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HistoryLink.org
Essay 3428 :
West Seattle
-- the oldest and the biggest of Seattle’s neighborhoods --
is both a peninsula and a state of mind. The first
Euro-American settlers arrived here (on Alki Point) in 1851,
but left within a few months, moving to a more agreeable
location on the other side of Elliott Bay (the site of
present-day downtown Seattle). Orphaned at an early age,
isolated by water on three sides, West Seattle has clung to
its cultural independence, remaining determinedly aloof even
while fighting tenaciously for the bridges, highways, and
ferries that have brought it closer to its sprawling neighbor
to the east.
“By and By”
The West Seattle peninsula
(known as Me-Kwa-Mooks -- "shaped like a bear’s
head" -- in the Nisqually dialect) juts into Puget Sound
at a point the Duwamish Indians called sbuh-KWAH-buks. It was
here, on the rainy morning of November 13, 1851, that a group
of 10 adults and 12 children disembarked from the schooner
Exact. The leader of the group, Arthur Denny (1822-1899),
later said it was "as wild a spot as any on earth"
(Prosser). When the women saw what was supposed to be their
new home, they quite sensibly wept.
Waiting for them on the beach
was one member of their advance party (the other had
temporarily left the site); a roofless cabin, the first
structure in what the settlers hoped would become a great
metropolis; and a group of Duwamish Indians, including a
kind-hearted tyee, or chief, Seattle.
There were at least 17
Duwamish and Suquamish villages in the Puget Sound region when
the Denny party arrived. Indian artifacts dating to the sixth
century have been found at one archeological site on the West
Seattle peninsula. The point where the party landed (now
marked by an obelisk at 63rd Avenue SW and Alki Avenue SW) had
long been used as a Duwamish burial site. Nonetheless, the
settlers claimed ownership of all they could survey under the
1850 Donation Land Law.
They named their would-be
town New York, after the hometown of one of the men in the
party. It’s not clear who added the tag “al-ki,” a word
meaning “by and by” or “in a while” in Chinook (a
crude trade jargon developed by Hudson’s Bay Company
trappers). In any case, the place became known as New York-Alki
and, eventually, as simply Alki -- pronounced “AL-kee” by
some purists, “al-KEE” by others, and “al-kye” (rhymes
with sky) by everyone else.
Alki Bye-Bye
Over the next few months, the
settlers completed the first cabin and built three more, but
it continued to rain, food supplies ran low, and several
members of the party fell sick. Among them was Mary Denny,
Arthur’s wife, who managed to persuade her infant son,
Rolland, to accept clam juice as an alternative to mother’s
milk. In the spring, after what was by all accounts a
miserable winter, most of the settlers decamped to the eastern
shore of Elliott Bay, where they found a better harbor and a
more sheltered townsite.
Of the original Denny party,
only Charles C. Terry (1830-1867) and John and Lydia Low and
their four children remained at the landing spot. The Lows
hung on for a year and then sold out, leaving Terry as the
sole owner of New York-Alki.
Terry platted and renamed the
town on May 28, 1853. Perhaps in recognition of diminished
expectations, he called it, simply, Alki. The Olympia
Columbian approved of the new name. “We never fancied
the name of New York on account of its inappropriateness,”
the newspaper editorialized, “but Alki we subscribe to
instanta. It is a pretty word, convenient, not borrowed or
stolen from any other town or city, and is in its meaning
expressive even unto prophesy. The interpretation of the word
Alki being ‘by-and-by, in a little while, or hereafter,’
we must approve its application to a growing and hopeful
place” (June 4, 1853).
The little community grew,
but at a pace that must have frustrated Terry, its chief
entrepreneur and booster. Terry operated a general store,
served as postmaster, became a partner in a sawmill, and
convinced two other men to open a barrel-making business.
However, by 1854 both the sawmill and the barrel business had
closed, followed the next year by the post office. Terry
finally gave up in 1856, trading his 320 acres at Alki to
David S. "Doc" Maynard (1808-1873) in exchange for
Maynard’s 260 acres in downtown Seattle.
With the departure of the
last of the original settlers, Alki settled into a future in
which modest hopes were balanced by stark realities. Buffeted
by winds and tides that hampered shipping, the town’s
exposed location limited its commercial and industrial
potential. Most subsequent industry in West Seattle developed
on the calmer, east-facing shores of Elliott Bay and on the
Duwamish River. Maynard soon discovered that the land around
Alki wasn’t suitable for farming, either. He, too, finally
sold out, in 1868. For the next decade or so, Alki lay in an
eddy of history, left to only a few intrepid souls.
Industrial,
Commercial Growth
Meanwhile, several distinct
communities emerged elsewhere on the peninsula. The strip of
land where Harbor Avenue is today became an industrial center,
with a sawmill, several shipbuilding yards, and a salmon
cannery all in business by 1880. More industries were
attracted to the area after 1895, when the Corps of Engineers
began dredging the Duwamish River and filling in the tideflats
at its mouth, creating the East and West Waterways with
manmade Harbor Island in the middle. A milltown known as
Freeport, and later as Milton, and still later as Youngstown
(and today as Delridge), provided housing, saloons, and other
amenities for the workers.
The business and commercial
center shifted to the town of West Seattle, in today’s
Admiral district, first platted in 1885 and taken over by a
land development company in 1888. Residential neighborhoods
developed in Fauntleroy, Gatewood, Highland Park, Arbor
Heights, and elsewhere. Alki gradually became a resort area,
with summer homes for the wealthier residents of rapidly
urbanizing Seattle and a “natatorium” (swimming pool) and
other attractions for the public at large.
Of these communities, only
the town of West Seattle ever incorporated as a separate
political entity (in 1902). Several attempts to annex
Youngstown, Alki, and an area known as Spring Hill to West
Seattle did not succeed. West Siders were not accustomed to
thinking of themselves as a joined community. However, they
have consistently found common cause on one issue: improved
access to the mainland.
Boats, Trains, and
Bridges
Before 1888, public
transportation between West Seattle and Seattle was limited to
the irregular and infrequent service provided by the
“Mosquito Fleet” steamships that docked at Alki. That
year, the West Seattle Land and Improvement Company (financed
largely by San Francisco capital) bought most of what is now
the Admiral district, replatted it, and began investing in
transportation and other amenities in order to attract
potential home buyers.
The company built a dock near
today’s Seacrest Marina and began offering regular service
to downtown Seattle on a steam-powered sidewheeler named the City
of Seattle, the first bona fide ferry on Puget Sound,
launched December 24, 1888. The crossing took eight minutes.
One hundred and thirteen years, ten bridges, and tens of
millions of dollars later, the City of Seattle still
holds the record for the fastest trip between Seattle and West
Seattle.
The company also provided the
first cable railway service to West Seattle, opening a
two-mile line in September 1890, for the benefit of ferry
commuters. Around the same time, Northern Pacific’s Seattle
Terminal Railway built the first bridge across the Duwamish, a
trestle, which also connected to the ferry.
The developers sold more than
$300,000 worth of West Seattle property during the cable
line’s first year of operation. However, the onset of a
national economic crisis in 1893 left West Seattle, like the
region as a whole, with a collapsing real estate market and a
growing number of shuttered businesses. The cable line limped
along until 1897, when the company closed it. Only the ferry,
the railway trestle, and a winding wagon road were left to
link West Seattle to the mainland.
A Town Is Born
Over the next few years, the
West Seattle Land and Improvement Company repeatedly promised
to improve the transportation system, provide more reliable
water supplies, and install electric lighting on the
peninsula. By 1902, however, none of these plans had
materialized. West Seattle residents decided to take matters
into their own hands, and voted (by a margin of 97 to 68) to
incorporate as a city of the fourth class. The new town
included most of the land between Duwamish Head and South
Street (now Lander). It did not include Alki, which had become
a full-fledged resort community with a fiercely independent
contingent of year-round residents
The West Seattle City Council
met for the first time on May 6, 1902, in a former school that
had been converted into a community center. The Council’s
first major civic project was the construction of a stout
jail, 12 feet by 12 feet and seven feet high. The Council
planned to improve the community’s public services by
issuing franchises to private utilities, but there was little
interest. One year later, West Seattle still had no
streetcars, no electricity for private homes, few telephones,
and an unreliable water system.
By the spring of 1903, some
civic leaders were advocating annexation to Seattle as the
only viable solution to the continuing problems with public
services. “There is no city in the world with a better water
supply than our big neighbor across the bay,” the West
Seattle News editorialized, “…and this can be ours
for the asking…” (May 15, 1903).
However, there was also
considerable opposition to annexation, by those who feared it
would mean a loss of local control. This faction prevailed, at
least for a few years. The town decided it would build its own
streetcar system, financed by municipal bonds. Before it could
issue the bonds, however, it had to be upgraded, from fourth
to third class status. On July 5, 1904, after proving that it
had the required 1,500 residents, West Seattle reincorporated
as a city of the third class. That same day, the City Council
issued 18 bonds of $1,000 each to build what would become the
first municipally owned streetcar system in the country.
The new streetcar line, which
began operating in late December 1904, was only a mile long.
As a municipally owned enterprise, it could not be extended
beyond the town limits. In 1906, both Alki and Youngstown
firmly rejected an offer from West Seattle to provide service
to those communities in return for annexation.
Putting its faith in private
enterprise once again, the City Council subsequently sold the
railway to the Seattle Electric Railway Company, which
operated all the streetcar lines in Seattle. The company
promised to provide a direct connection to Seattle via a new
swing bridge at Spokane Street and to build a new line along
California Avenue. First, however, Seattle Electric built a
line to what was then a virtually uninhabited area called
Fauntleroy Park, a decision heavily influenced by a $50,000
contribution to the company from real estate speculators.
Service on the Fauntleroy
Park line began February 15, 1907. The route looped from the
community of Youngstown, on the eastern side of the peninsula,
to Alaska Street, and from there west to California Avenue,
following California south to “Endolyne” -- the end of the
line -- at 45th Avenue and Roxbury Street. After Youngstown,
there was scarcely a building to be seen along the entire
route. Within weeks, however, half a dozen real estate offices
had sprouted around the intersection of Alaska and California,
an area that became known as the Junction. The streetcar
brought in buyers by the carload. For years, the boom of 1907
was legendary among West Seattle real estate agents.
While the transportation
network was improving, other public services continued to
falter. Eager to tap into Seattle’s Cedar River water supply
and municipal power system, the town of West Seattle initiated
yet another annexation campaign in 1907. First, however, West
Seattle had to annex Youngstown: in order to get power and
water from Seattle, West Seattle needed a corridor, and
Youngstown was in the way. After a hotly contested election on
May 25, 1907, West Seattle annexed Youngstown, Alki, and the
adjacent community of Spring Hill. City officials promptly
petitioned for annexation to Seattle. The measure, submitted
to the voters June 29, passed easily. West Seattle officially
became part of Seattle one month later. Consisting of more
than 16 square miles, it was by far the largest of the six
towns annexed by Seattle in 1907.
Bridging the Gap
With streetcars, pedestrians,
horse-drawn wagons, and a growing number of automobiles all
sharing the Spokane Street swing bridge between Seattle and
West Seattle, pressure increased for additional bridges to
ease the congestion. (A swing bridge is hinged on a turntable
in the middle of the river, allowing it to swing open for
marine traffic). A second, higher swing bridge was added in
1911. As a cost saving measure, the bridge carried West
Seattle’s new Cedar River water mains. Each time it was
opened, the mains had to be uncoupled, temporarily shutting
off the town’s water supply.
The need for a bridge that
would let traffic cross without delay became a perennial
political issue in West Seattle. The first organized campaign
for a fixed span, high bridge at Spokane Street began in 1916.
Pro-bridge advertisements warned that “in two years time
traffic on Spokane Street, will be at certain periods of the
day, almost impassable” (West Side Story, 51).
Instead of a high bridge, the city built another
“temporary” swing bridge, opened in 1918.
The elimination of direct
ferry service between West Seattle and downtown Seattle in
1921 put the burden of carrying West Side commuters directly
on the wooden frames of the Spokane Street swing bridges.
Pressed to come up with a long-term solution, the Seattle City
Council authorized the construction of a concrete and steel
bascule bridge, opened in 1924 (“bascule” means
“rocker” in French, referring to the hinge that allows the
structure to open in the middle). A second bascule bridge,
identical to and immediately south of the first, was completed
six years later.
These two bridges served as
the primary arteries (one used for westbound traffic, the
other for eastbound) to West Seattle for more than 50 years,
despite ever-increasing congestion and complaints about their
inadequacy. During World War II, thousands of workers flooded
in to work at defense plants on Harbor Island. By the end of
the war, West Seattle’s population had doubled, to more than
70,000. The Spokane Street viaduct, linking Harbor Island with
Beacon Hill, was completed in 1943 with emergency funding from
the federal government (as a defense measure), but there were
few other transportation improvements until the 1980s.
A renewed campaign for a high
level Spokane Street bridge began in the early 1970s. The
Seattle City Council authorized construction of the bridge in
1972, but the project was delayed for years, first by concerns
about the design, then by a scandal involving kickbacks to
public officials. Cost estimates soared, from $37 million to
$170 million. Charles Royer, elected mayor of Seattle in 1977,
advocated abandoning the plans and fixing up the drawbridges
instead. By March 1978, frustrated West Seattleites were
talking seriously about seceding from Seattle and
reincorporating as an independent city, in an effort to
qualify for state highway funds and build the bridge on their
own.
The debate came to an end
when -- as local punsters put it -- the ship hit the span. On
the morning of June 11, 1978, the freighter Antonio Chavez
rammed one of the bascule bridges, damaging it beyond repair.
Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (1905-1989) quickly rounded up $110
million in federal money to help build the long-awaited high
bridge. Construction began in 1980; the bridge opened four
years later.
If At First You
Don’t Secede…
The improved transportation
web (which, in recent years, has included a “water taxi”
from Seacrest Marina to downtown Seattle) has done little to
reduce West Seattle’s characteristic insularity. Talk of
secession flared in the 1980s in response to the Seattle
School District’s use of busing to promote racial
integration; and again in the 1990s, when Seattle city
planners tried to establish four “urban villages” in West
Seattle. The iconoclastic Charlie Chong, former City
Councilman and unsuccessful candidate for mayor, served as
spokesman for a group of West Seattleites who asked the
Legislature to help them secede from the city in 1995. The
Legislature agreed, passing a secession bill sponsored by
State Senator Mike Heavey, a West Seattle Democrat, but it was
vetoed by then-Governor Mike Lowry.
More than most city
neighborhoods, West Seattle is defined by its natural
environment. Among the peninsula’s many parks, greenbelts,
and beaches is Schmitz Park -- a 50-acre stand of massive,
old-growth Douglas fir and western red cedar, many towering
more than 200 feet, their roots carpeted by sword ferns and
salal. The park is a living reminder of what West Seattle
looked like in 1851, when the Denny party stumbled ashore at
Alki.
West Seattle is also a
neighborhood that is “particularly marked with mementos of
the Indian past” (Furtwangler, 141). The Point Elliott
Treaty of 1855 required the Duwamish Indians who were living
in what became Seattle to move onto reservations established
for other tribes. Some followed Chief Seattle to the Suquamish
reservation at Port Madison. Others moved to the Tulalip or
Muckleshoot reservations. Many refused to move, or shuttled
back and forth between reservations. Some retreated to the
West Seattle peninsula, where they carried on, at least for a
while, with traditional ways of life. What was apparently
their last enclave in West Seattle was destroyed in 1893, when
a white man (identified only as “Watson”) set fire to
eight makeshift homes on the banks of what is today the East
Waterway.
Still, traces of the Native
American presence remain. Many longtime residents tell stories
about finding middens full of clam scrapers, arrowheads, and
other artifacts in the 1920s and 1930s. Two vista points
looking across Elliott Bay toward the city are marked with
Northwest Indian totem poles. Each year, West Seattle
merchants sponsor a summertime festival called Hi-Yu (Chinook
jargon for “plenty” or “big time”). In another, if
distorted, tribute to the community’s Indian heritage, a
popular playfield is named Hiawatha, after the Iroquois leader
memorialized by poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
One additional variant on the
theme has been abandoned. When West Seattle High School
reopened in the fall of 2002 after extensive remodeling and
restoration, it jettisoned the nickname it had used for its
athletic teams for more than 80 years: the
"Indians." The school's student-run Native American
Club had objected to the name, prompting a Seattle Public
Schools policy banning the use of tribal names for teams,
clubs, and mascots. The alumni association challenged the
decision but a King County Superior Court judge upheld the
school district. The students subsequently adopted the
inoffensive "Wildcats" as their new nickname.
Sources:
The autobiographical sketch by Arthur Denny is found in
William Farrand Prosser, A History of the Puget Sound
Country; Its Resources, Its Commerce and Its People (New
York: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1903); West Side Story
ed. by Clay Eals (Seattle: Robinson Newspapers, 1987); Olympia
Columbian, June 4, 1853; Alexandra Harmon, Indians in
the Making: Ethnic Relations and Indian Identities around
Puget Sound (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1998); Seattle Post-Intelligencer, December 21, 1996;
Walt Crowley, National Trust Guide: Seattle (New
York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1998); West Seattle
News, May 15, 1903; West Seattle Herald,
February 2, 1924; Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March
7, 1998; Ibid., November 13, 2000; The Seattle
Times, October 20, 1997; Ibid., February 24,
1998; Ibid., May 26, 2000; Albert Furtwangler, Answering
Chief Seattle (Seattle: University of Washington Press,
1997); Seattle Press-Times, March 7, 1893; Jane
Wilson MacGowan, “Gully, Cove Fill Childhood with
Memories,” Neighbors, Spring 2000; West Seattle
Memories: Alki (Seattle: Southwest Seattle Historical Society,
1999); Brandt Morgan, Enjoying Seattle's Parks (Westport,
CT: Greenwood Publications, 1979); Deborah Bach, "Indians
Are Out, Wildcats Are In at West Seattle High," Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, April 25, 2003.
By Cassandra
Tate, July 08, 2001
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Schooner Exact delivered the balance of the
Denny Party to Alki Beach, November 13, 1851
Courtesy MOHAI

Map showing location of West Seattle
Map by Chris Goodman, Courtesy HistoryLink

First home on Alki Point built in 1851
Courtesy A.A. Denny, Pioneer Days on Puget Sound

Charles Terry and Mary (Russell) Terry
Courtesy A.A. Denny, Pioneer Days on Puget Sound

An outing near Alki Point, ca. 1889
Courtesy UW Special Collections (Boyd Album No. 34)

Luna Park board walk, 1900s
Postcard

Pacific Coast Steel Co. open hearth furnace,
Youngstown (West Seattle), 1914
Courtesy Bethlehem Steel, Co.

Schmitz Park, 1910
Courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives

Streetcar lines at The Junction, West Seattle,
1925
Courtesy MOHAI

California Avenue business district, West Seattle
Junction, ca. 1910
Courtesy MOHAI

Alki Beach, West Seattle, ca. 1970
Postcard

Alki Point Lighthouse, May 25, 2003
Photo by Daryl C. McClary
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