Sunday, October 19, 2025

Oscar & Mary (Ulseth) Radford: A Working Man's Journey Through Seattle

When Oscar Radford arrived in Seattle sometime between 1900 and 1908, the city was still rough around the edges - a place of lumber mills, muddy streets, and the smell of fresh-cut timber drifting off Puget Sound.  It was a city made for men who didn't mind a hard day's work, and Oscar fit right in.


By 1912, he had made Seattle his home and married there.  He and his wife, Mary Ulseth, settled into a place at 2010 1/2 Boylston Avenue, a typical working-class address in the bustling Capitol Hill area.  From 1913 through 1916, city directories show him working his way up through the lumber trade - first as a lumberman, then laborer, millwright, and planerman.  It was tough, noisy work, but it was steady, and it gave him pride.


As Seattle grew, so did its docks.  By 1917, Oscar had moved to 306 Minor Avenue North, taking on work at the waterfront as a cargo checker.  The following years found him listed as a laborer and then as a longshoreman, braving the cold winds off Elliott Bay.  In 1919, tragedy struck when he and Mary lost a stillborn daughter - a sorrow shared by many families of that era, but still one that must have left a quiet ache in their hearts.


That same year, Oscar made a change that would define the next two decades of his life.  He left the docks and began working for Seattle's public transit system as a streetcar conductor.  It was steady city work, and it came with something rare for working men at the time - a union and a brotherhood.  Oscar joined both the Streetcar Men's Union Local 587 and the Seattle Aerie No. 1 of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, organizations that offered fellowship, dignity, and a sense of belonging.


For twenty-three years, from 1919 to 1942, Oscar helped keep Seattle moving.  Day after day, he guided streetcars through the growing city - from the waterfront to the hills, through sunshine and rain.  When he finally retired in September 1942, he had earned every bit of that rest.


But retirement didn't last long.  The world was at war, and in June 1943, at sixty-two years old, Oscar answered call to work - this time with the Northern Pacific Railway Company.  He started as a materials handler, earning 67 cents an hour, and only a few month later, on October 9, 1943, he was promoted to store foreman, earning $6.27 a day.  Even in his sixties, Oscar proved himself dependable, steady, and capable - the kind of man who kept things running behind the scenes while the world was changing fast.


Just a few years later, Sorrow struck again.  Oscar's beloved wife Mary (Ulseth) Radford passed away on April 24, 1948, in Everett, Washington, after spending four weeks there, likely for medical care.  Her usual home had been 8331 11th Ave. NW in Seattle's Ballard area, where she and Oscar had spent their later years together.


By the 1950 census, age and decades of labor had finally caught up with Oscar.  He was listed as unable to work, living in a rooming house or small apartment in Seattle.  His hands had done their share - from lumber and docks to rails and streetcars - and his body had earned its rest.


In 1954, after forty-six years in the city he's helped build, Oscar passed away at King County Hospital in Seattle.  His cause of death was recorded as a coronary artery occlusion - what we would now call a heart attack.  An autopsy confirmed it.  His final address was 1713 Belmont Avenue, not far from where he had first lived when he came to Seattle decades before.


Though the hospital records were listed as the informant on his death certificate, his story speaks volumes on its own.  He was a man who worked with his hands, kept his word, and built an honest life in a growing city.  Together, Oscar and Mary lived through heartbreak, hard work, and history - their quiet legacy carried on through the family they left behind and the streets they helped shape.

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