We were up in Snoqualmie on Friday and stopped into this little antique and book-shop. I found a little treasure back in the corner. It is a wonderful four volume set published in 1909, so at this point it’s almost 100 years old. It is a complete set written by Clinton A Snowden called “History of Washington, The Rise and Progress of An American State” It covers Washington area history from it’s discovery to the formation of the State of Washington which occurred in 1889, only 30 years before the publication of this book.

The books are in fair condition with little damage. The 4th volume is in the worst condition with a rip in the crease between the front cover and the spine. I am thinking about having them re-bound. I have several others that I would like to have rebound as well, including one of my favorite books of poetry that has long ago seen better days.
I love old books like these for reasons like this;
I started reading the first volume and in it Snowden makes a reference to the fact that the location for Washington DC was originally chosen because it put it near the population center of the country. He goes on to comment on how since westward expansion the “current” population center is somewhere in souther Indiana and may even someday cross the Mississippi river. I found this part particularly funny because it has been within my lifetime that the this has happened. When I was born the population center of the country was very near my home in southern Illinois and crossed into Missouri when I was in high school. Snowden was not far off in his prediction, predicting that the population center would be somewhere near but east of Kansas City.
It is interesting reading a history book that has a perspective that from our point of view is itself part of history. By this mean, the book was written prior to both world wars, the rise of communism etc. etc. What made me think of this was this line
“It (Oregon Territory) is possibly capable of supporting a population as dense as that of the German Empire, which now amounts to more than sixty million people.”
What I find fascinating about this is that it is a sentence constructed from a mind that has no knowledge of what would be future events. No prejudice and no reference to the two world wars started by Germany. These events that for us any mention of Germany conjure to mind, where not available to Snowden.
I also picked up one other book that day, a copy of “Van Loon’s Geography” published in 1932. Which was apparently a gift either to or from Gordon N. Johnson for Christmas 1932.









