#Tolmie peak
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Tolmie Peak Fire Lookout - 8/23
#photography#pretty#my photography#mountains#my photos#washington state#hiking#pnw#Tolmie peak#fire lookout#fire tower#mount rainier national park
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Looking for a change, just haven't figured out what ⛰️ !.
_ Tolmie Peak
#mount rainier national park#Tolmie Peak#Away#Anywhere#Change#Plan#downfalldestiny#downfall#life#magic destinations#magical world#magic moments
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Eastern face of Mount Rainier from Tolmie Peak
9.14.23
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Why I have this in B&W idk
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Tolmie Peak Trail by Liddy_L
#tolmie peak trail#lavender#lavender field#lavanda#montanha#mountains#mountain#nature#cottagecore#naturecore#nature aesthetic#beautiful#flowers#flowercore#purple flowers#petitworld favs#petitworld
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forgot to upload this! little sketchy painting of rainier from a photo of mine (from tolmie peak fire lookout)
#art#digital art#digital illustration#washington#places#digital painting#painting#mount rainier#dont look too closely at the lack of rendering on the trees (i got bored)
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Views along the Tolmie Peak trail - Mt. Rainier National Park
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Tolmie Peak, WA | 2019
This has been one of my favorite hikes ever ☺️
Probably my favorite of all time.
#my post#cascades#don’t mind me I’m reminiscing#ignore my old friends photobombing them#my photos#photos
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NPS Photo of Mount Rainier with a portion of Mowich Lake Road viewed from Tolmie Peak in 1961 (Eunice Lake is in the foreground with Mowich Lake in the distance).
Mowich Lake Road, like other park roads, was initially planned as part of an “around-the-mountain” road system. Mowich Lake Road starts in the northwest corner of the park and was intended to connect to Westside Road, which starts from the southwest corner. The two roads were never completed due to budget constraints and the rugged topography of the mountain. Constructed from 1929-1934, Mowich Lake Road remains a six-mile long spur road (reached via SR165) and is a discontiguous portion of the Mount Rainier National Historic District. Original features along the road include one stone retaining wall and 39 rustic culverts with mortared stone headwalls.
Mount Rainier National Park Archives Photo of the Mowich Entrance Dedication in 1933.
Mowich Lake Road was dedicated in 1933 at the Mowich Lake Entrance (now at Paul Peak Trailhead). At the dedication, a log memorial was constructed in honor of Dr. William Fraser Tolmie who visited Mount Rainier a hundred years earlier in 1833 on a botanizing trip. The log memorial was intended to be incorporated into an entrance arch. The arch was never completed and the memorial no longer exists. Footage of the Mowich Lake Road dedication event can be viewed at: https://go.nps.gov/MMem-MowichDedication
NPS Photo of the current Mowich Lake Road Entrance at Paul Peak Trailhead, 8/17/23.
While dedicated in 1933, delays due to construction and then WWII limited access and Mowich Lake Road did not open to vehicle traffic until July 1955. Have you traveled the historic Mowich Lake Road?
#Historic Mount Rainier#mount rainier national park#Mowich Lake#Mowich Lake Road#Paul Peak#Paul Peak Trailhead#historic road#national historic landmark district#history
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MOWICH LAKE, EUNICE LAKE, TOLMIE PEAK
SEPTEMBER 4, 2024
#pnw#pacific northwest#washington#outdoors#cascades#hiking#pnwonderland#mount rainier#mt rainier#mount rainier national park#mt rainier national park
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Mount Rainier from Tolmie Peak, Tolmie Peak and view
9.14.23
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Jul 24, 2016 - the beauty of Mt. Rainier and Eunice Lake at Tolmie Peak.
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Tolmie Peak Trail by Liddy_L
#tolmie peak trail#landscape#purple flowers#mountain#mountains#nature trail#trail#mountain peak#nature#cottagecore#naturecore#nature aesthetic#beautiful#flowers#flowercore#petitworld
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William Fraser Tolmie was born in Inverness on February 3rd 1812, I have the same surname but he isn’t an ancestor, as far as I am aware.
William’s mother died when he was three and he spent some years under the “irksome and capricious authority” of an aunt. He was educated at Inverness Academy and Perth Grammar School. An uncle encouraged his interest in medicine and is said to have financed his studies at the medical school of the University of Glasgow for two years, 1829–31. Although almost invariably referred to as Dr Tolmie, he was not an md: during these two years he worked for credits toward a diploma as licentiate of the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, a body independent of the university. Tolmie did well in his studies, won prizes in chemistry and French, and received his diploma in the spring of 1831. He had hoped to study in Paris, but a near-fatal illness prevented him. When he recovered, he served from February to May 1832 as clerk in an emergency cholera hospital organized in Glasgow to cope with the epidemic then raging.
In the summer of 1832 the Hudson Bay Company was looking for two medical officer, William and another, Dr Meredith Gairdner signed that September a five-year contract to serve in the dual capacity of clerk and surgeon. As a clerk he would receive an annual salary rising from £20 to £50, and as a surgeon £100 per annum.
The ship arrived at Fort Vancouver in the spring of 1833. In his journal, he wrote about his accommodations at the fort, recording that the doctor's office had "a very excellent supply of surgical instruments." Just days after his arrival, Chief Factor Dr. John McLoughlin was stricken by the so-called "intermittent fever" (malaria). Tolmie treated him by him, a common practice in 19th century medicine. Like most doctors at the time, Tolmie was also a dedicated naturalist, and many plant and animal specimens as he travelled through the Pacific Northwest. He sent at least two collections of Northwest bird and animal specimens to Scotland - one to a museum in his hometown, Inverness, and one to fellow naturalist John Scouler. After Fort Vancouver, Tolmie went on to serve at several other Hudson's Bay Company posts in the Pacific Northwest.
William Tolmie enjoyed a good relationship with Native Americans, and in one case supported Chief Leschi of the Nisqually Tribe who was was charged with murder during the Puget Sound War, oor William measured distances, and determined it was impossible for Leschi to have made the trip to the murder site in the time required. The local Military refused to carry out the sentence as Leschi would not have been guilty as the tribe and the government were at war at the time.
Tolmie petitioned the Governor for Clemency, but the sentence was upheld. . Leschi was executed in 1858. Later, the trial was judged to have been unlawfully conducted, the execution wrong, and Leschi innocent.
He died at age 74 in Victoria, Canada and Tolmie State Park Washington, is named after him. Tolmie was the first European to explore the Puyallup River valley and Mount Rainier in what is now Washington Tolmie Peak is named in his honour, as is Tolmie Street in Vancouver. Plants bearing his name include Tolmie's star-tulip (Calochortus tolmiei) and Tolmie's onion (Allium tolmiei). The scientific name of MacGillivray's warbler is also named for him: Oporornis tolmiei.
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me again. more washington, i hiked tolmie peak over the weekend. when i drove around a corner and saw rainier towering over me I repeatedly slapped my hands so hard on my steering wheel i honked the horn, if you want to know how i felt about this whole situation
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