The first Golden Potlatch took place July 17–21, 1911. It used
Klondike Gold Rush imagery, reenacting the 1897 arrival of the
steamboat Portland with its legendary "ton of gold". The
Portland carried the festival's presiding figure, King D'Oro, avatar of golden wealth, along with a retinue of hoary
prospectors and rambunctious dancing girls. Roughly 300,000 people attended
parades,
concerts,
automobile races up
Queen Anne Hill, and an
airplane piloted by
United States Navy Lt.
Eugene Ely. Water events have always been a feature of Golden Potlatch (and later
Seattle Seafair) events. The first Golden Potlatch in 1911 had a small United States Navy fleet; the British sent a
sloop-of-war. There was even a hydroplane exhibition run by the "Triad" owned by
Glenn Curtiss of airplane fame. In 1911, Robert A. Reid, Seattle, published a number of
postcards as part of his Pacific Northwest Photographic Series to publicize the Golden Potlatch. These postcards identified Seattle as a destination available by 'sea, land and rail'. File:Potlatch19110001.jpg File:Potlatch19110002.jpg File:Potlatch19110003.jpg File:Potlatch19110006.jpg The Hopf Bros Co. of Seattle published another series of postcards by
Edward H. Mitchell. These postcards provide a glimpse of tourist sights such as
Mount Rainier and the
totem pole at
Pioneer Square; commercial aspects of Seattle including
Colman Dock and the
Grand Trunk Pacific dock; and downtown street views such as First Avenue looking north, Second Avenue looking south from Spring Street, Second Avenue Looking North, Third Avenue looking north, Fourth Avenue looking south and Pike Street looking East. == Second Golden Potlatch, July 15–20, 1912==