History of Seattle before 1900

History of Seattle before 1900

Two conflicting perspectives exist for the early history of Seattle. There is what one might call the "establishment" view, which favors the centrality of the Denny Party (generally the Denny, Mercer, Terry, and Boren families), and Henry Yesler. A second, less didactic view, advanced particularly by historian Bill Speidel, sees David Swinson "Doc" Maynard as a key figure, perhaps "the" key figure. In the late nineteenth century, when Seattle had become a thriving town, several members of the Denny Party still survived; they and many of their descendants were in local positions of power and influence. Maynard was about ten years older and died relatively young, so he was not around to make his own case. Because the Denny Party were generally conservative Methodists and Maynard was, among other things, a drinker who lived with both his wife and an ex-wife and felt that well-run prostitution could be a healthy part of a city's economy, he was not on the best of terms with what became the Seattle Establishment, and Maynard was nearly written out of the city's history until Speidel's research in the 1960s and 1970s.

Founding

What is now Seattle has been inhabited since at least the end of the last glacial period (c. 8,000 B.C.E.—10,000 years ago). Archaeological excavations at what is now called West Point in Discovery Park, Magnolia confirm settlement within the current city for at least 4,000 years and probably much longer. [cite web
last =Talbert
first =Paul
coauthors =
date =
year =
month =
url=http://www.sewardpark.org/sewardpark/history.html
title ="SkEba'kst: The Lake People and Seward Park"
work =The History of Seward Park
publisher =SewardPark.org
accessdate =2006-06-06
] IPA|/tolˈɑltu/ ("herring house") and later IPA|/hɑˈʔɑpus/ ("where there are horse clams") at the then-mouth of the Duwamish River in what is now the Industrial District had been inhabited since the 6th century C.E. [Dailey (map with village 33, referencing his footnotes 2, 9, and 10)] The "Dkhw'Duw'Absh" (People of the Inside), and the "Xachua'bsh" (People of the Large Lake), [For a pronunciation brief, see the footnote in Duwamish (tribe).] of the (Skagit-Nisqually) Lushootseed Coast Salish Native American Nations occupied at least 17 villages in the mid-1850s (13 within what are now the city limits), [(1) After historical epidemiology 62% losses due to introduced diseases.
(1.1)Boyd
] living in some 93 permanent longhouses ("khwaac'ál'al") along the lower Duwamish River, Elliott Bay, Salmon Bay, Portage Bay, Lake Washington within what is now Seattle, as well as Lake Sammamish, and the Duwamish, Black, and Cedar Rivers in what is now metropolitan Seattle. [(1) cite news
first =Ross
last =Anderson
author =
coauthors =Green, Sara Jean
url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/local/seattle_history/articles/story1.html
title =A culture slips away
work =Seattle History: 150 Years: Seattle By and By
publisher =The Seattle Times
pages =
page =1
date =2001-05-27
accessdate =2006-04-21

and cite news
first =
last =Ibid
author =
coauthors =
url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/local/seattle_history/articles/story1_p2.html
title =The settlers saw trees, endless trees. The natives saw the spaces between the trees.
work =Seattle History: 150 Years: Seattle By and By | publisher =The Seattle Times | pages =
page =2
date =2001-05-27
accessdate =2006-04-21

(2) cite web
last =Lange
first =Greg
date =2000-10-15
year =
month =
url=http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=1660
title ="Seattle and King County's First White Settlers"
work =HistoryLink.org Essay 1660
publisher =
accessdate =2006-04-21

(3) cite web
last =Dailey
first =Tom
date =n.d.
year =
month =
url=http://coastsalishmap.org/new_page_6.htm | title ="Duwamish-Seattle"
work= [http://coastsalishmap.org/start_page.htm "Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound"]
publisher =
accessdate =2006-04-21

Page links to "Village Descriptions Duwamish-Seattle section" [http://coastsalishmap.org/Village_Descriptions_Duwamish-Seattle.htm] .
Dailey referenced "Puget Sound Geography" by T. T. Waterman. Washington DC: National Anthropological Archives, mss. [n.d.] [ref. 2] ;
"Duwamish et al vs. United States of America, F-275". Washington DC: US Court of Claims, 1927. [ref. 5] ;
"Indian Lake Washington" by David Buerge in the "Seattle Weekly", 1-7 August 1984 [ref. 8] ;
"Seattle Before Seattle" by David Buerge in the "Seattle Weekly", 17-23 December 1980. [ref. 9] ;
"The Puyallup-Nisqually" by Marian W. Smith. New York: Columbia University Press, 1940. [ref. 10] .
Recommended start is "Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound" [http://coastsalishmap.org/start_page.htm] .
(4) cite web
last =
first =
date =c. 2003-07-04 per [http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/exhibitDetail.asp?WHEN=PAST&eventID=2926 "Native Art of the Northwest Coast: Collection Insight"]
year =
month =
url =http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/Learn/Teach/SongStorySpeech/Content/SalishArtCulture.htm
title ="The people and their land"
work =Puget Sound Native Art and Culture
publisher =Seattle Art Museum
accessdate =2006-04-21

(5) cite book
last=Boyd
first=Robert
authorlink =
coauthors =
editor =
year=1999
title=The Coming of the Spirit of Pestilence: Introduced Infectious Diseases and Population Decline Among Northwest Coast Indians, 1774-1874
accessdate=2006-05-21
publisher=University of Washington Press and University of British Columbia Press
location=Seattle and Vancouver
id=ISBN 0-295-97837-6 (alk. paper), ISBN 0-7748-0755-5
pages =
chapter =
] The "Dkhw'Duw'Absh" and "Xachua'bsh" are today represented by the Duwamish Tribe.

George Vancouver was captain of British exploration of the Pacific coast in 1792; the first White forays for sites in the area were in the 1830s. [Morgan (1951, 1982), pp. 21–22]

The founding of Seattle is usually dated from the arrival of the Denny Party on November 13, 1851 at Alki Point. The group had travelled overland from the Midwest to Portland, Oregon, then made a short ocean journey up the Pacific coast into Puget Sound, with the express intent of founding a town. The next April, Arthur A. Denny abandoned the original site at Alki in favor of a better-protected site on Elliott Bay, near the south end of what is now downtown Seattle. Around the same time, Doc Maynard began settling the land immediately south of Denny's. Charles C. Terry and others hung on at Alki for a few more years, but eventually it became clear that Maynard and Denny had chosen the better location.

The first plats for Seattle were filed on May 23, 1853. Nominal legal land settlement was provisionally established in 1855 (with treaty terms for what is now Seattle not implemented). Doc Maynard's land claim lay south of today's Yesler Way, encompassing most of today's Pioneer Square Historical District and the International District. He based his street grid on strict compass bearings. The more northerly plats of Arthur A. Denny and Carson D. Boren, however, which encompassed Pioneer Square proper, the heart of the current downtown, and the western slope of First Hill, had street grids that more or less followed the shoreline. The downtown grid from Yesler Way north to Stewart Street is oriented 32 degrees west of north; from Stewart north to Denny Way the orientation is 49 degrees west of north. The result is a tangle of streets where the grids clash. (See also Street layout of Seattle.)

Both Alki and the settlement that was to become Seattle relied in their early decades on the timber industry, shipping out logs (and, later, milled timber) to build and rebuild San Francisco which, as Bill Speidel points out, kept burning down. Seattle and Alki offered plenty of trees to build San Francisco and plenty of hills to slide them down to water. A climax forest of trees up to 1,000–2,000 years old and towering as high as nearly convert|400|ft|m|0 covered much of what is now Seattle. Today, none of that size remain anywhere in the world. [(1) Dolan & True (2003), pp. 142, 144
(2) Van Pelt (2001) pp. xxii, 181–185, 187–191
]

Relations with the natives

"This section draws heavily on Bill Speidel," Sons of the Profits "(1967) and" Doc Maynard" (1978)." Doc Maynard "and Murray Morgan," Skid Road "(1951, 1960, 1982) are especially useful on the events regarding resistance nominally led by Kamiakim in the January 1856 attack on the town."

Generally before the Point Elliott Treaty

The early Seattle settlers had a sometimes rocky relationship with the local Native Americans. There is no question that the settlers were steadily taking away native lands and, in many cases, treating the natives terribly. There were numerous deadly attacks by settlers against natives and by natives against settlers.

Bill Speidel writes in "Sons of the Profits", "The general consensus of the community was that killing an Indian was a matter of no graver consequence than shooting a cougar or a bear..." Against this background, Doc Maynard stands out for his excellent relations with the natives. He and Chief Seattle were friends and allies: Maynard certainly profited greatly from this friendship, but that should not diminish the fact that during the outbreak of violent hostilities in 1856 he risked the wrath of his fellow settlers by protecting neutral Indians. However, outside of some old-time trappers and traders, he was almost unique in his attitude.

Denny and Edward Lander (the latter was the first local federal judge) also stood out in that they believed that the law should be applied fairly and equally: to them, murder was murder, regardless of the race of the victim. However, it was impossible to get this view upheld by a jury. In "Sons of the Profits" Speidel recounts a case of two vigilantes who had hanged a native man. After a series of (possibly deliberate) irregularities in their trial, the jury acquitted these obviously guilty men on a technicality.

Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens probably did more damage to relations between settlers and natives than any one other person. He put a bounty on scalps of "bad Indians". He declared martial law to prevent Lander from issuing writs of "habeas corpus" for people who were held in jail for little other reason than sympathizing with the natives. On at least two occasions, he actually had Lander himself jailed.

Perhaps worst of all in its consequences for relations, he dealt dishonestly in treaties, among other things making oral promises that were not matched by what was written down. The local natives had at least a thirty-year history of dealing with the Hudson's Bay Company, who had developed a reputation for driving a hard bargain, but sticking honestly to what they agreed to, and for treating Whites and Indians impartially. This continued through the dealings of the local Bureau of Indian Affairs Superintendent General, Joel Palmer, who (along with Maynard's brother-in-law, Indian Agent Mike Simmons) was among the few even-handed men in the BIA.

Consequently when Stevens, in drafting treaties, acted in a manner that Judge James Wickerson would characterize forty years later as "unfair, unjust, ungenerous, and illegal", some natives, quite unprepared for such behavior by the official representatives of the white man's power, were angered to the point of war. The unjust and deliberately confusing Western Washington treaties such as that of Medicine Creek (December 26 1854) and Point Elliott (now Mukilteo) (January 22, 1855) were followed by the yet more provocative treaty of Walla Walla (May 21, 1855), as Stevens pointedly ignored federal government instructions to stick to sorting out the areas where natives and settlers found themselves immediately adjacent to one another, or, from the other perspective, where settlers moved right in on Native places.

Generally after the Point Elliott Treaty

By the time of the Treaty of Point Elliott, Maynard had already made an ally of Chief Seattle by arranging to have him somewhat compensated for the use of his name for the new town. Chief Seattle's ancestral religion and Coast Salish culture have beliefs opposed to speaking or using a person's name after that person's death and prior to protocols, so this was not a simple matter, although Chief Seattle soon converted to a somewhat eclectic Roman Catholicism. (See also tribe #History). At Point Elliott, Maynard cemented this alliance (and greatly benefited his emerging town) by getting Chief Seattle and the Duwamish a separate, more favorable treaty, which, in exchange for a relatively large reservation (promised, not yet ever fulfilled), Natives abandoned all aboriginal title to 54,790 acres (221.7 km²), constituting an area almost identical to the eventual twentieth-century city limits of the City of Seattle, for nearly nothing at the time.

With Stevens in Eastern Washington sowing discord, Secretary of State Charles Mason was left in charge of the state government. Yakama Chief Kamiakim had effectively declared war and told nations such as the Duwamish that they could either join him or would be treated as enemies. By autumn, there had been an exchange of massacres by Whites and settlers, in which both sides seemed ready to kill whichever people of the other race were at hand, with no regard for whether these particular individuals had in any way previously wronged them. (This cycle of retaliatory violence would reach its logical conclusion two years after the war, when the brilliant and generally respected "si'ab" Lescay (Chief Leschi) was tried and condemned to death for a murder he almost certainly did not commit, and hanged before his appeal could be properly heard.)

Maynard got Mike Simmons to deputize him as a Special Indian Agent, then—in a complex, multi-way transaction—cemented a relationship with acting governor Mason and some other key figures by selling them some prime Seattle real estate at a good price. He then used the money from the transaction to buy supplies and a boat to ferry Chief Seattle and his Duwamish to what was effectively a privately-funded reservation at Port Madison, west of Puget Sound. He also, at enormous personal risk, spent the first several weeks of November 1855 traveling around eastern King County, which was already penetrated by some of Kamiakim's men, informing several hundred other neutral natives that there was a safe place they could go. Most of them took him up on it. Induced fear effected abandonment of places Natives were otherwise loath to leave.

(In "Doc Maynard", Bill Speidel reports that not all of the Seattle businessmen were pleased with his getting the local Indians out of the way. Henry Yesler and others found themselves deprived of much of their labor force and wrote letters of protest to the territorial government.)

Shortly before Stevens returned to Olympia January 16, 1856, Captain E.D. Keyes had managed an uneasy informal truce by communicating with, among others, Chief Leschi. Stevens promptly undercut the truce, saying of the natives, "Nothing but death is mete punishment for their perfidy."

On January 25, 1856, Stevens announced, "The town of Seattle is in as much danger of an Indian attack as are the cities of San Francisco or New York."

On January 26, 1856, natives attacked the Seattle settlement. Friendly Indians permitted to stay in Seattle had warned the Whites, and sentries had been put on patrol. In the morning, acting on tip, a shell was lobbed into the forest above the town, what is now First Hill. First fire. The Indians fired back, small arms. Settlers rushed from their cabins to the blockhouse. The defenses were based on a large wooden blockhouse, a five-foot-high wood-and-earth breastworks, various ravines—and the cannon just offshore zeroed (bearing and range laid in). The settlement was defended at the time by the 150 man, 566 ton, 16 gun sloop-of-war "Decatur", the bark "Bronte", seven out-of-town civilian volunteers, fifty local volunteers, and at least 6 Marines from the "Decatur" The number of attackers is impossible to establish: estimates range from a mere thirty to 2000 with more than a hundred killed, another hundred wounded. Not so much as a single Indian body was ever found, not even a sign of blood. The Indians had made no attempt to storm the stockade. No one in the blockhouse was much interested in venturing out on attack. Both sides had paused for dinner. There were two known fatalities: a young volunteer and a 14-year-old boy, both of whom had neglected to stay behind cover. No one who kept inside the stockade was wounded. A few things do seem clear in this fog of war: nearly all of the local volunteers hardly left the blockhouse, the Navy took no combat casualties in this land battle, and Kamiakim's forces were successfully driven off, but also took few (if any) fatalities. [Morgan (1951, 1982), pp. 31–51] Still, they seem to have drawn the conclusion that attacking a major settlement wasn't worth the trouble. The only remaining major battle of the war was to occur March 10 at Connell's Prairie near Puyallup.

After the skirmish "Battle of Seattle"

The cessation of general hostilities did not diminish Stevens' crusading zeal against the natives. He encouraged fratricidal war by offering the "good Indians" a bounty for scalps of the "bad Indians". The largest collector of such rewards was Chief Seattle's sworn rival, Chief Patkanim, a leader among the Snoqualmie and Snohomish. According to Speidel, Patkanim was not above killing and scalping his own slaves as a means of generating income. Speidel also narrates (in "Sons of the Profits") that on one occasion this led to a native being killed and scalped in Stevens' own office.

Stevens continually attempted to recruit Chief Seattle and the Duwamish to this cause. Maynard and Chief Seattle, who had already gone to great lengths to help keep the Duwamish at a safe distance from Patkanim, never actually refused the Governor's request, but instead maintained a successful pattern of stalling and passive resistance to avoid ever providing any Duwamish fighters to further Stevens' scheme.

A smallpox epidemic broke out among the Northwest tribes in 1862, killing roughly half of the native population. Documentation in archives and historical epidemiology demonstrates that Governmental policies furthered the progress of the epidemic among the natives. [(1) Boyd
(2) Lange (4 February 2003, Essay 5171)
(2.1) Lange (8 December 2000, Essay 3176) [Summary]
]

The Seattle Establishment, including 'Doc' Maynard, petitioned the Territorial Delegate to Congress in 1866 to deny treaty rights to the Duwamish. The commitments made by the United States government in the Point Elliott Treaty have not yet been met. [cite web
last =Wilma
first =David
year =2001
month =24 January
url=http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=2955
title ="Seattle pioneers petition against a reservation on the Black River for the Duwamish tribe in 1866."
work ="HistoryLink.org Essay 2955"
publisher =
accessdate =2006-04-21

Wilma referenced "Petition: To the Honorable Arthur A. Denny, Delegate to Congress from Washington Territory," n.d., National Archives Roll 909, "Letters Received by the Office of Indian Affairs, 1824-81";
Pioneer Association of the State of Washington, "A Petition to Support Recognition of The Duwamish Indians as a 'Tribe', June 18, 1988, in possession of Ken Tollefson, Seattle, Washington.
]

Yesler's Mill

At first, Alki was larger than Seattle. "It was platted into six blocks of eight lots... and most of them had buildings on them that were in use. There weren't eight level, usable blocks in all of Seattle." [Speidel (1967), p. 31] However, when Henry Yesler brought"financial backing from a Massillon, Ohio capitalist, John E. McLain, to start a steam sawmill once he had isolated the perfect location for such a structure," [Speidel (1967), p. 60] he chose a Seattle location, on the waterfront where Maynard and Denny's plats met. Thereafter, Seattle would dominate the lumber industry.

Yesler selected this location because of a critical flaw with Alki as a port: "During the winter, the north wind, building up the tides in front of it, comes sweeping down the Sound out of Canada, piling might waves on Alki Point. Beginning with Terry... nobody has been able to build anything out in the water at Alki that will withstand those waves." [Speidel (1967), p. 33]

The road leading down the hill to that mill, later called Mill Street and now known as Yesler Way, was originally known as the Skid Road, the route for skidding logs down to the mill, hence the term "Skid Road" or corrupted as "Skid Row" for a rundown or dilapidated urban area as the mill declined and the area collapsed with the Crash and Great Depression. [cite web
last =Crowley
first =Walt
authorlink = Walt Crowley
coauthors =McRoberts, Patrick
date =Corrected 2 September 2004, 17 April 1999
year =
month =
url =http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=1041
title ="Seattle Neighborhoods: Downtown Seattle -- Thumbnail History"
work =HistoryLink.org Essay 1041
publisher =
accessdate =2006-07-21

Authors referenced Walt Crowley, "National Trust Guide Seattle" (New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1998);
Lee Moriwaki, "Downtown's Changing Face," "The Seattle Times", February 23, 1997. Information on the Smith Tower was corrected on September 2, 2004.
]

Via the bargaining power of his mill, Yesler wrangled about 20,220 square feet (1,900 m²) of prime land from some of the original settlers. Besides his mill, Yesler started a cookhouse that "did more to 'set' the heart of the city in the middle of Yesler's property holdings than anything else Henry did. Henry never did make a lot of money out of his mill. It was the strategic location of his land that made him a millionaire." [Speidel (1967), p. 63] Like many of Seattle's early entrepreneurs, Yesler was not always the most scrupulous about how he made his money; he borrowed $30,000 at 8% interest to build the mill, and repaid McLain only after McLain took Yesler to court three times.

A city grows

The first Seattle fortunes were founded on logs, and later milled timber, shipped south for the construction of buildings in San Francisco. Seattle itself, in the early years, was, of course, also a place of wooden buildings, and remained so until the Great Fire of June 6, 1889. Even the early system of delivering water to the settlement used hollowed-out logs for pipes. Seattle in its early years relied on the timber industry, shipping logs (and, later, milled timber) to San Francisco.

Terry sold out Alki (which, after his departure barely held on as a settlement), moved to Seattle and began acquiring land. He either owned or partially owned the first ships that allowed Seattle's timber industry to exist by providing a means to move the product to market. He eventually gave a land grant to the University of the Territory of Washington that housed its original campus and today makes the University of Washington a downtown landlord collecting rents of more than $1 million a year. He worked in politics to establish street grades, a water system, and a host of other services (which, not coincidentally, benefited him as one of the city's largest landholders).

Meanwhile, Arthur Denny became the second richest man in town, after Yesler, and got himself elected to territorial legislature. From that position, he tried unsuccessfully to get the territorial capital moved to Seattle from its then supposedly temporary location in Olympia. The other potential money prizes were the territorial penitentiary and the territorial university. When the politics all played out, Vancouver wound up as the proposed capital, Port Townsend was supposed to get the penitentiary, and Seattle got the university. Apparently, Seattle was the only real winner in this deal: to this day, Olympia remains the capital of Washington; the main state penitentiary is in Walla Walla.

The legislature had tacked on the requirement that a grant of 10 acres (40,000 m²) of land would be required for the university to be built, which they presumably thought would be sufficient to prevent its construction. However, Terry wanted his town to grow and donated the land, creating what would be "one of the biggest and most effective central core properties in the United States." [Speidel (1967), p. 89] The University of the Territory of Washington (later the University of Washington) opened on November 4, 1861. There were barely enough students to run it as a high school, let alone as a university, but over time it grew into its originally grandiose name.

The logging town developed rapidly into a small city. Despite being officially founded by the Methodists of the Denny Party, Seattle quickly developed a reputation as a wide-open town, a haven for prostitution, liquor, and gambling. Some attribute this, at least in part, to Maynard, who arrived separately from the Denny Party, and who had a rather different view of what it would take to build a city, based on his experience in growing Cleveland, Ohio. By selling some of his land cheaply on condition that businesses be soon built upon them, he recruited professionals, such as blacksmiths and purveyors of vice, who enhanced the value of his remaining land. The city's first brothel dated from 1861 and was founded by one John Pinnell (or Pennell), who was already involved in similar business in San Francisco. Real estate records show that nearly all of the city's first 60 businesses were on, or immediately adjacent to, Maynard's plat.

Seattle was incorporated as a town January 14, 1865. The incorporators were Charles C. Terry, Henry L. Yesler, David T. Denny, Charles Plummer and Hiram Burnett an officer of the largest Puget Sound lumber company Pope & Talbot. That charter was voided January 18, 1867, in response to unrest. Seattle was re-incorporated as a city on December 2, 1869. At the times of incorporation, the population was approximately 350 and 1,000, respectively. [ Clarence B. Bagley, "History of Seattle from the Earliest Settlement to the Present Time", Vol. 2 (Chicago: S.J. Publishing Co., 1916), p. 698.
NB: Per cite web
last =
first =
coauthors =
date =Updated 18 February 2003
year =
month =
url =http://www.nps.gov/klse/hrs/hrs1a.htm
title ="CHAPTER ONE 'By-and-By': The Early History Of Seattle"
work =Hard Drive to the Klondike: Promoting Seattle During the Gold Rush
publisher =Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, Seattle Unit
accessdate =2006-07-16

Original source not checked
]

Railroad rivalry and encroaching civilization

On July 14, 1873 the Northern Pacific Railway announced that they had chosen the then-small town of Tacoma over Seattle as the Western terminus of their trans-continental railroad. The railroad barons appear to have been gambling on the advantage they could gain from being able to buy up the land around their terminus cheaply instead of bringing the railroad into a more established Pacific port town.

Unwilling to be bypassed, the citizens of Seattle chartered their own railroad, the Seattle & Walla Walla. This project did not get very far, though after later reorganization it did bring coal, fueling industry in Seattle. The later Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railway was only moderately more successful, although it did provide a route for logs to come to the city from as far away as Arlington, Washington, boost development of towns, and help Seattle hit the jackpot with the Northern Pacific. The Great Northern Railway did finally come to Seattle in 1884, winning Seattle a place in competition for freight, though it would be 1906 before Seattle finally acquired a major rail passenger terminal. The Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern was, over the years, incorporated into the Northern Pacific and then the Burlington Northern railways. [(1) Speidel (1967), pp. 196–7, 200
(2) Dorpat (1994), ch. 42
] The line was abandoned as a railroad in 1971 with the general decline in rail, and became in 1978 a foot and bicycle route renamed the Burke-Gilman Trail, then gradually greatly extended.

As has been remarked, Seattle in this era was an "open" and often relatively lawless town. Although it boasted two English-language newspapers (and, for a while, a third in Norwegian), and telephones had arrived in town, lynch law sometimes prevailed (there were at least four lynchings in 1882), schools barely operated, and indoor plumbing was a rare novelty. In the low mud flats where much of the city was built, sewage was almost as likely to come in on the tide as to flow away. Potholes in the street were so bad as to cause at least one fatal drowning.

The 1882 lynchings are well described in Murray Morgan's book "Skid Road". The events involved a mob defying an armed sheriff, successfully disarming the sheriff's deputies, and assaulting Judge Roger Sherman Greene, who attempted to slash the ropes by which the lynching victims were to be hanged. Judge Greene, while not doubting the actual guilt of the lynched men, was later to write that "the lynchers were co-criminal with the lynched."

In an era during which the Washington Territory was one of the first parts of the U.S. to (briefly) allow women's suffrage, Seattle women attempted to counter these trends and to be a civilizing influence. On April 4, 1884, 15 Seattle women founded The Ladies Relief Society to address "the number of needy and suffering cases within the limits of the city." This eventually resulted in the founding of the Seattle Children's Home, still in operation today.

Another sign of encroaching civilization was the city's first bathtub with plumbing 1870, [Phelps, p.198] first streetcar, in 1884, followed by a cable car from downtown over First Hill to Leschi Park in 1887. In 1885, the city passed an ordinance requiring attached sewer lines for all new residences. In 1886, the city got its first YMCA gymnasium, and in 1888 the exclusive Rainier Club was founded. On December 24, 1888, ferry service was inaugurated, connecting Seattle to West Seattle, near the location of the Denny Party's first attempt at settling at Alki and reviving that settlement. A year later, a bridge was built across Salmon Bay, providing a land route to the nearby town of Ballard, which after 17 years would be annexed to Seattle.

The relative fortunes of Seattle and Tacoma clearly show the nature of Seattle's growth. Though both Seattle and Tacoma grew at a rapid rate from 1880 to 1890, based on the strength of their timber industries, Seattle's growth as an exporter of services and manufactured goods continued for another two decades, while Tacoma's growth dropped almost to zero. The reason for this lies in Tacoma's nature as a company town and Seattle's successful avoidance of that condition.

Both Seattle and Tacoma in the 1880s were essentially lumber towns, built on the resulting export income. All over the Puget Sound there are communities that started with the same assets, timber and a port. However, Seattle's early lead with Yesler's mill and other enterprises meant that its economy was based on manufacturing as well as lumber, and was thus far more diversified than Tacoma's. The Northern Pacific Railway terminus only increased Tacoma's lumber trade instead of diversifying the economy. Meanwhile, Seattle became the hub for the region and the railroad "had" to come.

Relations between whites and Chinese

Chinese first arrived in Seattle around 1860. The Northern Pacific Railway completed the project of laying tracks from Lake Superior to Tacoma, Washington, in 1883, leaving many Chinese laborers without employment. In 1883, Chinese laborers played a key role in the first effort at digging the Montlake Cut to connect Lake Union's Portage Bay to Lake Washington's Union Bay.

Seattle's Chinese district, located near the present day Occidental Park, was a mixed neighborhood of residences over stores, laundries, and other retail storefronts. [cite web
last =
first =
coauthors =
date =2003-02-18
year =
month =
url =http://www.nps.gov/klse/hrs/hrs1a.htm
title ="CHAPTER ONE: 'By-and-By': The Early History Of Seattle"
work =
publisher =National Park Service: Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, Seattle Unit
accessdate =Fact|date=February 2007

Sources provided with endnotes [http://www.nps.gov/klse/hrs/hrsend.htm] .
] In fall 1885, with a shortage of jobs in the West, many workers turned violently anti-Chinese, complaining of overly cheap labor competition. In the Pacific Northwest, this had the unusual character that the anti-Chinese mobs included significant numbers of the native Indians as well as European-Americans.

The first massacre of Chinese occurred at Rock Springs, Wyoming, September 2, 1885. On September 7, Chinese hop-pickers were massacred in the Squak valley near present-day Issaquah. Similar incidents occurred in the nearby mining camps at Coal Creek and Black Diamond. Many Chinese headed from these isolated rural areas into the cities, but it did them little good: on October 24, a mob burned a good portion of Seattle’s Chinatown; on November 3, a mob of 300 expelled the Chinese in Tacoma (loading them into boxcars with surprisingly little actual violence) before moving on to force similar expulsions in smaller towns. [(1) cite web
last =Wei
first =William, Professor of History, University of Colorado at Boulder
coauthors =
date =
year =
month =
url =http://immigrants.harpweek.com/ChineseAmericans/2KeyIssues/TheAntiChineseHysteria.htm
title ="The Chinese-American Experience: An Introduction"
work =The Chinese American Experience 1857-1892 > Introduction
publisher = [http://www.harpweek.com/ HarpWeek]
accessdate =2006-07-21

Harpweek [http://www.harpweek.com/] , on-line database of "Harper's Weekly", oldest extant periodical in the U.S.
(2)Morgan, p.82, 85
]

Violent opposition to the Chinese at this time was inseparable from labor union organizing. The pro-labor "Seattle Call" routinely described the Chinese in brutally racist terms; leading figures in the anti-Chinese movement included Knights of Labor organizer Dan Cronin and Seattle socialist agitator Mary Kenworthy; the utopian socialist George Venable Smith was also of this party. Nor did the Chinese have many strong defenders among the wealthier classes, who, however, mostly favored a more orderly departure of the Chinese to massacre and riot (the policy of Henry Yesler, who was serving as mayor at this time). [Morgan (1960), pp. 80–86]

Among the few defenders of the rule of law were the Methodist Episcopal Ministers' Association and Judge Thomas Burke. Burke, an Irish immigrant and generally a friend of labor, was nonetheless a stronger defender of the Constitution; he also spoke out that his fellow Irish should identify with the Chinese as fellow immigrants, a view which fell almost entirely on deaf ears. [Ibid, pp. 86–87]

On February 7, 1886, well-organized anti-Chinese "order committees" descended on Seattle's Chinatown, claiming to be health inspectors, declaring Chinese-occupied buildings to be unfit for habitation, rousting out the residents and herding them down to the harbor, where the "Queen of the Pacific" was docked. The police were willing to intervene only to the point of preventing the Chinese from being physically harmed, not to challenging the mob. It is quite probable that if ship's captain Jack Alexander had been willing simply to board the Chinese and take them away, the mob would entirely have ruled the day; however, he was not in the business of hauling non-paying passengers. The mob raised several hundred dollars, 86 Chinese were boarded, but this delay gave the mayor, Judge Burke, the U.S. Attorney, and others time both to rally the Home Guard and to serve Alexander with a writ of "habeas corpus". An effort to deport the Chinese by rail was squelched when Sheriff McGraw threatened to prosecute the railroad superintendent for kidnapping. [Ibid, pp. 90–93]

The following day, Judge Greene made it clear that those Chinese who wished to remain would be protected, but by now, after what they had been through, all but sixteen preferred to leave. Alexander, by now, "was anxious to keep his operations strictly legal", [Ibid, p. 93] and would board only the 196 passengers for which his ship was rated, slightly more than half of the Chinese who were ready to leave. Possibly due to poor communication, the anti-Chinese faction were unsatisfied; a resulting scuffle resulted in one dead and four others wounded among the anti-Chinese faction, and martial law was imposed. Ultimately, the bulk of the Chinese remained in Seattle, and the U.S. government "out of humane consideration and without reference to liability" paid out $276,619.15 to the Chinese government, but nothing to the victims themselves. [Ibid, pp. 93–97]

The Great Seattle Fire

The early Seattle era came to a stunning halt with the Great Seattle Fire of June 6, 1889. It burned 29 city blocks, destroying most of the central business district; no one, however, perished in the flames, and the city quickly rebounded from the destruction.

Labor history in 19th century Seattle

The Pacific Northwest economy during the nineteenth century was heavily rooted in extractive industries, mainly logging. Still, Seattle was becoming a city, and union organizing arrived first in the form of a skilled craft union. In 1882, Seattle printers formed the Seattle Typographical Union Local 202. Dockworkers followed in 1886, cigarmakers in 1887, tailors in 1889, and both brewers and musicians in 1890. Even the newsboys unionized in 1892, followed by more organizing, mostly of craft unions.

The history of labor in this period is inseparable from the issue of anti-Chinese vigilantism, as discussed above. A rough-and-ready approach to labor organizing was typical of the period, and there is no question that white Seattle-area laborers at this time saw cheap Chinese labor as their prime competition and strove to eliminate it by eliminating the Chinese immigrants.

"This section is still mostly a . You can help Wikipedia by ."

The Klondike Gold Rush

Seattle, as well as the rest of the nation, was hard hit by the Panic of 1893, and to a lesser extent, the Panic of 1896. Unlike many other cities, it soon found salvation in the form of becoming the main transportation and supply center for stampeders heading for the Klondike gold rush. The "Seattle Post-Intelligencer" scooped all other U.S. newspapers with the story that a "ton of gold" had arrived on the "S. S. Portland," arriving from Alaska. Seattle promoters successfully convinced the world that Seattle was the place to outfit yourself for the journey to Alaska, and Seattle became a household word, literally overnight. The miners mined the gold. Seattle mined the miners. [cite web
last =
first =
coauthors =
date =Updated 18 February 2003
year =
month =
url =http://www.nps.gov/klse/hrs/hrs5b.htm
title ="Chapter 5: Interpreting the Klondike Gold Rush"
work =Hard Drive to the Klondike: Promoting Seattle During the Gold Rush
publisher =Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, Seattle Unit
accessdate =2006-07-16
]

Seattle's relationship with Alaska during this period was generally one of rapacity. Besides the mining, on October 18, 1899, a Chamber of Commerce "Committee of Fifteen," just back from a goodwill visit to Alaska, proudly unveiled a convert|60|ft|m|sing=on totem pole from Fort Tongass, Alaska in Pioneer Square. The problem was, the pole had been stolen from the Tlingit village of Gaash on Cape Fox. A federal grand jury in Alaska indicted eight of Seattle's most prominent citizens for theft of government property. A nominal fine was assessed [(1) Wilma (1 January 2000, Essay 2076)] The village was repaid when the original burned and the Chamber of Commerce commissioned a replacement—and paid twice. "Thank you for the check", wrote the Gaash village leaders. "That was payment for the first one. Send another check for the replacement."

See also

* Duwamish (tribe)
* Mother Damnable
* Rock Springs massacre

Notes and references

Much of the content of this page is from , by Emmett Shear; Shear has granted blanket permission for material from that paper to be reused in Wikipedia.

Bibliography

*
and cite news | first = | last =Ibid | author = | coauthors = | url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/local/seattle_history/articles/story1_p2.html | title =The settlers saw trees, endless trees. The natives saw the spaces between the trees. | work =Seattle History: 150 Years: Seattle By and By | publisher =The Seattle Times | pages = | page =2 | date =2001-05-27 | accessdate =2006-04-21
*
* cite web | last =Cline | first =Scott, City Archivist | date =n.d., ~2006; second edition | year = | month = | url=http://www.ci.seattle.wa.us/leg/clerk/guide/9100.htm | title ="Annexed Cities (9100)" | work ="Seattle Municipal Archives Record Descriptions", [http://www.ci.seattle.wa.us/leg/clerk/guide/titletoc.htm#toc "A Guide To The Archives Of The City Of Seattle"] | publisher = | accessdate =2006-04-21
*
Page links to [http://coastsalishmap.org/Village_Descriptions_Duwamish-Seattle.htm Village Descriptions Duwamish-Seattle section] .
Dailey referenced "Puget Sound Geography" by T. T. Waterman. Washington DC: National Anthropological Archives, mss. [n.d.] [ref. 2] ;
"Duwamish et al vs. United States of America, F-275". Washington DC: US Court of Claims, 1927. [ref. 5] ;
"Indian Lake Washington" by David Buerge in the "Seattle Weekly", 1-7 August 1984 [ref. 8] ;
"Seattle Before Seattle" by David Buerge in the "Seattle Weekly", 17-23 December 1980. [ref. 9] ;
"The Puyallup-Nisqually" by Marian W. Smith. New York: Columbia University Press, 1940. [ref. 10] .
Recommended start is [http://coastsalishmap.org/start_page.htm "Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound"]
*
*
2d edition of vol. I of III
*
*
Lange referenced a very extensive list.
Summary article
** cite web | last =Lange | first =Greg | date =2000-12-08 | year = | month = | url=http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=3176 | title ="Smallpox kills 14,000 Northwest Coast Indians from April to December 1862." | work =HistoryLink.org Essay 3176 | publisher = | accessdate =Fact|date=February 2007
Lange referenced Lange, "Smallpox Epidemic of 1862 among Northwest Coast and Puget Sound Indians" [http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=5171] , HistoryLink.org "Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History". Accessed 8 December 2000.
* cite book
last =Morgan
first =Murray
authorlink =
coauthors =
editor =
year =1960 (originally published 1951, revised 1960)
title =Skid Road: Seattle -- Her first hundred years
accessdate =Fact|date=February 2007
publisher =Ballantine Books
location =New York
id =ISBN 0-295-95846-4
pages =
chapter =

*
*
*
* cite book
last =Sale
first =Roger
authorlink =
coauthors =
editor =
year =1976
title =Seattle: Past To Present
accessdate =
publisher =University of Washington Press
location =Seattle and London
id =ISBN 029595521X
pages =
chapter =

*
Speidel provides a substantial bibliography with extensive primary sources.
*
Speidel provides a substantial bibliography with extensive primary sources.
*
*
Wilma referenced "Petition: To the Honorable Arthur A. Denny, Delegate to Congress from Washington Territory," n.d., National Archives Roll 909, "Letters Received by the Office of Indian Affairs, 1824-81";
Pioneer Association of the State of Washington, "A Petition to Support Recognition of The Duwamish Indians as a 'Tribe', June 18, 1988, in possession of Ken Tollefson, Seattle, Washington.
*
Wilam referenced Paul Dorpat, "Seattle Now and Then Vol. 2" (Seattle: Tartu Publications, 1984), 32-35;
Joseph H. Wherry, "The Totem Pole Indians", (New York: Wilfred Funk, Inc., 1964), 64, 89;
William C. Speidel, "Sons of the Profits" (Seattle: Nettle Creek Publishing Co., 1967), 329-331;
Viola Garfield, "Seattle's Totem Poles" (Bellevue, WA: Thistle Press, 1996), 9;
Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation, "Data on the History of Seattle Park System Vol. 4" (Seattle: Seattle Parks Department, 1978);
James William Clise, "Personal Memoirs 1855-1935" Mimeograph, Altadena, California, 1935, Seattle Public Library.

Further reading

* HistoryLink.org "Encyclopedia of Washington State History" [http://www.historylink.org] provides a collection of articles on Seattle and Washington State history, unparalleled in its niche.
* Seattle [http://www.seattlehistory.org Museum of History and Industry] . With the Seattle Room at the Seattle Public Library, these host the most extensive archives about Seattle.
* [http://www.washingtonhistory.org Washington State History Museum] , Washington State Historical Society
* [http://content.lib.washington.edu/ University of Washington Libraries: Digital Collections] :
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/boydweb/index.html William F. Boyd Photograph Album] 43 photographs of early Seattle, particularly scenes of the aftermath of the Great Seattle Fire of June 6, 1889, and Washington state, ca. 1888-1893.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/boydbraasweb/index.html Boyd and Braas Photographs] 45 photographs, c. 1888-1893, of early Seattle, including the waterfront and street scenes, Madrona and Leschi parks, Native American hop pickers, and portraits of Seattle pioneers.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/larocheweb/index.html Frank La Roche Photographs] . 312 photographs c. 1888-1910 depicting scenes of the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush, Seattle, Washington state, Alaska, western United States, and Canada.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/larochealbumweb/index.html Lake Union Improvement Company Photograph Album] A small photograph album (ca. 1891) used as a sales tool. Photographed by Frank La Roche, it contains an historical photographic record of early Seattle and its expansion northwards along the shores of Lake Union.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/peiserweb/index.html Theodore E. Peiser Photographs] . 140 images from the later part of the 19th century to about 1907. Among his subjects were images of troops preparing to embark from Fort Lawton to China in 1900, the Territorial University (later University of Washington), and early Seattle scenes.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/prosch_seattleweb/index.html Prosch Seattle Views Album] . 169 images by Thomas Prosch, one of Seattle's earliest pioneers, documenting the early history of Seattle and vicinity, c. 1851-1906.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/seattleweb/index.html Seattle Photographs] Ongoing database of over 1,700 historical photographs of Seattle with special emphasis on images depicting neighborhoods, recreational activities including baseball, the Great Seattle Fire of 1889, "The Great Snow of 1916", theaters and transportation.
** [http://content.lib.washington.edu/warnerweb/index.html Arthur Churchill Warner Photographs] . Images by the pioneer photographer A.C. Warner, from the late 1800s and early 1900s, of Seattle conventional street scenes, waterfront activity, city parks, and regrading of downtown.


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