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Spokane WA

New Hotel Grand Coulee – Parts (Auto) – 106 S Cedar Street – Spokane, WA

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Hotel Grand Coulee

Hotel Grand Coulee (Hotel Upton): Hotel Grand Coulee, now known as Hotel Upton in 1910. It was built during, and in response to, an unprecedented period of growth in Spokane’s history between 1900 and 1910, when it assumed its role as the regional distribution hub of the “Inland Empire.” It is a single Room Occupancy hotel (SRO). Like many other SROs that appeared in this region during this time period, the Hotel Upton was built to accommodate to the many laborers that came to Spokane to benefit from the expanding industries. “The Imperial Investment Co., headed by principle owner, manager, and Secretary Andrew Laidlaw, a mining and real estate investor, contracted prominent Spokane architect Loren L. Rand to design the building.” The Grand Coulee remains a typical SRO, however no longer operates as a Hotel. The ground floor was given over to commercial space and the upper floors for housing space. – Flickr – sexymansamson’s Photostream

The Hotel Upton is historically significant as a Single Room Occupancy hotel, or SRO, in Spokane’s central business district. It was built during, and in response to, an unprecedented period of growth in Spokane’s history between 1900 and 1910, when it assumed its role as the regional distribution hub of the “Inland Empire.” Like other SROs, which appeared on nearly every block of the central business district during the period, the Hotel Upton was built to accommodate the many itinerant laborers that flocked to Spokane to benefit from the expanding industries such as mining, agriculture, lumber and railroads. The Imperial Investment Co., headed by principle owner, manager, and secretary Andrew Laidlaw, a mining and real estate investor, contracted prominent Spokane architect Loren L. Rand to design the building. Some of Rand’s other notable local works include the First Presbyterian Church, the Marble Bank (now demolished), numerous schools including Lewis and Clark High School, and the Riverside and Main additions to the Crescent Building. The Grand Coulee, as the building is now known, retains the functional integrity of a typical SRO, with the ground floor given over to commercial space and housing on the upper floors. It is the western terminus of the West Downtown Spokane Historic Transportation Corridor, a National Register Historic District.Historic Spokane

Wholesale Liquors, Wines & Cigars – Spokane, WA

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Aslin Finch Feed Co – Established 1937 – Spokane Valley, WA

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Red Lion Barbeque & Pub – First Pawn Inc. – Spokane, WA

© Vincenzo Aiosa

Barber Supplies – Spokane, WA

July 2009 © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco – Ketchum & Son Inc – Wholesale Dry Goods – Owl Cigars – Coca-Cola – Spokane, WA

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Globe Hotel – Spokane, WA

a GLOBE HOTEL — 75¢ AND UP – STEAM HEAT — HOT AND COLD WATER IN EVERY ROOM — PRIVATE BATHS — TELEPHONES © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Built in 1908 in response to a period of rapid growth in Spokane around the turn of the twentieth century, the Globe is significant as one of the few remaining downtown hotels representing this period of development. The hotel is also significant as a representative example of a Single Room Occupancy Hotel, a distinctive form of working class housing which was popular during the time period. – Globe Hotel – Historic Properties of Spokane, WA – Historic Preservation Office

Rasher & Kingman Vehicles of All Kinds – Schuttler Wagons – Spokane, WA

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Peter Schuttler has often been referred to as the “Great Chicago Wagon King” in Midwestern U.S. lore. He was born on December 22, 1812 in Wachenheim, Germany and died on January 16, 1865 in Chicago. – Wikipedia

Henry George 5¢ Cigar – Spokane, WA – July 2009

© Frank H. Jump

Coast Trading Company, Inc. Silo – Spokane, WA

July 2009 © Vincenzo Aiosa

© Frank H. Jump

The Coast Trading Company Inc. Grain Elevator is a 120 foot silo in Spokane built in the early modernism style of the late 1920’s and has been the subject of other urban photographers (Flickr).