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Now & Then Paul Dorpat

House With A Past

THIS PIONEER snow is neither from Seattle's still coldest winter of 1861-'62 nor from its still deepest snow, the "big snow" of 1880. The scene is too late for the former and too early for the latter. What is most curious about this look into what was then still Seattle's first residential neighborhood is the scene's "centerpiece" — the two-story box with four windows on its west façade. It sits at the northwest corner of Second Avenue and Cherry Street.

Judging from the remnants of the old forest on First Hill and from the other structures, most likely this view dates from the early to mid-1870s. Above the barn or large shed on the far left is the tower to Seattle's first sanctuary, the so-called White Church at the southeast corner of Second and Columbia Street.

Significantly, the "centerpiece" box is a frame structure. Therefore it is not the log cabin that Carson Boren built at that corner in the spring of 1852. The local tradition that the Carson cabin was the first structure completed in Seattle is remembered with a plaque on the Hoge Building (that now fills the corner). However, according to Greg Lange, a historylink.org scholar of Seattle's pioneer life, the Boren cabin was more likely the third house completed — after Doc Maynard's on First Avenue South and William Bell's first home in Belltown.

Actually, as Lange notes, Bell is also better associated with this box if not with its predecessor, the log cabin. In 1855 Boren sold the corner to him. Lange concedes that the frame building, seen here, may have been part of the deal. However, he thinks it more likely that Bell, not Boren, built it sometime after 1858. By the late 1870s the black box at Second and Cherry was replaced with a more distinguished residence.

Paul Dorpat specializes in historical photography and has published several books on early Seattle.

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