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The Rainier Club was first proposed at a February 23, 1888 meeting of six Seattle civic leaders; it was formally incorporated July 25, 1888. The attendees of the original meeting were J. R. McDonald, president of the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway; John Leary, real estate developer and former Seattle mayor; Norman Kelly; R. C. Washburn, editor of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer; Bailey ...
Rainier Club: Rainier Club. April 22, 1976 : 810 4th Ave. 156: Ravenna-Cowen North Historic District: Ravenna-Cowen North Historic District ... Seattle Yacht Club ...
By the end of World War II, a historic decision was made by the club membership to buy the building from its owner, The Washington Athletic Club Holding Co., who had been renting the building to them since 1936 at a rate of $12,500 a month, for $1.35 million. Even though the payments would follow the same rate as the rent, the wealthy club ...
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The team's fortunes improved in 1938 when Emil Sick, owner of Seattle's Rainier Brewing Company, bought the Indians from owner Bill Klepper for $100,000 and renamed them the Seattle Rainiers. He began construction of Sick's Stadium , a 15,000-seat facility on the site of old Dugdale Field. [ 10 ]
Costco membership prices have not increased in 2023, and the last time the company raised its membership fees was in 2017. ... Club membership: For $50 a year, ...
The first professional team to play in Seattle was the PCHA Seattle Metropolitans, which played in the Seattle Ice Arena between 1915 and 1924. In 1967, the NBA 's Seattle SuperSonics (more commonly known as the "Sonics") became the first modern-day major professional sports franchise in Seattle.
Roughly bounded by S. Hudson and S. Alaska Sts., 35th and Rainier Aves., Seattle, Washington Coordinates 47°33′33″N 122°17′8″W / 47.55917°N 122.28556°W / 47.55917; -122