Skip to content

Food & Drink

Seattle Magazine Cover 1968: Tumultuous Times

This ‘Seattle’ magazine cover from October 1968 reflects the turbulence of the era

By Rob Smith June 16, 2022

SeattleMagOct196800001-1

This article originally appeared in the November/December 2022 issue of Seattle magazine.

In early October 1968, a Seattle police officer shot and killed a 17-year-old Black boy after he threatened them with a rifle. According to David Wilma, writing on Historylink.org, the very next day two Seattle police officers were ambushed and wounded in retaliation. Welton Armstead’s death was eventually ruled “justifiable,” but a headline in a Black Panther Pamphlet read, “Murdered by Seattle Pigs.”

As former Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best recounts in this month’s cover feature, many of the racially tinged issues that defined the past still exist today. “Over time we are improving, and we can acknowledge that there is a troubled history,” she says, “not only for policing but for the country.”

This “Seattle” magazine cover from 1968 is indicative of the tension of the time. These conversations and issues were happening then. They’re happening today. It is incumbent upon all of us to redefine the narrative.

Follow Us

Pen & Eye #17 - SODA and SOAP

Pen & Eye #17 – SODA and SOAP

  Transcript: Page 1 Image One: Text: “Seattle’s history is full of terrible policies: Car Impound Ordinance, Hot Spot Policing, No Sitting Law, Poster Ban, Teen Dancing Ordinance, Red-Lining, Racist Housing Covenants RIP.” ALT Text: The names of old policies are graved in gravestones in a cemetery. Image Two: Text: “The city council recently unearthed…

Election-Induced Anxiety? You’re Not Alone

Election-Induced Anxiety? You’re Not Alone

From pure escapism to booze and antacids, here’s how others are coping 

Anxious about the election? Us too. We talked to 11 voters about how they’re coping — from TV marathons to comfort food and limiting news updates. How are you handling it?

Pen & Eye # 16 - Supreme Court ruled against "public camping"

Pen & Eye # 16 – Supreme Court ruled against “public camping”

Transcript: Page 1 Image One: Text: “The Supreme Court recently ruled, in Grants Pass vs. Johnson, that cities may criminalize “public camping” aka attempting to survive while unhoused.” ALT Text: A large hand holding a tiny, homeless individual is shown in front of the Supreme Court building. A red stamp labeled “A-OK” is pressed against…

Pen & Eye # 15 - Abolition 101

Pen & Eye # 15 – Abolition 101

Transcript: Page 1 Image One: Text: “If you ever hear about prison abolitionism, it’s usually presented as absurd, dangerous, and delusional.” ALT Text: A caricature of cartoonist David Horsey is shown holding a protest sign that reads “Burn the jails,” with Nicole Thomas-Kennedy depicted as an activist. Image Two: Text: “But given that the U.S….