The Neighbors project was published weekly in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1996 to 2000. This page remains available for archival purposes only and the information it contains may be outdated. For more updated information, please visit our Webtowns section.
 
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Beacon Hill
Hill was one of city's first neighborhoods

By MARK HIGGINS Mail Author
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

Beacon Hill has a rich history as one of Seattle's first neighborhoods. It was named by financier M. Harwood Young, who came from Boston and called the hill "Beacon" after one of the oldest residential neighborhoods in his hometown.

Among the first to be attracted by its grand views was Frank Black, a Republican businessman who served as mayor of Seattle -- for just three weeks. Black was pushed into office by reform-minded friends, who wanted to clean up Seattle's bawdy image.

But he quickly resigned in 1896, citing ill health. The real reason, according to pioneer lawyer, historian and author Cornelius Hanford, was that Black felt it would be impossible to impose a new morality on a city starting to itch with Gold Rush fever.

Black went on to build an estate on three acres near 12th Avenue South and South Atlantic Street, overlooking downtown. In about 1913, he offered his wife, Katie, a grand tour of Europe. She declined, asking instead for a Japanese garden.

Some 80 years later, the garden had slipped beneath a sea of blackberry vines and ivy.

Beacon Hill resident Keith Murray remembers rooting around on the site and rediscovering its hidden charms.

"I got in there and found two fish ponds," Murray says. A brick path wound around the ponds and cherry, cedar and elm trees formed a canopy over rhododendrons, quince and forsythia.

Murray helped rally neighbors to save the garden, some of which had been nibbled away by the construction of a nearby apartment building. The Parks Department bought the remaining corner of the garden and is in the process of restoring it -- though more help is needed from the community.

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HEADLINES
Saturday, Jan. 17, 1998

Rather than clash of cultures, residents here join together

El Centro is central to community's soul

Main street's median remains a sore point for many

Sprawling park is a local treasure

Literal urban jungle among neighborhood trouble spots

Hill was one of city's first neighborhoods

Jon Hahn: At MacPherson's market, shoppers needn't part with all their crisp greens

Things to do while you're here

Scenes of Beacon Hill

Beacon Hill historical album

Beacon Hill on the Web

By the numbers


Nearby communities:

Central Area

Columbia City

Georgetown

International District

Leschi

Mount Baker

Rainier Beach

Rainier Valley

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