Cle Elum Firsts | Cle Elum, WA
Discover Cle Elum™, Washington in a new way - from its beginnings through this compilation of "firsts" compiled by the
Northern Kittitas County Historical Society. An area rich in Washington State history, these historical highlights feature the first time an event or happening occurred in Cle Elum.
Click the options below to learn more about Cle Elum's first newspaper, first gold discovery, first talking movie, and more. Echoes of these stories are visible throughout the area, making our town a place where the past is truly always present.
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contact us! We'd love to hear from you and add to our list below.
Built by Walter J. Reed and his wife, Barbara Ann Steiner Reed in 1893.
Built by Walter and Barbara Reed at the corner of Pennsylvania and Railroad Streets in July 1886.
It was known as Wing Sing's Chinese Laundry which opened for business in 1891...
Built by Fred Zeek in 1887. It was the first dairy in Cle Elum and Roslyn.
James Dysart's mill on the Yakima River, which operated from 1876 to 1880.
Cle Elum's first mayor was Thomas L. Gamble, who served that office during 1902-1903.
The first newspaper in Cle Elum was known as the Teanaway Bugle which began in 1884.
Designated by the government to Cle Elum in 1888. Dr. Wheelock took charge as postmaster.
Established in 1887 in the old Walter and Barbara Reed cabin that they had built in 1883.
Thomas L. Gamble was the first settler in April 1883. He was also the first mayor of Cle Elum.
Frank Carpenter who took over the failing Kellogg bank in Cle Elum on November 2, 1904.
The First Talking Movie was in May 1929 at the Lane Theater and was the "Wolf of Wall Street".
The first telephone service was inaugurated in Cle Elum on April 5, 1901 with ten telephones.
Opened in 1904 near the corner of First and Harris, and was called the Opera House.
Cle Elum's first water system was installed in 1893 at an expense of some $19,000.
1886, after a rush by the Railroad to complete the laying of tracks to this rich coal-mining region.
July 26, 1886 by Walter Reed. Mr. Reed platted 60 acres of his claim as a townsite.