Spokane loves motorcycles
Spokane has had motorcycle riders, clubs, dealers and fans since they were invented. Do you remember Brush Cycle?
Spokane has had motorcycle riders, clubs, dealers and fans since they were invented. Do you remember Brush Cycle?
You would have to be over 100 to have attended Blair Business College.
This week's Then and Now column is about Newman Lake
The Collings Foundation brings three airplanes--a B-17, a B-24 and a P-51-- to Spokane International Airport for a few days.
The store at Newman Lake Resort is closed for the season because the owners have health problems. Perhaps its a business opportunity?
This week's Then and Now column is about Mount Spokane and the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The Great Depression brought thousands of young men to the Inland Northwest to work in the Civilian Conservation Corps. It was FDR's project to get idle young men off the street, somewhat isolated, in camps across the West, where they planted trees, built trails and shelters and other projects. About 200 camped at Mount Spokane.
This week's column is about Greenough's grocery store on the South Hill. It was open from 1929 until 1985.
Do you remember when Greenough's IGA was at Sixth Avenue and Washington?
This week's column was about Playland Pier. Next week's Then and Now feature is about...
That's how the cracker crumbles.
The language has changed a lot through the years.
What you can see when you're 13-stories above the streets of downtown Spokane.
This week's Then and Now column is the former Spokane College at what is now the Manito Shopping Center.
Monday's Then and Now Column will focus on Spokane College
The story of R.L. Rutter and Rutter Parkway.
Looking ahead to the next Then and Now column.
The most recent Then and Now feature was about Burgan's Furniture.
Some photos donated by Mark Silver of Stan's Coney Island, his parents' cafe on the 400 block of W. Main in the 1960s.
This is the first post of the new blog. Welcome all the people that read the Then and Now photo column.
Photo blog of The Spokesman-Review's award winning photojournalists