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Document 18 R. H. Thomson, “Seattle, Ten Years Hence” [speech, c. 1928], 1, 3-4, 6-7. R.H. Thomson Papers, Accession 89, Part 1, Box 13, Folder 5, University of Washington Libraries. The existence and growth of a city is dependent upon its hinterland. Broadly speaking, no hinterland, no city; also, no expanding or developing hinterland, no growing or developing city. It requires no mathematical demonstration to show that to serve an enlarged hinterland, better means of transportation must be secured and brought into operation. When Seattle’s pioneer fathers located at Alki Point they sensed that they had settled on a spot which, by means of the highways of the nations, would put them in touch with the whole civilized world as hinterland. Therefore, speaking as though it were already accomplished they declared that they were, and were not just some time, to be, but were New York. New York to them was the center of distribution to a great hinterland. The accepted spot on Puget Sound would, therefore, prove to be the center of distribution to a great hinterland… Whenever a settler locates upon a virgin tract of land, before he can reach the soil and get returns therefrom, he is compelled to subdue the natural growth thereon and to change the character of the animal life indigenous to the soil. In forestry belts he must fell and destroy magnificent timber. On the plains he has had to destroy the thousands of buffalo and antelope that covered the range. These things had to be done before the soil at his command would return those products necessary to be used in trade. The process of the removal of the capital stock afforded by nature cannot be kept up forever, and to any extent to which this disposal of nature’s gifts is carried, man with his genius must compel nature to provide him with articles of trade and commerce of superior value to those things found in the country’s original state. In city life all is based upon the magnitude of trade. Trade again is largely based upon facilities of competition in manufacture and economic access to market. We look particularly to Alaska, to Japan and to Siberia as part of our most profitable hinterland. Why? To Alaska because the people there have not opportunities for cheap manufacture and are dependent upon their returns from the sale of nature’s products, that is to say, the things from the mine and from the water for their income. As they secure returns from these sources they must call upon us for those things we can prepare for their use at less price than they can be had elsewhere. To Siberia—a country vast in extent, of vast opportunities, a territory where millions of people may find happy homes—whose growth is dependent upon stable government and though clouds now hand low over this country and strife prevails, the very fact of this strife is an index of movements which in time will bring these people more and more largely into market. In 1938 the wheels of industry at Seattle will be busily revolving, urged on to some extent by the products of the coal mines, urged on principally by the current generated by the water of our rivers, and as we develop electrical power every fraction of a mill that we are able to sell that power for less than it can be provided and sold for in another territory give us that much greater leverage by which to control the locations of factories and thus tend to dominate trade in the Civilized World, and in full proportion to an enlarging hinterland we will steadily advance so that in 1928 we can notify the U.S. Census Bureau that if in 1940 it does not find over one million population in Seattle, the Bureau will be charged with incompetence and misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance in office.
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