October 9, 2006 ·

Revising the Condo Map - Again

So once upon a time I created the condo map for Tacoma.  There seems to be a renewed interest in the map and…  I feel bad as it hasn’t been updated in a bit.  Fill the comments with fixes and corrections.  Is the status wrong?  Is a project dead?  Is it done and I still show it as a rumor?  Tell me what’s missing from the map and I’ll try to fix it before the Tour of Urban Living this weekend.  Thank you for your help. 

Link to the Condo Map

4 comments

  • Tim Smith August 13, 2010

    The photo shows the ultimate Tacoma dome, a stained glass wonder which has over 3,200 individual pieces of Kokomo Opulescent Glass and is 9.5 feet across. This photo is taken from the floor 20 feet below. This dome is located in the Oakwood Hill Cemetery Columbarium and Chapel, which was built by the “Cremation Society of Tacoma” and was the only glass columbarium west of the Mississippi at the time.

    The Cemetery is often overshadowed by its cousin to the North, the Old Tacoma Cemetery, but they began as one entitity with the first burial in Oakwood occuring on June 11th 1874. This was Miss Frances Desdemonia Coulston, age 19, who “Dropped Dead” after eating a big meal. Because she was not considered an adult at age 19, the burial of Gem McCarver in 1875 (in Old Tacoma Cemetery) is often cited as the first burial.

    In Oakwood, one will also find the entire membership of the Gen, George Armstrong Custer Grand Army of the Republic, the grave of Zinna Linnick, and many other historic gravesites.

    This will be a super event and I hope you don’t miss a chance to see a very historic part of Tacoma.

  • RR Anderson August 13, 2010

    Will there be charging station breaks for my rascal mobility scooter?

  • j feste August 13, 2010

    Oakwood Hill Cemetery is also the place of interment for the ashes of U.S. Senator Homer T. Bone, a Tacoman who became one of the nation’s most vigorous advocates ever for public-owned electrical power systems. Unlike Wenatchee’s Rufus Woods and Seattle’s James Ross (both of whom have landmark hydro-power lakes named for them) Bone is somewhat forgotten. Take time to remember him at his marker at Oakwood on Saturday. His story is worth recalling—of what can be accomplished in Tacoma.

  • jamie from thriceallamerican August 16, 2010

    His story is worth recalling—of what can be accomplished in Tacoma.

    Doing something notable and being ignored by the rest of the state? ;-)