Every place has its story. Even the suburbs.
I live a few blocks inside Seattle’s city limits. The double
yellow line on NE 145th St separates the Emerald City from the quiet
residential community of Shoreline, and even downtown Lake City has a strong
suburban flavor to it. The area just south of the neighborhood was home to both
an elaborate Prohibition-era speakeasy operation and a historic civil rights
campaign against a racist restaurant, both of which I’ll be writing about in
future posts. But Lake City proper’s main claim to fame is hosting some of the
oldest continuously operating dive bars in Seattle. There won’t be a period drama
set here anytime soon.
History isn’t just thrilling stories, though: it’s about how
people have lived and worked and loved and struggled every day. Instead of
tracing a narrative story, this week I decided to take a walk that would show
me new parts of my neighborhood and allow me to give some little vignettes
about what Shoreline and North Seattle are like, and how they got that way. I
was going to follow Thornton Creek.
Fig 3.1: It was also a really nice day out, so I needed an excuse for a walk. |
Thornton Creek drains twelve square miles of city and suburb
in Seattle and Shoreline, including almost all of Lake City. After an intensive
restoration campaign in the 2000s, about ninety percent of it is aboveground, which is
pretty remarkable for an urban river and makes it easy to walk along even when
it disappears into private property. One branch flows from Shoreline south, the
other flows east from underneath the Northgate Mall, and they converge in a
specially constructed flood-control park before issuing into Lake Washington at
Matthews Beach. I couldn’t follow both routes, but the North Branch was the
obvious choice. Northgate is about as historically interesting as a mall can
get – it was one of the first enclosed shopping centers in the United States,
and Ted Bundy used to pick up his victims in the parking lot – but that’s still
not saying much, and besides, the route of the North Branch is longer and more
varied. I got on the bus and headed to Ronald Bog Park.
The Thornton Creek Watershed is originally home to the Xacuabš
(Lake People), now part of the Duwamish tribe. A village was located on the
lake at the mouth of the creek, the bogs at the creek’s headwaters were
harvested for cranberries, and controlled burns were used to create hunting
meadows all across the watershed. If you’re ever in the area, the Shoreline
Historical Society has a beautiful hand-painted map of North Seattle as it
appeared before colonization, which is worth the visit alone.
The Xacuabš were dispossessed and driven off their land by
white settlers in 1854, and since then the story has been one of continuous
construction and rising population density. The latest chapter was visible
immediately when I arrived at Ronald Bog Park.
Fig. 3.2: Notices of Proposed Land Use Action are the Seattle area’s answer to red phone boxes or Benson Bubblers. |
Two signs, listing far out into the sidewalk, notified
passersby that the park will be undergoing some changes. A good chunk of it
will be converted into artificial wetlands in order to “mitigate” the
destruction of wetlands elsewhere. In a few years’ time, city engineers will be
laying light rail tracks along the other side of the freeway, grubbing up boggy
habitats as they extend the train up to Shoreline. Even development that’s good
for the planet in the long run, like public transit infrastructure, can be
pretty destructive in the moment.
Ronald Bog Park was quiet this Sunday afternoon. A couple
snoozed on the grass. Ducks paddled on the water. An old man with a beard and
bucket hat cooled his feet in the pond, Thornton Creek’s headwaters springing
up between his toes. The cherry blossoms were out.
You wouldn’t know it
looking at the smooth green lawn, but this area was once a true cranberry bog,
covered in peat moss and grazed upon by deer and bears. In the 1940s, a peat
mining operation dug up most of the moss (leaving a hole that the pond fills
today), and within a few years it became an urban wilderness, overgrown and
contaminated by spillover from the Shoreline dump then located immediately to
the south. It wasn’t until the 70s that neighbors got it cleaned up and
parkified.
I hoped to find a way out through the park to the south,
where Thornton Creek emerged from the pond, so I plunged into the remaining
overgrown boggy area on the eastern edge, up against the highway. The ground
bristled with poky dead reeds and Himalayan blackberry. A collapsed barbed-wire
fence no longer marked the boundary between park property and the domain of the
Department of Transportation; the highway was so close that I could’ve
scrambled up and stood on top of the concrete berm. I couldn’t see a way south.
The tents and tarps of a small encampment were visible through the trees in
this jurisdictional limbo, complete with a handmade bridge across a drainage
ditch and gates built from orange construction webbing. Even here, eleven miles
from downtown Seattle, the housing crisis is plain as day.
Fig. 3.3: A quiet corner of the park. |
I decided I’d have to circle the park instead. Back on N 175th
St, a gargantuan sign welcomed me to the City of Shoreline, Incorporated 1995.
Incorporated 1995 it might have been, but this has been a commuter suburb since
long before that date. The interurban from Seattle to Everett used to run right
through this neighborhood. Like so many other transit systems of the early 20th
century, though, it fell afoul of mismanagement, the Depression, and – if you
believe the story – General Motors’s nefarious plot to wipe out trolleys across the nation. Ronald Bog was de-bogged by the development
generated by one light rail line, and is now being re-bogged to mitigate the
construction of another. It’s a neat little historical poem.
Fig. 3.4: You can tell I posted this a little late. The park's statues were still dressed up for St. Paddy's when I went through. |
South of the park, Thornton Creek begins its flow
underground. I walked along Meridian Ave, dipping in and out of tidy
culs-de-sac that had once been dump, but not seeing a sign of the stream yet.
People were out working on their cars or yards in the sun. A girl was biking in
circles in the street; a few blocks over, a bald man was doing the same. Every
other household seemed to have a home improvement business: there were vans
belonging to plumbers, landscapers, solar panel installers and even a chimney
sweep. On Corliss Place, I finally spotted the creek bed running through a
landscaped front yard.
Just as it hits daylight, though, Thornton Creek disappears
again into forbidden property: a tangled stretch of woods posted with NO TRESPASSING
and NO DUMPING signs. Through the trees, I could see the low bulk of the
Shoreline Recycling & Transfer Station. Not wanting to have to circle
around on Meridian again, I looked for a back way in, but all I found was a
cell tower and a desolate park.
Fig 3.5: Fifteen-foot trees growing through the tennis court at James Keogh Park. |
The signs on the other side of the woods, by the bustling
entrance to the recycling station, caught my eye. One was dotted with lichen
devouring the black paint of the letters, while the other had the
pre-2006 insignia of King County on it.
King County was organized in December 1852 and named after
then-Vice-President-elect William Rufus DeVane King. A Southern plantation
owner and slaveholder, King is best known for founding Selma, Alabama, and for
probably being James Buchanan’s lover. (The two men spoke about each other in
terms that would be sweetly endearing if they weren’t the people they were.)
King was dying of tuberculosis in Cuba when he won the election. He expired
only two days after returning to the United States. As a closeted Romantic consumptive and a hideous racist, King is probably our most nineteenth-century
Vice President.
It took 134 years for Seattle-metro officialdom to recognize
that honoring a proud defender of slavery wasn’t a very good look. The solution
was brilliantly simple: they kept the name King County, but proclaimed that it
now referred to Martin Luther King, Jr., instead. It was another 20 years
before they got the designation officially recognized by the State of
Washington and the logos updated to match. I’m almost certainly going to do a
post on the Guerrilla Theater of the Absurd when I get back to Portland, and
you’ll see how surprisingly controversial honoring MLK could be in the 90s.
(The county councilman who led the renaming effort, by the
way, was Ron Sims, who later served as Obama’s HUD secretary and ran for
Governor on a platform of fixing Washington’s grossly regressive tax system –
unfortunately he was less successful in the latter effort.)
Fig 3.6: Urban wilderness. |
As it turned out, I wouldn’t see the creek again for a while. It emerges on private property and remains there for the next mile, tracing a property line between people’s backyards and the interstate. As I walked through more suburban streets, smiling at the cherry blossoms and getting scowled at by two men washing a vintage car, I spotted snatches of ivy-coated gully behind fences. I was too far back to see the flowing water, and it was too close to the interstate to hear it.
The creek became public property again in Twin Ponds Park.
Now this place was bustling. A junior soccer game was in progress. Less
competitively inclined kids were scrambling over the huge banks of tree roots
that lined the ponds. A dad was trying to play frisbee while smoking a
cigarette: an athletic feat I hadn’t seen since college.
Fig. 3.7: A Twin Pond. |
On the southern edge of the park, where the creek jogged back to join the freeway, I spotted the first signs of watershed volunteerism: the Washington Native Plant Society had been by to replace invasives. This walk could easily have been a trudge along a culverted dump, and the fact that it was a fun adventure instead is due to volunteer effort. If you're in the area, you can get involved with the Thornton Creek Alliance; if not, your local watershed probably has a similar group that could use your help.
Once I emerged on NE 145th St I’d reached the
city limits. Seattle was right there on the other side of the street. The
interstate was in sight, too, and I was about to get a new perspective on my
local exit. Walking through highway infrastructure, even when it’s built with
pedestrian accommodations, is always an uncomfortable and revelatory
experience. It’s an ecosystem built for a different species, larger, louder,
and tougher than human beings. I had diesel fume flashbacks to walking on the
barricaded bridges during the anti-Trump rallies in Portland, and dodging big
rigs on my way to work at a freight company off Columbia Boulevard. In my
hustle across the overpass, I didn’t even stop to take a picture.
Catty-corner across the highway, I followed the creek down
the edge of the Jackson Park Golf Course. The highway faded to a low growl and
the scenery to pleasant monotony. On my left, a fence shielded me from errant
balls; on my right, the creek ran by in the underbrush. I passed two joggers.
Someone had chalked an enigmatic face on a beech.
Fig. 3.8: Shielded from balls and pinecones. |
Here at the end of the golf course, the creek plunged into a
deep gully of apparently public land; I tried to follow it but quickly got
stuck in the mud. There was no trail here. Lost golf balls sank inexorably
beneath the skunk cabbages. I scrambled up a slope, found myself in a community
garden, kicked the mud off my shoes and headed onwards.
I liked the next neighborhood immediately. Technically, I
live here, since the boundaries of the Olympic Hills neighborhood reach over to Lake
City Way, but the enormous trees and pleasantly dated houses over here look
nothing like the view from my apartment. I wondered idly if these trees might
be old-growth that escaped logging because of the hilly terrain. Probably not.
I spotted the only political sign of my walk here – a stakeboard for Trotskyite
city councilor Kshama Sawant, who doesn’t represent this district – and one of
the houses had an enormous, handmade wooden halfpipe in the driveway,
disintegrating under a coat of pine needles. I’d like to settle down in a neighborhood
like this.
Fig. 3.9: No, I didn't pose the ball. |
Fig. 3.10: The Olympic Hills. |
By the time I reached the commercial strip on Lake City Way
there was already a blue note in the afternoon sun. The little wedge of park
across from Wendy’s, where Thornton Creek plunged down into a ravine again, was
almost twilit. This park was the first place I’d seen the creek when I first
moved into the neighborhood, and it was as much of a hideous mess as always.
Native plants choked out by Himalayan blackberry, branches hacked off to stobs,
Fireball bottles and busted shoes and Top Ramen flung everywhere, Satanic
glyphs painted on the trees. I assume that the little ravine park’s seclusion
and its proximity to a big, filthy strip of fast food outlets means that
cleaning it is a Sisyphean task for the Thornton Creek Alliance.
Fig. 3.11: I didn't stand in the grove for very long. |
The creek runs under Lake City Way (under Pacific Northwest
Flooring and its weird brick monolith, specifically) before plunging on into
more residential neighborhoods. Lake City Way started life as a
nineteenth-century logging road, and it’s still unusually wiggly for a major
right of way.
Heading down NE 117th, now more than halfway to
my destination and on a steep decline towards the water, I spotted the first
really ugly houses I’d passed so far: skinny new builds with hard angles,
gravel yards, and oddly scattered windows. I don’t need to include a picture.
You know what I’m talking about.
What I do need to include a picture of is the sight that
awaited me at the bottom of the hill: a giant vulva, kitted out for Saint
Patrick’s Day and spouting out a stream of road reflectors. I’m not sure
whether they’re meant to be love beads, a golden shower or a leprechaun’s treasure.
Fig. 3.12: The little text on the inside says "No New Taxes - Bush." Get it? |
This incredible piece of public art is officially a commentary
on the creeping forces of real-estate homogenization represented by the ugly
houses up the street – the Showbox is a historic theater downtown, currently
slated for demolition despite fierce protest from Seattleites, and the pun is
obvious – but its origins are a little smaller-time. The owner was slagged off
by his neighbors for leaving two giant stumps in his yard, so he decided to
turn them into something they could really complain about.
A few blocks past the roadside attraction, I came to
Thornton Creek’s confluence. The North Fork, which I’d just walked, and the
South Fork, fed by parking lot runoff and the ghosts of Bundy victims, converge
here in Meadowbrook Park. I’ll let Meadowbrook speak for itself. It was
beautiful, and it’s the only park I’ve ever visited that requires a diagram to
explain.
By this point, my legs were getting sore. I’m not in great
shape these days, and it felt good to have some muscles working besides my
typing fingers. The sun was setting, and the neighborhood was quiet. A clutch
of high schoolers were standing in a driveway, passing a basketball back and
forth. As I passed, one was pretending to walk away in mock disgust at his
friend’s joke. “Shit,” he realized, turning around. “I don’t have a car.”
Figs. 3.13 - 3.15: Ahhhh. |
A few more steep drops later and I hit Sand Point Way, North
Seattle’s westernmost arterial, and only a block or two down that I spotted
signs for Matthews Beach Park. Not too long ago, this was the site of the Xacuabš
village, home to the people who walked the creek every day on their way to pick
cranberries at the bog.
Tonight, families were packing up their Sunday picnics, and
two friends were hauling their canoe ashore. I’d reached Lake Washington at
last, three hours and eight miles later – and just in time for sunset on the
Cascades.
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