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The Yakima Public Library was constructed in 1904, primarily using $10,000 grant donated for that purpose by Andrew Carnegie.The Rural Library District #1 (RLD) was established in 1944, and, in 1951, pooled resources with the City of Yakima to form the Yakima Valley Regional Library System.
The White Swan Library (a branch of the Yakima Valley Regional library) was established in 1947. It was moved to a donated facility in 1969 where it stands today. White Swan is part of the Mt Adams School District #209, and home of White Swan High School. The town has never been formally incorporated. [6] [7]
Spike, W.D.C. Spike's North Yakima, Illustrated, 3 Vols. Tacoma and North Yakima, 1890. Yakima County Assessor's Office, property ownership records. Yakima Daily Republic, 26 April 1910, 22 May 1909, 14 July 1899. Yakima Herald. 26 September 1889, 9 January 1890, 22 August 1889, 19 September 1889.
Feb. 20—The Kaneohe Public Library will close temporarily for a construction project beginning Monday, but a pop-up site at Windward Mall will offer limited library services starting March 17 ...
Location of Yakima County in Washington. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Yakima County, Washington. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Yakima County, Washington, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided ...
The Yakima Valley Transportation Company (YVT) built a railroad line connecting the town with Yakima in 1910. [6] YVT provided both electric interurban service and freight service to Wiley City, but passenger service was discontinued in 1935.
Fruitvale is an unincorporated community in Yakima County, Washington, United States, located within the north city limits of Yakima.. The community was established around 1906 around a train station of the North Yakima and Valley Railway Company.
The museum has a superb collection of horse-drawn vehicles, from stagecoach to hearse. [1] An historical exhibit and reconstruction of the Washington D.C. office of former Yakima resident and environmentalist, Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, [2] an exhibit of petrified Miocene trees, a Neon Garden exhibit of vintage neon lights, and a changing schedule of special exhibitions.