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==History== The area that would become Almira was first settled in the 1880s by Charles C. Davis who purchased land and erected a small store to serve the few settlers living in the area. With the imminent construction of the [[Central Washington Railroad]] (later acquired by the [[Northern Pacific Railway|Northern Pacific]]) through the area in 1889, Davis was approached by land developers Odgers and Reed who were looking to start a town on the site. Upon seeing Davis' wife's [[given name]] on the deed, the developers suggested christening the town under her name.<ref name="majors">{{Cite book |last=Majors |first=Harry M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CoWrPQAACAAJ |title=Exploring Washington |publisher=Van Winkle Publishing Co |year=1975 |isbn=978-0-918664-00-6 |page=106}}</ref><ref name="Hitchman">{{Cite book |last=Hitchman |first=Robert |title=Place Names of Washington |publisher=[[Washington State Historical Society]] |year=1985 |isbn=0-917048-57-1 |pages=5}}</ref> Davis' farm and post office had previously been called "Davisine".<ref>{{cite web |title=National Archives Catalog |url=https://catalog.archives.gov/id/68814444 |website=Report of Site Locations 1837-1950 Washington: Lewis to Mason Pg 507 |publisher=National Archives and Records Administration |access-date=May 30, 2021}}</ref> {{cquote|That place may make a town in the future. There is considerable vacant land for it to grow on. If you desire to learn of the 'glorious future' in store for the town. just confer with 'Tom' Hodges. the resident town-site agent. He never tires of reciting it. β ''Wilbur Register'', July 26, 1889}} With the railroad assured, Almira was platted and lots begin to sell quickly. Contractors and businessmen began to build temporary buildings for their stores. The railroad reached Almira in the Fall of 1889, where it would serve as the line's temporary terminus before being extended to [[Coulee City]] the following summer.<ref>{{cite news |title=Through to Almira: Trains Will Begin Running to That Point from Spokane Today |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86072021/1889-11-07/ed-1/seq-8/#date1=1888&sort=date&date2=1892&searchType=advanced&language=&sequence=0&lccn=&index=5&words=Almira&proxdistance=5&state=Washington&rows=20&ortext=&proxtext=&phrasetext=almira&andtext=&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1 |access-date=January 23, 2023 |work=Spokane Falls Review |date=November 7, 1889 |page=4}}</ref> Until the road was completed to the Grand Coulee Almira remained the terminus. All trains ran to this point, connections by stage being made to points westward. These factors made the town furiously active but a harsh winter prevented any building boom from taking place, leaving Almira as a collection of temporary shacks until the weather improved. Despite the end of Almira as a rail terminal, it continued to thrive through 1890 with the establishment of a newspaper and the construction of many new buildings. The town's population was 156. In November 1890, Almira citizens voted for [[prohibition]] and the city temporarily became the only dry town in the Big Bend Country. After the [[Panic of 1893]], growth in Almira like all across the country, came to a standstill. Most of the undeveloped lots in town were either in [[foreclosure]] or completely worthless. This changed in 1900 when the economy began to improve following several years of prosperous wheat harvests. The next several years saw Almira grow from a temporary village to a more substantial city. In 1902, the city's population was 289 only counting citizens living on the platted town site. {{cquote|Almira is still growing. If you don't believe it. come and see for yourself. During the past twenty months activity in building has scarcely diminished at any one time. There has been no sudden impetus, no 'mushroom growth, in a single night, a day, or even six months, but there has been a steady increase. With the exception of a short period last winter, from one to six buildings have been in progress of construction during all seasons of the year. β ''Big Bend Outlook'' (Almira), January 17, 1902}} Almira was visited by fires twice in 1903. The first on March 21 destroyed several buildings including the office of the ''Almira News''. The second fire in October started in the Almira Hotel and was much more destructive, destroying a whole block's worth of buildings. These blocks were rebuilt with more permanent brick buildings which still stand today. Steps were taken towards incorporation in April 1903 but were initially unsuccessful because of disagreements in the town's incorporation boundaries. The second try was successful and Almira was officially incorporated on February 1, 1904. [[File:Post office in Almira Washington 8-3-2008.jpg|right|thumb|U.S. Post office in Almira, located in the town's first bank building.]]
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