Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alpine,_Washington> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 triples per page.
- Alpine,_Washington abstract "There have been two villages named Alpine in Washington State. The earliest was located on the shores of Lake Cavanaugh in Skagit County from 1894-1898.Alpine, Washington, was a town in the Cascade Mountains, near Skykomish, Washington. Founded in the late 19th century and originally named Nippon, Washington, it was first built to house Japanese railway workers. Another nearby railway town, Corea, housed Korean workers. About eight miles west of Stevens Pass, Alpine had only rail access, and was a mile from the nearest road.The local lumber baron changed the town's name from Nippon to Alpine in 1903. Its population peaked at 200–300 people; after the nearby woods were logged out, it was evacuated and intentionally burned, around 1929. All that remains are two foundation stones.Author Mary Daheim, whose family, the Dawsons, lived in Alpine approximately 1916–1922 (before she was born) sets her \"Emma Lord\" mystery novels in a fictional, surviving town of Alpine.".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageID "4618280".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageLength "1911".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageOutDegree "16".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageRevisionID "637793990".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Business_magnate.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Cascade_Range.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Category:Company_towns_in_Washington_(state).
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ghost_towns_in_Washington_(state).
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Category:Populated_places_in_King_County,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Corea,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_people.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Koreans.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Cavanaugh,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Mary_Daheim.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Mystery_fiction.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Railway_town.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Skagit_County,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Skykomish,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Stevens_Pass.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLink Washington_(state).
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLinkText "Alpine".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageWikiLinkText "Alpine, Washington".
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:KingCountyWA-geo-stub.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:US-ghost-town-stub.
- Alpine,_Washington wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington subject Category:Company_towns_in_Washington_(state).
- Alpine,_Washington subject Category:Ghost_towns_in_Washington_(state).
- Alpine,_Washington subject Category:Populated_places_in_King_County,_Washington.
- Alpine,_Washington comment "There have been two villages named Alpine in Washington State. The earliest was located on the shores of Lake Cavanaugh in Skagit County from 1894-1898.Alpine, Washington, was a town in the Cascade Mountains, near Skykomish, Washington. Founded in the late 19th century and originally named Nippon, Washington, it was first built to house Japanese railway workers. Another nearby railway town, Corea, housed Korean workers.".
- Alpine,_Washington label "Alpine, Washington".
- Alpine,_Washington sameAs Q4735464.
- Alpine,_Washington sameAs m.04c5dsp.
- Alpine,_Washington sameAs 5785571.
- Alpine,_Washington sameAs Q4735464.
- Alpine,_Washington wasDerivedFrom Alpine,_Washington?oldid=637793990.
- Alpine,_Washington isPrimaryTopicOf Alpine,_Washington.