Cover Story Plant Life On Fitness Northwest Living Taste Now & Then


WRITTEN BY PAUL DORPAT
A Pair of Pioneers
 
Facing Third Avenue, the Yesler Mansion and City Hall were photographed together in 1900, the last year they would stand side by side. In 1903, the oversized but short-lived Coliseum Theater was built in the place of the mansion. In 1916, the lower floors of the surviving City County Building were dedicated there. Across Jefferson Street, the site of the rambling clapboard City Hall that was destroyed in 1909 was ultimately developed into City Hall Park.


So far as I can recall, this is the only photograph that shows, side by side, two of the more significant structures in our pioneer history. On the left facing Third Avenue is the Yesler Mansion; on the right, Seattle City Hall. You cannot tell it here, but in its lifetime the latter grew into such a heterodox structure that it was popularly called "the Katzenjammer Castle." The nickname was drawn from a comic strip featuring the two mischievous Katzenjammer Kids, whose adventures took place in a cityscape stuffed with clumsy structures resembling Rube Goldberg inventions.

In its own, ornate way, the 40-room Yesler Mansion was also clumsy. In "Shaping Seattle Architecture," Jeffrey Karl Ochsner of the University of Washington Department of Architecture notes its "highly agitated forms . . . irregular bays, picturesque profile and varied details . . . are typical of American High Victorian architecture." I, for one, fall for this kind of clumsiness.

When construction began on the mansion in 1883 in time for the depression or "Panic of 1883," its municipal neighbor was already standing for two years as the King County Courthouse. When, in 1886, Henry and Sara Yesler moved two blocks from their home in Pioneer Place (Square) to their big home, it was barely furnished. After Sara died the following year, Henry and his nephew James Lowman went east to visit relatives and buy furniture. Henry died in late 1892.

Seven years later, the Seattle Public Library moved in. The stay was short. On New Year's Day 1901, fire destroyed the Yesler Mansion and 25,000 books. Twelve years earlier both buildings just escaped the city's "Great Fire."

Paul Dorpat's two-hour videotape on Seattle's early history, "Seattle Chronicle," is $29.95 from Tartu Publications, P.O. Box 85208, Seattle, WA 98145.


Cover Story Plant Life On Fitness Northwest Living Taste Now & Then

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