3:36 the melted wilted steel is done by microwaves in dir N R G beams that superheat by inducing eddy currents. There is no other way this was done.
Open-air fire, fueld by any means, can not possibly melt steel — any backyard grill owner knows this — even a blowtorch can not melt the measly weber grillwork. Molten large wilted steel beams requires a different energy source, one that excites the molecules of the metal (by microwaves), causing the metal itself to superheat and become the ‘fuel’ that ignites nearby flammables furiously. No other known explanation exists — Pres Reagan outlined this exotic weaponry in 1983. It certainly pre-existed his announcement. DE WISH has more (it’s an O R G)
DEW Hallmarks
- Grey/white mist lingering
- Zero glass
- Masonry powderized
- Melted / warped steel
- Totally inexplicable by traditional fire or other means
- Much rubble
- Lack of water pressure blamed (just like Lahaina) at 8:50 in
- Every single railroad terminal in the city was mysteriously destroyed
All cities in WA burned to the ground in one day fires 1889, it’s what forced them to surrender and join the “union” on 11/11/89. They refused to join, and so they were simply incinerated, apparently?















































While looking for the book THE DAY SEATTLE BURNED …






Seattle Population 1889 ~40k persons
Here’s what I found about Seattle’s population in and around 1889:
Seattle Population — Then and There
1. 1890 U.S. Census
- According to the 1890 federal census, Seattle’s official population was 42,837. (BU Physics, Census)
2. Population in 1889 (Estimate)
- Seattle’s city archives note that in the first half of 1889, the city was growing at a ferocious pace—adding about 1,000 new residents per month. (Seattle)
- A count from the Seattle City Census of 1888 cites 19,116 residents, and the city had surged to become the largest in the new state by late 1889. (MOHAI)
- Wikipedia’s late‑19th‑century data reflects that in the year following the Great Seattle Fire (June 6, 1889), the population jumped dramatically—from about 25,000 to around 40,000, as reconstruction efforts spurred massive in‑migration. (Wikipedia)
Summary Table
Year | Population (approx.) | Notes |
---|---|---|
1888 | ~19,116 | Based on city census before the 1889 fire |
Mid-1889 | ~25,000 → ~40,000 bubble | Post-fire surge amid reconstruction boom |
1890 | 42,837 (official census) | U.S. Census count |
So: “Population of Seattle in 1889”
While there’s no single official figure for 1889, multiple sources converge on this picture:
- Before the June 1889 fire, Seattle had around 19,000 residents.
- During reconstruction, the city’s population soared, climbing to the 30k–40k range.
- By the 1890 census, Seattle’s population had reached 42,837.









