellingham was officially incorporated on November 4, 1903 as a result of the incremental consolidation of four towns initially situated around Bellingham Bay during the final decades of the 19th Century. Whatcom is today's "Old Town" area and was founded in 1852. Sehome was an area of downtown founded in 1854. Bellingham was further south near Boulevard Park, founded in 1853; while Fairhaven was a large commercial district with its own harbor, also founded in 1853.

In 1890, Fairhaven developers bought Bellingham. Whatcom and Sehome had adjacent borders and both towns wanted to merge; thus they formed New Whatcom. Later, on October 27, 1903, the word "New" was dropped from the name, because the Washington State Legislature outlawed the word new from city names. At first, attempts to combine Fairhaven and Whatcom failed, and there was controversy over the name of the proposed new city. Whatcom citizens wouldn't support a city named Fairhaven, and Fairhaven residents wouldn't support a city named Whatcom. They eventually decided to use the name Bellingham, which remains today. Voting a second time for a final merger of the four towns into a single city, the resolution passed by 2163 votes for and 596 against.

In the early 1890s, three railroad lines arrived, connecting the bay cities to a nationwide market of builders. The foothills around Bellingham were clearcut after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake to help provide the lumber for the rebuilding of San Francisco. In time, lumber and shingle mills sprang up all over the county to accommodate the byproduct of their work.

In 1889, Pierre Cornwall and an association of investors formed the Bellingham Bay Improvement Company (BBIC). The BBIC invested in several diverse enterprises such as shipping, coal, mining, railroad construction, real estate sales and utilities. Even though their dreams of turning Bellingham into a Pacific Northwest metropolis never came to fruition, the BBIC made an immense contribution to the economic development of Bellingham.

BBIC was not the only outside firm with an interest in Bellingham utilities. The General Electric Company of New York purchased Bellingham's Fairhaven Line and New Whatcom street rail line in 1897. In 1898 the utility merged into the Northern Railway and Improvement Company which prompted the Electric Corporation of Boston to purchase a large block of shares.

Bellingham was the site of the Bellingham riots against East Indian (Sikh) immigrant workers in 1907. A mob of 400–500 white men, predominantly members of the Asiatic Exclusion League, with intentions to exclude East Indian immigrants from the work force of the local lumber mills, attacked the homes of the South Asian Indians. The Indians were mostly Sikhs but were labelled as Hindus by much of the media of the day.

Bellingham's proximity to the Strait of Juan de Fuca and to the Inside Passage to Alaska helped keep some cannery operations here. P.A.F., for example, shipped empty cans to Alaska, where they were packed with fish and shipped back for storage.

Ort : Geographische Breite: 48.74908, Geographische Länge: -122.47814729999999


Geburt

Treffer 1 bis 11 von 11

   Nachname, Taufnamen    Geburt    Personen-Kennung 
1 Childs, Helen  11 Mai 1911Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I35278
2 Haggen, Sandra Irene  27 Apr 1947Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10663
3 Horman, Burton Leroy  8 Feb 1927Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10612
4 Horman, George Albert  16 Dez 1920Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10609
5 Horman, John William  5 Mai 1919Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10608
6 Horman, Josephine Leda  22 Nov 1922Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10610
7 Johnson, Duane L.  9 Okt 1934Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I194115
8 Lake, Francis Manning  17 Jun 1913Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I163046
9 Morningstar, LeRoy E.  19 Mrz 1919Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I35170
10 Webster, Ethel - wife of  4 Aug 1910Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I11022
11 Wiebe, Vern Lawrence  18 Mai 1960Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I105329

Tod

Treffer 1 bis 11 von 11

   Nachname, Taufnamen    Tod    Personen-Kennung 
1 Haggen, Sandra Irene  15 Feb 1948Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10663
2 Horman, George William  6 Jun 1976Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I10495
3 Kirschenmann, Christina  3 Apr 2005Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I86015
4 Kirschenmann, Friedrich  23 Dez 1953Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I86007
5 Kirschenmann, Otto  31 Dez 1997Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I86053
6 Krein, Wilbert  30 Okt 1997Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I75346
7 North, Wiiliam H.  16 Apr 1943Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I106962
8 Schuler, Frieda  26 Jul 1939Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I37187
9 Schüler, Ludwig  5 Sep 1969Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I37183
10 Wambsgans, Lester W.  12 Mrz 2005Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I224653
11 Weißenburger, Heinrich  23 Apr 1947Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA I90648

Eheschließung

Treffer 1 bis 2 von 2

   Familie    Eheschließung    Familien-Kennung 
1 Horman / Dennison  18 Apr 1936Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA F3730
2 Lind / Schuler  12 Aug 1950Bellingham, Whatcom County, Washington, USA F12478