It's walkable to grocery stores. Streets are well-lit. Kids play outside. Car is needed. There are community events. There's wildlife. It's quiet. See All what locals say. Learn more about our methodology. Dog Owners. Trulia User. Resident 1y ago. Resident 2y ago.
It's very quiet, but close to downtown and to the center of West Seattle. Homey-people wave and smile. Close to just about everything.. Resident 3y ago. People often stop and visit with you when you are in yard or out walking. Resident 4y ago. The views from walking around in the hoods are amazing too. Gender Identity. Sexual Orientation. Protection from being unfairly evicted, denied housing, or refused the ability to rent or buy housing. Writes the Report Number and value of the money on the paper edge of the air-dry bag.
Paper clips a completed Currency Envelope to the outside of the air-dry bag. If submitted after business hours, Mon-Fri , places air-dry bag in the bio-hazard locker in the Evidence Unit. Home Title 7 - Evidence and Property. Both employees who counted the money sign the Currency Envelopes. Counts the currency with another sworn employee. Our unique approach to fertility involves caring for the needs of couples as well as individuals. Our highly trained specialists can handle the entire spectrum of reproductive issues, from contraception to infertility to hormone replacement therapy.
We also specialize in fertility preservation in clients with cancer or those facing treatments that may jeopardize their future fertility. We can also provide seamless, coordinated obstetric care with UW Medicine providers who have experience with high-risk pregnancies. Patient Forms. The two red brick buildings are a few blocks northwest of the main medical center; UWMC-Roosevelt I is the southernmost of the two buildings.
See map. Free shuttle service is available between the medical center and the two Roosevelt buildings. Among them are routes No. Use Metro's Trip Planner to learn which buses can help you get to the clinics, or call Metro, Both Roosevelt buildings have underground parking.
Disability Parking Both garages offer parking for people with impaired mobility. If your vehicle is larger than the garages' accommodations, designated disability spaces are available on the west side of the building and in the covered garage behind Roosevelt Way N. Please call to schedule your appointment instead.
In the summer of , the Library Association moved its meetings and reading room into the Yesler's new building at Front Street now 1st Avenue and Cherry Street seen here on the right during the Big Snow of That fall, a large consignment of books arrived from San Francisco.
Notices were posted inviting all to come and enjoy the association's reading room. However, by the mids the Young Men's Christian Association was caring for the books and providing most of the services. After this transfer little is known of the library's activities until when the Ladies Library Association was organized at the home of Babette Schwabacher Gatzert at 3rd Avenue and Cherry Street. Seattle Post-Intelligencer owner L. Hunt and his wife gave considerable assistance.
Yesler donated a lot, perhaps in memory of Seattle's first librarian, his recently deceased wife Sara Yesler. Another activist in the library's revival was its recording secretary, Mrs. Adelaide Heilbron. Her father, W. Piper, had owned Boston's famous W. Piper Bookstore, where the lions of nineteenth-century American literature mingled -- Whittier, Lowell, Holmes, Longfellow, and Hawthorne.
Young Adelaide grew up at their side, absorbing their wit and erudition. The city's Great Fire of delayed the opening of the association's library until April , when a reading room was engaged on the 5th floor of the flat-iron Occidental Block facing Pioneer Square. The circulation department started later that year. In , the library printed its first catalogue of books. In the summer of , the library was moved across 2nd Avenue to the fifth floor of the Collins Block at the southeast corner of James Street.
Head Librarian John D. Atkinson directed a staff of five. In , the library briefly instituted a policy of charging all borrowers 10 cents a month or a dollar per year.
When the library moved in February into the second floor of the elegant Rialto Building, all charges were dropped. In , the library moved again, this time taking over the Yesler Mansion. The Yeslers built their room home in the mids and took residence in A year later Sarah Yesler, the community's first librarian, died suddenly of an illness diagnosed as "gastric fever. Five years later the year-old Henry Yesler followed.
Minnie Gagle Yesler, Henry's second wife and second cousin continued to live in the mansion with her mother until shortly before the library moved in and mounted its sign above the front porch.
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