Aboard each cargo ship in local waters is a Puget Sound Pilot, a skilled and seasoned maritime professional licensed by the US Coast Guard and the state.
These can feel like scary times, but it might have been even scarier back in 1955, when the region had maps of evacuation routes for residents to use in the event of a nuclear attack.
A once-sprawling and now mostly forgotten Naval Training Station that stood on the University of Washington campus was considered ground-zero for the local Spanish Flu outbreak in 1918.
MOHAI has not set a specific date, but plans to display Stan Boreson's accordion at the museum at Lake Union Park. The instrument will likely appear in MOHAI鈥檚 permanent Seattle history exhibit.
Lake Stevens City Council is set to vote on changing the name of Wyatt Park. But what do the descendants of the park's namesake think about all of this?
One of the most important founding documents in the history of the Pacific Northwest is on display at the Tulalip Indian Reservation in Snohomish County.
It was 72 years ago this week that plans for a revolutionary new shopping center in Seattle were announced, which would later be known as 'Northgate Mall.'
A museum in Spokane is remembering the 40th anniversary of the Mt. St. Helens eruption with a new exhibit, as well as an online effort to collect memories.
Officials from the National Archives and Records Administration are meeting with staff of the threatened Seattle facility and local Native American tribes.
Captain Vancouver is often ridiculed for failing to notice the Columbia River, but he also gets the blame for another blunder: The misnaming of Hood Canal.
With the closure of the Seattle National Archives moving forward, federal agencies are pointing fingers at each other for a process that went without public input.
There were two routes between Kirkland and Redmond originally, not including trails first blazed by Native Americans, and then by early settlers in the 1870s.