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T-Mobile Park is also used for amateur baseball events, including the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association high school state championships and one Washington Huskies game per season. Major non-baseball events that have been held at T-Mobile Park include the 2001 Seattle Bowl and WrestleMania XIX in 2003, which attracted the stadium ...
Seattle Clamdiggers: N/A [2] Recreation Park Base Ball Grounds 1905 N/A Seattle Siwashes: N/A [3] Yesler Way Park 1907–1912 N/A Seattle Siwashes, Seattle Turks, Seattle Giants: N/A [4] Dugdale Field ~1900–1932 15,000 Seattle Giants, Ballard Pippins: N/A [5] Civic Field 1932–1938 15,000 Seattle Indians, Seattle Rainiers: N/A [6] Sick's ...
Leo Lassen (1899–1975) – Baseball announcer in Seattle, Washington. Lawrence Denny Lindsley (1879–1974) – Photographer and also a miner, hunter, and guide. Lindsley was a grandson of Seattle pioneer, David Thomas Denny, a member of the Denny Party. Alfred Lueben (1859–1932) – A German-born music professor and conductor in Seattle ...
Legacy.com is a United States–based website founded in 1998, [2] the world's largest commercial provider of online memorials. [3] The Web site hosts obituaries and memorials for more than 70 percent of all U.S. deaths. [4] Legacy.com hosts obituaries for more than three-quarters of the 100 largest newspapers in the U.S., by circulation. [5]
Seattle Central College M. Rosetta Hunter Art Gallery: Capitol Hill: Art: website: Seattle Children's Museum: Lower Queen Anne: Children's: Located in the Seattle Center Seattle Mariners Hall of Fame: SoDo: Sports: Located at T-Mobile Park: Seattle Metropolitan Police Museum: Downtown: Law enforcement: History of policing in the Pacific ...
The Mariners moved to Safeco Field, now known as T-Mobile Park, midway through the 1999 season, and the Seahawks temporarily moved to Husky Stadium after the 1999 season. On March 26, 2000, the Kingdome was demolished by implosion. The Seahawks' new stadium, now known as Lumen Field, was built on the site and opened in 2002. King County finally ...
Dori Monson (October 2, 1961 – December 31, 2022) was an American radio personality who hosted the Dori Monson Show, an afternoon talk radio show in Seattle, Washington, on KIRO-FM. Early life and education
Valerie Easton (April 27, 2003), "The Olmsted Legacy: Masters of Green / From Street to Shore, a Living Legacy of Distinctive Public Places", Pacific Northwest magazine, The Seattle Times Frederick Law Olmsted , Metro Parks Tacoma , January 9, 2011, archived from the original on 2007-10-28 , retrieved 2012-01-12