|
| Title | Morse House, Hilltop neighborhood, Bellevue, n.d. |
| Photographer | Hupy, Art
|
| Date | n.d. |
| Historical Background | Hilltop is the second-oldest cooperative residential development in King County. It was established in 1947, founded by individuals who, after bypassing convential real estate developers, planned a community that was founded on the desire to utilize principles of modern planning and architectural design to enhance the natural beauty of each home site and to make possible a sharing of benefits and opportunities among the members on as equal and democratic a basis as possible. Founding members intended that site plans and buildings should have a straightforward contemporary character and that there should be no racial restrictions and no requirements as to the size or cost of homes. [Source: A half-century on the hill: collected memories from 50 years of community living. Edited by Connie Reed, et al. Hilltop, Wash.: Hilltop Community, 1998?]
The Morse house was built in 1948. |
| Notes | Caption on negative sleeve: Morse House, Hilltop, Morse
PH Coll 458.5155-8 |
| Subjects (LCTGM) | Dwellings--Washington (State)--Bellevue Automobiles--Washington (State)--Bellevue Architectural photographs
|
| Location Depicted | United States--Washington (State)--Bellevue--Hilltop |
| Digital Collection | Modern Photographers Collection
|
| Order Number | MPH143 |
| Ordering Information | To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see: http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcollections/services/reproduction-info Please cite the Order Number when ordering. |
| Negative Number | Hupy 5155-8 |
| Repository | University of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division. |
| Repository Collection | Art Hupy Photograph Collection |
| Object Type | Photograph |
| Physical Description | b&w ; 8 x 10 inches |
| Digital Reproduction Information | Scanned from a photographic print using a Microtek Scanmaker 9600XL at 100 dpi in JPEG format at compression rate 3 and resized to 768x600 ppi. 2004. |