Summary: | Seattle’s first Golden Potlatch festival opened on July 17, 1911. The city-wide summer celebration was conceived by civic groups to celebrate the Klondike gold rush and capitalize on the success of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909. The week-long festival included concerts, parades, aircraft and boat demonstrations. Seattle’s annual Seafair celebrations each July continue the Potlatch tradition. This photo shows an airplane flying high over a U. S. Navy warship while a seaplane hovers nearby over the water. During the Potlatch festival Navy lieutenant Eugene B. Ely, credited as the first pilot to take off and land on a ship, gave flight demonstrations in his Curtiss airplane three times a day. The photographer identification is based on the resemblance of the numbering system and handwriting to attributed photos in the collection. Caption information source: HistoryLink.org. 1 photographic print: b&w; 6.75 x 4.75 in.
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