Tacoma was founded in 1872 by teetotaler and former general Morton Matthew McCarver. He gave the city its first name – Commencement City. Tacoma had a lumber mill, two stores, a saloon, a hotel, a jail, a blacksmith, and about 100 residents when it was founded. McCarver’s efforts were rewarded in 1873 when the Northern Pacific Railroad chose Commencement Bay as the western terminus for its transcontinental line from Minnesota to Puget Sound. NP had a surprise for McCarver and his investors when they ran rails from Kalama on the Columbia River in Washington. They built their depot in a spot south of Tacoma City and named it New Tacoma.
By the end of November 1875, the territorial legislature had incorporated Tacoma City (which had already been incorporated by the Pierce County commissioners a year and a half earlier). Although the city was referred to as Tacoma by the legislation, the settlement is now commonly known as Old Tacoma to distinguish it from the NP’s New Tacoma. Pierce County residents voted to move the county seat from Steilacoom to New Tacoma in 1880. Steilacoom had been the county seat since 1852, when the county was formed. The legislature incorporated New Tacoma in the following year, leaving two similarly named but independent city governments on Commencement Bay. Northern Pacific constructed a fine headquarters building on Pacific Avenue, and wharves on the tideflats brought trade to the orient. Streetcar lines spanned downtown to new neighborhoods.
Check out these stunning historical photos that will take you back to the old Tacoma from the 1880s.
#1 Tacoma Hotel, Located on the Street, between South Eighth and Tenth Streets, 1880
#2 Tacoma Hotel, 1885
#3 Tacoma Mill Co. Wharf, Tacoma, 1885
#4 Fannie C. Paddock Memorial Hospital, Tacoma, 1885
#5 Union Avenue, Tacoma, 1887
#6 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1880
#7 William P. Jackson Photo Studio, Tacoma, 1888
The view is taken from across the Street. The studio is on the second story, above a savings bank, and its sizeable multi-paned glass windows are visible on the side of the building. Business in a nearby building: Hewitt & Hill, Real Estate. Sign on the side of the building: Lots in the Oakes Addition Now on Sale. A horse-team-drawn streetcar on Pacific Avenue, a dirt road, is in the image center.
#8 San Francisco Store, The Gross Brothers’ Store on Pacific Avenue, Near Ninth Street, Tacoma, 1881
#9 Possibly Tacoma Mill Company, Tacoma, 1885
#10 Tacoma, looking toward Tacoma Hotel from 9th and D St, 1884
#11 Tacoma Mill Co., 1888
dock, covered railroad track, and mill buildings are across the image center. Sign on building covering railroad track: Tacoma Mill Co. Store, Carries the Only Full Stock in the City of Ship Chandlery Supplies; a hand pointing to image right is beside the sign. Houses on a hill are visible in the left image background. Smoke coming from mill buildings obscures the background in the image right.
#12 Tacoma Hotel, 1888
#13 Tacoma National Bank, Tacoma, 1888
#14 Tacoma Mill Co. workers, Tacoma, 1885
#15 New Tacoma & Mt. Tacoma, the 1880s
#16 Tacoma Mill Co., 3001 North Starr St., Tacoma, 1887
The lumber mill was opened in 1869 as Hanson, Ackerson & Co., became the Tacoma Mill Co. in 1884 and was demolished in 1922. Three or four sailing ships are by docks in the image center-right. Smoke rises from the mill buildings. Houses are built on the slope in the image left center behind the mill buildings.
#17 Tacoma Mill Co., 1888
#18 Tacoma Grocery Company, 1527 to 1541 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1889
#19 Six women, three men, and three girls, one in a carriage, stand in front of the Anderson and Dumas Tin Shop at Second and McCarver Streets, Tacoma, 1888
#20 Tacoma Mill Company, Old Town, Tacoma, 1889
#21 Tacoma Sawmill, 1888
#22 Tacoma Mill, 1889
#23 Terminus N.P.R.R., Tacoma, 1889
#24 Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Tacoma, the 1880s
#25 Tacoma Mill Wharves, Old Tacoma, 1888
#26 Tacoma Fire Department, 1885
#27 Tacoma Volunteer Firefighters, 1887
#28 Mt. Tacoma, 1888
A trestle railroad bridge over the Tacoma, Pierce County. The image is taken from land, and low foliage is in the foreground. The trestle bridge is horizontal across the image center, making a 90-degree angle into the background near the image's left edge. The rotating bridge span is in the image right.
#29 Tacoma, Washington Territory view from Tideflats, 1884
#30 Tacoma Fire Co, the 1880s
#31 Tacoma Washington Territory View, 1885
#32 Eagle Hose Co. No. 2, Tacoma, 1888
#33 New Tacoma, 1889
#34 Hose Co. No. 3, Tacoma, 1888
#35 Tacoma buildings taken from Commencement Bay, 1889
#36 Corner of Tacoma and 17th St., Tacoma, 1889
The remains of several frame buildings at the corner of Tacoma Avenue and South Seventeenth Street collapsed by the most destructive storm to ever hit Tacoma. In the image left, several men and women peer at the debris from the elevated sidewalk. Several men stand atop the debris.
#37 Annie Wright Seminary, at the Corner of Tacoma Avenue North and Division Avenue, Tacoma, 1884.
In image center left, Annie Wright Seminary, viewed from the side at Tacoma Avenue North and Division Avenue, dirt roads in Tacoma. The view looks northwest on Tacoma Avenue North, running at an angle in the image center. The present Vista Del Rey Apartments at 319 Tacoma Avenue North is near the tall tree in the image center background. A few tree stumps and two wagons are amidst random vegetation on the side of the school.
#38 Hanson’s Sawmill, Tacoma, 1889
In the center of the photograph is a long, comprehensive, elevated building with an opening extending the width of the building and several belts extending from ground level to the opening. Unmilled lumber is stacked all around the building. A sign at the roof peak reads Tacoma Mill 1865, Hanson & Co. In the foreground are stacks of milled lumber. To the right of the building is a two-story residential structure, and in the distance are smokestacks and the two steeples of a large building.
#39 Shipyards at Tacoma, 1889
#40 New Tacoma, 1883
#41 Puyallups and Canoes by Railroad Tracks Along Commencement Bay, Below Tacoma Hotel, Tacoma, 1886
#42 New Tacoma Washington View looking west from Puyallup River, 1885
#43 Steamer Olympian, Tacoma, 1885
#44 Hawthorne School, Tacoma, 1886
#45 Hook & Ladder Co. No. 1, Tacoma Fire Department, 13th & A Streets, Tacoma, 1886
Twelve men stand at attention. The man near the image's right edge may be holding a megaphone under his arm. Another man may be holding a bugle in his hand. A hook and ladder wagon are partially visible behind the men in the center. The horse team drawing the wagon is visible in the image left.
#46 Villard House, 822 A Street, Tacoma, 1888
Several men, including three employees, wearing long aprons, pose, standing in front of the building. A dog lies on the sidewalk. Four women pose on the second-floor open balcony extending across the front. Two men sit atop a three horse-drawn carriage, with Villard House on the top, on the dirt road in front of the building. A man on horseback is nearby.
#47 Mostly commercial buildings are in the foreground and center of the image, Tacoma, 1888
#48 Coal Bunkers – Tacoma, 1885
#49 S.S. Bob Irving at Brown’s Wharf, Tacoma, 1884
#50 Log Cabin, Tacoma, 1885
#51 John A. Logan School, Tacoma, 1909
#52 Tacoma Mill Co. Dock, Tacoma, 1885
The mill company buildings are visible in the image right center background. Stacks of lumber are on the dock in the image center-right. The dock extends into the image lower foreground. Barrels lie sideways on the dock near the image's lower right edge. Two men are standing in front of 1 of 3 low, wide diameter circular objects, partially covered with wood, sitting on the dock above the center of the image's lower edge. They may be millstones. Another man rests against the hull of a small overturned boat nearby—the sides of possibly four sailing ships moored by the dock area in the image center-left.
#53 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1889
#54 Cascade Park Addition, Tacoma, 1888
The Cascade Park Addition was platted in 1888. South 40th bordered it on the north and South 48th on the south and between Union and Lawrence in South Tacoma, not far from the Northern Pacific Railroad shops. In this image, a dirt road leads from the foreground and intersects with another dirt road running left to right in the center of the image. A horse harnessed to an open buggy stands in the grass just to the left of the two roads intersect. Are several tall evergreen trees lining the roads?
#55 Tacoma Waterfront, 1884
#56 Tacoma-Pacific Ave. South from 9th St., 1888
#57 St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Tacoma, 1889
#58 Shipping Docks. Tacoma, 1889
A log pond near the shore is near the center of the right image edge. Buildings probably on shipping docks are visible in the image upper center. Three sailing ships are in Puget Sound beyond the buildings. A partially wooded hillside rises above the railroad yard in the image left.
#59 Loading wheat for Gt. Britain / Tacoma, 1888
#60 Tacoma, looking west toward County Courthouse, 1885
The elevated view looks west towards the first County Courthouse (1881-1893), the large white structure just right of center. To the left of the Courthouse is W.A. Freeman Livery Stable and the offices of the Tacoma Ledger. Just across the Street from the Ledger is Enterprise Furniture Co. To the right of the Courthouse on the opposite side of the Street is the office of Hewitt & Hill Real Estate. The streets are unpaved, and the sidewalks are wood planks.
#61 S.S. Idaho on Tacoma Waterfront, 1888
The end of the pier is visible in the image center. The end of a freight train is visible on the pier. A barge, with two men on it, is on the side of the pier in the image left. The masts of perhaps two sailing ships are visible in the center background. Another steamship is docked at the right image edge.
#62 Tacoma Sawmill, Capacity, 500,000 Ft. per Day, 1888
#63 Oldest Church Tower in the United States, Old Tacoma, 1888
The church was built in 1873 and is currently the oldest building in Tacoma. The image shows the simple white wooden church building with a single door and s small arched window above. Wooden steps lead from the unpaved streets to the church. The church's bell tower is a tall tree stump topped with the housing for the bell and across.
#64 Wharves at Tacoma, 1888
Part of the hillside is visible at the lower left image corner. The old Northern Pacific Railroad depot is the 2-story building to the left of the center, near the wharves extending in the image center. Four freight cars are above the image lower center edge. More freight cars are adjacent to the piers in the image center. A sternwheeler is partially hidden behind a wharf at center-right.
#65 Pacific Looking North from 12th, Svea Hotel, 1102-1104 Railroad Street, Tacoma, 1887
#66 Tacoma waterfront, sidewheeler steamship, tideflats, Mt. Rainier, 1889
#67 Man of War Thetis coaling at bunkers Tacoma, 1889
#68 Northern Pacific Rail Road Shops at Tacoma, 1888
#69 Washington Territory Views, View of Tacoma and Mt. Rainier, commonly called Mt. Tacoma, 1887
Several wooden barns and houses sit in the foreground while a few brick buildings are behind them. A sign on the roof of one of the wooden buildings reads Livbery Board & Sale Stable. A church is visible on the far left. Railroad tracks cut diagonally across the tide flats just to the church's right.
#70 H. Hohenschild, Dry Goods, Tacoma business, 1889
#71 Hotel Fife, Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, Sept 1888
#72 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1888
A roof ornament and roof edge are in the left lower corner foreground. A horse-team-drawn streetcar is in the image center. In the image foreground, three horse-drawn wagons and two pedestrians are on the Street. Commercial buildings appear to line both sides of Pacific Avenue.
#73 Main Street and Harbor, Old Tacoma, 1888
#74 Northern Pacific Railroad “Half-Moon” Yards, Tacoma, 1884
At the bluff's base, railroad freight cars are visible across the image center and left of the center. The Tacoma Hotel is at the top of the bluff, to the left of the image center. Another cluster of buildings is on the bluff to the left of the hotel. A road or walkway may extend parallel to the railroad cars, halfway up the bluff, where four telephone poles extend along a fence line. The reflection of the hotel, hillside, and railroad cars is visible in a large pool of water in the image center.
#75 Tacoma Fire Department, Our Boys Co. No. 4, in uniform, 1887
#76 Washington Territory and Oregon Views, 1880
#77 13th & Pacific Ave, Tacoma, 1889
#78 Chamber of Commerce Building, Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1888
#79 Canoes at Tacoma Waterfront, on Commencement Bay, 1888
A wolf's head is visible on the prow of one canoe. A few women and children are in the canoes and several bundles. An open umbrella sits near the center of 2 of the canoes. A person wearing a basketry hat is in one canoe. A log pond protected by pilings is beyond the canoes, and a pier with a building is in the center background. A tiny steamship is near the pier.
#80 Tacoma–Mason Block, S.E. Corner A & 10th Sts, 1888
#81 Laying Cornerstone for Gross Building, Ninth and Commerce, Tacoma, 1889
Many men and women, some women with umbrellas, and a few children face the site, hidden from the view below the image center. A dragline appears to be in place for placing the stone. With a girl standing inside one of them, small construction firms are on the construction site in the foreground.
#82 Streetcar & Motor near Tacoma, 1889
The engineer is peering out of the motor, and a man, possibly the conductor, stands on top of the steps at the end of the streetcar. Another railroad track runs parallel to the image lower edge. Three small buildings built from logs are in the right background. Wild foliage, perhaps including ferns, is in the image right foreground.
#83 William H. Opie Residence, 1510 E Street, Tacoma, 1884
#84 M[iles] F. Hatch Mill, Old Town, Tacoma, 1885
#85 Wharf Scene, Terminus of Northern Pacific Railroad, Tacoma, 1888
#86 Dr. Joseph R. Kennedy, Dentist, 1st Office in Tacoma, 906 Pacific Ave, 1887
The view is from one end of a narrow room towards windows at the far end in the image center background. A dentist's chair is in the image right background, with a bookcase behind it on the wall adjacent to the window. An open cupboard with indistinguishable objects on the shelves is on the other side of the window.
#87 Ninth and Pacific Avenue 1884 After the Fire
#88 Puget Sound Flouring Mills Plant, Tacoma, 1900
There is no name on either of the two large buildings in the image center and right. Railroad tracks are visible near the image right edge in front of the building. Two water towers are on the hill behind this building. The mills were built in 1889, A. Bradford, architect. Logs are crowded in a log pond in the image foreground. In the image lower center, a few small wooden buildings are clustered at and above the water's edge.
#89 View of Tacoma Oil Company’s Oil Wells, At Eli, Pierce County, 1888
#90 Tacoma looking west from headquarters N.P.R.R., 1888
The image shows the view of the city looking west from the headquarters of the Northern Pacific Railroad. There are several houses, two churches, and a hotel. The church on the left is First Methodist, located at 602 Broadway. The church on the right is St Luke's Memorial Episcopal, located at 702 Broadway. The St. Charles Hotel is on the lower right. A wagon sits outside the hotel's covered porch. The current City Hall is on the site of St. Charles Hotel.
#91 Looking Across Tideflats from A St., Tacoma, 1887
The Puyallup Indian Reservation is said to be in the background. There are two clusters of building in the background: one in the image left-center and one near the right image edge. A group of 5 people, including children, stand by a fence on the slope in the image foreground, looking out at the tideflats.
#92 West Side of Pacific Avenue, South of Ninth Street, Tacoma, 1885
#93 Annie Wright Seminary, 1885
#94 Merchants National Bank, South Eleventh Street, and Pacific Avenue, Tacoma, 1889
#95 View of Tacoma Oil Company’s Oil Wells, At Eli, Pierce County, 1888
#96 N.P. Headquarters Building / 9th & C Streets, 1880
The old Northern Pacific Railroad Headquarters Building in Tacoma, located at 9th and C Streets, was built by the Tacoma Land Company in the mid-1870s until a building on Stadium Way replaced it. When the Tacoma Theater was built, the building was moved to 7th and St. Helen's. It later became the Sylvan Hotel.
#97 The Coffee Dealers, Mason & Finley, 906 Railroad Avenue, Tacoma, 1889
#98 Chamber of Commerce Building, Southeast Corner of Pacific Avenue and Twelfth Street, Tacoma, 1887
#99 Pacific Avenue, Looking North from Eleventh Street, Tacoma, 1889
#100 Frank Clark Residence, 922 A Street, Northwest Corner of South Tenth Street and A Street, Tacoma, 1879
A man stands by a horse team and buggy on the dirt road in front of the house. A picket fence encloses the front yard beyond a plank sidewalk. Three women, one wearing an apron, and two men, holding a small child, pose on the front porch. General J.W. Sprague later occupied the house.
#101 Peritz & Co. and Other Businesses, Pacific Avenue and Thirteenth Street, Tacoma, 1885
#102 Logged Site of Mueller Garage, 1887
#103 Indian Scholars at the Industrial Boarding School, Puyallup Reservation, 1887
#104 Children’s Day, M.E. Church, June 13th, Tacoma, 1886
#105 Pacific Avenue looking south from 7th, 1888
#106 Annie Wright Seminary, 1884
#107 Tacoma Hotel, Tacoma, 1885
#108 H. Slippern & Co., 1319 So. Tacoma Ave., Tacoma, 1889
#109 Old Town, Tacoma, 1880
A 2-story building (possibly a school) with children standing on the first and second-floor exterior landings is left. Boys stand together on the lower level of the building, and girls stand together on the upper level. Other people (primarily men) and several horses are visible standing on the unpaved Street.
Well that’s some stunning photos. Thank you.