fbpx
Wikipedia

Alki Point, Seattle

Alki Point (/ˈælk/, Lushootseed: sbaqʷabqs, lit.'prairie point')[1] is a point jutting into Puget Sound, the westernmost landform in the West Seattle district of Seattle, Washington. Alki is the peninsular neighborhood on Alki Point. Alki was the original settlement in what was to become the city of Seattle. It was part of the city of West Seattle from 1902 until that city's annexation by Seattle in 1907.

Alki
sbaqʷabqs[1]
Aerial view of Alki Point in Seattle. Elliott Bay and Downtown Seattle can be seen in the background.
The Alki region of West Seattle
Coordinates: 47°34′34″N 122°25′12″W / 47.576°N 122.420°W / 47.576; -122.420
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountyKing County, Washington

The Alki neighborhood extends along the shore from the point, both southeast and northeast. To the northeast it continues past Alki Beach roughly to Duwamish Head, the northernmost point of West Seattle.

Alki Point also marks the southern extent of Elliott Bay; a line drawn northwest to West Point marks the division between bay and sound.

Etymology edit

The name "Alki" is a Chinook Jargon word meaning "by and by" or "eventually".[2] It is a shortened version of the original name, "New York Alki." The name "New York" may have been chosen because it was the state of origin of several of the settlers.[3]

In the Lushootseed language, the name of the point is sbaqʷabqs, meaning "prairie point."[1]

Other names in English for the point include Battery Point, Me-Kwah-Mooks Point, and Roberts Point.[4]

History edit

 
Alki marina waterfront with downtown Seattle in the background

Prior to American settlement, the Duwamish people used the area for cultivating and gathering at nearby prairies. They were maintained through seasonal burning.[5]

The Denny Party landed at Alki Point November 13, 1851, and platted a settlement of six blocks of eight lots, calling the settlement "New York Alki". However, the next April, Arthur A. Denny abandoned the site at Alki for a better-situated site on the east shore of Elliott Bay, just north of the plat of David Swinson "Doc" Maynard. This site is now known as Pioneer Square.

Charles C. Terry, who owned the land, and some others held on at Alki for a while, but most eventually joined the others in Pioneer Square. Terry gave his claim to Maynard in 1857 in exchange for his Pioneer Square holdings; Maynard farmed the land for 11 years and sold it to Hans Martin Hanson and Knud Olson in 1868, Hanson taking possession of the point itself.

 
Theodore Peiser's photo of the Stockade Hotel on November 13, 1905

The Stockade Hotel was photographed by early Seattle photographers Asahel Curtis and Theodore Peiser.

The Alki Point Lighthouse dates from 1913, replacing the United States Lighthouse Service's post light from 1887 and Hanson's lantern-on-a-post from the mid-1870s.

 
Alki Point bathing beach, 1930, by Asahel Curtis

From 1925 to 1936, a ferry route across Puget Sound connected Alki Point with Manchester, Washington on the Kitsap Peninsula.[6]

Well into the 20th century, Alki was reachable from most of Seattle only by boat. Alki today is reminiscent of a Pacific Northwest beach town, with a mix of mid-century bungalows, medium-rise waterfront apartment houses, waterfront businesses, a thin beach, and a road with a bike/foot trail running several miles along the water. This section of West Seattle is bounded on the northwest by Elliott Bay; on the southwest by Puget Sound; and on the east by the West Seattle hill. Its main thoroughfares are Alki Avenue S.W. (northeast- and southwest-bound); Beach Drive S.W. (northwest- and southeast-bound); and S.W. Admiral Way (east- and westbound).

There have been summer concerts at Alki Beach since the early 1900s; the original streetcars to West Seattle were established in order to bring people to these events. Today, the beach plays host to the Seattle Music Fest every August, a three-day music festival that plays host to emerging Northwest artists and selected national and international headliners.

The Birthplace of Seattle Monument is located at Alki Beach. It has the names of the first Seattle colony listed on it. The third side of the monument gives the names of the adults composing the first Seattle Colony: "Arthur A. Denny and his Wife. John N. Low and Wife. Carson D. Boren and Wife. David D. Denny. Charles C. Terry", and on the base, "New York Alki (By and By)", the name first given the settlement. The fourth side says "Erected by the Washington University State Historical Society, 13 November 1905", and on the base, "Presented by Lenora Denny."

Geology edit

Just inland from the point is a small hill of about 75 feet (23 m). This hill is one of the Seattle area's few bedrock outcroppings, and possibly the only one outside of the Duwamish River valley. It constitutes a piece of the 23-million-year-old sedimentary Blakeley Formation. It is believed to have once formed a sea stack, though it is possible that it was always connected to the mainland by a tombolo.[7]

Tourism edit

Alki Beach edit

 
Duwamish Head, at the eastern end of Alki Beach

Alki Beach is the principal tourist attraction at Alki Point. It features sand, saltwater, bungalows, and local restaurants. It is generally not a popular swimming beach, owing to the cold waters of Puget Sound. It overlooks the Olympic Mountains and downtown Seattle from all points. There is access for wheelchair users and roller-skaters.[8] In the summer months, Alki Beach becomes crowded, especially on weekends. Alki Beach is also famed for its biking and walking trail, which provides a picturesque view of nearby Blake Island. Tourist attractions include the miniature of the Statue of Liberty, the iconic Alki Point Lighthouse and the Birthplace of Seattle monument which also includes a tribute to the Indigenous Duwamish people[9] without whom the first settlers would not have thrived. The main commercial strip in West Seattle, uphill from Alki Beach, California Ave SW provides five-and-dime shops and diners that recall earlier decades.[10][tone]

Landmarks edit

 
Alki Point, seen from Lincoln Park

Alki Point Lighthouse is a historic landmark built in 1913 that still functions today. Though the property is not open to the public, the tower is available for touring on summer weekend afternoons when the lens can be viewed.[11] Despite its normal inaccessibility, it provides the tourist with the feeling of an authentic beach town and contributes to the overall picturesque.

A scale replica of the Statue of Liberty at Alki Beach was donated by Reginald H. Parsons and the Seattle Area Council of The Boy Scouts of America in 1952. The statue may allude to "New York-Alki", the name of the 1851 settlement at Alki (see above).[3] Many tourists mourned the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center at the site.[12]

Music edit

 
Alki Beach on a rainy day

Alki Beach has been a venue for summer concerts every August since the early 20th century.[13] The local music scene draws tourists and locals alike. Live music can also be found at Kenyon Hall which features a Wurlitzer theater organ. The Historic Admiral Theater also presents live performances on occasion.

Bungalows and historic buildings edit

Bungalows are nestled between condominiums along Harbor Avenue. These historic homes, such as the Hanson-Olsen Home, originally built in the 1860s, provide a glimpse into the Arts and Crafts movement which flourished in the cities of the American West in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Many of these bungalows are today in poor condition, and residents have been increasingly forced to renovate or move them to another destination, or risk demolition.[14]

Parks edit

Hamilton Viewpoint Park, founded in 1954, provides a picturesque view of Elliott Bay. This park is located above Alki Beach on California Avenue SW. There are benches and lawn suitable for picnics and resting. Within the Alki neighborhood is Schmitz Park, the only old-growth forest in Seattle. Other parks in the Alki neighborhood: Me-Kwa-Mooks, Constellation Park and Marine Reserve, Whale Tail Park, Alki Playground, Bar-S Baseball Field. Alki Beach is also a city park.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Waterman, Thomas T. sdaʔdaʔ gʷəɬ dibəɬ ləšucid ʔacaciɬtalbixʷ - Puget Sound Geography. Lushootseed Press. p. 65.
  2. ^ Jones 1972, p. 41
  3. ^ a b Watt, Roberta Frye (1932). The Story of Seattle. Lowman and Hanford Company. p. 41.
  4. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Alki Point
  5. ^ Thrush, Coll (2007). Native Seattle: Histories from the Crossing-Over Place. University of Washington Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-295-98700-2.
  6. ^ Kline and Bayless, Ferryboats-A Legend on Puget Sound, at pages 134, 135, 211, and 374.
  7. ^ Williams, David B. (2023-02-16). "Geology Did That". Street Smart Naturalist: Explorations of the Urban Kind. Retrieved 2023-02-16.
  8. ^ Johnston, Mandy (1998). Stepping Out in Seattle: A Guide to Fun... for Singles, Couples and Friends. JASI Books. p. 170. ISBN 1-881409-21-X.
  9. ^ "Duwamish Tribe". We are the People of the Inside, dxʷdəwʔabš. Duwamish Tribal Services. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  10. ^ McRae, Bill (1998). Seattle. Lonely Planet. p. 118. ISBN 0-86442-537-6.
  11. ^ Washington The State: Alki Point the Lighthouse http://www.experiencewa.com/attraction.aspx?id=733
  12. ^ . City of Seattle. 1995–2010. Archived from the original on 2021-02-09. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  13. ^ Johnston, Mandy (1998). Stepping Out in Seattle: A Guide to Fun... for Singles, Couples and Friends. JASI Books. p. 171. ISBN 1-881409-21-X.
  14. ^ Kreisman, Lawrence (2009). "Preserving our Unique Northwest Neighborhoods is Everybody's Business". The Seattle Times Company. p. 1.

References edit

  • Jones, Nard (1972), Seattle, Garden City, New York: Doubleday, ISBN 0-385-01875-4
  • Johnston, Mandy (1998), Stepping Out in Seattle: A Guide to Fun... for Singles, Couples, and Friends 2nd Edition, Medina, Washington: JASI Books, ISBN 1-881409-21-X
  • Kline, Mary S., and Bayless, G.A., Ferryboats -- A Legend on Puget Sound, Bayless Books, Seattle 1983 ISBN 0-914515-00-4

External links edit

  • City of Seattle Neighborhood Map: Alki
  • Cormorant Cove
  • Me-Kwa-Mooks Park
  • Charles Richey Sr Viewpoint

alki, point, seattle, alki, point, lushootseed, sbaqʷabqs, prairie, point, point, jutting, into, puget, sound, westernmost, landform, west, seattle, district, seattle, washington, alki, peninsular, neighborhood, alki, point, alki, original, settlement, what, b. Alki Point ˈ ae l k aɪ Lushootseed sbaqʷabqs lit prairie point 1 is a point jutting into Puget Sound the westernmost landform in the West Seattle district of Seattle Washington Alki is the peninsular neighborhood on Alki Point Alki was the original settlement in what was to become the city of Seattle It was part of the city of West Seattle from 1902 until that city s annexation by Seattle in 1907 Alki sbaqʷabqs 1 Seattle NeighborhoodAerial view of Alki Point in Seattle Elliott Bay and Downtown Seattle can be seen in the background The Alki region of West SeattleCoordinates 47 34 34 N 122 25 12 W 47 576 N 122 420 W 47 576 122 420CountryUnited StatesStateWashingtonCountyKing County Washington The Alki neighborhood extends along the shore from the point both southeast and northeast To the northeast it continues past Alki Beach roughly to Duwamish Head the northernmost point of West Seattle Alki Point also marks the southern extent of Elliott Bay a line drawn northwest to West Point marks the division between bay and sound Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geology 4 Tourism 4 1 Alki Beach 4 2 Landmarks 4 3 Music 4 4 Bungalows and historic buildings 4 5 Parks 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe name Alki is a Chinook Jargon word meaning by and by or eventually 2 It is a shortened version of the original name New York Alki The name New York may have been chosen because it was the state of origin of several of the settlers 3 In the Lushootseed language the name of the point is sbaqʷabqs meaning prairie point 1 Other names in English for the point include Battery Point Me Kwah Mooks Point and Roberts Point 4 History edit nbsp Alki marina waterfront with downtown Seattle in the background Prior to American settlement the Duwamish people used the area for cultivating and gathering at nearby prairies They were maintained through seasonal burning 5 The Denny Party landed at Alki Point November 13 1851 and platted a settlement of six blocks of eight lots calling the settlement New York Alki However the next April Arthur A Denny abandoned the site at Alki for a better situated site on the east shore of Elliott Bay just north of the plat of David Swinson Doc Maynard This site is now known as Pioneer Square Charles C Terry who owned the land and some others held on at Alki for a while but most eventually joined the others in Pioneer Square Terry gave his claim to Maynard in 1857 in exchange for his Pioneer Square holdings Maynard farmed the land for 11 years and sold it to Hans Martin Hanson and Knud Olson in 1868 Hanson taking possession of the point itself nbsp Theodore Peiser s photo of the Stockade Hotel on November 13 1905 The Stockade Hotel was photographed by early Seattle photographers Asahel Curtis and Theodore Peiser The Alki Point Lighthouse dates from 1913 replacing the United States Lighthouse Service s post light from 1887 and Hanson s lantern on a post from the mid 1870s nbsp Alki Point bathing beach 1930 by Asahel Curtis From 1925 to 1936 a ferry route across Puget Sound connected Alki Point with Manchester Washington on the Kitsap Peninsula 6 Well into the 20th century Alki was reachable from most of Seattle only by boat Alki today is reminiscent of a Pacific Northwest beach town with a mix of mid century bungalows medium rise waterfront apartment houses waterfront businesses a thin beach and a road with a bike foot trail running several miles along the water This section of West Seattle is bounded on the northwest by Elliott Bay on the southwest by Puget Sound and on the east by the West Seattle hill Its main thoroughfares are Alki Avenue S W northeast and southwest bound Beach Drive S W northwest and southeast bound and S W Admiral Way east and westbound There have been summer concerts at Alki Beach since the early 1900s the original streetcars to West Seattle were established in order to bring people to these events Today the beach plays host to the Seattle Music Fest every August a three day music festival that plays host to emerging Northwest artists and selected national and international headliners The Birthplace of Seattle Monument is located at Alki Beach It has the names of the first Seattle colony listed on it The third side of the monument gives the names of the adults composing the first Seattle Colony Arthur A Denny and his Wife John N Low and Wife Carson D Boren and Wife David D Denny Charles C Terry and on the base New York Alki By and By the name first given the settlement The fourth side says Erected by the Washington University State Historical Society 13 November 1905 and on the base Presented by Lenora Denny Geology editJust inland from the point is a small hill of about 75 feet 23 m This hill is one of the Seattle area s few bedrock outcroppings and possibly the only one outside of the Duwamish River valley It constitutes a piece of the 23 million year old sedimentary Blakeley Formation It is believed to have once formed a sea stack though it is possible that it was always connected to the mainland by a tombolo 7 Tourism editAlki Beach edit Main article Alki Beach Park nbsp Duwamish Head at the eastern end of Alki Beach Alki Beach is the principal tourist attraction at Alki Point It features sand saltwater bungalows and local restaurants It is generally not a popular swimming beach owing to the cold waters of Puget Sound It overlooks the Olympic Mountains and downtown Seattle from all points There is access for wheelchair users and roller skaters 8 In the summer months Alki Beach becomes crowded especially on weekends Alki Beach is also famed for its biking and walking trail which provides a picturesque view of nearby Blake Island Tourist attractions include the miniature of the Statue of Liberty the iconic Alki Point Lighthouse and the Birthplace of Seattle monument which also includes a tribute to the Indigenous Duwamish people 9 without whom the first settlers would not have thrived The main commercial strip in West Seattle uphill from Alki Beach California Ave SW provides five and dime shops and diners that recall earlier decades 10 tone Landmarks edit nbsp Alki Point seen from Lincoln Park Alki Point Lighthouse is a historic landmark built in 1913 that still functions today Though the property is not open to the public the tower is available for touring on summer weekend afternoons when the lens can be viewed 11 Despite its normal inaccessibility it provides the tourist with the feeling of an authentic beach town and contributes to the overall picturesque A scale replica of the Statue of Liberty at Alki Beach was donated by Reginald H Parsons and the Seattle Area Council of The Boy Scouts of America in 1952 The statue may allude to New York Alki the name of the 1851 settlement at Alki see above 3 Many tourists mourned the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center at the site 12 Music edit nbsp Alki Beach on a rainy day Alki Beach has been a venue for summer concerts every August since the early 20th century 13 The local music scene draws tourists and locals alike Live music can also be found at Kenyon Hall which features a Wurlitzer theater organ The Historic Admiral Theater also presents live performances on occasion Bungalows and historic buildings edit Bungalows are nestled between condominiums along Harbor Avenue These historic homes such as the Hanson Olsen Home originally built in the 1860s provide a glimpse into the Arts and Crafts movement which flourished in the cities of the American West in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century Many of these bungalows are today in poor condition and residents have been increasingly forced to renovate or move them to another destination or risk demolition 14 Parks edit Hamilton Viewpoint Park founded in 1954 provides a picturesque view of Elliott Bay This park is located above Alki Beach on California Avenue SW There are benches and lawn suitable for picnics and resting Within the Alki neighborhood is Schmitz Park the only old growth forest in Seattle Other parks in the Alki neighborhood Me Kwa Mooks Constellation Park and Marine Reserve Whale Tail Park Alki Playground Bar S Baseball Field Alki Beach is also a city park See also editHistory of Seattle before 1900Notes edit a b c Waterman Thomas T sdaʔdaʔ gʷeɬ dibeɬ lesucid ʔacaciɬtalbixʷ Puget Sound Geography Lushootseed Press p 65 Jones 1972 p 41 a b Watt Roberta Frye 1932 The Story of Seattle Lowman and Hanford Company p 41 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Alki Point Thrush Coll 2007 Native Seattle Histories from the Crossing Over Place University of Washington Press p 233 ISBN 978 0 295 98700 2 Kline and Bayless Ferryboats A Legend on Puget Sound at pages 134 135 211 and 374 Williams David B 2023 02 16 Geology Did That Street Smart Naturalist Explorations of the Urban Kind Retrieved 2023 02 16 Johnston Mandy 1998 Stepping Out in Seattle A Guide to Fun for Singles Couples and Friends JASI Books p 170 ISBN 1 881409 21 X Duwamish Tribe We are the People of the Inside dxʷdewʔabs Duwamish Tribal Services Retrieved 7 July 2019 McRae Bill 1998 Seattle Lonely Planet p 118 ISBN 0 86442 537 6 Washington The State Alki Point the Lighthouse http www experiencewa com attraction aspx id 733 Seattle gov Seattle Parks and Recreation City of Seattle 1995 2010 Archived from the original on 2021 02 09 Retrieved 2010 03 17 Johnston Mandy 1998 Stepping Out in Seattle A Guide to Fun for Singles Couples and Friends JASI Books p 171 ISBN 1 881409 21 X Kreisman Lawrence 2009 Preserving our Unique Northwest Neighborhoods is Everybody s Business The Seattle Times Company p 1 References editJones Nard 1972 Seattle Garden City New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 01875 4 Johnston Mandy 1998 Stepping Out in Seattle A Guide to Fun for Singles Couples and Friends 2nd Edition Medina Washington JASI Books ISBN 1 881409 21 X Kline Mary S and Bayless G A Ferryboats A Legend on Puget Sound Bayless Books Seattle 1983 ISBN 0 914515 00 4External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alki Point Seattle Washington City of Seattle Neighborhood Map Alki Cormorant Cove Me Kwa Mooks Park Charles Richey Sr Viewpoint Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alki Point Seattle amp oldid 1198306828, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.