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List of structures on Elliott Bay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Past and present structures on Elliott Bay in Seattle, Washington, U.S. include:

  • piers, wharves, terminals, etc.
  • mills and industrial buildings, mostly in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • trestle bridges, mostly in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • Bridges of various types along the Spokane Street corridor

Although the focus is on structures built over water, this list also includes some terminals etc. built on fill. Especially in the early years, it can be difficult to make a distinction between the two. "[O]ne of ... [the] basic practices," writes David B. Williams, "was to drive a double row of pilings out from the shoreline, lay timbers across the tops of the pilings to form piers and wharves, and build out atop the wood. They could then dump material under these structures, undertaking the land-making practice known as wharfing out."[1]

It is not possible for a list like this to be complete. In the late 1880s and 1890s, a lack of legal clarity about ownership of lands between the low- and high-tide lines resulted in a massive number of structures on the tideflats, mostly poorly built and short-lived.[2] "The craze for salt water," remarked Judge Thomas Burke, had "broken out again with greater violence than before ... [with] lunatics of high and low degree ... like so many cawing crows on the mudflats."[3] Even today, there are numerous small, anonymous piers and ruins of piers.

The geography of Elliott Bay has changed considerably in the period since people of European ancestry first settled in the Seattle area in the mid-19th century. In particular, virtually all of the Industrial District and Sodo, as well as all of Harbor Island are built on landfill; also, there have been a series of smaller adjustments to the terrain of the Downtown waterfront, including the construction of the Alaskan Way Seawall.

In general, when listing variants of names we have not listed minor variants such as "Yesler Wharf/Yesler's Wharf".

Before the Great Fire

[edit]

Structures from before the Great Seattle Fire, June 6, 1889.

Besides what is listed below, there is the following from Daily Pacific Tribune, January 15, 1877: "Last year the Seattle Coal Company pushed out a new dock, as also the Seattle Gas and Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad Companies."[4] The Seattle and Walla Walla later became the Columbia and Puget Sound.[5] This suggests either slightly earlier dates for the Columbia and Puget Sound piers than given by other sources, or that they were begun in 1876 and not rapidly completed, or that short-lived piers were quickly replaced; similarly for the coal pier (presumably the one at King Street). Conversely, it suggests a slightly later date than given elsewhere for the "Gas Cove" gas works, although this could have been the addition of a pier to an existing operation. Also, that same 1877 article refers to a pier "for Mr. Isaac Parker, in the rear of his lot on Commercial Street [First Avenue South], and immediately alongside the Craig & Hastings Wharf."[4] That suggests two structures south of Yesler's Wharf, neither mentioned below, at least not by those names. Even if the Parker wharf was never built, the Craig & Hastings Wharf appears to have already existed in January 1877.

West Seattle

[edit]
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 (unnamed piers)
Seen in this photo of a 1916 landslide.
(1889 or earlier)[6] after 1916 two piers Near present-day Elm Place West, West Seattle[6] West Seattle Machine Works, visible at upper left of photo shown here, is described in the 1916 Polk's Directory as located "Alki Av[enue], [at the] f[oo]t [of] Maryland Place", which puts it at the present site of Hamilton Viewpoint Park.[7] In this general area, a 1910 listing of piers in 1907 lists "King & Wing Shipyard (leased of West Seattle Land and Improvement Company)" and "city docks (partially occupied by Calhoun & Krauss Lumber Company)."[8] ("King & Wing" is certainly a typo, should be "King & Winge".) The 1912 Baist maps show four unnamed piers of various sizes in this area; the second from the north shows a "machine shop" on a pier at the foot of Maryland St.[9]
2 West Seattle Ferry Slip 1888[10] after 1918[11] ferry slip Near site of today's Seacrest Park[6][10] The West Seattle end of the West Seattle Ferry run.[6][10] The ferry started running December 24, 1888.[10] In 1907 this was still owned by the West Seattle Land and Improvement Company.[8] A 1918 map by the Port of Seattle Commission indicates this as property of the Port: "Port Commission, W. Seattle Ferry Landing".[11]
3 Wheat Elevators and Warehouses
Seattle Terminal and Railway Elevator Co. circa 1891.
by 1891,[12] possibly earlier[6] after 1950[13] multiple piers West Seattle,[6] extending south from site of present-day restaurant "Salty's on Alki Beach" (which is not on Alki Beach) The 1890 Anderson map says "Wheat Elevators and Warehouses" but gives no specifics;[6] given that it shows rail lines in that area that were definitely not yet built, it is possible that this represented structures that were merely proposed or under construction. An 1891 map shows the extensive Seattle Terminal Railway and Elevator Company facility at this site.[14] Salty's is on the site of the Novelty Mill, "a working flour mill from the late 1890s to the mid 1950s."[13] See further discussion of these structures in the section "Since the Great Fire".

Mudflats south of King Street

[edit]

Prior to the Great Seattle Fire, anything south of King Street and west of roughly Eighth Avenue was on mudflats.

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Hemrich & Co's Brewery[15][16]
Bay View Brewery[17]

Pictured in 1901.
more images
(1888 or earlier)[15] between 1901[18] and 1905[17] Bottling plant on pilings West of Grant Street on east shore of Elliott Bay. Most of the Hemrich/Bay View facility (today's Old Rainier Brewery) was always on solid ground, but planks on pilings extended past the Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad (C. & P.S.R.R.), then across Grant Street, to the bottling plant pier. Grant Street was roughly along the same route as today's Airport Way S., but was a causeway over water: the area had not yet been filled. Between Grant Street and the shore, also on pilings, was the C. & P.S.R.R.[15][16] By 1905 the area was solid ground.[17]
2 Palouse Feed Mill Warehouse c.1888 ? Feed mill on pilings East of Grant Street, but west of the C. & P.S. R.R. on east shore of Elliott Bay, "about 134 miles south of Mill and Front Sts."[19] Described as "new" in 1888[19]
3 Slaughterhouse c.1888 ? slaughterhouse on pilings West of Grant Street on east shore of Elliott Bay, "about 134 miles south of Mill and Front Sts."[19] Described as "being built" in 1888[19]
4 McDonald & Rice's Planing Mill (by 1888)[20] (after 1888)[20] Pier with planing mill at end[20] Between Judkins and B Streets, extending across C. & P.S. R.R. and Grant Street on east shore of Elliott Bay.[20] The 1888 Sanborn map notes that the mill is "not in operation...building and mach[iner]y becoming impaired...Tatum & Bowen (owners)". The map shows over a dozen structures on a complex of connected piers, with the mill being the farthest from dry land, some 200 feet (61 m) from shore.[20]

This is right in the path of today's Interstate 5, with the mill falling roughly along the line of Royal Brougham Way.

5 "Gas Cove" gas works[21] 1873[21] ? gas works with pier[21] south of Jackson, between Fourth and Fifth Avenues[21] Seattle's first gas works was built partly on land and partly on a pier extending south from Jackson Street over the salt water that became known as "Gas Cove". Fourth and Fifth Avenues were then known as Fifth and Sixth Avenue, respectively.[21]
6 Mechanics Wharf[22] by 1875[22] by 1889[23][24] south of King Street, foot of what was then Second Street and is now Occidental Avenue South[22]
7 Atkin's Wharf[22][25] by 1875[22] by 1889[23][24] wharf south of King Street on line of Commercial Avenue (later First Avenue South)[26]
8 (no known name for the planked area as a whole) by 1884[27] 1889[23][24] planked area over mudflats south of King Street, east of Stetson & Post Mill The 1884 Sanborn map shows several buildings of the Hall and Paulson Furniture Manufactury on planks extending about a block south from King Street, extending from Second Avenue in the east to the railroad tracks beyond the line of Commercial Street (later First Avenue South) in the west; on the other side of the tracks was the Stetson & Post Mill.[27] The 1888 Sanborn map shows this much expanded. Hall and Paulson has packed in more buildings and has extended south onto another small pier; extensive C. & P.S. R.R. rail infrastructure has been added between Commercial and Second Avenues in the west and Third Avenue in the east. The area extending roughly a block-and-a-half south of King Street includes a railway turntable, a locomotive house, car shop, machine shop, etc.[28] A distinct rail line on planks continues south several blocks roughly along the line of Second Avenue, where the Oregon Improvement Company Mill is located on another large planked pier.[28] (The 1890 Anderson map does not detail this area.[6]) This either incorporated or replaced Atkin's Wharf.

Central Waterfront

[edit]
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 (no known name for the pier as a whole)
Seattle Dry Dock and Ship Building Company, circa 1889; however, this may be a picture of the post-Fire replacement for this dock.[29]
1888[30][31] 1889[23][24] pier[6] Between Plummer and Lane Streets[6] Structures on pier (from land outward):
  • Mechanics Mill[6]
  • Seattle Dry Dock[6]

The east edge of this was Railroad Avenue, running due south from King Street, a block west of Commercial Street (today's First Avenue South), along the line of today's Alaskan Way South. Very little of Plummer Street remains anywhere as of 2019; it is a block south of Charles Street.[6]

Seattle Dry Dock and Ship Building Company was owned by the Moran Brothers and Bailey Gatzert. The Moran Brothers had been repairing boats in Seattle since 1882. At the beginning of 1888 they built this sectional floating dock at the foot of Charles Street on the tideflats. They would go on to found a major shipyard after the fire.[30]

2 Stetson & Post Mill[27]
Stetson & Post board-making facility, 1882
more images
1882[32][33] 1889[23][24] pier and sawmill[6] Between Lane and King[6] There were various structures on this pier over time, and there were multiple occasions when much of the pier burned and was rebuilt: 1879,[34] 1885,[33] and 1887, before the major destruction of the Great Seattle Fire[34] (after which nonetheless another Yesler Wharf was built and lasted slightly over a decade).

The east edge of this was Railroad Avenue, running due south from King Street, a block west of Commercial Street (today's First Avenue South), along the line of today's Alaskan Way South.[6]

3 King Street Coal Wharf (Coal Bunkers[6])
Coal wharf c. 1889
more images
1878[35] 1889[23][24] Pier / coal bunkers Foot of King Street[6][35] The wharf consisted of a pair of coal wharves/piers/bunkers, one extending due west, the other angled about 30 degrees north of west.[6][35]
4 Plummer's Dock
Plummer's store and dock, 1860
by 1860[36] by 1884[37] Pier/dock with small structure[36] foot of Main[36] pier with large shed[36]
5 Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company City Dock
(O.R.& N. Co. City Dock,[6]
Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad's City Dock,
C. & P.S. R.R. Co's City Dock Warehouse[38])

more images: (City Dock), (Ocean Dock)
(1884 or earlier)[38] 1889[23][24] Pier/wharf/warehouse Between Jackson & Main[6][38] pier with large shed
6 Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company Ocean Dock (O.R.& N. Co. Ocean Dock,[6]
Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad's Ocean Dock,
C. & P.S. R.R. Co's Ocean Dock Warehouse[38])
(1884 or earlier)[38] 1889[23][24] Pier/wharf/warehouse Between Main & Washington[6][38] pier with large shed
7 Stone & Burnett's Wharf[22] by 1875[22] after 1875[22] south of Washington Street[22]
8 in 1875: Crawford & Harrington's Wharf[22]
(by 1884: Harrington & Smith's Wharf[6][38])

Harrington's is the slim wharf with a single structure at the end.
by 1875[22] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Just north of Washington Street,[38] foot of Washington[6] A Seattle Public Library Special Collections photo caption refers to a "Harrington and Smith" dock at the "foot of Yesler Way" (presumably a minor error; certainly Yesler Wharf was at Yesler) that burned July 26, 1879.[39]

The caption of an 1882 Theodore Peiser photo on the University of Washington Libraries site suggests that Crawford's and Harrington's Wharves were distinct.[40] Given the sign "Talbot Coal Yard" in that photo, Harrington's Wharf must be the same thing as "Talbot Coal Dock".[41]

9 Yesler's Wharf[6][38]

Map; east (land) at top.


Yesler's is the wharf in rear with a large number of structures.
more images
1853 (stub),[42] 1854 (small pier),[43][44] 1859 (first extension)[42] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Foot of Mill Street,[38] later Yesler Way[6] Begun as a stubby pier when Yesler set up his mill, the pier was extended in 1859.[42] In 1875, a branch to the northwest was added, initially as a coaling pier[42] but later serving other purposes.[45]

Significant structures, roughly from shore outward, 1888:

  • Moran Bros. Foundry
  • Mechanics Mill
  • Mach[iner]y Depot
  • Seattle Boiler Works
  • Soda Water Fac[tory]
  • Soda Water Mfy. Storage
  • Ice House & produce building
  • spur running from the middle of the dock to the northwest
    • Durie's Hay W[are]ho[u]s[e]
    • (various other storage buildings)
    • Lime Ho[use]
    • Yesler's Freight W[are]ho[use] & sign paint[in]g
  • Salt Loft & W[are]ho[use]
  • (passenger rail terminal)
  • Freight House

All from[45]

10 (floating boathouses)

Budlong's and other boathouses, c. 1886; Frye Opera House in the background.
by 1886[46] c. 1888?[47] floating boathouses[45] Foot of Columbia From here north, the 1888 Sanborn maps show an extensive planked area over the water, partially interrupted at Madison and Spring Streets, but extending as far north as a bit past Seneca Street, so it is a bit difficult to entirely separate out the next several piers.[48] Some of that planking, and a few small buildings, seems to exist at the foot of Columbia as early as the 1884 Sanborn map. At that time, this is shown as the northern terminus of the C. & P.S. R.R.; there is no connection north to the tracks that would constitute Railroad Avenue north of this.[49]

One of these boathouses was the pre-fire Budlong's Boathouse, which existed by 1886.[46]

11 Colman's Hay Warehouse ("Coleman's [sic] Hay W.Ho."[45]) (1888 or earlier)[47] c. 1888?[47] pier/wharf Foot of Marion[45][50] warehouse[45]
12 Colman's Wharf c. 1888[51] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between Columbia and Marion[6]
13 Seattle Lumber & Commercial Cos. Sawmill[52]
(Seattle Lumber & Commercial Mill Co.,[50] Commercial Mills[50])
(1884 or earlier)[52] (No later than 1889)[53][23][24] pier/wharf Between Marion and Madison[50] Sawmill and lumber yard. The 1888 Sanborn map shows this considerably expanded from the 1884 map; in particular, a pier with "Commercial Mills No. 2" extends further out away from shore.[50]
14 Pontius; Stewart & Maddocks[54] 1877-1878[34] (1888 or earlier)[55] pier/wharf Foot of Spring[52]
From Madison to Seneca[54]
A January 1877 article in the Daily Pacific Tribune says that work had begun on what was to be "the largest wharf in the city… From Madison Street to Seneca, a distance of 546 feet… reaching west… 60 feet, and from that will extend two long piers… [one at Madison] built by Mr. R. W. Pontius and… [one at] Seneca by J.T. S[t]ewart and M. B. Maddocks. The [546-foot wharf] along the bank, will be owned by Messrs. M. Stacey, Amos Brown, John S. Hill, and M. B. Maddocks, and will be used as a roadway…"[54] Two weeks later, the same newspaper described the Stewart & Maddocks pier as "well nigh finished" and the 60-foot-wide planking along the shore as to be "commenced this week", with the Pontius wharf expected to be completed the following month.[4]
15 West Seattle Ferry Slip 1888[56][10] 1889[23][24] ferry slip Foot of Marion[6] The Downtown end of the West Seattle Ferry run.[6] The ferry started running December 24, 1888.[10]
16 (no known name ) between 1876 and 1878[57] after 1878[57] pier between Madison and Spring[57]
17 (no known name ) (between 1884 and 1888)[58] (1889 or earlier)[59][23][24] planking between Madison and Spring The 1888 Sanborn map shows several structures here. Roughly from south to north:
  • Carp[ente]r on first floor, Commercial Mill Glazing on second
  • "Bl. Sm. & Wagon shop" on first floor, vacant second
  • Jones & Hubbel Hay & Feed W[are]Ho[use]
  • Ice cream factory
  • Shoudy, Perkins & Co. Hay W[are]Ho[use]
  • Ship carp[enter]

All from [50]

18 (no known name ) (1884 or earlier)[52] 1889[23][24] pier Foot of Spring[6][52] Visible but unnamed on maps showing 1884 and 1889 configuration. No way to know for certain whether this remained the same structure.[6][52] 1888 Sanborn map shows planking between Madison and Spring that would seem to eliminate this as a distinct structure.[50]
19 Scott's Wharf[50]
(Badere Milling Co. Wharf,[6])
(1884 or earlier) 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between Spring & Seneca[6] The 1884 Sanborn map shows an unmamed wharf; 1888 Sanborn shows Scott's Wharf and the 1890 Anderson (which shows a pre-Fire configuration) shows Badere Milling Co. Wharf. Some of these could have been distinct structures in the same location a few years apart.[52][50][6]

The 1884 Sanborn map shows a boiler works and some unnamed warehouses. The 1888 Sanborn map shows (roughly from south to north):

  • Baxters Baled Hay W[are]H[ouse], bran and feed
  • 2 Canadian Pacific R.R. freight warehouses
  • Several facilities for the storage of hay (one sharing with the railroad warehouses)

All from [50]

20 T.R. Humphrey & Co. Wharf ? 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between Seneca & University[6] This may or may not be an extension of the structure shown on the 1884 Sanborn map and/or it may be the same structure shown on the 1888 Sanborn map. The 1884 map shows a small pier at this location with "Star B[ui]ld[in]g" built at the foot of the pier.[52] The 1888 map shows a continuation of the planking that extended north from around Marion Street (though there is a partial interruption at Seneca Street, where there were some openings in the planking).[60]

Going roughly from land to open water, structures on the pier included:

  • Broom shop / boat factory /tenem[en]ts
  • "Pulling Scur'g & C."
  • Boat shop
  • "S.P. Lod'g / Steam dyeing"
  • "Pett Drying"

All from [60]

21 Baker, Baton & Co. Wharf c. 1888[61] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between Seneca & University[6]
22 Baxter & Co. Wharf (between 1884 and 1888)[6][60][62] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between University & Union[6] The 1888 Sanborn map shows a shorter wharf with the Seattle Soap Works, which may or may not be part of the longer pier shown on the Anderson map.[6][60]
23 Almond & Phillip's Wharf (between 1884 and 1888)[6][60][62] 1889[23][24] pier/wharf Between University & Union[6] Almond & Philips Foundry[60]
24 Schwabacher's Wharf
(Schwabacher Bro's Wharf[6]
Schwabacher Dock[63])

Schwabacher's Wharf circa 1900
more images
1888[64] c. 1962[63] pier/wharf Foot of Union[6][65] The 1888 Sanborn map shows an unnamed plank wharf at this location, with no structures,[60] presumably Schwabacher's Wharf under construction. See below for post-Great-Fire history.
25 Pike Street Coal Pier,[66] S.C.&T.Co's Wharf,[22] S.C.&T. Coal Wharf[67]
Detail from an 1878 bird's-eye map.
1872[66] abandoned 1878[66] coaling pier[66] foot of Pike Street[66] This pier was connected by a roughly 1 mile (1.6 km) railway to Lake Union.[68] More than 200 feet (61 m) long and 70 feet (21 m) high. The end of the pier collapsed June 11, 1877, although it was partially repaired and continued to be used[34] until it was abandoned when the King Street Coal Wharf was built.[66]
26 Columbia Wharf[6]
(Columbia Canning Co. Wharf[60])

Left of center: Columbia Canning Co. c. 1888 or slightly earlier
(between 1884 and 1888)[6][60][62] ? pier/wharf Between Union & Pike[6]
27 Louch & Johnson Wharf (1889 or earlier)[6] ? pier/wharf Between Pike & Pine[6]
28 Denton's Wharf (1889 or earlier)[6] ? pier/wharf Between Stewart & Virginia[6]
29 Gatzert & McNaught Wharf (in 1889);[6]
McNaught's (in 1899)[69]
(1889 or earlier)[6] After 1899 pier/wharf Between Stewart & Virginia[6]
30 Squire's Wharf[6][69] c.1888[70] after 1899[69] pier/wharf Between Stewart & Virginia[6]
31 Hall's Wharf;[6]
(possibly distinct) Mannings Wharf[71])
(1888 or earlier)[71] after 1899[69] pier/wharf Between Wall & Vine[6]

North to Smith Cove

[edit]

As discussed below in section Trestle (and other) bridges, italics indicate structures shown on one or more maps, but little other evidence that they actually existed.

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Seattle Barrel Manufactury Pier 1880[72] ? Pier Foot of Lake Street (now Broad Street), Belltown.[49][73] The Seattle Barrel Manufactury (a.k.a. Seattle Barrel Manufacturing Company[72]) stood on dry land between Lake (now Broad Street) and ran northwest along the shore past Eagle to Grant (now Bay), west of West St.(now Western Avenue). The pier was at the south end of their shoreline.[49][73] This is now entirely filled, and is roughly the eastern half of the Olympic Sculpture Park, between Elliott (roughly the old shoreline) and Western. This may or may not have been the same structure as Coffman's Wharf, attested a few years later.
2 Coffman's Wharf (1889 or earlier)[6] ? pier/wharf Foot of Lake, now Broad[6]
3 Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway Ocean Dock
(S., L.S. & E. R.R. Ocean Dock[6])
(1889 or earlier?)[6] ? railroad pier Smith Cove These correspond to piers 38/88 and 39/89. Daryl C. McClary implies that although these appears on the 1890 Anderson map, they were not actually built at that time, and instead were part of the Great Northern Railway's construction of a route north out of Seattle in the early 1890s.[74]
4 Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway Coal Bunkers
(S., L.S. & E. R.R. Coal Bunkers[6])
(1889 or earlier?)[6] ? railroad pier/coal bunkers just west of Smith Cove

Ballast Island

[edit]
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Ballast Island
Ballast Island
more images
1880s,[75] possibly earlier[76] before 1900[76] artificial island just offshore near South Washington Street[76][77] Ballast Island, developed more or less by accident starting in the 1880s and survived into the post-Fire era, from ships dumping their ballast. During that time, it was home to numerous displaced people, including many Native Americans.[75] This was later the site of the circa 1900 Pier A, owned by the Pacific Coast Company; part of the remainder of Ballast Island was the site of a brick railroad station for the Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad, completed 1905, also owned by owned by the Pacific Coast Company.[78] A present-day historical marker places Ballast Island at the intersection of Alaskan Way South and South Washington Street.[77]

Trestle (and other) bridges

[edit]

Italics indicate structure shown on one or more maps, but little other evidence that they actually existed. As Matthew Klingle has written, "paper railroads... crisscrossed Puget Sound, routes planned and licensed but never built..."[79]

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Portland & Puget Sound Railroad / Union Pacific trestle Never built N/A rail trestle West Seattle, Alki Beach to Duwamish Head and beyond[6] The 1890 Anderson map shows this as a rail line coming in from the south along the Puget Sound coast, cutting inland near Alki Point, then continuing around Duwamish Head, coming onto land again and ending in the harbor area a bit south of the ferry terminal.[6] However, while it is possible that some rights of way were secured, this line was never built.[80]
2 Seattle & Southern Railroad Trestles ? ? multiple railroad trestles[6] Various trestles over Puget Sound[6] The 1890 Anderson map shows this as a rail line close to the shoreline running slightly east of south from the West Seattle wheat elevators and warehouses, crossing relatively open water (now filled) roughly along the line of Spokane Street to Pigeon Point, and continuing slightly east of south, partly on trestle over water and partly on land, to roughly Kellogg Island, then continuing in a similar direction on land.[6]
This is on the 1890 Anderson map, but may not yet have been built. There are few, if any, references to a "Seattle & Southern Railroad" as anything beyond the planning stage. At least one of these references seems to preclude it being an existing railroad in Seattle in 1889-1890.[81]
3 Railroad Avenue
On a planked area over water near Pioneer Square in the 1910s.


On the Central Waterfront, just south of Broad Street in 1934.


Near Smith Cove in the 1910s.
more images
created by ordinance 1887,[72]
parts by October 1887;,[82]
cross-bay trestle c. 1890;[83]
all by 1893.[84][45][50][60]
? multiple railroad trestles[6] Various trestles over Elliott Bay[6] By October 1887, the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (S., L.S. & E. R.R.) was running on this line on piers just offshore, from the Yesler's Wharf area north to Smith Cove just north of the S., L.S. & E. R.R. Ocean Dock, from which the line continued through Interbay, Ballard, Brooklyn (soon to be the University District and beyond along the shore of Lake Washington.[82][6]


Farther south, the 1890 Anderson map (which, as indicated above, shows rail lines that were not yet completed), shows Railroad Avenue beginning on the West Seattle shore of the bay near the wheat elevators and warehouses, heading roughly east across the bay, then turning to run due north to King Street, a block west of Commercial Street (today's First Avenue South), along the line of today's Alaskan Way South, where it meets the abovementioned line opened in 1887.[6]

According to the 1890 Anderson map, this line carried the Portland & Puget Sound Railroad (which appears never to have been built[80]), Northern Pacific Railway's Seattle Terminal Railway, and Seattle & Montana Railroad,[6] an enterprise of James J. Hill's[85][86] that began construction in May 1890 with construction north of Seattle, incorporated the S., L.S. & E. R.R., and began running north from Seattle October 12, 1891, providing a link to the Canadian Pacific Railway.[86]

The east–west line across the bay was completed by 1893.[84] A map from that year shows two significant structures built adjoining the trestle in otherwise open water:

  • P.H. McMaster Shingle Mill, south of the Downtown waterfront, at the turn in the trestle.[84]
  • American Lumber Co's Shingle Mill, west of that, a bit east of the middle of the bay.[84]
4 Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad trestle
(after 1880 Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad[87] trestle (1))
March 7, 1877[88] abandoned 1881[88] railroad trestle[88] Trestle over tideflats[88] This trestle built by Joe Surber ran south from the King Street Coal Wharf, carrying trains through what has now been filled as part of Seattle's Industrial District; the lines continued to the coal mines at Renton, Washington. It was short-lived because shipworms attacked the pilings.[88]

Henry Villard's Oregon Improvement Company bought the Seattle and Walla Walla in 1880 and renamed it the Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad.[89]

5 Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad trestle (2)
This 1881 photo shows a trestle along the C. & P.S. R.R.(2) route hugging the shore; the C. & P.S. R.R.(3) route is not yet built.
more images
1881[88] ? railroad trestle[6] Trestle over tideflats[6] Coming out of the King Street Coal Wharf, this trestle ran mainly south just off of the then-shore at the foot of Beacon Hill, carrying C. & P.S. R.R. trains through what has now been filled as part of Seattle's Industrial District, eventually re-joining the prior C. & P.S. R.R. route.[6][90]
6 Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad trestle (3)
This pre-Fire photo shows a pair of trestles along the C. & P.S. R.R.(3) route, as well as one along the C. & P.S. R.R.(2) route.
more images
(between 1881 and 1889)[91] ? railroad trestle[6] Trestle over tideflats[6] Coming out of the King Street Coal Wharf, this trestle rapidly turned south over the mudflats, carrying C. & P.S. R.R. trains on a line not far from today's First Avenue South through what has now been filled as part of Seattle's Industrial District, eventually re-joining the prior C. & P.S. R.R. routes. According to the 1890 Anderson map, the northern portion of this coincided with Railroad Avenue over the mudflats, separating when Railroad Avenue headed west across the bay; from there, this trestle ran slightly east of south, carrying Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad (C. & P.S. R.R.) and Northern Pacific trains.[6]

Since roughly 1900 there have been a series of bridges of various types running east–west roughly along the line of Spokane Street; see List of bridges in Seattle.

Since the Great Fire

[edit]

West Seattle

[edit]
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Alki–Manchester Ferry Dock 1925 1935 ferry dock Alki Beach This is presumably the substantial pier visible very near the west end of today's Alki Beach Park in two 1929 aerial photographs of Alki.[92]
2 (unnamed piers) by 1918[11] after 1918[11] several narrow piers between Alki bathing beach and Duwamish Head A 1918 Port of Seattle map shows three narrow, unnamed piers between the Municipal Bathing Beach (Alki Beach) and Duwamish Head, as well as several others around Alki Point facing onto Puget Sound, outside Elliott Bay.[11] One such pier is visible in the distance in the third photo of a Seattle Now & Then article by Paul Dorpat and Jean Sherrard.[93]
3 Luna Park
Luna Park, 1910.
more images
1907[94]

[95]

1913/
1931[94]
amusement park on pilings, natatorium[94] Duwamish Head[94] Construction began in 1906; the amusement park was open 1906-1913; the natatorium remained open until it was destroyed by arson, April 14, 1931.[94] A small portion of the former Luna Park site is now solid land behind a seawall, as part of the line of parks along the West Seattle waterfront; there is a 2.5-ton anchor at this site.[96] A 1910 listing of Seattle docks refers to the "Mexico street dock (used by Luna Park; this park is built on piles extending into the harbor, the site being leased of the West Seattle Land Improvement Company)."[8]
4 (unnamed piers)
King and Winge Boat Shop, circa 1906
In 1918, in this area, there were at least two identifiable structures and a third unnamed pier. From north to south: King & Winge Shipbuilding Co.; City of Seattle Marine Iron Works; unnamed pier.[95][97] See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above. West Seattle was not directly affected by the fire.
5 West Seattle Ferry Slip
West Seattle Ferry Slip circa 1920.
A 1918 Harbor Department map calls this "Port of Seattle West Seattle Terminal".[95] See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above. West Seattle was not directly affected by the fire.
6 (unnamed piers)
The northernmost of these piers is visible at right in this c. 1911 photo (centered on the ferry slip). A sign on the building in the pier says "Elliott Bay Yacht & Engine Co. Inc"
by 1912[9] after 1912[9] piers between West Seattle Ferry Slip & Seattle Yacht Club The 1912 Baist map shows an unnamed pier adjoining the south side of the West Seattle Ferry Slip, then three unnamed piers (the northernmost labeled "Boat Wks." as you go south toward the Yacht Club.[9] In this general area, a 1910 listing of piers in 1907 lists the "Ericson Dock and Shingle Mill" and the "Arrow Lumber and Shingle Company dock," both described as "leased of West Seattle Land and Improvement Company."[8] A 1918 Harbor Department map shows all piers here as being within the anchorage of the Yacht Club.[95]
7 King County Water Taxi terminal
(originally Elliott Bay Water Taxi terminal
Seacrest Pier[98])

King County Water Taxi terminal, 2015
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1997[98] extant dock Seacrest Park[98] The Elliott Bay Water Taxi, started its run from Downtown to West Seattle in 1997.[98] In April 2009, the route was renamed from the Elliott Bay Water Taxi to the King County Water Taxi,[99] and dock was upgraded.[98]
8 Seattle Yacht Club
(Yacht Anchorage[100][95])
1892[101] 1918[101] float & boathouse; clubhouse on shore[101] Location is now Seacrest Park. The 1892-1918 Yacht Club site was just south of the terminal for today's King County Water Taxi.[9] Since 1920, the club has been located in Montlake.[101]
9 Novelty Mill[11]
(Novelty (flour) mills,[8]
Novelty Milling Co.[100])
Novelty Mill Co.[95]

Novelty Mill in the 1890s, looking south with Seattle Terminal and Railway Elevator Co. in background.
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1893 or 1894[102] 1950s?[13] piers and building West Seattle, site of present-day restaurant "Salty's on Alki Beach"[13] (which is not on Alki Beach) Salty's is on part of the site of the Novelty Mill, "a working flour mill from the late 1890s to the mid 1950s."
10 Salty's on Alki Beach (before 1985, Beach Broiler[13])
Salty's, seen from the water, 2015
before 1948 as Beach Broiler[13] extant West Seattle restaurant largely on pilings
11 Seattle Terminal Railway and Elevator Co.
(in 1907: Northern Pacific Railway grain and coal elevators;[8]
in 1913 and 1918: West Seattle Elevator;[100][95]
in 1918: Northern Pacific Railway Grain Elevator and Wharf[11])

Seattle Terminal and Railway Elevator Co. circa 1891.
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by 1891[14] after 1918[11] multiple piers West Seattle It not clear whether this predates the Great Fire of June 1889. The 1890 Anderson map says "Wheat Elevators and Warehouses" but gives no specifics;[6] given that it shows rail lines in that area that were definitely not yet built, it is possible that this represented structures that were merely proposed or under construction. An 1891 map shows the extensive Seattle Terminal Railway and Elevator Company facility at this site.[14] This is the location of the "maze of old decaying and barnacle encrusted piers" between Salty's and Jake Block Park depicted in a 2014 YouTube video.[103]
12 "Coal Bunkers"[95] before 1918[95] after 1918[95] coal bunkers Immediately northeast of West Seattle Elevators[95] Possibly Pacific Coast Coal Co. There was apparently a second Pacific Coast Coal Co. bunker (besides the one on the east shore of the bay) somewhere in West Seattle as of 1913.[104]
13 Pier 2 (in 1912: Colmans Creosote Plant;[105] in 1913, 1918: Colman Creosoting Works[100][11] or Coleman Creosoting Works[95])
Fire at the creosote pier, 1947


Barges at Pier 2 in 2010


This recreational pier photographed 2019 in Jack Block Park is actually the east side of the former main slip of the creosoting plant.
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1909[106] extant railway pier north of Jack Block Park, Industrial District West There is quite a bit of disagreement in sources as to whether this is properly Colman or Coleman. However, File:Panoramic view of Harbor Island, between 1912 and 1917 (MOHAI 5199).jpg clearly shows a sign on the roof saying "Colman Creosoting Works". North edge of Industrial District West. A rail spur runs north under a bridge in Jack Block Park to reach this small pier northwest of Terminal 5. The 1912 Baist map shows "Colmans Creosote Plant" at this location.[105] A 2004 EPA report reports successive owners of the creosote plant: J.M. Coleman Company (1909); West Coast Wood Preserving Company (jointly owned by J. M. Coleman Co. and Pacific Creosoting) (1930); Baxter-Wyckoff Company (1959); Wyckoff Company (1964); Pacific Sound Resources (1991); Port of Seattle (1994)[106]

In 1963 the Baxter-Wyckoff property included an "East Log Wharf," "North Piers and Marine Slip," and a "West Barge Slip."[107]


Crowley Maritime's[108] PSAVL Hydro-Train ("Puget Sound Alaska Van Lines"), after 1969 Alaska Hydro-Train,[109] used Pier 2 from its inception in 1963[108] until early 1971.[109] Railroad cars would "roll onto 400-foot steel barges destined for Alaska."[109] Crowley retired the Alaska Hydro-Train name and others in 1992.[110]

14 Schwager Nettleton[105] (Schwager-Nettleton Saw Mill,[100] Schwager-Nettleton Mill Co.,[11] Schwager & Nettleton Lumber Mills[95])
Schwager Nettleton Mill, 1913
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1910[111] closed 1965[111] sawmill & lumber yard[105] north of Terminal 5; now part of site of Jack Block Park[105] North edge of Industrial District West.[105] The 1912 Baist map shows this at a location within what the Southwest Harbor Cleanup and Redevelopment Project: Environmental Impact Statement shows as the "Lockheed Property".[112] A 1967 water pollution study attests a Nettleton pier shipping lumber by barge in 1963.[107]
15 Lockheed Property[112][113]

(Lockheed Shipyard Number 2;[113][114]
1918: Frank Waterhouse & Co. site[95] before 1959: Puget Sound Bridge and Dredge[113]

1959-1965: Puget Sound Bridge and Drydock Company

1965-1987: Lockheed Shipyard and Construction Company)[115]

1971: Piers G and H[115])

Remains of piers at Lockheed Property, 2019
before 1956[116] ceased operations 1987[113] drydocks, shipyard north of Terminal 5; now split between Jack Block Park and Terminal 5[112] Bounded by Elliott Bay (north), West Waterway of the Duwamish (east), Terminal 5 (south), Wyckoff (former Coleman, west)[113] Operated by Lockheed from 1959 to 1987.[113] A 1967 water pollution study attests two piers and three drydocks in 1963.[107] Its final configuration had five piers: west to east, the first was unnumbered; the others were numbered as Pier 24, 23, 22, and 21, respectively. All piers extended to the north. Just west of pier 21 was a drydock.[117] The western portion of the land had been the West Seattle Landfill, closed in the mid-1960s. There is also an adjacent reference to one "Puget Sound Dredging Co. Pier", which may or may not be part of the same property.[118] After Lockheed left, the land passed to the CEM Development Company, which leased portions to the Purdy Company (who stored scrap metal there) and Salmon Bay Steel (who stored scrap metal and slag).[118] By 1994, the site had been purchased by the Port of Seattle.[118]
16 Jack Block Park
(Terminal 5 Park)

Observation tower, Jack Block Park 2012.
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1998[119] extant park with structures including observation tower north edge of Industrial District West The park was established after a Superfund cleanup.[120] Known as Terminal 5 Park from its 1998 opening until 2001.[119]
17 Wilson Shipyard[11] by 1918[11] after 1918[11] shipyard Industrial District West, north of Ames Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. A 1918 Port of Seattle map shows this as a distinct shipyard immediately north of Ames.[11]
18 Ames Shipbuilding & Drydock Company[11][95]
Ames Shipbuilding Company 1917. Colemans Creosote Plant and Schwager Nettleton are in the middle ground (the last row of buildings).
1916[121] (after 1960)[121] shipyard and cargo-handling facility "about 20 acres"[121] in Industrial District West, north of Spokane Street This was located on part of the site of present-day Terminal 5. It included "a machine shop, blacksmith shop, boiler shop, plate and pattern shops, carpenter and coppersmith shops, and ... a large dining hall and hospital for its employees" and eventually the salmon-packing facility for Libby, McNeil and Libby Company.[121]
19 Drummond Lighterage Co.[11][95] by 1918[11] after 1918[11] barge dock Industrial District West, south of Ames Shipbuilding and Drydock Co.
20 Terminal 5
(Seattle Terminal 5)

Terminal 5, 2019
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1964[122] extant container port / marine terminal, mainly on landfill 86 acres[123] or 172 acres[122] in Industrial District West, north of Spokane Street Container operations at Terminal 5 began in 1964[122] and were suspended in July 2014; as of 2019 activities are underway to rework the terminal.[123] A 1967 water pollution study attests a "Banana Terminal" here in 1963 (a year before the official opening of the container port), as well as "Receipt and shipment of general cargo including containerized cargo in foreign and domestic trade; receipt of automobiles and fuel oil; shipment of scrap metal."[124] In 1971: Salmon Terminals, Inc., Sea-Land Service, Inc., United Fruit Co. (Banana Terminal)[115]
21 Port Commission Iowa Street Ferry Landing[11] by 1918[11] after 1918[11] ferry landing Industrial District West, southwest corner of West Waterway A 1918 Port of Seattle map shows this on the west side of the West Waterway, almost exactly at the south end of the part of the West Waterway that runs straight north–south. Below this point the Waterway angles southeast.[11]
22 Maritime Boat and Engine Works
Maritime Boat and Engine Works, 1920.

Elliott Bay Shipbuilding Company circa 1918.

1917. Probably the West Waterway Lumber Co. in foreground. Fisher Flouring Mill on Harbor Island in background.

Tugs from Island Tug & Barge on this site, seen from Harbor Island, 2023.
(by 1918)[125] (closed 1936)[126] shipyard immediately north of Spokane Street on the West Waterway of the Duwamish, Industrial District West.[127] Moved to Salmon Bay and renamed as Maritime Shipyards, 1936.[126]

Maritime Boat and Engine Works business is not indicated on the 1918 Port of Seattle map; southeast of the Iowa Street Ferry Landing it shows, from northwest to southeast (headed away from Elliott Bay to what is steadily more specifically the Duwamish River):

  • Alaska Pac. Nav. Co. Shipyard
  • West Waterway Lumber Co.
  • Elliott Bay Shipbuilding Co.
  • Erickson Shipbuilding Co.
All from,[11] all spellings theirs.

Similarly, but not identically, from the 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District:

  • Alaska-Pacific Shipbuilding Co.
  • West Waterway Lumber Co.
  • Index Granite Co.
  • National Canning Co.
  • Elliott Bay Yacht & Engine Co.
All from,[95] all spellings theirs.

The 1971 harbor map lists West Waterway Lumber Co. here as Pier 7.[115]

Harbor Island

[edit]

Harbor Island is an artificial island in the mouth of the Duwamish River, where it empties into Elliott Bay. Built by the Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company, when Harbor Island was completed in 1909 it was the largest artificial island in the world, at 350 acres (1.4 km²).[128] It appears that no substantial businesses had opened on the island in 1911.[129] Since 1912, the island has been used for commercial and industrial activities. Harbor Island was made from 24 million yd³ (18 million m³) of earth removed in the Jackson and Dearborn Street regrades and dredged from the bed of the Duwamish.[128]

This list goes clockwise around Harbor Island, starting from the south end.

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Port of Seattle Harbor Island Marina
Harbor Island Marina, 2007
more images
? extant marina, mainly for pleasure boats Harbor Reach, south end of Harbor Island,[130] especially West Waterway
2 Jim Clark Marina
Jim Clark Marina, 2023
1973[131] extant marina for pleasure boats Harbor Island, West Waterway, south of Spokane Street and railroad
3 Nieder & Marcus[95]
Abandoned Tilbury Cement towers, 2023
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by 1918[95] after 1918[95] ? Harbor Island, West Waterway, immediately north of Spokane Street[95] (Nature of Nieder & Marcus is unknown, and the name wasn't perfectly legible and could be slightly different.) More recently, this site was Tilbury Cement.
4 Terminal 18 Park[132]
Terminal 18 Park, 2023
more images
? extant public park Harbor Island at Hanford Street, West Waterway 1.1 acre public park[132] Near here in 1918 was the Mullins Saw Mill Co.[133]
5 Campbell Machine Works[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] machine works southwest Harbor Island, West Waterway, small parcel southwest of Mullins Saw Mill Co.[95]
6 Fisher Mill[134]
(Fisher Flouring Mills Co.,[100][105][133][135][95] Pendleton Mill,[134] Pier 8—Fisher Flouring Mills Co.[115])

Fisher Flouring Mills Co., circa 1911.
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1911[134] extant (ruin) flour mill, grain elevator, pier southwest Harbor Island, West Waterway In 1963, the mill was shipping and receiving grain, feed, and flour by barge.[136] Fisher Communications sold the mill to Pendleton in 2001, but Pendleton closed the mill a year later.[134] The mill soon passed into the hands of King County; sound stages for film and video opened there in 2021.[137]
7 Chas. H. Lilly Co. Flour, Feed[133][95]
The Lilly flour mill can be partly seen behind the sailboat in this 1913 photo.
between 1911[129] and 1913[138] after 1918[133] immediately north of Fisher Flouring Mills[133] Charles Lilly was the "Lilly" of Lilly Bogardus
8 Standard Boiler Works[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] boiler works immediately north of Chas. H. Lilly Co.[95]
9 Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company Ship yards,[133][44]
(Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging Co. Shipbuilding plant;[95] Lockheed's Yard No. 1;[44] Piers 9 & 10—Lockheed Shipbuilding & Construction Co.[115])
between 1911[129] and 1918[133][95] in ruins as of 2019 piers Harbor Island near Seattle Bulk Shipping, West Waterway A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 refers to "Puget Sound Bridge & Drydock Co., Plant No. 1", with four piers, in what appears to be a list going counterclockwise around Harbor Island.[136] The City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District, February 1918, shows six piers.[95]
1945 US Navy aerial survey:[139]
10 Arco (Atlantic Richfield Co.[44])
Arco, in 2011
? extant pier Harbor Island, West Waterway A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 refers to "Richfield Oil Corp. Wharf, Pier 11", in what appears to be a list going counterclockwise around Harbor Island.[136] 1971 harbor map also calls it "Pier 11" but refers to "Atlantic Richfield Co."[115] (reflectimg the 1966 merger).
11 Vigor Shipyard
(formerly Todd Drydock & Repairing Co,[133] Todd Shipyard[140])

Todd Shipyard in 1983


Vigor/Todd Shipyard in 2011
more images
1918 extant shipyard, multiple docks and piers northwest Harbor Island, West Waterway and north side Tracing its history back to 1887 via Central Waterfront shipyards Moran Bros. Company, Seattle Construction and Drydock Company, etc.,[141] the company was acquired in 1916 by William H. Todd,[142] and moved to Harbor Island in 1918.[140] A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 indicates Todd as having seven active piers and four drydocks, as well as owning an unused "Plant A, Pier 18".[143] The 1971 harbor map shows Todd with several multi-vessel piers, Pier 12 on the West Waterway and Piers 13 & 14 on the north side of Harbor Island, as well as sharing Pier 15 with Mobil Oil.[115] Todd built 10 Gleaves-class destroyers concurrently in 1941. In 2010 Todd was acquired by Vigor Industrial.[140] In July 2019, The Carlyle Group and Stellex Capital Management agreed to acquire and merge Vigor Industrial with MHI Holdings LLC.[144]
1945 US Navy aerial survey:[139]
12 Maxum Petroleum pier
Maxum Petroleum, 2011
? extant pier Harbor Island, north side Maxum may be the same facility that a 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 lists as "Mobile Oil Co." with two piers,[145] which in turn is certainly the same as Pier 15 that the 1971 harbor map shows as shared by Todd Shipyard and Mobil Oil.[115] At roughly this location, the 1918 Port of Seattle map shows a very small pier labeled "Harbor Island Manufacturing Co.",[133] also shown on that year's City of Seattle Harbor Department Map.[95] Kroll's 1920 map shows the site as "General Petroleum," with no pier.[146]
13 Pier 16[145][147] (1963: Coastal Car Co. Barge Dock;[145] 1971: Alaska Hydro-Train Coastal Co.[115]) by 1963[145] after 1971[115] pier Harbor Island, north side, where tracks reach shore between 13th Ave SW and 11th Ave SW[147] As of 2019, there does not appear to be any significant pier protruding from land at this site.
14 Pier 17[147]
(Puget Sound Tug & Barge,[148]
Crowley Marine Services Pier 17;[149] 1971: Alaska Hydro-Train, Puget Sound Tug & Barge, United Transportation Co.[115])
by 1963[145] extant pier Harbor Island, north side, just east of 13th Ave SW[147]
15 East Waterway Dock & Warehouse Co.[133] between 1911[129] and 1918[133] after 1918[133] dock and warehouse Harbor Island, East Waterway Now part of Terminal 18.
16 Terminal 18[150][151]
(T-18[151][115])

Terminal 18 in 2006 (roughly the east/near half of Harbor Island)
by 1971 extant container terminal[151] roughly the east half of Harbor Island 196 of Harbor Island's 430 acres.[151] 1971 harbor map lists "POS [Port of Seattle] container terminal, Matson Navigation Co., U.S. Navy, United Export Packers".[115]
17 Pier 19
(Shell Oil Co. Wharf[145][115])

Shell facility on Harbor Island, 2011
by 1963[145] after 1971[115] pier Harbor Island, East Waterway[152] Now part of Terminal 18.[146] Shell still has a large facility roughly in the center of Harbor Island.
18 Pier 20[145][146]
(East Water Dock,[146]
East Waterway Terminal[145][115])
by 1963[145] after 1971[115] pier Harbor Island, East Waterway 1971 harbor map lists "POS [Port of Seattle] general-cargo terminal, Foreign Trade Zone No. 5, Tank Farm".[115] Now part of Terminal 18.[146]
19 Rogers, Brown & Co. by 1918[95] after 1918[95] ? Harbor Island, East Waterway, north of J. F. Duthie & Company
20 J. F. Duthie & Company[153][95] (Duthie & Co. Shipbuilders[133])
J. F. Duthie & Company, 1917
1916[154] between 1920[153] and 1922[155] numerous shipyard buildings Harbor Island, East Waterway The company predates this particular shipyard, and lasted beyond its closure. It was founded in 1911, and built at least four ships before 1916; in 1928 the company name was changed to Wallace Bridge Company.[153]
21 Pier 23 (1971: Pioneer Sand and Gravel Co.[115]) by 1963[145] extant tugboat/barge wharf[156] Harbor Island, East Waterway north of Spokane Street formerly (1963) Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co. Wharf[145]
22 Harley Marine Services
Harley Marine Services, 2012
? extant wharf/quay Harbor Island, East Waterway just north of Spokane Street

The 1971 harbor map shows much of Harbor Island south of Spokane Street, along with the area across the East Waterway on the Seattle mainland, as Terminal 102, POS [Port of Seattle] Container Facility.[115]

Mudflats south of King Street

[edit]

The mudflats south of King Street were filled in the early 20th century, forming present-day Sodo and the portion of the Industrial District east of the East Waterway of the Duwamish. Prior to that, contained numerous buildings on pilings.

For the post-Fire section, we are confining this to structures east of Commercial Street (later First Avenue South); structures to the west of that correspond more or less to the present-day waterfront. The mudflats south of King Street were filled in at various times starting July 29, 1895[157] and extending into the late 1910s or, possibly in some cases, the 1920s.[158]

This list runs roughly counterclockwise, first running north up the east shore of the mudflats then turning to include both the north and west shore of the mudflats, as well as a few buildings in the middle of the flats along the early 20th-century rail lines before landfill was complete.

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Hemrich & Co's Brewery This area was not directly affected by the fire. The brewery complex has continuity down to the present time, but the filling of the Industrial District left it far from the bay. Rainier was last brewed there in 1999; the buildings were renovated into offices, apartments, and (since 2011) a small brewery called Emerald City Brewing.[159] See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above.
2 Palouse Feed Mill Warehouse See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above. This area was not directly affected by the fire.
3 Slaughterhouses, including Frye and Bruhn
Frye and Bruhn, meat packers, circa 1905
c.1888 ? slaughterhouses on pilings West of Grant Street on east shore of Elliott Bay, between Stacy and Plum This area was not directly affected by the fire. The single slaughterhouse of the late 1880s soon became an entire slaughterhouse district. Filling the Industrial District left this district far from the bay. The 1905 Baist map shows Frye Bruhn & Co. Port Packers west of 9th Avenue, south of Walker St., partly on pilings,[160] with three other unidentified slaughterhouses on pilings between Walker and Plum Street (a block south of Holgate)[161] This is now where Interstate 5 comes through. See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above.
4 Seattle Brewing & Malting Co. by 1905[161] after 1905[161] brewery on pilings foot of Holgate, west of 9th Avenue[161] This land would be filled soon after 1905
5 McDonald & Rice's Planing Mill See further discussion in the section "Before the Great Fire", above. This area was not directly affected by the fire.
6 (miscellaneous small buildings on pilings)
At lower right, this c. 1898 photo shows small buildings on pilings, the "Old Wharf" at southwest of Washington Iron Works, and part of the ironworks property.
by c. 1898[162] between 1905 and 1909[161][163] miscellaneous west of Seattle Boulevard along the waterfront (roughly Seventh or Eight Avenue)[161] A 1909 photo shows that these were gone by that date.[163]
7 Washington Iron Works by 1905[161] after 1905[161] ironworks on pilings between Judkins & Plummer, west of Seventh Avenue[161] At the southwest of this property, the 1905 Baist Map indicates an "Old Wharf"[161] A 1909 photo shows it still clearly on pilings, and minus the old wharf.[163] The 1912 Baist map shows the ironworks still there, minus the wharf, and now spanning Seattle Boulevard; it does not indicate whether was still mudflat at that time, or filled.[164]
8 (no known name for the planked area as a whole)
Northern Pacific freight warehouse c. 1891.


Apartment buildings over the mud flats, just east of 6th on South Charles Street, 1908.
c. 1889 c. 1904 planked area over mudflats south of King Street, east of Commercial Street After the fire, the planked area south of King Street was rebuilt and expanded. The Northern Pacific rail facilities shown on the 1893 Sanborn map shows a similar configuration to the C. & P.S. R.R. infrastructure from the 1888 map: a turntable, a roundhouse, car repair and machine shops, warehouses.[165] East of the station between Lane and Weller, also on planks, were some additional structures: the Buchanan and Brooke Company Wagon and Carriage Works east of Fourth Avenue S, the Duwamish Dairy east of Fifth Avenue S, and a few smaller structures.[165] By 1905, this area was taken over by a new configuration of railroads running straight north–south.[164]
9 Great Northern Freight Depot
Great Northern Freight Depot, circa 1906
by 1905[161] after 1905[161] railway freight terminal south of King Street, east side of Second
10 Northern Pacific Freight Depot by 1905[161] after 1905[161] railway freight terminal south of King Street, east side of Second
11 J.W. Fales Paper Co. by 1912[164] after 1912[164] building on pilings between Norman and Plummer Street, between Fourth and Fifth Ave S.[164] This was along the Oregon & Washington Railroad tracks that, at that time, ran north–south roughly down the middle of the mudflats south of King Street.[164]
12 U.S. Steel Products Co. by 1912[164] after 1912[164] building on pilings Connecticut Street (now S. Royal Brougham Way) and Norman Street, between Fourth and Fifth Ave S.[164] This was along the Oregon & Washington Railroad tracks.[164]
13 Vulcan Iron Works
Vulcan Iron Works, 1910
more images
by 1909[163] after 1912[164] ironworks on piling between Atlantic Street (now S. Edgar Martinez Drive) and Connecticut Street (now S. Royal Brougham Way) between Fourth and Fifth Ave S.[164] This was along the Oregon & Washington Railroad tracks.[164]

Waterfront south of Atlantic Street / Edgar Martinez

[edit]

The present-day east shore of Elliott Bay in the Industrial District and Sodo south of South King Street is entirely a product of landfill in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[166] The list here runs approximately south to north, going north to about historic Atlantic Street (now S. Edgar Martinez Drive), just south of the present-day stadiums.

As of the 2010s, the vast bulk of this area between Spokane Street and S. Edgar Martinez Drive has been combined into a container terminal, Port of Seattle Terminal 30.[147] The only exceptions are:

  • a small disused area
  • Pier 28
  • At the north end of this area, the Coast Guard facility, Pier 36[167]

All from [147] except as noted.

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Barton & Co.[168] by June 30, 1917[169] after 1918[168] packing company under the viaduct/bridge at Spokane Street Barton & Co., meatpackers, known for "Circle W." meat products[170][169]
2 Elliott Bay Mill Co. (Lumber)[168][95] (unidentified sawmill[105]) by 1912[105] after 1912[105] sawmill immediately north of Spokane Street, East Waterway
3 Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company by 1912[105] between 1912[105] and 1918[168] shipyard, manufacturing facility, etc. between Spokane and Hanford Streets, south of canal, East Waterway[105] The company shows at this location on the 1912 Baist map, but the 1918 Port of Seattle map shows it as having moved to Harbor Island.[105][168] The canal is no longer there (and may never have been, beyond being a cleared spot on the right bank of the Duwamish: David B. Williams raises the possibility that maps from the era may be inaccurate in showing it[171]); this would now be roughly at E. Marginal Way, south of S. Hinds St. By 1940, the company had moved to Harbor Island[172]
4 Spokane Street Dock[173]
(Port Commission, Spokane;[168] Spokane Street Terminal,[174][175][176] Port of Seattle Spokane St, Pier[95]
[115] after May 1, 1944: Pier 24[173][115])

Aerial view, 1960. Spokane Street Dock below, Hanford Street Dock above.
1917[175] after 1971[115] cold storage[176] between Spokane and Hanford Streets, south of turning basin between piers 24 and 25, East Waterway,[174] roughly the former Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company location. Port of Seattle facility.[175] Seven-story concrete cold storage building.[175] In 1963, the terminal was mainly focused in fish and ice, and had piers on its north and west sides,[174] the north being the turning basin. 1971 harbor map shows the turning basin still there, mentions Auto Warehousing, Inc. and Rainier-Port Cold Storage.[115] At some later date, the turning basin was eliminated, and this was combined into Pier 25 as a container facility, the new Pier 25.[146]
5 Hefferman Dry Dock Company[104][177]
(Hepperman Dry Dock Company [sic][105])
by 1912[105] after 1913[104] dry dock facility north side of mouth of canal, south of Hanford Street, East Waterway
6 Hanford Street Dock[173]
(Hanford Street Terminal,[168][176]
Hanford Street Wharf;[178]
Hanford Street Grain Terminal;[146] Port of Seattle Hanford St. Pier;[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 25[173][115])

Grain terminal at Hanford Street; Sears (now Starbucks headquarters) in background, 1917.
more images
1915[178][179] 1971[179] grain terminal including hay shed, transit shed north of turning basin between piers 24 and 25, south of Hanford Street, East Waterway[176] Port of Seattle facility. In 1963, the terminal was south and west sides,[174] the south being the turning basin,[146] which is still there on the 1971 harbor map.[115] 1971 harbor map indicates Cargill, Inc. at the grain terminal.[115] When the turning basin was eliminated the grain terminal was torn down and this was combined with Pier 25 as a container facility, the new Pier 25.[146] Its function was effectively replaced by the Terminal 86 Grain Facility; they had a slight overlap in operation.[179]
7 Isaacson Iron Works[173]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 26[173])

J. F. Duthie & Company shipbuilders at 2917 Whatcom Avenue
between 1912 and 1944[173][180] 1983[181] steel mill[181] East Waterway, south of Milwaukee Road facilities The 1918 Port of Seattle map shows "Pacific Const'n & Engineering Co." at approximately this location;[168] Similarly, Pacific Coast Const. & Eng. Co. on the City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District of that year.[95] Frank Waterhouse & Company's Pacific Ports (1919) gives the address for that as 2917 Whatcom Avenue;[182] Whatcom Avenue was the extension of Railroad Avenue south through the newly filled lands, along the east margin of the Duwamish Waterway.[183] An image of J. F. Duthie & Company shipbuilders in the collection of the University of Washington Libraries, dating from roughly the same era, gives that identical address for that company.[184]

Isaacson Iron Works began as a blacksmith shop in 1907. During World War II, Isaacson Steel incorporated the Jorgensen Steel Works.[185] Eventually the largest steel mill in the Pacific Northwest,[181] the Isaacson Forge division was sold to the Earle M. Jorgensen Company in 1965.[186] The Isaacson plant closed in 1983, with all equipment shipped to China.[181] This area was eventually combined with into the new Pier 25 container facility.[146]

8 Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road) facilities
(C.M.&S.P.,[95] R. R. Ferry Slip (C. M. & St. P. Ry.),[100][105] C.M.&St.P.R.R. Wharf & Car Ferry,[168] Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Car Ferry Slip,[146] C. M. & St. P. Ry. (Sound & Coast Dock),[100] The Milwaukee Road,[115] Milwaukee Ferry Slip,[173] after May 1, 1944: Pier 27;[173]
Milwaukee Ocean Dock,[173] after May 1, 1944: Pier 28.[173])

Milwaukee Road facilities, 1915


Weiding and Independent Fisheries, 1912
by 1907[8] after 1971[115] freight house, sidings foot of Forrest Street Freight house on north side of Forrest, yard with sidings on south side, with a small waterway in between. A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 shows Pier 27 as "Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Car Ferry Slip"; it refers to the northern pier simply as "Pier 28".[174] A map in a 1973 Seattle government report shows "Milwaukee Road" still having a facility in this area.[187]

1971 harbor map shows American Mail Line at Pier 28.[115]

The currently designated Pier 28 may not correspond exactly to the area so designated in 1944. According to Paul Dorpat's 2005 book, the Lander and Stacy Street piers had been incorporated into Pier 28 before the big consolidation of Terminal 30.[146]

9 until 1913: Weiding and Independent Fisheries[105][188]
(Wieding (sic) Fish Co.;[100]
after 1913: National Independent Fisheries Co,[168][188] although the 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District still shows "Weiding Fish Co."[95])
between 1907[189] and 1912[105] 1922?[188] fish packing facility? on pier west of Milwaukee Road freight house Became National Independent Fisheries in 1913; company liquidated August 2, 1922.[188]
10 Commercial Boiler Works Wharf[168][95][100] by 1912[105] after 1915[190] pier with structures immediately north of Milwaukee Road freight house, south of Lander (Might have been part of the Milwaukee Road facility.) From shore to open water:
  • Western Iron Works
  • Seattle Machine Works
  • Commercial Boiler Works

A 1910 listing of piers in 1907 indicates Oregon & Washington Railway in this area; it might have been the same facility.[8]

11 Lander Street Wharf[191] (South Pier 2;,[192] Lander Street Terminal,[168] Port of Seattle Lander St. Pier & Stacy St. Pier[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 29[173]);
Stacy Street Dock[173] (Stacy Street Terminal[168]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 30[173]);
and Port of Seattle Grain Terminal.

Lander and Stacy Street docks October 9, 1914...

...and in 1915.
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c. 1914[193] after 1971[115] piers / wharves between Lander and Stacy Streets (grain terminal extended further), East Waterway Port of Seattle facilities,[173] used by (among others) the American-Hawaiian Steamship Co.,[44] and (as of 1971) Black Ball Freight Service.[115] These were west of the Sears that is now (2019) Starbucks headquarters.

Immediately before the piers in this area were all combined as a single container terminal, Terminal 30 served from 2003 to 2009 as a temporary terminal for Alaska cruises by Holland America Line and Princess Cruises, which relocated in 2009 to a permanent facility at Pier 91.[194]

12 San Juan Fish & Packing Ice Co.[105]
(San Juan Fish Co.,[100][8] San Juan Fish & Packing Co.,[168] San Juan Fish Dock,[173] San Juan Fishing Pack Co.[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 31[173]
1971: Rothschild Int'l Stevedoring Co.[115])

San Juan Fish Dock, 1913
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by 1911[129] after 1963;[174] probably after 1971[115] fish processing plant on long pier foot of Stacy Street, and to the north of that, East Waterway 1971 reference has it as a stevedoring operation, not a fish processing plant,[115] but presumably the same pier.
13 Nilson & Kelez Shipbuilding Co.[168][195]) by 1918[168] after 1918[168] shipyard between San Juan Fish Dock and Standard Oil, East Waterway The 1912 Baist map shows this as an unnamed planked area with a saw mill and a machine shop[105]
14 Standard Oil Co. Oil Wharf[100][8][105][168][115]
(Standard Oil,[95] Standard Oil Dock,[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 32[173])

Standard Oil facility, 1905
by c. 1905[196] after 1973[187] oil wharf and (on shore) complex of oil tanks[105] between Walker and Holgate, East Waterway A small, adjacent inland property may have been the world's first gas station (1907).[197]
15 Hammond Milling[100][105][168] (Hammond Mill Co.[95])
The Hammond Mill was the rightmost of the three waterfront mills in this 1906 photo (Centennial and Albers to its left)
by 1906[198][199] between 1913[104] and 1944[173] flour mill north of Holgate, East Waterway Along with Albers and Centennial Mills, part of the "flour milling district".[105][198][199] A 1910 listing of piers in 1907 mentions Hammond, but lists them farther south, between Standard Oil and San Juan Fish Company; they may have had an earlier facility there.[8]
16 Telephone Pole Yard,[173] Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone[115]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 33;[173])
by 1944[173] after 1971[115] telephone pole yard south of Associated Oil Dock A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 does not mention this facility, so it may have been gone by then.[174] Paul Dorpat's 2005 book specifically says it has "disappeared".[146]
17 Associated Oil Dock,[173] Phillips Petroleum Co.[115]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 34;[173]
in 1963: Tidewater Oil Company[174])
by 1944[173] after 1971[115] oil dock south of Albers Bros. Milling Co.
18 Oregon Boiler by 1912[105] after 1912[105] manufacturing facility south of Albers Bros. Milling Co. The 1912 Baist map shows this on the shore (possibly on land, possibly on planking) south of Albers Bros.[105]
19 Albers Bros. Milling Co.[8][105][168][100][95]
(before May 1, 1944: Albers Bros. Milling Co. Dock[173]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 35[173])

Loading up at Albers Mill in 1906.
by 1906[200][199] after 1944;[173] disused by 1963[174] flour mill south of Massachusetts Street, East Waterway Along with Hammond and Centennial Mills, part of the "flour milling district".[105][198] Inland of the mill in 1912 were a hay and grain warehouse and "Plaster Co. Furniture Fact[ory] 3".[105][199]
20 Jack Perry Memorial Shoreline Public Access (Jack Perry Memorial Park)
Old pier, probably a remnant of the Albers Dock, 2007.
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? extant shoreline access park 1700 East Marginal Way S., south of Massachusetts Street, East Waterway near the historic site of Albers Milling
21 City of Seattle Fire Wharf[168] (Fireboat Snoqualmie[95]) by 1918[168][95] after 1918[168][95] fire wharf between Albers Mill and Skinner & Eddy, East Waterway[168]
22 before 1917: Seattle Dock Company's Re-plat[167]

1917-1920: Skinner & Eddy's shipbuilding plant No. 2[168][167][95]

Fire at Golden West Baking Co., Seattle, September 24, 1909


Skinner and Eddy shipyard, 1917
by 1912[105] closed 1920[167] shipyard and various other structures north of Massachusetts Street, East Waterway, extending slightly north of the foot of S. Edgar Martinez Drive (formerly Atlantic Street); at times, this included about 10 acres north of Atlantic Street. The 1912 Baist map shows a variety of buildings, including Golden Baking Co. (sic: actually Golden West Baking Co.), NW Dairy Co. an unnamed meatpacking company, Hofius Steel Equipment, and Letson & Burpee, besides Seattle Dock Company's own shipyard.[105] Interstate Fisheries Co. at this location (originally "Inter-State Fisheries") went public in 1902,[201] and in 1913 had 190 feet (58 m) of dock frontage,[100] and in 1907, prior to their opening of a large facility north of Broad Street, Union Oil Company of California had a facility here;[8] the facility is still shown on a 1911 map.[129] Beginning in April 1917, during World War I, the Skinner & Eddy Corporation first leased and (in June 1918) purchased all of this property, as well as further property to the north that was owned by Centennial Mill. However, by 1920, the war's end and economic depression resulted in an end to Skinner & Eddy shipbuilding operations. The property passed to the United States Shipping Board and, in 1923, was sold to the Port of Seattle, who, in turn, sold it to the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, which soon thereafter merged into the Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company, which then changed its name to the Pacific Steamship Company.[167]
23
1925-1940: Pacific Steamship Company[202]

1940-1958[167] or 1960:[202] U.S. Army Seattle Port of Embarkation[202] (before May 1, 1944: Piers A, B, C, D; after May 1, 1944: Piers 36, 37, 38, 39;[173] also, in September 1955 the port of embarkation was renamed Seattle Army Terminal[167])

since 1966: United States Coast Guard Station Seattle[203] (Pier 36,[167] U. S. Coast Guard Integrated Support Command Seattle,[167] U. S. Coast Guard Base Seattle[202])


Pier 39, 1946


Coast Guard base, 2007


Seen from Alaskan Way, 2011. Museum in foreground.
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1925[202] extant 1925-1940: steamship dock

1940-1958 or 1960: U.S. Army Port of Embarkation

1958 or 1960-1965: Army Corps of Engineers District Headquarters

since 1966: USCG facility[202]
This is the same location as the Seattle Dock Company's Re-plat and Skinner & Eddy's shipbuilding plant No. 2.[167]


Pacific Steamship's building (BLDG 1) was "a very modern passenger and freight terminal" when it was built in 1925,[146] and remains the hub of this facility nearly a century later.[202] At least part of the Pacific Steamship facility was abandoned and became part of a Hooverville in the late 1930s, before being repurposed as a Port of Embarkation. The Hooverville was bulldozed April 10, 1941.[167] Since 1965, the piers have belonged to the Port of Seattle, who lease it to the Coast Guard. It is the only substantial military facility left in King County.[202] Includes Coast Guard Museum Northwest.
1971 harbor map lists Pier 36 as "POS [Port of Seattle] general-cargo terminal".[115]
Pier 37, built 1941 for the Port of Seattle as a general cargo terminal was taken over in 1960 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as its District Headquarters[202] The Port of Seattle reacquired Pier 37 in 1965, but it continued to function as the Corps of Engineers District HQ at least until 1971.[115]
By 1971, Pier 38 was gone,[115] and Pier 39 was listed as a "POS [Port of Seattle] OCP terminal".[115]

Waterfront from Atlantic Street to King Street

[edit]
Terminal 46, 2009, seen from the Columbia Center.

The former S. Atlantic Street is now known as S. Edgar Martinez Drive. From here north, the waterfront faces the open water of Elliott Bay, rather than the channelized Duwamish River. Beginning in the early 1980s, the waterfront area roughly between S. Edgar Martinez Drive and King Street were combined into a 3-berth container terminal, Port of Seattle Terminal 46.[147][204] All of the waterways between the piers were filled in.[204] As late as 1971, the Port of Seattle still distinguished Piers 42 and 43,[115] and when the current three-berth configuration was first implemented, the southernmost berth was still known for a time as Pier 37 (see prior section), the other two both as Pier 46.[204]

Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Centennial Mill[100][8][199][167]
Centennial Mill, 1900
view east from Centennial Mill, 1903
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1898[199] 1917[167] flour mill north of Atlantic (now Edgar Martinez)[164] Along with Hammond and Albers Mills, part of the "flour milling district".[164][198][199] In 1912, the Centennial Mill pier was also home to United Collieries Co. and Hammond Warehouse Co., with a furniture warehouse and an iron forge.[164] Torn down in 1917 for the northern part of Skinner & Eddy Plant No. 2.[167]

There were extensive structures on the pier besides the mill itself. In the 1903 view to the east shown here, only the iron works barely discernible in the background at top is on the far (east) side of Railroad Avenue.
2 Northern Fish Co.[161]
Northern Fish Co. pier seen from atop Centennial Mill, 1903
by 1905[161] after 1912[164] feed & fuel company, engine works, lumber yard.[164] south of Connecticut (now Royal Brougham)[164][161] 1903 photo shows signs for Northern Fish Co. and United Parking Co.[205]
3 C.&P.S. Log Spur[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] railway spur at Connecticut (now Royal Brougham)[95]- "C.&P.S." is presumably Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad. That name had actually gone out of use in 1916, when that became the Pacific Coast Railroad Company.[206]
4 Black's Replat[164] by 1912[164] after 1912[164] pier with a variety of small businesses north of Connecticut (now Royal Brougham)[164] Buildings on the pier included (roughly from dry land to open water) "N.W. Iron Works, Alaska Boiler Shop, American Iron & Wire Wks, Elevators & Hoisting Machinery, Boiler Wks."[164] The 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District labels this area as "Steel Yard."[95]
5 Port of Seattle[173]
(Central Terminal;[146]
Alaska Steamship Company Terminal;[207][146])
after May 1, 1944: Pier 42[173][146])
by 1944[173] after 1971[115] steamship pier Also used as part of the port of embarkation during World War II.[146] The Alaska Steamship Company moved here in the late 1940s.[208]
6 (various structures on planking) 1889[209][210] by 1912[164] various structures south of Norman Street The 1893 Sanborn map shows an area equivalent to five city blocks west of Commercial St (First Ave S) running east–west, south of Norman Street, as a series of planked areas over tide flats. The block from Commercial St to West Street is mainly tenements. The narrow strip between West Street and the Railroad Avenue tracks shows a small boatbuilder facing south onto the tideflats. Buildings in the next block west include the Cha's K. Zorn Furniture Factory and the McSorley Bottling Works. Then a block-long pier leads to Mechanics Mill and Lumber Co's saw mill.[211] A 1910 listing of piers in 1907 lists a "city wharf" in this area.[8]
7 The Moran Co. Ship Builders[164] (Seattle Construction and Drydock Company,[100][95]
Seattle Drydock and Shipbuilding Co.,[211][212]
Moran Bro's Co.[211])

Moran Bros. Shipyard, 1902

Moran Bros. between 1903 and 1909, with Dearborn Coal Wharf and Centennial Mill in background.
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1889 1918[213] shipyard north of Black's Replat, extending north roughly to the foot of Charles Street.[164] The Moran Brothers began rebuilding at this site on the tideflats immediately after the Great Seattle Fire, opening for business just ten days later. The company expanded steadily, covering 15 acres (6.1 ha) by 1892, and building 14 paddlewheelers for the Yukon Gold Rush trade between January and May 1898 and going on to build the USS Nebraska (BB-14).[30] The 1893 Sanborn map shows the shipyard running mainly east–west in a single north–south block south of Charles Street. The area equivalent to five city blocks west of Commercial St (First Ave S) is a series of planked areas over tide flats. At the northwest corner of Commercial and Plummer is a dairy. At the northwest corner of the same "block" (most of which is unplanked tide flat), the southeast corner of Charles and West Streets, is P.V. Dwyer Bros. Foundry. Just west of West Street are the railroad tracks of Railroad Avenue, then, successively, Moran Bros. Co. (mainly a foundry) and Seattle Drydock and Shipbuilding Co., and a "deep water wharf." In the block west of West Street a "flask yard" extends a block south of Plummer Street. ("Flasks" are the frames used for casting metal in a foundry.)[211]

During World War I, from about 1916, this was an additional Skinner & Eddy facility.[214]

8 (unnamed pier between Charles and Dearborn) by 1893[215] shortly before 1912[129][164] multiple buildings about halfway between Charles and Dearborn This street-like unnamed pier ran west from Commercial St (now First Avenue South) and gave access to numerous buildings on its south side, built on planking:
  • Puget Sound Steam Laundry, at the southwest corner of Commercial
  • a building vacant as of 1893 at the southwest corner of Railroad Avenue
  • San Francisco Bridge Co. storehouse, about another 0.05 miles (0.080 km) west
  • Then, at a distance of about 0.1 miles (0.16 km) west, the Allen & Nelson Land Co. storehouse, just southwest of Myers Meat Packing Co. on the next pier north.

A 1910 list of piers in 1907 refers to this pier at "Puget Sound Dredging Company (or San Francisco Bridge Company),"[8] and a 1911 map as "S.F. Bridge Co."[129]

9 (unnamed pier including Myers Packing Co.)
Myers Packing Co., 1895
by 1893[211] c. 1903[216] long wharf including fish packing company foot of Weller, narrow wharf to west, then angling southwest[211] The wharf was contiguous with Stetson & Post. Just north of Weller Street was an east–west tramway, and north of that a block west of Railroad Avenue was Rock Plaster Co.'s Mill. West of that, a pier angled southwest and widened to accommodate the Myers Packing Co., and continued to the southwest.[211][215]
10 Wellington Coal Co.[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] coaling pier north of Seattle Construction and Drydock Company
11 Gen. Petroleum Co.[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] tank facility? north of Wellington Coal Co. Map suggests some sort of tank, south of the west end of the C.&P.S.R.R. Spur following.[95]
12 C.&P.S.R.R. Spur[95][217] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] railway spur north of Wellington Coal Co. and Gen. Petroleum Co. "C.&P.S.R.R." is presumably "Columbia and Puget Sound Railroad". That name had actually gone out of use in 1916, when that became the Pacific Coast Railroad Company.[206]
13 Seattle Coal & Fuel Co.[164]
(P. C. Coal Docks (2) and Bunkers;[100]
Pacific Coast Coal Pier;[173]
Pacific Coast Coalbunkers;[214][146]
Pacific Coast Coal Co.[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 43[173][146])

Wagons at Seattle Coal & Fuel Co.'s Dearborn Coal Wharf, c. 1909

US Army Transport Dix coaling up at the foot of Dearborn, 1912
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c. 1903[216] at least late 1950s[204][207] coaling pier foot of Dearborn Coaling pier was moved south from King Street c. 1903 when the main line railroads finally reached Seattle from the south.[216] A 1967 water pollution study with data for 1963 breaks this into "North Pier 43: Mooring company-owned tugs and barges" and "South Pier 43: Shipment of drilling mud (barite); mill scale, ammonium sulphate (fertilizer material); magnesite, and coal.[207] It is not clear whether the 1963 structure is the same structure as in the first half of the 20th century. Paul Dorpat says this was combined into Pier 46 in the late 1950s,[204] but the 1971 harbor map shows a distinct Pier 43, described as "James Griffiths & Sons, Inc.[;] Washington Tug & Barge Co.".[115] The part of Dearborn Street nearest the waterfront is a bit north of the line of the rest of Dearborn, probably closer to Lane.
14 Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co.[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] just north of Pacific Coast Coal Co., looks contiguous with it.[95]
15 Oregon, Washington Railway and Navigation Co.[214][146] by 1911[129] c. 1930s[146] presumably between Dearborn St. and Elliott Bay Dry Dock Co. This may or may not be the same pier that the 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District labels "U.W.K.&N.Co." and shows in this location.[95]
16 Elliott Bay Dry Dock Co.[146][95] by 1913[104] c. 1930s[146]
17 Union Pacific Railroad Terminal[146]
(Union Pacific Dock;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 44[173])
c. 1930s[146] after 1944.[173] probably late 1950s[146][218] Combined the Oregon, Washington Railway and Navigation Co. Elliott Bay Dry Dock Co. piers.[146] Used by Matson in the 1930s.[146] Paul Dorpat says this was combined into Pier 46 in the late 1950s.[204]
18 Stetson & Post Co.;[211]
Stetson-Post[69]

Stetson & Post, 1900
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1889[209] between 1909 and 1912[219] sawmill and related buildings[211] between foot of Lane and foot of King[211] There was a long pier in the southern half, between Lane and Weller.[211]
19 (piers between Dearborn & King Streets) by 1912[164] after 1918[214] piers between Dearborn and King[164] The 1912 Baist map shows a largely empty planked area roughly between Dearborn & King Streets, with at least two distinct piers, corresponding to the Stetson & Post location from the 1893 Sanborn map. The more northerly, at the foot of King Street, is labeled "Sand Wharf" and shows a machine shop just west of Railroad Avenue.[164] (The line of Dearborn in 1912 is close to the line of Lane in 1893.) The 1918 Port of Seattle map describes the pier at the foot of King Street as "Boiler Works, Machine Shops & c."[214]
20 King Street Coal Wharf
(Oregon Improvement Co.'s Coal Bunker[211])

King Street Coal Wharf in 1902
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1889 c.1903[216] coal wharf foot of King Street Two long piers at a roughly 20° angle to one another.[211] Coaling pier was moved south to Dearborn Street c. 1903 when the main line railroads finally reached Seattle from the south.[216]
21 King Street Dock[173][146]
(King Street Pier,[220] Trimble's wharf,[221] Trimble Dock;[100] Chesley Dock;[8]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 45[173][146])

King Street Dock, 1917
by 1907[8] after 1944,[173] probably late 1950s,[146] almost certainly before 1963[218] pier foot of King A 1910 document listing piers in 1907 refers to "King street wharf and Chesley tug dock, leased by Chesley Towboat Company of the Pacific Coast Company, and partly sublet to shops and boats."[8] A 1913 listing in Railway & Marine News refers to "Chesley Dock" with 635 feet (194 m) of dock frontage;[100] Chesley was a tugboat company.[222] From at least 1917 to 1929, the pier was owned by William Pitt Trimble, whose wife died there in an accident in December 1929.[221][220] Paul Dorpat says this was combined into Pier 46 in the late 1950s.[204]

Central Waterfront: King Street to Broad Street

[edit]
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 in 1912, 1918: Pier D, Pacific Steamship Co.[223][224][95]
(in 1913: Pier D (P. C. S. S. Co.)[100]
before May 1, 1944: Luckenback Steamship Company, Pier D[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 46[173])

Pier 46 (at left), 1953
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c. 1907[8] after 1953[225] steamship pier The 1912 Baist map shows this serving the California Line.[223] File:View from Alaskan Way Viaduct, 1953 (39737727923).jpg clearly shows "Luckenback", although some sources refer to "Luchenbach";[208] presumably confusion with Luckenbach Steamship Company.
2 Wayside Mission Hospital[226]
The Idaho functioning as Wayside Mission Hospital at Pier C
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by 1900[226] after 1910[226] pier and warehouse[226] foot of Jackson Street[226] The sidewheel steamboat Idaho was berthed here from 1900 to at least 1909, and served from 1900 to 1907 as the "Wayside Mission Hospital".[226] Sources refer to it as "on pilings alongside the Pacific Coast Steamship Co.'s, Pier C,"[226] but judging by this photo of its opening it actually predates the pier.
3 Oregon Improvement Company Pier B
("B" Oregon Improvement Warehouse[227]);
Lilly & Bogardus[69]

Oregon Improvement Co. Pier "A" at center, Pier "B" at right, c. 1892.

Lilly Bogardus seed company at Pier B, 1900. King Street coaling pier in background at right.
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by 1893[227] before 1903[78] pier and warehouse between Jackson and Main Streets[227] The 1893 Sanborn map shows "A" and "B" Oregon Improvement Warehouse piers; the configuration shows waiting rooms, baggage rooms, a lunchroom, etc., indicative of passenger traffic.[227] Between the piers, that map shows a small "S.L.&R. Reading Room" (presumably Stevedores, Longshoremen and Riggers' Union) on a tiny pier at the exact foot of Main Street.[227] The 2006 Central Waterfront Context Statement prepared for the Department of Neighborhoods by Thomas Street History Services asserts that the 1893 piers "A" and "B" are distinct from the later piers with the same designations: "South of the central waterfront and Yesler Way, the Ocean Dock, located roughly between Main and Washington Streets, consisted of two piers, Pier A and Pier B (later Pier 48), adjoined to the south by Pier C, known as the City Dock. Previously Pier A had been located between Main and Washington Streets and Pier B between Jackson and Main Streets."[78]
4 Oregon Improvement Company Pier A
("A" Oregon Improvement Warehouse[227])
by 1893[227] before 1903[78] pier and warehouse between Main and Washington Streets[227]
5 in 1912, 1918: Pier C, Pacific Steamship Co.[8][224][95][223][100]
(City Dock,[223][78] Lilly's Dock;[223] Lilly-Bogardus Dock[228]
before May 1, 1944: Pacific Coast Company, Pier C[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 47[173])

The Pacific Coast Company piers, 1916
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by 1903[78] c. 1970[208] pier south of Pier B The 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District adds a note for Pier C that is not perfectly legible but seems to read "Tyres Storage and Distributing Co."[95]

The Oregon Improvement Company went bankrupt in 1895 and was succeeded by the Pacific Coast Company; both were owners of the Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad.[78]

Piers A, B, and C (completely distinct from the earlier Piers A and B) were all adjoined to one another.[78] Paul Dorpat indicates that "Pacific Coast Terminals Piers C and A were shortened [before 1944]" and that "some place in the [c. 1970] remodeling of Pier 48 the over-the-water parts [of both] were demolished and the land portions behind the bulkheads were incorporated into Pier 48"[208] (The 1971 harbor map shows these all as Pier 48.[115]) McCormick Steamship Co used Pier 48 in the late 1930s and after World War II. Around 1970 Pier 48 was remodeled; the north side became a ferry slip for the Alaska Marine Highway System, and was used until they moved to Bellingham, Washington[208] in 1989.[229][230] They also used the south side of the Pier 48 and the north side of Pier 46 to moor and overhaul their ferries.[208] The pier was the site of one of Nirvana's most famous performances on December 13, 1993. The pier shed was demolished in 2010.[231]

6 in 1912, 1918: Pier B, Pacific Steamship Co.[8][224][95][223]
(with Pier A, Ocean Dock;[78]
in 1913: Pier B (CP Railway Docks)[100]
before May 1, 1944: McCormick Steamship Company, Pier B;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 48[173])

Pier 48, 2010, shortly before shed was demolished
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1889[209] extant, without shed steamship pier foot of Main Street
7 in 1911: Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad Pier A[232]
(with Pier B, Ocean Dock;[78]
in 1912-1913: Pier A, Pacific Coast Steamship Co., C.P. Line to Vancouver;[223][100]
in 1918: Pier A, Pacific Steamship Co.;[8][224][95]
Pacific Coast Company, Pier A,[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 49[173])

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[209] c. 1970[208] steamship pier North of Pier B, extending roughly to Washington Street[78]
8 Washington Street Public Boat Landing and Harbor Entrance Pergola (in 1918: Wash. Gridiron City of Seattle[95])
Harbor Entrance Pergola, 2007
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"scow gridiron" by 1893; pergola: 1920[233] extant public boat landing (now closed) and pergola foot of Washington Street The 1893 Sanborn map shows an incline at the foot of Washington Street with a "scow gridiron" flanked by two small wharves;[227] a similar description is given in 1910 referring to "freight scows";[8] the 1918 Port of Seattle map refers to "City of Seattle, Wharf & Gridiron".[224] Presumably this is also the "City Slip" at the foot of Washington referred to in the 1899 Polk's Directory.[69]
9 Hatfield's Wharf and Warehouses by 1893[227] after 1893[227] wharf and warehouses Just north of Washington Street[227] File:Yesler Way at Railroad Avenue map, Seattle, 1896 (MOHAI 13411).jpg implies that there was also a post-fire Harrington and Smith Wharf contiguous with Hatfield's Wharf and immediately to its south.
10 Yesler['s] Wharf[234][235][69] 1889[235][209] 1901[234] wharf foot of Yesler Way Except for some pilings that survived the Great Seattle Fire, this was a completely distinct structure from the pre-fire wharf of the same name in the same location. Work on rebuilding the wharf began within days after the fire, while some of the city was "still smouldering."[235] The 1893 Sanborn map shows the wharf as containing a lumber yard and various woodwork-related businesses, as well as a depot, baggage room, and warehouses related to maritime commerce.[227]
11 In 1912, 1918: Pier 1, Northern Pacific Railway[224][8][223]
(in 1913: Pier 1, N. P. Ry. Docks—C. P. R. Coast Service;[100]
in 1918: Harbor Dep't City of Seattle, Pier 1, N.P.Ry Co., C.P.Ry S.S. Co.[95]
1918 and before May 1, 1944: Alaska Steamship Company, Pier 1;[173][223]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 50[173])

Alaska Steamship Company, Pier 1, circa 1915
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between 1901 and 1904[234] early 1980s[208] pier Paul Dorpat says that this pier (which, along with Pier 2/51, replaced Yesler's Wharf) was first used by Luckenback/Luckenbach Steamship Co. (he gives both spellings) for their intercoastal service, then by Alaska Steamship Company (no start date given but they were apparently there in the World War II era[173]). Alaska Steam Ship Company was there as early as the first decade of the 20th century, when they shared the pier with the Port Angeles-Victoria Line and the Vancouver Line.[208] In 1917, Pier 1 was owned by the Northern Pacific Railway, and operated by the Canadian Pacific Steamship Company, the Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company, and the Port Angeles Transportation Company and was also the headquarters of the port warden.[236] In the late 1940s, Alaska Steamship Co. moved to Pier 42 and Nippon Yusen Kaisha used this pier until September 17, 1960 as port of call for the Hikawa Maru, the only Japanese passenger ship to survive the WWII.[208] In 1971, it was owned and/or operated by Seattle Piers, Inc. and, along with Pier 51, was the proposed site for a World Trade Center.[115] Torn down early 1980s to expand the Washington State Ferries terminal at Pier 52 (Colman Dock).[208]
12 in 1912, 1918: Pier 2, Northern Pacific Railway[224][95][8][100][223]
(1912 & before May 1, 1944: Alaska Steamship Company, Pier 2[100][95][173][223]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 51[173])

Alaska Steamship Company, Pier 2, circa 1911
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between 1901 and 1904[234] early 1980s[208] pier In its early years this was port of call for the Whatcom Line, Joshua Green's LaConner T. & T Company line and the Port Orchard Line.[234] As with Pier 50, Alaska Steamship Company left in the late 1940s. The pier had various uses over the next three decades. Washington State Ferries moored ships there; eventually the pier lost its shed and became mainly a parking lot. In the early 1960s, the restaurant Polynesia was built there.[208] The pier was also home to Ye Olde Curiosity Shop.[115] In 1971, it was owned and/or operated by Seattle Piers, Inc. and, along with Pier 50, was the proposed site for a World Trade Center.[115] Torn down early 1980s to expand the Washington State Ferries terminal at Pier 52 (Colman Dock).[208]
13 Budlong's Boathouse[46][237][238] by 1893[237][238] after 1893[237][238] boat house on float[237] foot of Columbia Street[238] Another structure that was recreated after the fire; distinct from the pre-fire boathouse
14 Coleman's (sic) Boathouse[238] by 1893[238] after 1893[238] boat house on float[237] foot of Columbia Street[238] extending out from Budlong's Boathouse[237]
15

[100]

in 1913: Colman Dock (Inland Navigation Co.)[100][239]
(in 1918: Colman Dock,[95] Colman Wharf;[224]
before May 1, 1944: Colman Dock (Puget Sound Navigation Company)[173] (Puget Sound Navigation Company);[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 52[173]
WSF Colman Dock;[240]
Seattle Terminal[240])

Colman Dock, 1917
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by 1903[241] after 1944[173] Mosquito Fleet/ferry pier foot of Columbia Street James Colman's Colman Dock was rebuilt many times. In 1903, it had two sheds, each with a pitched roof, and a box-like office/storefront along Railroad Avenue similar to Pier 6/ 57. In 1905 it included a ship's chandler and a fish shop; in 1906, Frank H. Folsom, based there, advertised himself as an electrical contractor also selling telegraph poles, piles, spars and lumber.[241] In 1908, Colman extended the pier west to a length of 705 feet (215 m), added a domed waiting room, and a clock tower on the water end of the pier. Much of the Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet docked there.[241] In May 1912 the steamer Alameda crashed into Colman Dock, knocked over the clock tower, and plowed into the waiting room. Two piers north, the Flyer Dock was destroyed. A gangplank was set up at Colman Dock as a temporary loading area, but only weeks later it failed under the weight of a crowd of passengers; two people died and 58 more were injured.[241]

In 1938, the Puget Sound Navigation Company, known as the Black Ball Line, rebuilt Colman Dock in Art Deco style, matching the streamlined MV Kalakala ferry they had introduced three years prior.[242] Washington State Ferries bought them out in 1951[242] and rebuilt the pier in 1966.[243] According to Paul Dorpat, the name "Colman Dock" went out of use with the 1944 rename as Pier 52, but came back with the early 1980s expansion.[208]

16 Coleman (sic) Dock Warehouse[238] (Colman-Hatfield Wharf[209]) 1889[209] after 1893[238] "hay, grain, and feed" building, warehouse, and waiting room[237][238] just south of foot of Marion Street[237] Adjoined West Seattle Ferry Dock.[238]
17 West Seattle Ferry Dock[100][238][244]
(West Seattle Ferry slip,[8] Port Commission, Marion Street Ferry Landing;[224] W.S. Ferry, Port of Seattle;[95] West Seattle Ferry[69])
by 1893[238] after 1893[238] ferry dock, including waiting room[238] foot of Marion Street[237] In 1893, adjoined Coleman Dock Warehouse to the south G. G. Willey Cement Lime and Plaster to the north.[238] From some later date in the 1890s until 1912, adjoined the Flyer Dock to the north.[241]
18 G. G. Willey Cement, Lime and Plaster;[238] Commercial Dock[245] by 1893[238] after 1893,[238] probably after 1899[245] warehouse[238] just north of foot of Marion Street[237][238] Adjoined West Seattle Ferry Dock.[238] The 1893 Sanborn map shows three separate large structures here. From south to north:
  • G. G. Willey Cement, Lime and Plaster Warehouse
  • Commercial Dock Warehouse and office; building includes Hutton and Son Machine Shop, Sprague Autom[obile] Motor, G[reat] N[orthern] Freight Off[ice], and two waiting rooms.
  • Hay storage; cement & lime

All from [237]

19 Grand Trunk Pacific Dock[100][95][173][244] or Wharf[224]
(in 1918: Pacific S.S.Co. Alaska Dock;[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 53;[173]
Canadian National Dock[208])

Grand Trunk Pacific Dock, 1911. Colman Dock at right.
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1910[246][247] 1964[247][248] steamship dock between Marion and Madison Streets Like the 1910 Colman Dock (the 1908 to 1912 version), the 1910 Grand Trunk Paciflc Dock had a distinctive tower.[248] That dock had a major fire July 30, 1914. It was rebuilt and survived until 1964, when it was torn down for an expansion of the WSF Colman Dock.[248][247] Paul Dorpat says that besides Grand Trunk Pacific steamships it was port of call for the "Alaska Pacific Navigation Co" (presumably Alaska Pacific Steamship Company or its successor Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company) and Pacific Steamship Company (successor to the Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company) and various Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet boats Puget Sound Freight Lines, and finally the Black Ball Line (Puget Sound Navigation Company).[208] Part of its moorage space was also, at times, used by the Seattle Fire Department as part of Fire Station No. 5.[247] It was demolished in 1964, for one of the many expansions of Pier 52/Colman Dock.[248]
20 Flyer Dock[8][248] between 1893 and 1899[248] 1912[241] dock foot of Madison Street Fast steamboat service to Tacoma.[248] A 1910 listing of piers in 1907 refers to, "Flyer Dock, Columbia River and Puget Sound Navigation Company (leased of K. McIntosh)."[8]
21 Fire Station No. 5[248]
(City fireboat dock,[8] City Dock, Fireboat & Hose House,[244] City Fire Slip,[69][100] City of Seattle, Fire Wharf,[224] City Landing,[69] Fire Boat Duwamish[95])

Fire Station No. 5, c. 1910


The current Fire Station No. 5, 2016
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by 1893[238] extant fire station foot of Madison There have been at least four successive fire stations at this location,[249] all known as "Fire Station No. 5,"[249] although the 1893 Sanborn map shows the station, but does not identify its station number.[237]) The second station was completed in early 1903, serving also as a lookout for the harbor master. It was replaced by a two-story Tudor Revival building in 1917.[248] The current station opened December 1963.[249]
22 (coal bunker);[238] Seattle Coal & Iron Co's Dock and Coal Bunkers[69] by 1893[238] after 1899[69] coal bunker[238] just north of foot of Madison[237]
23 Galbraith-Bacon Dock[250]
(Pier 3, Galbraith Dock[8][244][100] or Wharf;[224]
Pier 3, N.P. Ry. Galbraith Dock;[95]
before May 1, 1944: Arlington Dock, Pier 3[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 54[173])

A ship at Pier 3 in the Galbraith era


Pier 54, 2016
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1900[250] extant pier between Madison and Spring Streets The second Pier built by Northern Pacific Railroad, after the White Star Dock.[250] Original tenants Galbraith and Bacon stored and sold grain, hay, and building materials. John Galbraith's son Walter also used the pier as port of call for his Kitsap Transportation Company.[250] From 1929 to 1935, Gorst Air Transport provided "air ferry" service from this pier to Bremerton, using amphibious Keystone-Loening airplanes.[251] Ivar Haglund opened a short-lived aquarium on this pier in 1938, as well as a fish-and-chips stand; in 1946 he expanded to his restaurant Ivar's Acres of Clams;[252] he bought the pier from Washington Fish and Oyster Company in 1966,[243] though the 1971 harbor map shows that latter company as still located there.[115] The pier was renovated in 1983-1984,[243] and the fish-and-chips stand and restaurant are still there as of 2019. From some time in the 1950s to the early 1970s, part of this pier was the Washington Fish and Oyster Co. fish processing/freezing plant.[208] Currently it is home to Ivar's and several other businesses, including Ye Olde Curiosity Shop, founded 1899 and successively located several different places on and near the Downtown Seattle waterfront.[253]


A remark on a photo from MOHAI indicates that the late 1890s Northern Pacific Railroad Pier 1, serving the Canadian Pacific Steamship Co., was approximately at this site.[254]

24 Towles and Peters Boat House[238] by 1893[238] after 1893[238] boathouse[238] just south of Spring Street[237]
25 Harbor Master's dock[238] by 1893[238] after 1893[238] harbor master's dock[238] foot of Spring Street[237]
26 White Star Dock
White Star Dock c. 1900
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1900[255][256] 1901[257] steamship dock, offices, storage foot of Spring Street[258] The White Star Dock was built by the Northern Pacific in 1900,[255] but collapsed September 14, 1901[257][259] possibly due to being anchored in poor fill.[260] The collapse was slow, and no one was injured.[261] At the time of the collapse, tenants included Zerwekh and Caufman (who stored hay there), and the offices of the Frank A. Bell Co.[257]
27 Arlington Dock Company[8][255]
(Pier 4;[8][244][224][100]
in 1913: Spokane Grain Co.'s Dock;[100]
in 1918: Pier 4, N.P.Ry, Spokane Grain Co. & Arlington Dock Co.;[95]
before May 1, 1944: Fisherman Supply Company, Pier 4[173] (Fisherman Supply Company still present in 1971[115]).
after May 1, 1944: Pier 55[173])

Pier 4, 1912

Pier 55, 2009
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1902[255] extant short pier with shops between Spring and Seneca Streets Built by Northern Pacific as a replacement for the White Star Dock, on the same site. In its early years, it was a major point of departure for Alaska.[255] Along with the adjacent Pier 5/56, in the 1920s it served as port of call for the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company,[262] the East Asiatic Company[263] and the Cosmos Line.[264] In 1938 it became home to the Fisheries Supply Company, and ceased to be actively involved in shipping; Fisheries Supply remained there until the 1980s.[251] The pier was remodeled in 1945, and again in the 1960s and the 1990s.[243]
28 Merchants Dock Warehouse[237] by 1893[237] after 1893[237] dock, warehouse[237] just south of Seneca Street[237]
29 first Ainsworth and Dunn Wharf[238] by 1893[238] after 1893[238] warehouses and machine shops[238][265] near the foot of Seneca Street[238][265] "Ainsworth and Dunn's first 'Fish, Hay and Feed' warehouse";[238][265] also H.W. Baker & Co. warehouses, Cha[rle]s Hicks & Co. machine shop.[265]
30 Arlington Dock[266]/ Arlington Wharf[267] / (possibly distinct) Caine's Wharf[267] (all 1899)
Seen in this 1899 picture.
by 1899[266][267] 1899? 1900?[268] pier, warehouses, iron works[266] near University Street[267] There appears to have been short-lived "Arlington Dock"[266] or "Arlington Wharf"[267] earlier than the others of this name; unlike those others, the photo shows it to have been at 90° to Railroad Avenue. It also included (in photo) a hay and feed warehouse, and Northwestern Iron Works.[266] It is possible that with changes in ownership/names, this could be the same dock as the immediately preceding "first Ainsworth and Dunn Wharf".
31 Arlington Dock Company[8][173][244][100]
(in 1918: Pier 5, N.P. Ry "Waterhouse";[95]
before May 1, 1944: Pier 5[8][173][244][224][100]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 56[173])

Pier 56, 2016
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1900[255] extant pier, "primarily a restaurant and small shop venue"[269] between Seneca and University Streets Another early Northern Pacific Pier initially used by Arlington Dock Company,[8][255] this is where the steamship Spokane docked May 23, 1903, bringing President Theodore Roosevelt to Seattle.[255] It soon became the base of operations for the globe-spanning Frank Waterhouse Company, which went bankrupt in 1920,[255] and was later used in the 1930s by Northland Transportation Company for freight and passenger routes, primarily to Southeast Alaska,[269][251] and by the Shepard Line Intercoastal Service.[251] It was remodeled "based on drawings from 1969" for Trident Imports, and was renovated again in 2000.[270] Ted Griffin's Seattle Marine Aquarium occupied the outer end of the pier from 1962 to 1976.[270] There has been a restaurant as part of the pier at least since 1960.[270]


In 1971 it was also home to Seattle Harbor Tours and a restaurant called The Cove.[115]
A remark on a photo from MOHAI indicates that the late 1890s Northern Pacific Railroad Pier 2, serving the Alaska Steamship Co., was approximately at this site.[254]

32 (unidentified pier) Seen at left in this 1898 picture. by 1898 after 1898 pier just south of University Street
33 Clark and Bartette boathouse[46]
This 1900 picture of a ship at Schwabacher's Wharf presumably shows the Clark and Bartette boathouse at lower right.
1889-1890[46] c. 1901?[46] boathouse foot of University Street
34 John B. Agen Company,[255][271]
John B. Agen Dock (circa 1905)[272] (from 1909, Milwaukee Pier;[255] also "the old Milwaukee Dock,"[269] Milwaukee Road Pier,[273]
C.M.& St. P. Ry.,[224] Pier 6, C.M.&S.Ry,[95] and in the 1930s McCormick Terminal;[251] in 1912-1913 and before May 1, 1944: Arlington Dock Company, Pier 6[8][173][244][224][100]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 57[173])

Pacific Net & Twine Co. at Pier 6

Pier 57, 2013
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1902[255] extant pier, "primarily a restaurant and small shop venue"[269] foot of University Street Pier 57 (originally Pier 6) was built in 1902 for the John B. Agen Company and significantly lengthened in 1903. Agen's Alaska Butter and Cream Company used all but the part nearest Railroad Avenue for cold storage, with offices and retail facing the street.[255] Pacific Net & Twine Co. was also an early tenant.[274] In 1909 the pier was bought by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company (the "Milwaukee Road") and Agen moved to a new facility at 1203 Western Avenue.[255] A 1913 listing refers to "Trimble Dock" with 886 feet (270 m) of dock frontage, which might be this, since the land was at one time owned by William Pitt Trimble; they refer separately to the Chesley Dock, so it can't be that.[100] In the 1920s this was the port of call for the Osaka Shoshen Kaisha and the Hamburg America Line.[264] In 1971, the Port of Seattle owned it and operated it as a public fishing pier.[115]

The City bought the pier from the Port in 1971 and renovated it, with work completed in 1974.[275] The north side and outboard end of Pier 57 are now part of Waterfront Park,[269] and since June 29, 2012 it has been the site of the Seattle Great Wheel.[276][277]

35 Fireboat Wharf by 1893[238] between 1893[238] and c. 1936[66] small fireboat wharf[238] "south of the Schwabacher Dock".[238] One of two downtown fireboat wharves in the 1890s.[238]
36 Pioneer Boathouse[8] by 1907[8] after 1913[100] boathouse Probably the structure at right in this circa 1905 postcard. A 1910 document listing piers in 1907 refers to "Pioneer boathouse (leased of Mr. Trimble)."[8]
37 Wellington Coal Pier[66] probably by 1912[244] after c. 1936[66] narrow coaling pier just south of Schwabacher Dock[66] The 1912 Baist map shows just "coal wharf" here.[244] This may be the "Pier 612" referred to in the 1918 Port of Seattle map and the 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District, though nothing in either ties it to Wellington or coal.[224][95] A 1911 Seattle Times article refers to "the [Frank W.] Waterhouse coal bunkers at "Pier 612" and states that William Pitt Trimble owned the Waterhouse Bunker property.[278]
38 Schwabacher['s] Wharf[269][100][279][224]
(Schwabacher Bros,[69] Schwabacher Dock,[8] Pier 7, Schwabacher Wharf[224][280] or Dock[95]
before May 1, 1944: City Dock Company, Pier 7[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 58[173])

McCormick Steamship Co. at Schwabacher's Wharf, 1935, during seawall construction.
See Schwabacher's Wharf above; this structure predated the Great Seattle Fire After surviving the Great Seattle Fire of 1889,[279] Schwabacher's Wharf went on to make history in several other ways. On August 31, 1896 the Miike Maru docked there, initiating Seattle's trade relations with Japan. The following year, the ship Portland arrived with the "ton of gold" at the slip between the Schwabacher and the Pike Street Dock, beginning the Klondike Gold Rush and boosting the image of Seattle as the provisioning station and jumping-off point for that gold rush.[279]

Some time in the early 20th century Schwabacher's pier was enlarged and significantly rebuilt to conform to Seattle's now-required northeast–southwest alignment for piers, devised in 1897 by City Engineer R.H. Thomson and his assistant George Cotterill; the new pier was a bit south and west of the old one, though overlapping.[279] In the 1920s this was the port of call for the Humboldt Steamship Company;[100][264] as with Pier 6/57, it was used in the 1930s by the McCormick Steamship Company;[281] and it was used by Alaska Transportation Company from the late 1930s until they went out of business in the late 1940s. After the early 1950s, all that was left was "a small dispatchers office left on the end, and floats for mooring Puget Sound Tug and Barge tugs at the outboard end."[269]

39 Waterfront Park
Waterfront Park, 2001
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1974[282] extant 2022 but closed to the public since August 2020 city park on planks over water foot of Union On the location of the former Pier 58 / Schwabacher's Wharf. Closed to the public because of hazardous conditions 2020; a large portion of it collapsed shortly thereafter. The city is in the process of rebuilding a similar park.
40 Boston Fish Co.[265] by 1893[265] after 1893[265] storehouse, smoking house, large planked dock.[265] just south of Pike Street[265] Boston Fish Co. was west of Railroad Avenue. East of Railroad Avenue, but still on planks over water, were Hunt and T.C. Campbell Packers warehouse and N. Clark & Sons sewer pipe yard.[265]
41 Pike Street Dock[273]
(circa 1908: W. W. Robinson Pike St Wharf;[283]
1912-1915 Dodwell Dock;[280][283]
in 1913: Pier 8 (Ainsworth Dock);[100]
in 1918: Pacific Net and Twine;[224][95]
in 1918 and before May 1, 1944: Pier 8;[273][95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 59[273])

Pike Street Dock,
circa 1905

Pier 59, 2008
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1904[66] extant pier, entrance to Seattle Aquarium foot of Pike Street / Pike Place Hillclimb Originally built in 1904 by Ainsworth & Dunn, who were mainly in the fish business and who, with this pier, started the move of the fish business north from its earlier base south of Yesler Way.[66] (The listing of wharves and docks in the 1899 Polk's Directory lists "Ainsworth & Dunn's, foot of Pike", so they may have had some facility on this site as early as 1899.[69]) An early major tenant was Willis Wilbur Robinson, who ran sternwheelers of hay from the Skagit River.[66] A 1910 source, writing about 1907, says Robinson's hay and grain was "mostly government supplies" and that the dock was also used by the U.S. Quartermaster Department.[8] It was also port of call in this era by the Northwestern Steamship Company.[283] Beginning around 1911, signs on the pier show the major tenant as a steamship agent named Dodwell.[66] Beginning in 1916,[66][283] this was the home of Pacific Net and Twine, later (roughly mid-20th-century) Seattle Marine and Fishing Supply Co.[269] (sited there at least as late as 1971[115]) / Pacific Marine Supply Co.[273] In the 1920s and 1930s the fishing fleet gathered there in the spring before heading north.[269] It is now part of the Seattle Aquarium, including the main entrance and the Omnidome.[273]
42 City Float[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] presumably a floating dock foot of Pike
43 Reliable Oyster & Fish Co.[100]
(before May 1, 1944: Salt Dock,[66][284] Pier 812,[273] Palace Fish & Oyster Company[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 60;[173]
Arden Salt Dock;[273] in 1971, Main Fish Co.[115])

Pier 60, 1970
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by 1913[100] 1975[284] pier foot of Pike A 1910 list of Seattle piers in 1907 lists "Wright & Smith Machine Shop (leased of San Juan Fish Company)" in this area. That could be the Salt Dock, the Fish Dock, or some (possibly short-lived) pier.[8] The 1899 Polk's Seattle City Directory list of wharves and docks refers to a "Smith's, foot Pike," possibly the same.[285] A 1911 map also attests "San Juan Fish Co." in this area.[129] Circa 1920s, these two piers housed W. R. Grace and Company, Charles Nelson Company, the Matson Navigation Company, and Northwest Fisheries.[264] These two piers were purchased by the Port of Seattle in the mid-1940s, although its use remained the same at that time.[284] This space is now occupied by the Seattle Aquarium[273]
44 Whiz Fish Products Company[173][224]
(1912: Ocean Fish Co.;[280]
1918: Whiz Fish Co.;[95]
before May 1, 1944: Fish Dock,[66][284] Pier 9[273][224] Pier 8-½[286]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 61;[173] in 1971, Fishermen's Cooperative Assn.[115])

Pier 8-½, later Pier 61, 1935
by 1918[224] 1975[284] pier between Pike & Pine
45 Gatzert & McNaught Wharf (in 1889);[6]
McNaught's (in 1899)[69]
(1889 or earlier)[6] after 1899 pier/wharf Between Stewart & Virginia[6][69] Pre-fire structure (see above) that apparently survived at least until 1899.
46 The more southerly of two Virginia Street Piers[269]
(Gaffney Dock,[8][284][280][287]
in 1913, with Pier 10: Western Alaska S.S. Co.[100]
in 1918: Pier 9, Gaffney Dock[95]
before May 1, 1944: Newsprint Service Company, Pier 9;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 62;[173] in 1971, Puget Sound Freight Lines[115])

Piers 9 & 10 in 1908

Skybridge, 1908, piers at right

Pier 9 in 1935

Piers 62 & 63, 2009
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1901[287] extant, though with no pier shed pier foot of Pine Street The Pier 9/62 shed was built about a year after the pier itself.[287] Piers 62 and 63 adjoin directly to one another. Historically, they were used mainly to store newsprint shipped in from Canada.[269] In its early years, the Gaffney Dock served Alaska Commercial Company steamships and the Holden or Virginia Street Dock was home to Northwest Fisheries salmon cannery.[284] These docks were significantly reconfigured several times.[284] From 1991 to 2005, the bare planks of the pier were the site of the "Summer Nights at the Pier" concerts, but Pier 62 became too deteriorated for mass gatherings. The piers have generally remained open for more passive uses. The city plans to rehabilitate them as waterfront open space, capable of holding events again.[288]

There was at one time a skybridge to these docks across Railroad Avenue from Virginia Street,[284] but the docks are a bit south of Virginia.

There appears to be some confusion on historical numbering of piers in this area. Daryl C. McClary, in listing the 1944 name changes, refers to the two Virginia Street Piers before the renaming as Piers 9 & 10, respectively, and gives no pre-1944 numbers to the Fish and Salt Docks.[173] The 1918 Port of Seattle map makes no mention of the Salt Dock, refers to the Fish Dock as "Pier 9, Whiz Fish Co." and groups, apparently at the location of the Virginia Street Piers, "W.F. Jahn Co, [Pier] 11A, Pier 10, Virginia St. Wharf," with the next pier north being "U.S.Q.M. Wharf, Pier 11B".[224]

47 The more northerly of two Virginia Street Piers[269]
(early on, Holden Dock,[284] Virginia Street Dock,[8] Virginia Dock;[280][284]
in 1913, with Pier 10: Western Alaska S.S. Co.[100]
in 1918: Pier 10, Virginia St. Dock[95]
before May 1, 1944: Newsprint Service Company, Pier 10;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 63;[173] in 1971, Puget Sound Freight Lines[115])
1906[284] extant, though with no pier shed pier just north of Pine Street
48 Pier D[289] by 1904[289] after 1908, by 1920s[289] warehouse, steamship dock foot of Lenora Street These two docks built and owned by the Pacific Coast Company appear to have adjoined.[289] Parallel to shore, rather than finger piers.[289] As of 1904-1905 this held one of the United Warehouse Company warehouses (others were inland) and Oriental Dock was port of call for the American Hawaiian Steamship Company.[289][8] A 1910 report specifically refers to the port with the United Warehouse Company warehouses as "Pier 11".[189] The 1912 Baist map shows a single wharf parallel to the shore here, labeled as Pier 11, and naming both Pacific Coast Company and United Warehouse Company.[280] "Seattle One of the World's Great Ports" (Railway & Marine News volume 11, number 12, August 1, 1913), refers to a "Bratnober Dock" in this area with 621 feet (189 m) of dock frontage. That might or might not be the same structure as Pier D.[100] The Bratnober family were primarily in the lumber business.[290]
49 Oriental Dock[289][8]
(in 1913: Pier 11, Oriental Dock;[100]
in 1918: Oriental Dock, Pier 11, W.F. Jahn Co.[95])
by 1904[289] after 1918,[95] by 1920s[289] warehouse, steamship dock foot of Lenora Street
50 Lenora Street Dock (Canadian Pacific RR)[173]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 64[173])
by early 1920s[269] after 1974[269] 1990s? pier foot of Lenora Street This directly adjoined Pier 65. The pier was owned by the Port of Seattle and was used by Canadian Pacific Railway steamers from the early 1920s until they ceased operation c. 1974.[269]
51 Lenora Street Dock (Leslie Salt Company)[173]
before May 1, 1944: Pier 11-B;[291]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 65[173])

Pier 11-B at right, 1925
by 1925[292] after 1971[115] 1990s? fish dock foot of Lenora Street As early as 1918, the Port of Seattle map shows a "U.S.Q.M. Wharf, Pier 11B" (that is, "United States Quartermaster Wharf...") at roughly this location, possibly the same structure;[224] similarly, the 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District refers to "U.S. Government Pier 11B".[95] This directly adjoined Pier 64.[269] In the 1930s it became a major center for auto freight.[291] The 1971 harbor map lists it as New England Fish Co.[115]
52 Bell Street Terminal (Port of Seattle)[173][115][224]
(Bell Street Wharf,[293] Bell Street Pier,[269] Port of Seattle Bell St. Pier;[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 66[173])

Bell Street Terminal, 1915
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1914[294] after 1971[115] 1990s? shipping terminal, with park, solarium, and pool on roof[294] Park, solarium, and pool were added 1915,[294] "but by the 1920s, the park had developed an unsavory reputation and was closed."[293] The 1971 harbor map shows it as still Bell Street Terminal, and lists the Port of Seattle general offices and the Pioneer Alaska Line.[115]
53 Bell Street Pier / Pier 66
Pier 66, 2016


Cruise ship at Bell Street Pier, 2018
mid-1990s extant pier, marina, cruise ship dock, restaurants, conference center foot of Bell Street Extends on shore from Blanchard Street northwest past Bell almost to Battery; outer pier around the Bell Harbor Marina extends southeast another block to Lenora
54 Brighton's Boathouse[46] 1894[46] ? boathouse foot of Battery Street
55 Wall Street Pier[289]
(in 1913: Galbraith, Bacon & Co. Wall Street Dock[100][8]
in 1918: Pier 12, Galbraith Bacon Co.[95]
Galbraith Bacon Dock;[289]
before May 1, 1944: Galbraith and Company,[173][224] Pier 12[224]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 67[173])

Wall Street Dock, 1906
shortly after 1900[289] 1962 or very shortly before[295][269][296] storage facility for building materials Torn down to build the hotel now known as The Edgewater.[269][296]
56 The Edgewater (Camelot;[297] Edgewater Inn[297])
The Edgewater, 2008
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1962[297] extant hotel foot of Wall Street The hotel sits on a pier on the site of Pier 67 and part of Pier 68, both of which were demolished to build the hotel.[296]
57 in 1913: Richmond Beach Sand & Gravel Co.[100] (in 1918: Central Sand & Gravel Co.;[224]
in 1918: Booth Fisheries Co., Richmond Beach Sand & Gravel[95])
between 1907[189] and 1912[298] after 1912[298] sand and gravel wharf[298] exactly at the foot of Wall Street The 1912 Baist map shows a small unnamed sand and gravel wharf exactly at the foot of Wall Street, immediately south of the Chlopeck Fish Company.[298] "Seattle One of the World's Great Ports" (Railway & Marine News volume 11, number 12, August 1, 1913) refers to "Richmond Beach Sand & Gravel Co.".[100] The 1918 Port of Seattle map gives the name Central Sand & Gravel Co. and shows it nestled tightly between Booth Fisheries and the Galbraith-Bacon Dock[224]
58 Squire's Wharf[6][69] c.1888[70] after 1899[69] pier/wharf Between Stewart & Virginia[6] Pre-fire structure (see above) that apparently survived at least until 1899.
59 Hall's Wharf;[6]
(possibly distinct) Mannings Wharf[71])
(1888 or earlier)[71] after 1899[69] pier/wharf Between Wall & Vine[6] Pre-fire structures (see above) that apparently survived at least until 1899.
60 Chlopeck Fish Company[100][298][299] (by 1918,[224] and remaining May 1, 1944: Booth Fisheries Company;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 68[173])

Chlopeck Fish Co, 1907
by 1905[295] 1962 or very shortly before[295][269][296] fish warehouse just north of the foot of Wall Street There were related warehouses and fish processing facilities on the other side of Railroad Avenue, at least one of which survives as Vine Street Storage at 2501 Elliott Avenue; two cottages built for workers here also survive.[295] The pier was torn down to build the hotel now known as The Edgewater.[269][296]
61 Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co.[224]
(in 1918: Pacific Coast Co., Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co.[95])
after 1907,[189] by 1918[224] after 1918[224] sand and gravel wharf Between Chlopeck/Booth Fish and Seattle/Superior Fish This presumably short-lived pier shows up on the 1918 Port of Seattle map in what appears to be part of the area into which American Can Company eventually expanded.[224]
62 in 1912: Seattle Fish & Storage Co.[298]
(in 1913: Pacific Coast Co.;[100]
in 1918: Superior Fish Co.[224])
by 1912[298] after 1918[224] very shallow pier with buildings[298] from foot of Vine Street just past Cedar The 1912 Baist map shows a small pier with several structures including the Seattle Fish & Storage Co., extending only a little past Railroad Avenue, in part of the space that would later be occupied by the expanded American Can Company pier.[298]
63 Pier 13[300]
(in 1913: Roslyn Coal Co.;[100]
in 1918: American Can Co.;[95]
before May 1, 1944: American Can Company Dock;[173][224]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 69[173])

American Can Company including pier at left, c. 1920.
more images
1900[300][301] extant successively a coal pier, fish processing facility, and a ferry terminal between Vine and Clay Streets Originally built for the Roslyn Coal and Coke Company,[300] it was completely remodeled and expanded by the American Can Company, who connected it by a skybridge to a building on the other side of Railroad Avenue.[300] The 1912 Baist map still has this as Roslyn;[298] but the 1918 Port of Seattle map has it as American Can Company, but not yet expanded to the south at the expense of the wharves to its south.[224] The American Can Company (still there in 1971[115]) sold the pier and a large onshore building to "a Canadian interest"; the Princess Marguerite used the pier for some time beginning around 1979.[269] Since another complete remodel ending in 1993, it has housed the Port of Seattle headquarters, and is also the Seattle dock for Clipper Navigation's Victoria Clipper hydrofoil service.[302]
64 Ainsworth and Dunn Wharf,[8][100][300][303] Pier 14[8][100]
(in 1918: Pier 14, Dodwell Wharf;[224]
in 1918: Pier 14, Ainsworth & Dunn[95]
before May 1, 1944: Washington State Liquor Warehouse, Pier 14[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 70[173])

As Puget Sound Wharf and Warehouse Company, at right, 1903


Pier 14, c. 1935


Pier 70, 2015
more images

1902[303] extant various uses, see notes foot of Broad Street Built in 1902 as Pier 14 by fish company Ainsworth and Dunn (their name was still associated with the pier as late as 1971[115]), whose warehouse was across Railroad Avenue and who had several prior Central Waterfront locations. Not long after, they moved their operations to Blaine, Washington, and the pier had a long series of major tenants including the Puget Sound Wharf and Warehouse Company, the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company, and the Dodwell Dock and Warehouse Company. Dodwell used the pier as a terminal for the Northland Steamship Company and the Blue Funnel Line. The Washington State Liquor Control Board used the pier as a warehouse during World War II, and the U.S. Coast Guard used the pier as its Seattle base from 1946 to 1955. Its historic uses were superseded by containerization, and it was remodeled to house shops and restaurants. Triad Development bought the pier in 1995, remodeled it in the late 1990s as a headquarters for the ill-fated Go2Net. Immediately before that remodel, in 1998 The Real World: Seattle was filmed there.[303][304]

Although the pier shed retains its historic shape, it was remodeled after a fire in 1915, remodeled again in the 1970s, and so heavily altered in the late 1990s that it retains only traces of its historic character.[303]

Broad Street to Magnolia

[edit]

Piers near Smith Cove, 1934, with Magnolia behind them. From left to right, the piers that would later be numbered 91, 90, 89, and 88. The white building just below the high end of the Garfield Bridge (now Magnolia Bridge) is the grain elevator on Pier 89; much of the length of Pier 88 is visible.
Name
(Alternative names in parentheses)
Image Year completed Year destroyed Type Location Notes
1 Union Oil Co. Wharf[100][305][95]
(before May 1, 1944: Union Oil Dock, Pier 18
after May 1, 1944: Pier 71[173])

Union Oil facility including dock at left, 1934

Pacific Mildcure Company at left, circa 1917-1920; Union Oil takes up most of the photo.
1910[306][307] between 1971[115][308] and 1989,[306] oil dock site of present-day Olympic Sculpture Park There was quite a large dock here as of 1913: 1,097 feet (334 m) of fock frontage.[100]
2 in 1912: Occidental Fish Co.[298] (in 1918: Pier 18, Pacific Mildcure Co.[305][95]) between 1907[189] and 1912[298] after 1918[305] pier with shed just north of Union Oil Co. Wharf
3 "Bell's" and "Whitford's" docks/wharves by 1899[69] after 1899[69] docks/wharves[69] foot of Bay (2 blocks north of Broad Street)[69] The 1899 Polk's Directory indicates these two docks/wharves at the foot of Bay Street.[69]
4 Martin Gravel Co.[100] by 1907[8] after 1913[100] gravel pier
5 A.S. Kary[100] by 1907[100] by 1910[100] lumber dock
6 Colman Creosoting Works[100][298] by 1907[8] between 1911[129] and 1918[305][95] wood treatment plant, roughly L-shaped pier foot of W. Thomas Street, corner of Third Ave West. The 1918 Port map shows this as filled land. As of 2019, this is roughly where a pedestrian bridge crosses Elliott Ave. W.
7 Gridiron[95] by 1918[95] after 1918[95] "gridiron" very slightly southeast of Harrison St. Wharf
8 City of Seattle, Harrison St. Wharf[305]
(City Dock,[100] Harrison Street Pier[95])
between 1912[309] and 1918[305] wharf foot of W. Harrison Street No indication of this on the 1912 Baist map,[309] but it is on the 1918 Port map.[305]
9 Seattle Lumber Co.[100][8][309][305][95] by 1907[8] between 1911[129] and 1918[305] sawmills and wharf roughly from W. Harrison to W. Mercer Streets The 1912 Baist map shows an extensive lumber yard on planks over water on the onshore side of the rail trestle, with a roughly L-shaped pier on the offshore side.[309] The lumber company remained there after the land was filled, becoming Blackstock Lumber from the 1930s to the 1980s, and the small part of the property north of Mercer being the site of Seattle's Humane Society from the 1930s to the 1970s.[310]
10 Terminal 86 Grain Facility[311]
(Pier 86 Grain Terminal[312]

Pier 86 grain terminal, 2006
more images
1970[179] extant grain terminal Elliott Bay Park, roughly on a line with W. Roy Street "Total grain storage capacity is almost 4 million bushels (over 101,000 metric tons) and is divided into 8 shipping bins, 60 large tanks, 39 interstices, and 13 house bins. The dock is 600 feet long and can accommodate a 1,400 foot vessel."[312] All of the incoming grain arrives by rail.[312]
11 The N & S Electric[313]
Citizens Light and Power Company gas plant in middle ground at right, 1902
by 1902?[314]
by 1912[313]
after 1912[313] gas plant foot of W. Highland Drive[313] The 1912 Baist map shows this between the rail trestle and Elliott Ave W. It is not clear whether this was on planks or fill.[313] By 1918, this was certainly filled land.[305] Quite likely the same thing as the Citizens Light and Power Company gas plant at or near this site, which existed by 1902.[314]
12 Commercial Hotel[309] by 1912[309] after 1912[309] hotel, on planking foot of W. Galer Street, just outside the Great Northern facilities The 1912 Baist map shows a triangular hotel on planking on the onshore side of the rail trestle.[309] By 1918, this land appears to be filled.[305]
13 Great Northern Hotel[315]
Hotel at right in this 1909 picture
by 1909 after 1909 hotel, on planking near foot of W. Galer Street
14 Great Northern Dock[173]
(G. N. Ry. Dock,[100] Great Northern Railroad Dock,[313] G.N. Ry Asiatic Freight Warehouse & G.N. Ry Warehouse;[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 88[173])
See photo above, "Piers near Smith Cove..." after 1944[173] extant steamship pier Smith Cove This area is now part of the filled land east of the Elliott Bay Trail.
15 Great Northern Grain Elevator Dock[173]
(G. N. Ry. Elevator & Dock,[100] Balfour Gutherie Grain Elevator;[95]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 89[173])
See photo above, "Piers near Smith Cove..." 1890s[74] burned November 6, 1925[74] grain terminal Smith Cove Damaged, but not destroyed, by fire October 15, 1918; destroyed by fire November 6, 1925. At the time this burned, it was leased by the Centennial Mill Company and Northwest Magnesite Company. Centennial Mill Company relocated to Tacoma after the fire.[74]
16 Great Northern Grain Elevator Dock[173]
(after May 1, 1944: Pier 89[173])
See photo above, "Piers near Smith Cove..." 1926[74] after 1944[173] grain terminal Smith Cove Replaced the similarly located earlier structure that burned in 1925. Initial major tenants were the Northwest Magnesite Company and the Pacific Grain Products Company of Spokane.[74] This area is now part of the filled land east of the Elliott Bay Trail.
17 Port Commission Smith Cove Terminal[305]
(Port of Seattle Smith's Cove Pier;[95]
before May 1, 1944: U.S. Navy, Pier 40;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 90;[173] 1971: U.S. Naval Supply Center[115])
See photo above, "Piers near Smith Cove..." between c. 1912[316] and 1918[305] extant now part of the T91 cruise ship terminal Smith Cove According to Daryl C. McClary, the Port of Seattle purchased this property in Smith Cove from the Great Northern Railway and built Piers 40 and 41 (now Piers 90 and 91).[74] The piers have been differently configured at different times. A 1947 or 1948 photograph shows them as part of a de facto Navy base (the 13th Naval District Operating Annex, or NOA), with a series of sheds occupying both sides and the south end of Pier 90, as well as the north half of Pier 91.[317] Since 2009, Pier 91 has been the site of the Smith Cove Cruise Terminal.[318]
18 Port Commission Smith Cove Terminal[305]
(Port of Seattle Smith's Cove Pier;[95]
before May 1, 1944: U.S. Navy, Pier 41;[173]
after May 1, 1944: Pier 91;[173] 1971: U.S. Naval Supply Center, Captain of the Port, Seattle[115])
See photo above, "Piers near Smith Cove..." between 1912[319] and by 1918[305] extant now part of the T91 cruise ship terminal Smith Cove
19 Pioneer Glass Works[313] by 1912[313] after 1912[313] glass works north entrance to Smith Cove, in Magnolia The 1912 Baist map shows a rail spur along the north side of Smith Cove, leading to this glass works at the tip.[313]
20 Elliott Bay Marina
Elliott Bay Marina, 2012
more images
1991[320][321][322] extant pleasure-boat marina south side of Magnolia

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Matthew Klingle (2007). Emerald City: an environmental history of Seattle. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300116410.
  • David B. Williams (2015). Too High & Too Steep: Reshaping Seattle's Topography. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295995045.
  • Office of Environmental Management, Department of Community Development (April 1973). Seattle Shoreline Inventory. Seattle: City of Seattle.
  • Parametrix, Inc., Converse Consultants NW, Pacific Groundwater Group (1994). Southwest Harbor Cleanup and Redevelopment Project Draft Environmental Impact Statement. p. xxix. Retrieved August 2, 2019. Three volumes. Prepared for U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Washington Department of Ecology, Port of Seattle.
  • Technical Services Program of the Pacific Northwest Water Laboratory, Corvallis, Oregon (February 1967). "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963". Pacific Northwest Watercraft Pollution Study: Appendix. Northwest Region, Federal Water Pollution Control Administration, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved August 2, 2019 – via National Service Center for Environmental Publications. Appendix begins at p. 191 of linked document and has its own pagination (15 pages)
  • Thomas Street History Services (November 2006). "Context Statement: The Central Waterfront" (PDF). Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved August 15, 2019. Updated January 2007.
  • The City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District, February 1918

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Williams 2015, p.48.
  2. ^ For example, see image 35 between pages 19 and 20 of Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History (PDF). Retrieved August 27, 2019. (On p. 28 of PDF.) It shows a large number of minor structures—shanties and the like—at the base of the bluff at the foot of Lenora Street.
  3. ^ quoted in Klingle 2007, p. 54.
  4. ^ a b c "Local News: Still Another Wharf". Daily Pacific Tribune. Seattle. January 15, 1877. p. 3. Available on microfilm at Downtown Seattle Public Library.
  5. ^ Robertson, Donald B. (1995). Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History. Vol. III: Oregon &middot, Washington. p. 204.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co.; published 1890, shows the pre-Fire configuration of the city.
  7. ^ Polk's Seattle City Directory, 1916.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb Report of the Commissioner of Corporations on Transportation by Water in the United States: Water terminals. 1910. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1910. pp. 239–240. Retrieved August 26, 2019. pier west seattle. This lists "piers, docks, and wharves at Seattle in 1907."
  9. ^ a b c d e Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 27 (PDF).
  10. ^ a b c d e f Cassandra Tate (July 8, 2001), "Seattle Neighborhoods: West Seattle — Thumbnail History", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 20, 2019, The company built a dock near today's Seacrest Marina... the first bona fide ferry on Puget Sound, launched December 24, 1888.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries for West Seattle in the map index include:
    • 99 - Erickson Shipbuilding Co.
    • 100 - Elliott Bay Shipbuilding Co.
    • 101 - West Waterway Lumber Co.
    • 102 - Alaska Pac. Nav. Co. Shipyard
    • 103 - Port Commission Iowa St Fy. Landing
    • 104 - Drummmond Lighterage Co.
    • 105 - Ames Shipbldg & Drydock Co.
    • 106 - Wilson Shipyard
    • 107 - Schwager-Nettleton Mill Co.-Lumber
    • 108 - Colman Creosoting Work
    • 109 - N.P. Ry. Grain Elevator & Wharf
    • 110 - Novelty Mill Co., Flour
    • 111 - Port Commission, W. Seattle Ferry Landing
  12. ^ "Seattle Terminal and Railway Elevator Co., West Seattle, ca. 1891". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Connie Adams (January 2011). "Salty's on Alki 25th anniversary, Part 1". seattledining.com. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  14. ^ a b c Birds-eye-view of Seattle and environs King County, Wash., 1891, Koch, Augustus; Hughes Litho. Co.
  15. ^ a b c Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, Plate 34 writes "Hewrich" (sic) for "Hemrich"
  16. ^ a b c 1905 Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Wash, Plate 11 shows this area as completely filled.
  17. ^ "South Canal trestle; filling tideflats near Bay View Brewery, Seattle, 1901". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 29, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, Plate 34
  19. ^ a b c d e Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, File:Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington. LOC sanborn09315 002-36.jpg
  20. ^ a b c d e Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 14 (18 of PDF). Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. Retrieved August 27, 2019. 1878 United States Coast Guard Survey Map representing Seattle in 1875, reproduced in part as an illustration between pages 15 and 16 (on p. 21 of PDF). Also relevant discussion on p 45 (64 of PDF).
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "CHAPTER THREE: Reaping the Profits of the Klondike Trade / Outfitters". Hard Drive to the Klondike: Promoting Seattle During the Gold Rush. Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park, Seattle Unit. 2003-02-18. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Fred Rochlin (2000). Pioneer Jews: A New Life in the Far West. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 115. ISBN 0618001964.
  24. ^ Williams 2015, p.71; visible on an 1875 United States Coast Guard Survey Map shown on p.72.
  25. ^ David B. Williams (March 12, 2013), "Seattle citizens start work on Seattle & Walla Walla Railroad on May 1, 1874", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 30, 2019
  26. ^ a b c Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884; plate 9
  27. ^ a b Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888; plate 9
  28. ^ Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society (2002). Maritime Seattle. Arcadia Publishing. p. 16. ISBN 9780738520643. Describes this picture as "after the Great Fire".
  29. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, Index & Plate 1; shown on Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co., published 1890
  30. ^ Clarence Bagley (2017). History of Seattle. Vol. 1. Jazzybee Verlag. p. unknown. ISBN 9783849650230. Retrieved August 25, 2019. ...Stetson & Post had outgrown the [Yesler's] wharf location... Securing a large tract of tide land on First Avenue South, at King and Weller Streets... the new mill began operations in 1882...
  31. ^ a b "Seattle waterfront, with Beacon Hill in background". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  32. ^ a b c d Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. pp. 38–40 (54–57 of PDF). Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  33. ^ a b c Randy Hees. "Seattle Coal and Transportation Company". pacificng.com. Retrieved July 18, 2019. The barge and tramway system was replaced in 1878 (last run Jan. 29, 1878) by the Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad...
  34. ^ a b c d "Plummer's Store, 1860". Seattle Public Library. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
  35. ^ This was the site of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company docks.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884; plate 3
  37. ^ "Fire wreckage at foot of Yesler Way, July 26, 1879". Seattle Public Library. Retrieved September 16, 2022. …ruins of the Harrington - Smith dock…
  38. ^ "Crawford, Harrington and Yesler's wharves, looking west toward Elliott Bay, Seattle, 1882". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 19, 2019. Item Description...Photographer:Peiser, Theodore E....Caption on image: Peiser 42. Crawford, Harringtons and Yesler's Wharves, 1882.
  39. ^ Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society (2002). Maritime Seattle. Arcadia Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 9780738520643.
  40. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 4-5
  41. ^ Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 1. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  42. ^ a b c d e Paul Dorpat (2005). "3" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 196. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888; plate 3
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 36 (51 of PDF). Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  45. ^ a b c Shown on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 3; absent on Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co., published 1890
  46. ^ Shown on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 3, plate 4, plate 5.
  47. ^ a b c Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884; plate 1
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888; plate 4
  49. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 3; shown on Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co., published 1890
  50. ^ a b c d e f g h Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884, Plate 6
  51. ^ Present on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 4. Not labeled on the 1890 Anderson map, but there seems to be a structure of approximately the same dimensions
  52. ^ a b c "Extensive Wharf Project". Daily Pacific Tribune. Seattle. January 3, 1877. p. 2. Available on microfilm at Downtown Seattle Public Library.
  53. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 3
  54. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 3
  55. ^ a b c Paul Dorpat (2005). "1" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 34 (47 of PDF). Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  56. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1884, plate 6, shown on Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 4.
  57. ^ Not shown on the 1890 Anderson map.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888; plate 5
  59. ^ Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 5; shown on Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co., published 1890
  60. ^ a b c The 1884 Sanborn map does not show this area, presumably because there were no structures here yet.
  61. ^ a b Paul Dorpat (February 6, 2016). "Seattle Now & Then: Baker's Dock aka The Ecclefechan". Seattle Now & Then. Retrieved July 20, 2019./
  62. ^ HistoryLink staff (January 22, 2005), "Seattle Aquarium Slideshow, Part 2: From the Great Fire to the Great Depression, 1889-1930s", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 20, 2019, ...the 1888 wharf of Schwabacher & Co., roughly where Pier 58 stands today...
  63. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 11
  64. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (18 July 2010). "Seattle Now & Then: Pike Pier". pauldorpat.com. Seattle Now and Then. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  65. ^ E.S. Glover, Bird's-eye View of the City of Seattle, Puget Sound, Washington Territory, 1878, A. L. Bancroft & Company (San Francisco), 1878.
  66. ^ Robertson, Donald B. (1995). Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History. Vol. III: Oregon &middot, Washington. p. 265.
  67. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y The 1899 Polk's Seattle City Directory (p. 91) (reproduced on Wikimedia Commons) lists the following "Wharves and Docks"; wording and capitalization is verbatim, except bullets and square-bracketed comments not in original:
    • Arlington Wharf, foot University.
    • Ainsworth & Dunn's, foot of Pike.
    • Bell's, foot Bay (North Seattle).
    • Caine's Wharf, foot University.
    • Central Wharf, foot Washington.
    • City Fire Slip, foot Madison.
    • City Landing, foot Madison.
    • City Slip, foot Washington.
    • City Wharf, foot Main.
    • Coffman's, foot Broad.
    • Colman, foot Marion.
    • Columbia Dock, bet Columbia and Marion.
    • Commercial, foot Marion.
    • Dry Dock, foot Charles.
    • Galbraith Dock, foot Washington.
    • Great Northern Ry Ocean Dock, Smith's Cove.
    • Hall's, foot Vine.
    • Hopkin's Wharf, foot Seneca.
    • Johnson's Wharf, Elliott av., foot Prospect.
    • Leary's, bet Pike and Pine.
    • Lilly & Bogardus, foot Main.
    • McNaugnt's [sic, presumably McNaught's], bet Virginia and Stewart.
    • Madison Street, foot Madison.
    • Manning's, foot Wall.
    • Ocean Dock, foot Washington.
    • Ocean Dock, S[eattle] & I[nternational] Ry, Smith's Cove.
    • Ocean Dock, G[reat] N[orthern] Ry, Smith's Cove.
    • Pacific Coast Co's Dock, foot Main.
    • Puget Sound Mill Co., foot Spring.
    • Renton, bet Pike and Pine.
    • Schwabacher Bros, foot Union.
    • Seattle Coal & Iron Co's Dock and Coal Bunkers, foot Madison.
    • Seattle & International Ry Co., foot Clay.
    • Sheafe's, foot Thomas.
    • Smith's, foot Pike.
    • Squire's, bet Battery and Wall.
    • Stetson-Post, foot King.
    • Stimson Mill Co's, foot John.
    • West Seattle Ferry, foot Marion.
    • Whitford's, foot Bay (N Seattle).
    • White Star Dock, foot Spring.
    • Yesler Wharf, foot Yesler way.
    Some of these wharves may have been under construction at the time: for example, the short-lived White Star Dock definitely opened in 1900, not 1899.
  68. ^ a b Absent on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 26; shown on Anderson's new guide map of the city of Seattle and environs, Washington, O.P. Anderson & Co., published 1890
  69. ^ a b c d Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, 1888, plate 26
  70. ^ a b c Mimi Sheridan (November 2007). "Belltown Historic Context Statement and Survey Report" (PDF). Seattle Department of Neighborhoods, Historic Preservation Program. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  71. ^ a b Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884, Plate 8
  72. ^ a b c d e f g h Daryl C. McClary (November 4, 2013), "Fire destroys Great Northern Railway's grain and ore terminal at Smith Cove in Seattle on November 6, 1925", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved August 24, 2019
  73. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 78.
  74. ^ a b c Thomas Street 2006, p. 4
  75. ^ a b "Ballast Island Historical Point of Interest". hmdb.org. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  76. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Thomas Street 2006, p. 18
  77. ^ Klingle 2007, p. 64
  78. ^ a b "Appendix: Official Proceedings, State Board of Equalization, sessions 1891 and 1892.". Biennial Report of the State Auditor to the State Legislators. Session of 1893. Olympia, Washington: State of Washington. 1892. p. 35. Retrieved July 20, 2019. I refer more directly to the Portland & Puget Sound. It has been assessed in Clarke county (sic) at $500 a mile, and in Thurston county at $1,000 a mile. The facts are that the Portland & Puget Sound Railroad Company was organized some time ago, and the work of constructing the line was commenced by the Union Pacific, and some portion of the right-of-way was secured and some work was done at different points along the line in the grading from Kalama to Olympia perhaps one-third of the grade counted by miles, though a much less amount counted by way of expense in construction was made. The balance of it remains untouched. I think that no work, at least none of any consequence, was done in Clarke county at all. This is not a railroad at any point, and is not assessable under the laws of the state as such.
  79. ^ "Old and new roads". Railroad Gazette. 21: 814. December 6, 1889. Retrieved July 20, 2019. Seattle & Southern.—The preliminary survey of this road between Portland and Seattle has been completed to Sumner, Wash., a point 30 miles south of Seattle.
  80. ^ a b Williams 2015, p. 83-84.
  81. ^ a b c d Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, Image 1
  82. ^ Klingle 2007, p. 58
  83. ^ a b Karen Prasse (September 13, 2008), "Railroad between Seattle and British Columbia is completed near Stanwood on October 12, 1891", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 20, 2019
  84. ^ Seattle. Garden City, New York: Doubleday. 1972. p. 114. ISBN 0-385-01875-4.
  85. ^ a b c d e f Williams 2015, p. 71-76.
  86. ^ Jones, Nard (1972). Seattle. Garden City, New York: Doubleday. p. 114. ISBN 0-385-01875-4.
  87. ^ The northern end of this trestle, crossing Yesler Wharf and extending up to Columbia Street, can be seen on Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, July 1884; plate 1 & plate 3.
  88. ^ This trestle has not yet been built in this photo from 1881: "Seattle from Beacon Hill in 1881". University of Washington. Retrieved 2019-07-26. (Available on Commons). It is visible in this pre-Fire photo: "Looking northwest across the harbor from Beacon Hill at South Dearborn St. and 12th Ave., Seattle, probably between 1880 and 1890". University of Washington. Retrieved 2019-07-26. (Available on Commons).
  89. ^ Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (October 15, 2016). "The First (and Forgotten) Alki Natatorium". pauldorpat.com. Seattle Now & Then. Retrieved August 22, 2019. The cited photos are:
  90. ^ Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (July 16, 2011). "Antique Alki Swimwear". pauldorpat.com. Seattle Now & Then. Retrieved August 22, 2019. The cited photo is https://i2.wp.com/pauldorpat.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/alki-point-1929-aerial-map-detail-webn.jpg?ssl=1.
  91. ^ a b c d e Alan J. Stein (June 16, 1999), "Luna Park - Coney Island of the West (1907-1913)", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 25, 2019
  92. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv Paysse, A.A. (1918). The City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District (PNG). Seattle: City of Seattle, Harbor Department. G4284.S4 P55 1918 .S4 at University of Washington Libraries Special Collections. Also available as File:The City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District, February 1918.png
  93. ^ Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation. "Alki Beach Park". seattle.gov. Retrieved 2019-07-25.
  94. ^ King and Winge Boat Shop, Seattle, ca. 1906, a photograph from the Museum of History and Industry hosted on the site of the University of Washington Libraries, says in its notes that " The King and Winge Boat Shop opened in 1899".
  95. ^ "King County Ferry District Fact Sheet" (PDF). King County Ferry District. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 8, 2012. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
  96. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq "Seattle One of the World's Great Ports". Railway & Marine News. 11 (12). Seattle: 31. August 1, 1913. Retrieved August 25, 2019. This lists dock frontage in feet as of 1913.
  97. ^ a b c d John Caldbick (January 26, 2013), "Seattle Yacht Club", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 26, 2019
  98. ^ Clarence Bagley (1916). History of Seattle from the Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. Vol. 2. Seattle: S.J. Clarke Publishing Company. p. 627. The Novelty Mill Company... was organized in 1893, and the mills in West Seattle were, within a short time, manufacturing flour.
  99. ^ Wildman Zen (May 3, 2014). "Spooky Pier Paddling in West Seattle". YouTube. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  100. ^ a b c d e "Report tells advantages of Seattle's Great Harbor". Railway and Marine News. XI (3). Seattle: J.P. Parkinson: 20–21. February 15, 1913. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  101. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 26 (PDF).
  102. ^ a b "Five-Year Review Report" (PDF). United States Environmental Protection Agency. September 28, 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 1, 2006. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
  103. ^ a b c "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 8 (198 of overall document).
  104. ^ a b "Barges Ordered for Alaska run". Seattle Times. February 26, 1974. p. 36.
  105. ^ a b c Glen Carter (December 27, 1970). "Waterfront Gears for Action". Seattle Times. p. 74. The Alaska Hydro-Train began moving out of Terminal 2
  106. ^ "Crowley splits operations of liner, marine services". Seattle Times. August 4, 1992. p. E2.
  107. ^ a b "Summary for 620 W Lee ST W / Parcel ID 1732801325". Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved July 27, 2019. In 1910, Schwager & Nettleton ... opened Puget Sound's first all electric sawmill in West Seattle. By 1927 the West Seattle sawmill employed 350 men and from 1910 until 1927 produced one billion board feet of lumber. By then, Nettleton was the sole owner and he ran the mill until it closed in 1965.
  108. ^ a b c Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xxix
  109. ^ a b c d e f Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xxxvii
  110. ^ Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xxxi
  111. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs "Seattle Harbor Directory". Seattle Municipal Archives. 1971. Retrieved 2022-10-18. Map also available as File:Map of Seattle Harbor, circa 1971 (52409434495).jpg.
  112. ^ Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xxxvii. "By 1956, two drydocks were located on the property."
  113. ^ Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xxxix
  114. ^ a b c Southwest Harbor Cleanup Draft EIS 1994, p. xlv-xlvi.
  115. ^ a b "Jack Block Park". Port of Seattle. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  116. ^ "Terminal 5". Port of Seattle. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  117. ^ a b c d "Ames Shipbuilding & Drydock Company Record Books, 1916-1953". Archives West. Retrieved July 27, 2019. ...the shipyard covered an area of about 20 acres and was equipped with a machine shop, blacksmith shop, boiler shop, plate and pattern shops, carpenter and coppersmith shops, and other facilities, including a large dining hall and hospital for its employees. Ames opened his new Ames Terminal Company, a cargo-handling facility, in Seattle in 1922, at the site of the shipyard. The terminal was a center of salmon shipping activity, handling the entire pack of the large Libby, McNeil and Libby Company fisheries. ¶ City directory entries for the Ames Shipbuililding & Drydock Company end in the 1956, and for the Ames Terminal Company in the early 1960s.
  118. ^ a b Chris Daniels, KING Staff (April 2, 2019). "Ports of Seattle, Tacoma approve major renovations for Terminal 5". KING-TV. Retrieved July 27, 2019.
  119. ^ "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 7 (197 of overall document).
  120. ^ Listed on page 89 of Report of the Secretary of State by Washington (State) Office of the Secretary of State, 1918. Accessed online July 28, 2019.
  121. ^ a b Ingrid O'Connell (March 26, 2015). "Norwegian boat-building in the US". The Norwegian American. Shoreline, Washington. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  122. ^ "Maritime Boat and Engine Works, Inc., 1710 W. Spokane Ave., Seattle, Wash. : Plant of Maritime Boat and Engine Works". Pacific Fisherman Year Book 1920. University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 28, 2019. 1710 W. Spokane Ave. (sic: should be Spokane St.)
  123. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Map of Seattle, 1911-12". sos.wa.gov. Seattle: Seattle Pioneer Pocket Guide. 1911. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  124. ^ "Port of Seattle Harbor Island Marina". Washington State Parks. Archived from the original on July 28, 2019. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  125. ^ "Who We Are". Jim Clark Marina. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  126. ^ a b "Terminal 18 Park". Port of Seattle. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  127. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries for Harbor Island in the map index include:
    • 81 - Duthie & Co. Shipbuilders
    • 82 - East Waterway Dock & Whse Co.
    • 83 - Harbor Island Manufacturing Co.
    • 84 - Puget Sound Br. & Dredg Co, Ships
    • 85 - Chas. H. Lilly Co. Flour, Feed
    • 86 - Fisher Flouring Mills Co
    • 87 - Mullins Saw Mill Co.
    • 132 - Todd Drydock & Repairing Co
  128. ^ a b c d Eric Johnson (November 18, 2013). "Behind the walls of iconic, abandoned, Fisher Mill". KOMO-TV. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  129. ^ "Fisher Flouring Mills Co, Seattle, Washington, ca 1911". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  130. ^ a b c "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 5 (195 of overall document).
  131. ^ "King County announces Harbor Island Studios; former Fisher Flour warehouse is now soundstages". Westside Seattle. April 3, 2021. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  132. ^ "Testing pump used for Duwamish dredging, September 6, 1913". Special Collections Online. Seattle Public Library. Retrieved 2023-01-13. The Lilly flour mill can be partly seen behind the sailboat in this 1913 photo.
  133. ^ a b "Thirteenth Naval District (Cochrane Collection)". Shipscribe.com. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
  134. ^ a b c "Our History" Archived May 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Vigor Industrial, May 2012
  135. ^ Clarence Bagley, History of Seattle from the earliest settlement to the present time, Volume 2 (1916), p. 609.
  136. ^ "William H. Todd", The Rudder (1919), Vol. XXXV, p. 61.
  137. ^ "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 4-5 (194-195 of overall document).
  138. ^ Iris Dorbian (July 25, 2019). "Carlyle and Stellex to buy and merge Vigor Industrial and MHI Holdings". PE Hub Network. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  139. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 4 (194 of overall document).
  140. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Paul Dorpat (2005). "3" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 197. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  141. ^ a b c d e f g "A Tour of Seattle's Working Waterfront" (PDF). Port of Seattle. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  142. ^ "Superfund Site: Harbor Island (LEAD) Seattle, WA". U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  143. ^ "Crowley Marine Services Pier 17". Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  144. ^ "Terminal 18". Northwest Seaport Alliance. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  145. ^ a b c d "Terminal 18". Port of Seattle. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  146. ^ Denise Fainberg (June 4, 2012). Explorer's Guide Washington (Second ed.). The Countryman Press. p. 150. ISBN 9780881509748. Map shows Pier 19 roughly across the East Waterway from Lander Street.
  147. ^ a b c Colton, Tim. "J. F. Duthie & Company, Seattle WA". Shipbuildinghistory.com. The Colton Company. Archived from the original on 2009-12-17. Retrieved 21 September 2008.
  148. ^ "One of Seattle's Great Institutions". Pacific Marine Review. 15. J.S. Hines: 98–102. July 1918. Retrieved August 1, 2019. J.F. Duthie & Company broke ground for their new plant on September 10, 1916, and on November 29, 1916 the keel of their first vessel reposed on the keel blocks, and a completely finished plant stood ready...
  149. ^ "Obituaries". Marine Review. 52. Penton Publishing Company: 244. June 1922.
  150. ^ "Olympic Tug and Barge Grounding". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). June 29, 2019. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  151. ^ Williams 2015, p. 95.
  152. ^ Williams 2015, p. 104: "by 1917, [the Lake Washington Waterway Company] had filled in 92 percent of the tideflats."
  153. ^ "Rainier 'R' reclaims perch atop old brewery". KOMO-TV. October 25, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  154. ^ 1905 Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Wash, Plate 11
  155. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q 1905 Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Wash, Plate 10
  156. ^ Seattle Municipal Archives on Flickr (January 1898). "Tideflats, circa 1898". Fleets and Facilities Department Imagebank Collection. Retrieved July 29, 2019.
  157. ^ a b c d "Seattle tideflats viewed from Beacon Hill". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 29, 2019. Available on Commons as File:Seattle tideflats viewed from Beacon Hill (CURTIS 1691).jpeg.
  158. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 23 (PDF)
  159. ^ a b Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 17: (left half), (right half)
  160. ^ Williams 2015, Chapter 3:Filling in the Duwamish River Tideflats.
  161. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries in the map index for the east side of the East Waterway south of Atlantic Street include:
    • 65 - Skinner & Eddy Shipbuilding Corp.
    • 66 - City of Seattle, Fire Wharf
    • 67 - Albers Bros Milling Co.
    • 68 - Hammond Milling Co.
    • 69 - Standard Oil Co. Wharf
    • 70 - Nilson & Kelez Shipbuilding Co.
    • 71 - San Juan Fishing & Packing Co.
    • 72 - Port Commission Stacy St. Terminal, Port Commission Lander [St. Terminal]
    • 73 - Commercial Boiler Works Wharf
    • 74 - National Independent Fisheries Co.
    • 75 - C.M. & St.P.R.R. Wharf & Car Ferry
    • 76 - Pacific Const'n & Engineering Co.
    • 77 - Port Commission, Hanford St. Terminal
    • 78 - Port Commission, Spokane
    • 79 - Elliott Bay Mill Co. (Lumber)
    • 80 - Barton & Co., Packers
  162. ^ a b "Barton & Company Wholesale Packers and Provisioners". The Town Crier. Vol. 12, no. 26. Seattle. 1917-06-30. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-03-20.
  163. ^ "G.I.C. Barton". The Town Crier. Vol. 11, no. 50. Seattle. 1916-12-09. p. 15. Retrieved 2023-03-20.
  164. ^ Williams 2015, p. 216 (endnotes), note 59: "I have not been able to determine if the Canal Waterway was actually completed. It appears to have been started, and it is shown on the 1912 Baist map and the 1904-5 Sanford map. It is also mentioned in the newspaper, or at least its filling in is mentioned, but there are no photographs of it. Paul Dorpat raises a good point, asking why the canal would be dug before the completion of the cut through Beacon Hill [which never occurred]. Why then are there articles in the Seattle Times describing the filling of a canal at this location? It's one of Seattle's little mysteries. Paul Dorpat, email correspondence with the author, January 30, 2014."
  165. ^ "Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging Company, September 30, 1940". Museum of History and Industry. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  166. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc Daryl C. McClary (November 26, 2011), "Seattle docks and piers are given new designations on May 1, 1944", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 31, 2018
  167. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 3 (193 of overall document).
  168. ^ a b c d "Seattle's Refrigerating Terminals". American Shipping. 15: 26. January 10, 1922. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  169. ^ a b c d G.F. Nicholson (1918). "Future Development of Harbor and Rail Facilities for Seattle". Pacific Marine Review. J.S. Hines: 104. Retrieved August 1, 2019. Spokane Street Terminal... Two electrically actuated elevator ice crushers... having a capacity of 75 tons per hour, also have been installed for the icing of boats and the packing of fresh fish on the wharf.
  170. ^ "Hefferman" is certainly correct, e.g. Lloyd's Register of Shipping. Vol. 2. Wyman and sons. 1908. p. 801. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  171. ^ a b "Hanford St. Wharf, Port of Seattle". Washington State Historical Society. Archived from the original on August 1, 2019. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  172. ^ Not shown on the 1912 Baist map
  173. ^ a b c d "(untitled UPI story)". United Press International. November 22, 1983. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  174. ^ Frank Waterhouse & Company's Pacific Ports. Pacific Ocean. 1919. p. 67. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  175. ^ Bogue, Virgil Gay (1911). "Transportation". Plan of Seattle: Report of the Municipal Plans Commission. p. 112. Retrieved April 12, 2020. Railroad Avenue, with its southerly extension, Whatcom Avenue between Holgate and Spokane Streets, traversing the city's waterfront from Smith's Cove to Spokane Street...
  176. ^ Guy Scott. "J.F. Duthie Company shipbuilders at 2917 Whatcom Ave. and planked road, probably between 1917 and 1920". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  177. ^ "Machine shop, Isaacson Iron Works, Seattle, 1943". Museum of History and Industry. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  178. ^ "Earle M. Jorgensen Company". Encyclopedia.com. International Directory of Company Histories. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  179. ^ a b Office of Environmental Management 1973, p.23
  180. ^ a b c d "National Independent Fisheries Makes Assignment". Pacific Fisherman. 20 (8): 40. August 1922. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  181. ^ a b c d e Not listed in the 1910 Report of the Commissioner of Corporations...
  182. ^ "East Waterway Terminal, 1915". Engineering Department Photographic Negatives. Seattle Municipal Archives on Flickr. 24 May 1915. Retrieved July 31, 2019.(Available on Commons)
  183. ^ "Port of Seattle, Lander Street Wharf, foot of S. Lander St., Seattle". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  184. ^ "South Pier 2, 1914". Seattle Municipal Archive on Flickr. 9 October 1914. Retrieved July 31, 2019. (Available on Commons)
  185. ^ Not on Baist 1912 map; Lander and Stacy Street Wharves visible in Seattle Municipal Archives photo "South Pier 2, 1914", dated October 9, 1914, and the grain terminal in of harbor and shipyards, Seattle (on the University of Washington Libraries site, dated 1917; available on Commons).
  186. ^ Oldham, Kit; Blecha, Peter; HistoryLink Staff (2011). Rising Tides and Tailwinds: The Story of the Port of Seattle 1911–2011. Seattle: Port of Seattle, HistoryLink, University of Washington Press. pp. 98, 107. ISBN 9780295991313.
  187. ^ The 1918 City of Seattle Harbor Department Map of Central Waterfront District shows this as "Nilson & Kelzie Shipbuilding Corp." but "Kelzie" is almost certainly an error.
  188. ^ "Standard Oil Co., Railroad Ave. S. [Alaskan Way], Seattle". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  189. ^ David Wilma (January 1, 1999), "Gas Station may have been invented in Seattle in 1907", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved July 31, 2018
  190. ^ a b c d "Seattle waterfront, flour milling district". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  191. ^ "Steamship OLYMPIA loading at Albers Brothers Milling Co dock, 304 Railroad Ave S, Seattle". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  192. ^ "(advertisement)". Seattle Mail and Herald. Vol. 5/#46. Seattle. 1902-09-27. p. 11. Retrieved 2022-11-25. our building and wharf at the foot of Massachusetts Avenue
  193. ^ a b c d e f g h i "History of Base Seattle at Pier 36". Deputy Commandant for Mission Support U.S. Coast Guard. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  194. ^ "Official Facebook page for Coast Guard Station Seattle". Facebook. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  195. ^ a b c d e f g Paul Dorpat (2005). "3" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. pp. 197–198. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  196. ^ File:Seattle - Northern Fish Co. Pier from Centennial Mill, 1903.jpg, detail from Seattle Mail and Herald, v. 6, no. 51, Oct. 31, 1903, page 8.
  197. ^ a b Robertson, Donald B. (1995). Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History. Vol. III: Oregon · Washington. pp. 244–245.
  198. ^ a b c "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963", p. 2 (192 of overall document).
  199. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Paul Dorpat (2005). "3" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. p. 198. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  200. ^ a b c d e f g "A Wonderful Era". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Seattle: 13. 1890-01-01. Retrieved 2019-10-05. Wharves, Burnt District.
  201. ^ An 1890 city directory shows Mechanics Mill already at this location after the 1889 fire.Seattle City Directory. Polk's Seattle Directory Company. 1890. p. 820. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  202. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 16: (left half), (right half)
  203. ^ The list of docks and wharves in Polk's 1899 Seattle City Directory (p. 91) lists "Dry Dock, foot Charles."
  204. ^ Walter V. Woehlke, Union Labor in Peace and War (1918), p. 107.
  205. ^ a b c d e "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries in the map index from King to Atlantic Street include:
    • 61 - Boiler Works, Machine Shops & c.
    • 62 - Oregon Washington RR Co. Wharf
    • 63 - Pacific Coast Coal Co. Bunker & c.
    • 64 - Skinner & Eddy Shipbuilding Corp.
  206. ^ a b Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 20: (left half), (right half)
  207. ^ a b c d e Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (6 November 2011). "Seattle Now & Then: First Avenue South". Seattle Now & Then (pauldorpat.com). Retrieved August 6, 2019. The railroad trestle connecting the King St. wharf with the worm-free slope of Beacon Hill was used until 1903 (or thereabouts) when the coal wharf was moved south to Dearborn Street and a new trestle connected with it.
  208. ^ This is presumably the pier "Seattle One of the World's Great Ports" (Railway & Marine News volume 11, number 12, August 1, 1913) refers to as "C. & P. S. Ry. Co.": they are generally listing this area south-to-north, and they have this before the coaling pier at Dearborn.
  209. ^ a b The generally comprehensive list in "Exhibit 29: Piers, Wharves, and Docks Port of Seattle, Washington 1963" makes on mention of this pier.
  210. ^ Seattle... and the Orient. Seattle Daily Times. 1900. p. 65., shows them with a 9-acre site at this location. File:Seattle - Stetson Post Lumber 1909.jpg reproduces an ad from the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition special issue of Seattle weekly The Argus (Volume 16, No. 3, February 20, 1909), showing the mill still in this location at that time. However, the 1910 Report of the Commissioner of Corporations... says that in 1907 the Union Pacific Railroad had purchased the property, and the 1912 Baist map shows largely empty piers here.
  211. ^ a b "Trimble's wharf on tideflats, 1917". Seattle Municipal Archives on Flickr. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  212. ^ Newell, Gordon R. (1966). H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest. Seattle: Superior Publishing. p. 159.
  213. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 1 (PDF)
  214. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries in the map index on the Central Waterfront include:
    • 33 - Pier 14, Dodwell Wharf
    • 34 - American Can Co.
    • 35 - Superior Fish Co.
    • 36 - Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co.
    • 37 - Booth Fisheries
    • 38 - Central Sand & Gravel Co.
    • 39 - Pier 12. Galbraith Bacon Co.
    • 40 - Port Commission, Bell St. Terminal
    • 41 - U.S.Q.M. Wharf, Pier 11B
    • 42 - W.F. Jahn Co, [Pier] 11A, Pier 10, Virginia St. Wharf
    • 43 - Pier 9, Whiz Fish Co.
    • 44 - Pier 8, Pacific Net & Twine Co.
    • 45 - Pier 7, Schwabacher Wharf
    • 46 - Piers 6&612, C.M.& St. Ry.
    • 47 - Pier 5, Northern Pacific Ry.
    • 48 - Pier 4
    • 49 - Pier 3, Galbraith Wharf
    • 50 - City of Seattle, Fire Wharf
    • 51 - Grand Trunk Pacific Wharf
    • 52 - Port Commission, Marion St Ferry Ldg
    • 53 - Colman Wharf
    • 54 - Pier 2, Northern Pacific Ry
    • 55 - Pier 1, [Northern Pacific Ry]
    • 56 - City of Seattle, Wharf & Gridiron
    • 57 - Pier A, Pacific Steamship Co.
    • 58 - Pier B, [Pacific Steamship Co.]
    • 59 - Pier C, [Pacific Steamship Co.]
    • 60 - Pier D, [Pacific Steamship Co.]
  215. ^ File:View from Alaskan Way Viaduct, 1953 (39737727923).jpg
  216. ^ a b c d e f g Wayside Mission Hospital Photograph Collection, between 1900 and 1909 (finding aid), Archives West. Accessed 2022-06-06
  217. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 15: (left half), (right half)
  218. ^ Photograph at File:Seattle waterfront c1905 (5536882384).jpg shows this name written on the dock. Accessed August 25, 2019.
  219. ^ Corr, O. Casey (October 3, 1989). "Terminal cure: Port may help boost the economy". The Seattle Times. p. F3.
  220. ^ Wigglesworth, Zeke (February 26, 1989). "Ferry to Alaska set for port change". The Tampa Tribune. p. 8–G. Retrieved June 15, 2018 – via Newspapers.com. Free access icon
  221. ^ Peter Blecha (November 19, 2014), "Grunge-rock luminaries Nirvana perform scorching homecoming concert for MTV at Seattle's historic Pier 48 along Elliott Bay on December 13, 1993", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved August 13, 2019
  222. ^ "Steamer SENTINEL at Pier A in Seattle, approximately 1911". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
  223. ^ "Summary for Washington Street and Alaskan Way". Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
  224. ^ a b c d e Thomas Street 2006, p. 18-19
  225. ^ a b c Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (September 17, 2016). "Yesler's Wharf, 1891". pauldorpat.com. Seattle Now & Then. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
  226. ^ Beaton, Welford, ed. Frank Waterhouse & Company's Pacific Ports: A Commercial Geography (1917), at pages 27 to 37. (accessed 06-09-11)
  227. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 4: (left half), (right half)
  228. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at Thomas Street 2006, p. 12, citing 1893 Sanborn map
  229. ^ Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 2 (PDF) just gives "Colman Dock," doesn't mention Inland Navigation Co.
  230. ^ a b "Seattle Terminal and Cameras". Washington State Ferries. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  231. ^ a b c d e f Thomas Street 2006, p. 19-20
  232. ^ a b Thomas Street 2006, p. 40-41
  233. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 46
  234. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 2 (PDF)
  235. ^ a b The list of docks and wharves in Polk's 1899 Seattle City Directory (p. 91) lists "Commercial, foot Marion"; the 1893 Sanborn map Vol. 1. Plate 4: (left half) lists a "Commercial Dock Warehouse and office" here.
  236. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 20 says, somewhat oddly, that the Grand Trunk Dock "stood north of the Colman Dock, in the location of the old Flyer Dock" but the same source say that the Grand Trunk Dock existed "by 1910" and that the Flyer Dock was destroyed in the Alameda accident of 1912.
  237. ^ a b c d e f g h i Thomas Street 2006, p. 20
  238. ^ a b c Paul Dorpat; Jean Sherrard (August 27, 2016). "Fire Station No. 5 (or 'You'll Like Tacoma')". pauldorpat.com. Seattle Now & Then. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  239. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 20-21
  240. ^ a b c d e Thomas Street 2006, p. 41
  241. ^ Paul Dorpat (June 20, 2000), "Haglund, Ivar (1905–1985)", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved January 29, 2008
  242. ^ Duncan, Kate C. (2001). 1001 Curious Things: Ye Olde Curiosity Shop and Native American Art. University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-98010-9.
  243. ^ a b "Alaska Steamship Company at Piers 1 and 2, Seattle, circa 1898". Retrieved 2020-11-19. This image features Northern Pacific Railroad Piers 1 and 2 on the Seattle waterfront, operating under the Alaska Steamship Company. The piers were rebuilt in 1902 and numbered 3 through 5 until World War II when the military renumbered them 54 through 56. Museum of History and Industry content on the site of University of Washington Library; despite the attribution of both piers as "operating under the Alaska Steamship Company," the one on the left (Pier 1) clearly says "Canadian Pacific Steamship Co."
  244. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Thomas Street 2006, p. 21
  245. ^ "White Star Dock, foot Spring" is listed on p.91 of the 1899 Polk's Seattle City Directory, but other sources seem consistent in saying it was not completed until 1900. The directory presumably anticipated the completion.
  246. ^ a b c "Wrecking Started: Northern Pacific Begins Tearing Out the Collapsed White Star Dock". Seattle Daily Times. September 17, 1901. p. 3.
  247. ^ "Seattle Steamship Company offices at the White Star Dock, foot of Spring St., Seattle, Washington, between 1893 and 1906". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  248. ^ "Contracts Are Awarded". Seattle Daily Times. December 9, 1901. p. 7.
  249. ^ Klingle 2007, p. 77. "In digging a new slip at the base of the old Yesler mill in 1901, Northern Pacific engineers dislodged chunks of 'slab wood and large rocks' from beneath the mud. This inferior fill was, the engineers claimed, responsible for the collapse of the White Star Line dock into Elliott Bay that same year."
  250. ^ "Seattle Dock Collapses". UCR Center for Bibliographical Studies and Research. California Digital Newspaper Collection. Vol. XXVII, no. 260. Santa Rosa, California: Press Democrat. September 15, 1901. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  251. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 39 gives this as "Royal Mail Steam Pack Company"
  252. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 39 gives this as "East Asiatic Steamship Company"
  253. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 39
  254. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Seattle, King County, Washington, 1893 Vol. 1. Plate 1: (left half), (right half)
  255. ^ a b c d e "Transports Garonne and Athenian docked in Elliott Bay, Seattle, August 1899". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  256. ^ a b c d e Polk's Seattle City Directory (1899), p. 91, lists both "Arlington Wharf" and "Caine's Wharf" as "foot University". The 1898 Polk's lists "EE Caine" as being at the "foot of University"; the 1899 Polk's lists "EE Caine" as being at "Arlington Dock"; the latter also lists a "Polk Clipper Lines" at the same location.
  257. ^ Based on another dock being in this location by the end of 1900.
  258. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Paul Dorpat (2005). "3" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History (PDF). p. 199. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  259. ^ a b c Thomas Street 2006, p. 46-47
  260. ^ The 1910 Report of the Commissioner of Corporations... refers to "J.B. Egan," presumably a typographical error.
  261. ^ "Seattle piers at the base of University St., ca. 1905". Seattle Public Library. Retrieved 2022-12-26. Scan of a postcard published by Lowman & Hanford c. 1905.
  262. ^ "Boat MARY B moored beside the Pacific Net and Twine Company dock, Seattle waterfront, probably". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved 2020-03-05.
  263. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 47
  264. ^ Kugiya, Hugo (June 29, 2012). "What 'Seattle process'? Big wheel turns up fast". Puget Sound Business Journal. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
  265. ^ Sullivan, Jennifer (June 29, 2012). "The Seattle Great Wheel opens to a big crowd". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on December 26, 2017. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
  266. ^ "C.P.R. to Build Mammoth New Seattle Wharf". Seattle Daily Times. June 24, 1910. p. 19.
  267. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 21-22
  268. ^ a b c d e f Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 3 (PDF)
  269. ^ See signs on pier shed in "Railroad Avenue; North from Pacific Marine Supply Co. and Union Street". Engineering Department Negatives. Seattle Municipal Archives. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  270. ^ Paul Dorpat (May 24, 2000), "Seattle Central Waterfront, Part 7: Waterfront Park", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved August 9, 2019
  271. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 22-23
  272. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Thomas Street 2006, p. 23
  273. ^ 1899 Polk's Seattle City Directory (p. 91)
  274. ^ Pier 8 1/2, 1935, Seattle Municipal Archives post on Flickr, accessed 2022-06-02.
  275. ^ a b c "Building Warehouse". Seattle Daily Times. September 17, 1901. p. 3.
  276. ^ Daniel Beekman (June 17, 2016). "Push is on to rebuild Pier 62 for concerts and more". Seattle Times. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  277. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Thomas Street 2006, p. 24
  278. ^ Phil Dougherty (September 17, 2007), "Bratnober, John (1879-1951)", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, retrieved August 26, 2019
  279. ^ a b Paul Dorpat (2005). "4" (PDF). The Seattle Waterfront: An Illustrated History. pp. 230–231. Retrieved August 22, 2019. With the completion of the Lenora Street overpass in the early 1930s and the increasing development of motor freight, Pier 11-B / 65 became an important center for auto freight with more than twenty such companies listed in the 1943 city directory as located there.
  280. ^ "Auto accident at Railroad Avenue". Department of Streets and Sewers Photograph Collection. Seattle Municipal Archives. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  281. ^ a b Thomas Street 2006, p. 36
  282. ^ a b c "Port of Seattle, Pier 66, Bell Street Wharf, Waterfront, Seattle, WA (1914)". PCAD (Pacific Coast Architecture Database). Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  283. ^ a b c d Thomas Street 2006, p. 25
  284. ^ a b c d e Elenga, Maureen R. (2007). Seattle Architecture. Seattle: Seattle Architecture Foundation. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-615-14129-9.
  285. ^ a b c "Summary for 2411 Alaskan WAY / Parcel ID 7666202317". Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
  286. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 8 (PDF)
  287. ^ Thomas Street 2006, p. 25 spells this "Chlopek," but the correct spelling is visible on photographs of the building. Similarly, the 1910 Report of the Commissioner of Corporations... gives "Clopeck".
  288. ^ a b c d e Thomas Street 2006, p. 25-26
  289. ^ Oldham, Kit; Blecha, Peter; HistoryLink Staff (2011). Rising Tides and Tailwinds: The Story of the Port of Seattle 1911–2011. Seattle: Port of Seattle, HistoryLink, University of Washington Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 9780295991313.
  290. ^ Oldham, Kit; Blecha, Peter; HistoryLink Staff (2011). Rising Tides and Tailwinds: The Story of the Port of Seattle 1911–2011. Seattle: Port of Seattle, HistoryLink, University of Washington Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 9780295991313.
  291. ^ a b c d "Summary for 2821 Alaskan WAY / Parcel ID 7666202290]". Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
  292. ^ Pier 70: Home of the Real World Seattle, realworldhouses.com. Accessed online August 14, 2019.
  293. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Map of the Port of Seattle". City of Seattle. Port of Seattle Commission. May 1918. Retrieved August 22, 2019. Also available as File:Port of Seattle map, 1918.jpg. Relevant entries in the map index on the waterfront north of Broad Street include:
    • 27 - Port Commission Smith Cove Terminal
    • 28 - Great Northern Terminal
    • 29 - Seattle Lumber Co.
    • 30 - City of Seattle, Harrison St. Wharf
    • 31 - Pier 18, Pacific Mildcure Co.
    • 32 - Union Oil Co. Wharf
  294. ^ a b Seattle Times Staff (January 19, 2007). "A look back: 120 years in the life of a city block". Seattle Times. Retrieved August 13, 2019. Unocal operations were phased out in the 1970s and 1980s, and cleanup started in 1989.
  295. ^ Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 8 (PDF) shows this in 1912.
  296. ^ A 1970s planning document (File:Elliott_Bay_waterfront_plans,_1970s_(51250882042).jpg) shows it as a possible feature of what became Myrtle Edwards Park.
  297. ^ a b c d e f g h Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 9 (PDF).
  298. ^ "Blackstock Lumber". Washington State Department of Ecology. Retrieved August 24, 2019.
  299. ^ "Terminal 86 Grain Facility". Port of Seattle. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  300. ^ a b c "Internal Audit Report: Lease and Concession Agreement Audit; Pier 86 Grain Terminal" (PDF). Port of Seattle. March 24, 2017. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  301. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 21 (PDF).
  302. ^ a b Seattle Mail and Herald, v.6, "Progress Edition", 1902-12-20, p. 34.
  303. ^ "Japanese trade delegation's arrival, Great Northern Steamship Co. dock, Smith's Cove, Seattle, Washington, September 1, 1909". University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved August 24, 2019.
  304. ^ Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 21 (PDF) shows this partially built, not yet named, with a rail line but no other facilities.
  305. ^ Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society (2002). Maritime Seattle. Arcadia Publishing. p. 98. ISBN 9780738520643.
  306. ^ Oldham, Kit; Blecha, Peter; HistoryLink Staff (2011). Rising Tides and Tailwinds: The Story of the Port of Seattle 1911–2011. Seattle: Port of Seattle, HistoryLink, University of Washington Press. p. 107. ISBN 9780295991313.
  307. ^ Baist's Real Estate Atlas of Surveys of Seattle, Washington from 1912, Plate 21 (PDF) does not show this having been started.
  308. ^ Brown, Greg (1991-05-17). "Elliott Marina opening could create renters' market for moorage". The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. pp. C8. Retrieved 2008-09-16.[dead link]
  309. ^ "About Emerald Harbor Marine". emharbor.com. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  310. ^ Deborah Bach (October 6, 2010). "Elliott Bay Marina: an urban oasis". threesheetsnw.com. Retrieved August 12, 2019.[permanent dead link]