Colman Building, with Lough, Augustine & Co.'s grocery wagons, Seattle, circa 1900

Seattle's Colman Building, at 811 First Avenue, was one of many large brick buildings built in the Pioneer Square area after the 1889 Great Fire. One of its early business occupants was the upscale grocery firm of Lough, Augustine and Company. Others included the Northern Pacific Express Co., H...

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Online Access:http://cdm16786.contentdm.oclc.org:80/cdm/ref/collection/imlsmohai/id/9635
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Summary:Seattle's Colman Building, at 811 First Avenue, was one of many large brick buildings built in the Pioneer Square area after the 1889 Great Fire. One of its early business occupants was the upscale grocery firm of Lough, Augustine and Company. Others included the Northern Pacific Express Co., Hudson Bay Fur Co., Wilcox Tailoring Co., Lang Drug Co., and the Delmonico Cafe. The Elk Cafe, with its tall, lighted sign, stands across the street. Shown here is Lough, Augustine & Co's fleet of horse-drawn delivery wagons that made deliveries all over Seattle. Charles Lough left Seattle in 1903, and M.B. Augustine then partnered with Henry A. Kyer to form Augustine & Kyer. Handwritten beneath image: The Colman Bldg - 1st and Columbia Showing Augustine Kyer's Grocery Wagons Caption information source: Seattle Times Pacific NW Magazine, May 22, 2015. 1 photographic print mounted on paper: b&w; 7.5 x 9.5 in.