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Ed Murray Staff Records

 Series
Identifier: 5257-03

Scope and Contents Note

Records from various mayoral staffers during Ed Murray's term in office. Public safety issues are heavily represented, including police accountability legislation, the Department of Justice consent decree, police and fire hiring equity, youth violence, emergency management, and the downtown 9 1/2 block strategy. Other topics include public health, homelessness and encampments, central waterfront development, transportation, labor relations, parks, utilities, education, and LGBTQ issues. Some records document mayoral office organization, priorities, and projects.

Forty digital images, taken by photographer Arthur Bacon, show day to day life in encampments.

Dates

  • Creation: 1997-2017
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 2014-2017

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Records are open to the public.

Biographical Note

Ed Murray served as mayor of Seattle from 2014 to 2017. He was born in 1955 in Aberdeen, Washington, and grew up in West Seattle and Lacey. After graduating from the University of Portland, he began working in the legal field in Portland and Seattle. He transitioned into involvement in local politics, managing the winning campaign for Washington State House candidate Cal Anderson. Murray also worked in city government as a legislative aide to Seattle City Councilmember Martha Choe. When Cal Anderson passed away in 1995, Murray campaigned to fill his seat representing the 43rd district in the state Senate. He did not win the election, but was appointed to fill the House seat for the 43rd, which was vacated by the candidate who won the Senate seat. He continued serving in the House through 2006, when he won the 43rd district Senate seat. He remained in the state Senate until taking office in 2014 as the city's 53rd mayor. Murray was Seattle's first openly gay mayor. Major issues and projects during his term included the Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement project, reform of the Police Department, affordable housing, changes in land use and zoning, and homelessness. Murray resigned from office on September 13, 2017.

Extent

8.2 Cubic Feet (21 boxes)

40 digital image files

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Records from various mayoral staffers during Ed Murray's term in office.

Arrangement

Records are arranged by staff member. Boxes accessioned into the archives from the Mayor's Office were designated by originating staff member; however, in some cases files from other staffers appeared to be mixed in, so not all records in a staffer's subseries may have come from that person.

Related Materials

Additional materials from Mayor Murray’s tenure found in City social media accounts and City websites are searchable online through ArchiveSocial and Archive-IT.

Title
Guide to the Ed Murray Staff Records
Author
Finding aid prepared by Julie Kerssen
Date
2023
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
EAD Location
https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv390324

Repository Details

Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository

Contact:
PO Box 94728
600 Fourth Avenue, Floor 3
Seattle 98124-4728 USA US