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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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When crackers were all the rage

Spokane has had lots of cookie, biscuit and cracker bakeries in its history. Only some signs and advertisements are left.
Spokane has had lots of cookie, biscuit and cracker bakeries in its history. Only some signs and advertisements are left.

What's left of Spokane's history of biscuit and cracker industry can be seen in this photo taken from the top of the Ridpath Hotel. The National Biscuit Co. building is situated along the Northern Pacific rails which run through the downtown corridor. The proximity helped with incoming supplies and distribution via railcar. 

From a Spokesman-Review business column in January 2015:

"Work begins on old building

Renovation is underway for the Washington Cracker Co. building, at 304 W. Pacific Ave., to convert the 38,000-square-foot interior into mixed-use commercial spaces for lease, including for a winery.

Built in 1891 and added to in 1905, the three-story structure is on the Spokane Register of Historic Places as a site used for decades to make assorted breads, saltine crackers, biscuits and cereals. The logo, “Home of SnowFlake Saltines,” and name, National Biscuit Company, are visible on the north façade.

Darby McKee, with investor group Cracker Box LLC developing the property, said the $900,000 project began this month. Overbluff Cellars, for which McKee is a co-owner, will fill part of the main floor. Other first-floor areas will have a restaurant, art gallery and Anvil Coffee. Tenants hope to open by late summer.

Offices will occupy second-floor and likely third-floor spaces. Contractor SDS Construction Management also will install a new elevator, add stairs, build common areas, and upgrade utilities.

Portland entrepreneur Herman Wittenberg first developed the site for his rapidly growing biscuit and candy-making business. Early parent Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. was purchased in 1930 by the National Biscuit Co. (Nabisco), which operated in the building until 1965, when Morrison Moving & Storage Co. moved in and used it until 2009."

 

This group of women sat for a photo in their bakers clothing in 1912.  The photo was taken at the Tru-Blu Biscuit Co., which later became Sunshine Biscuit Company. Photo courtesy of Richard Grosch.
This group of women sat for a photo in their bakers clothing in 1912. The photo was taken at the Tru-Blu Biscuit Co., which later became Sunshine Biscuit Company. Photo courtesy of Richard Grosch.


Jesse Tinsley
Jesse Tinsley joined The Spokesman-Review in 1989. He currently is a photojournalist in the Photo Department covering daily news and shoots drone photography.

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