

Mossback's Northwest
Knute Berger mines Seattle's historical and cultural nuggets.
Prospectors headed to the 1897 gold rush in Alaska had to bring tons of provisions with them. Some imagined the possibility of airships carrying freight and gold back and forth to the Klondike, and suddenly, airships were being "seen" all over the world.
Wealthy English aristocrat and musician Sir Thomas Beecham came to Seattle during WWII to be the Seattle Symphony's conductor for two years. Outspoken and fiery in temperament, he made a statement about Seattle's artistic life that stings citizens even today.
Seattle World's Fair organizers desperately wanted President John F. Kennedy to visit. He couldn’t, but he did glimpse the site.
In 1919, during an Armistice Day parade, a gun battle between Wobblies and the American Legion left five men dead.
Tiny compared to other oysters, the Olympia was for decades raked out of Washington's beds by the ton, to feeding hungry gold diggers in California and Northwestern lumbermen.
The ramps to an imagined expressway were built during freeway frenzy in the 1960s. Now, all but one are coming down.
George Bush, a free black man, settled what is now known as Tumwater in 1850.
How a race between rival crews brought Native and UW paddlers closer to the sport — and each other.
"You've got to be a little mad to live in this place." Mossback looks back at his favorite episodes and all the reasons we love living in the Northwest. Online now.