Hillside Historic District | |
Location | Roughly bounded by Jefferson Ave., Hill St., Washington Ave., and 9th St., Chehalis, Washington |
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Coordinates | 46°39′49″N122°57′52″W / 46.663735°N 122.964418°W |
Area | 125 acres (51 ha) |
Built | 1890 |
Architectural style | American Craftsman/Bungalow, American Foursquare, Colonial Revival, Queen Anne, Tudor |
NRHP reference No. | 96000841 [1] |
Added to NRHP | August 1, 1996 |
The Hillside Historic District is a neighborhood located in Chehalis, Washington and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). [2] The Hillside District is one of three NRHP neighborhoods in the city, including the Chehalis Downtown Historic District and the Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District.
At the beginning of the settlement of Saundersville, eventually to become known as Chehalis, the hillside was part of an original Donation Land Claim belonging to the founding family of Chehalis, the Saunders. Under ownership of Elizabeth "Eliza" Tynan Saunders Barrett after a divorce, Obadiah B. McFadden purchased half the claim when he moved the community. In the city's early history, the hill was used for pasture and orchard farming. [2] A crab apple tree known as the Saunders Tree, originally located on Market and 4th Street, grew from a graft completed in 1870 by an unnamed Native American boy and Joseph Saunders, the youngest Saunders son. [3]
The hill also became of use as a natural resource, including coal mining and timber production. [4] [5] In the early 20th century, the hill was used as a rock quarry during street construction in the city. [6] Most of the timber land was owned by the Chehalis Land & Timber Company (CL&T) beginning in 1888; the company was a crucial part of the early platting of the hillside. [2]
Beginning in 1888, the first streets built on the hillside were Adams, Jefferson, and Washington, named by the CL&T after the first presidents in the United States after the Washington territory was granted statehood. Early residential development began in 1890 but only a few homes, scattered amongst the hillside, had been built in a few years. The southern portion of the hillside was rapidly developed between 1905 and 1910. [2] Initial infrastructure construction to provide a residential area on the hillside included a sewer system in 1906 [7] and there were several road builds and improvements, such as the completion of Cascade Avenue from the main thoroughfare of Market Street to the hillside. [8] A reservoir existed during this time that supplied water to the city, fed by the Newaukum River. [9] A replacement reservoir, constructed out of wood, was built in 1928 to provide water specifically for hillside residents. The holding area was capable of containing 100,000 US gallons (380,000 L; 83,000 imp gal). [10] [11] The hill was a location of an wireless telegraphy station, operational and in use as late as 1909. [12]
Pioneers and founding members of the city owned residences, or plots, on the hillside. The home for the matriarch of Chehalis, Eliza Saunders, was near the intersection of Market and Main Street. [13] Approximately half of the lots on Washington Avenue were owned by William Muir Urquhart, a banker, merchant, and long-serving civil servant in the city. [2] Other prominent homeowners included family members of the Chehalis mint company I.P. Callison's & Sons, [14] the banker N.B. Coffman, the attorney Daniel Millett of Millett Field fame, the coal and timber baron T.C. Rush, [9] the mercantile Saindon brothers, and the Sticklin family noted for their funeral parlor. [7] [15] [16] As the years passed into the Roaring Twenties, other notable persons, such as state senator A.E. Judd, continued the history of distinguished residents to call the hillside home. [17]
Additional lots began to be partitioned in the late 1900s and 1910s for expansive residential use. By 1910, Coffman surveyed pasture land spanning towards the southern end of the district and platted 50 lots for sale. [18] Sticklin was awarded permission for a tract on Washington Avenue in 1913. [19] In the same year, the Sticklin addition was part of a major access improvement project with the Judd addition, which was near the St. Helens hospital; the efforts included sidewalks and paved roads. [20] In 1921, Judd opened a 10-acre (4.0 ha) parcel around Adams Avenue that he combined via several tract purchases from of other preeminent landowners; he also built a home for himself. Judd began the construction of the curved Terrace Road in 1922 and residential development began soon thereafter. [2] [17] [21] The road was paved and completed in 1923, allowing for access into the Sticklin addition, which was completely platted and considered open for residency the same year. [22] [23] The Sticklin tract was renamed as Fair Oaks Park in 1926 and extended from behind city hall on Market Street to the top of Park Hill. [24] The connecting curved roads known as Highland Place and Hillside Drive, which parallels Terrace Road, were constructed and paved in 1927. [25] An improved water line to residents was installed in 1928. [26]
Most of the Hillside District was completed by the 1930s [2] but as the neighborhood aged into the 1960s and 1970s, modern adaptations and changes to the community began to occur. The local power company, Lewis County Public Utility District, started to bury electric power lines for parts of the hillside area in 1969 [27] and the beginning construction of apartment buildings took place in various parts of the historic neighborhood during the early 1970s. [28] Due to a widening project on Market Street, the Saunders Tree was moved in 1968 to Henderson Park where it thrived at first, but the pioneer tree was reported as dead a year or two later. Cuttings were taken and planted at the Chehalis park system's office. [29]
Residents on the Hillside District created a petition in late 2005 against a Les Schwab Tire Center opposing a conditional use permit authorizing the company to store tires in cargo containers on a residential-zoned area on North Street. Negotiations with residents, including additional objection from the Chehalis Historic Preservation Commission, went on long enough that the permit expired in mid-2006; Led Schwab abandoned any further attempt. [30]
A minor place crash by a commercial pilot known as "Dare Devil" Smith occurred in 1924; other than a broken propeller, no injuries or damages to property were reported. [31] After the Chehalis high school football team in 1926 soundly defeated their Centralia rivals in the annual Thanksgiving Swamp Cup by a score of 61 to 0, townspeople burned a large "C" on the hillside which was reported to be visible from miles around. [32]
The district is located on the upslope of Park Hill and below the "Top-of-the-Hill" John Dobson and McFadden Parks. The neighborhood borders the Chehalis Downtown Historic District at its most northern reach and stretches south to 11th Street, a block short of Henderson Park. The district encompasses most of Washington, Adams, and Jefferson avenues, including various interconnecting streets. Within the confines of the Hillside Historic District is the Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge, an NRHP-listed site. [2] [33] [34] [35]
Initial dwellings were built in a variety of styles. A majority of homes are of American Craftsman and Craftsman Bungalow styles, with a count of 37 bungalows in the neighborhood. Additional homes feature architectural construction in smaller numbers, including American colonial, [36] American Foursquare, Dutch Colonial, French Eclectic, Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Victorian. A rarity in the city as a whole, a few homes in the Hillside District include turrets. [2] [37] [38] Due to the upslope of the terrain, many homes have views of Chehalis, including its downtown historic district, as well as sightlines into the Chehalis Valley and of the Willapa Hills. [2]
The NRHP nomination included 141 homes in the district, though 81 additional buildings were excluded either due to alterations or age that did not meet NRHP requirements. [39] The houses selected for inclusion were declared to have "structural honesty and historic integrity" and were noted for a variety of styles, such as American Craftsman, Tudor, and Late-Victorian. In partnership with a consultant and the Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation (DAHP), the city's historic preservation commission researched the history of the area. [37] The district during its NRHP nomination process was subsequently nominated for historic status to the Washington State Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. [35]
Although the Hillside District during its early formation was home to the prominent or wealthy of Chehalis, the neighborhood was and is considered a mixed-socioeconomic residential area. Opulent homes, with some on large lots, are interspersed with simpler, working class homes on smaller plats, an example being houses for millworkers located on Washington Avenue. [2]
The Dr. Dow Home was built in the American Foursquare style in approximately 1904 and contains touches of Italianate architecture. Located on Washington Avenue, the house showcases a large porch, various exposed structural details, and a large bay window. A simpler foursquare dwelling is the Schmidt Home, a two-story construction from around 1924 on Hillside Drive. The house lacks dormers or a standard visual break between floors, but contains a Palladian window above the front door. [2]
Significant Craftsman-style homes featured in the Hillside District are the Hotchkiss Home, a two-story gablefront house built circa 1912 on Washington Avenue. Known for its large gable, it features a balcony and lead glass windows. Another gable building, the 1+1⁄2 story Baker House located on Adams Avenue, also contains a porch and lead glass casements, and features several distinctive dormers. Other examples include the 1910 Saunders Home, known for its cross-gable rood and the 1912 Scherer Home, noted for its covered porch and exposed rafters. [2]
Two notable Craftsman Bungalows are the Henriot Home on Terrace, and the Smith Home, on Washington. The Henriot, built around 1923, is noted for its columned porch, gable structure, and exposed structural features. The Smith house is distinguished by a second, off-center gable. [2]
Eleven Tudor-style homes are recorded in the Hillside District. A prominent dwelling of this style is the 2-story Ellington Home on Washington. Constructed with an asymmetrical roofline in approximately 1930, it features terra cotta siding and two connected gables on the front of the home. Another example is the Bishop Home on Terrace, built circa 1928. Recognized for its cross-gable roof and multiple dormers, it's also highlighted by the patterned siding on the second level. [2]
Several Vernacular architecture buildings, homes constructed based on a broad and mixed scope of architectural and construction styles, are listed with the Hillside District's NRHP designation. Of note is the Cory Home situated on Washington, built for Arthur Cory, a banker and state representative. Constructed in 1925, the two-story structure is known for its original interior details, covered front porch, and windows, one of which includes a pediment. The home was sold to the Lewis County Historical Society and Museum in 1965 for use to house artifacts from the early pioneer days in the region but became of use as a residence years afterwards. A second notable house of this type is the Boone Home, also located on Washington. Constructed around 1925 for a Chehalis mortuary owner, John Boone, the home is the only known dwelling of Mediterranean Revival architecture in the district. Most of the original style has been lost, but the 1+1⁄2 stucco home features parapets at the flat roofline. [2]
Various homes that fall under the Queen Anne-Victorian architectural style include one of the oldest homes in the city, the T.C. and Anna Rush house. Built in 1890 on Washington, the Rush family were prominent developers of the early Chehalis Downtown Historic District. [40] The home originally was detailed with gingerbread trim. The Rush house contains a turret and is recognized for its sunburst motif, large gable, and covered porch with turned columns. [2]
The Dieckmann Home was built before 1893 and additions to the dwelling up to 1912 created a Queen Anne-style look. The two-story home was built for gold prospector, Charles Dieckmann. Similar to the Rush Home, the Dieckmann house contains a turret and asymmetrical roof, and is noted for its partial wrap-around front porch [2]
The mansion known as the Burnett House is situated on Northeast Cascade Avenue. Constructed in 1894, it eventually became owned by Morris Burnett, a prominent proprietor of an established jewelry store in the downtown district during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The home was heavily restored after being purchased by the Barkis family after they moved to Chehalis in the late 1960s. The two-story house has a turret and once contained a second. It also features curved windows and contains a living room that is over 1,000 square feet (93 m2). [2] [37] [38]
A Queen Anne-style home known as the Marietta Manor, is situated on Jefferson Avenue. Known for its columned, warp-around porch and bay windows, the home was built of old growth lumber in 1899. [41] [42]
A Victorian home of note is the Kirk House, which hosted the Nkhoma family of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian – Nkhoma Synod in 1999. [43]
A rare English cottage-style home in the city is the Ribelin Home on Adams. Designed by architect Jacque “Jack” DeForest Griffin, noted for his work in the Chehalis Downtown District, [44] the home was for A.L. Ribelin, a manager of the city's J.C. Penney's. The two-story stucco dwelling has a simulated thatch roof, various window details included arched casements and stained-glass, and two gables. During the construction, a home to members of the Urquhart family had to be moved across the street to accommodate the new, larger dwelling. [2]
The dwelling known as the Melin house, built in 1924, was renovated to its original layout. [45]
The St. Helens Hospital, with an annex designed by influential Chehalis architect, Jacque “Jack” DeForest Griffin, is located centrally in the district on Washington Avenue and 4th Street but is not included under the NRHP listing. [46]
The district hosts several homes recognized by the Chehalis Historic Preservation Commission (CHPC). The commission recognizes historical value and the subsequent preservation of homes and buildings in the city. Homes honored with the designation receives a brass plaque that denotes the year of construction and the name of either the architect or original owner of the house. [41]
Homes in the district given recognition from the CHPC include the Boone Home, Burnett Mansion in 1992, [38] Marietta Manor, [41] , a Craftsman bungalow and Craftsman cottage on Washingon Avenue in 1993, [47] the Melin house in 2000, [45] and Rush Home. [40]
At the turn of the 20th century, Chehalis had grown large enough that residents began to require parks for leisure activities. An addition of parks was also to be seen as a symbol for the city's growth and prosperity. Editorials, as early as 1903, listed the hillside as an attractive option for a park. [4] Work on a donated 14-acre (5.7 ha) tract that became Dobson Park began in 1914 and included extensive plans for a road over the hill, the inclusions of a waterfall system to the reservoir, and was to have a tennis court. [48]
Dobson Park became associated with McFadden Park and the pair, situated next to each other, became known as the "Top-of-the-Hill" parks. The 28 acres (11 ha) McFadden Park began in 1912 after land on the hillside was donated to the city in memory of Obadiah McFadden. [49] Mostly unimproved for decades, the grounds were rededicated in 1945 [50] and had been outfitted in the following years with a covered kitchen, picnic areas, and playgrounds. [49] [51] A main road around the rim of the hilltop and a water filtration plant for the city was constructed in the 1960s. [52] [53]
The top-of-the-hill parks are technically considered closed by the city of Chehalis due to maintenance and vandalism difficulties but residents continue to use the parks, especially for hiking. [54]
The parks are joined by a looped trail, the 1.3 miles (2.1 km) Dobson-McFadden Trail. The trailhead is located at the Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge. [54] [55]
Chehalis is a city in and the county seat of Lewis County, Washington, United States. The population was 7,439 at the time of the 2020 census.
Obadiah Benton McFadden was an American attorney and politician in the Pacific Northwest. He was the 8th justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, temporarily serving on the court to replace Matthew Deady. A Pennsylvania native, he later was a legislator in the Washington Territory, and he served in Congress representing that territory.
Cora was a former farming community and is a locale in Lewis County, Washington, United States. Cora is located off U.S. Route 12, next to the Cowlitz River between the towns of Randle and Packwood.
Swofford, also known as Swofford Valley, is an unincorporated community in central Lewis County, in the U.S. state of Washington. The town sits on the south shore of Riffe Lake, approximately 4.0 miles (6.4 km) southeast of Mossyrock.
The Chehalis Theater, also as the Chehalis Theatre, is a single-screen, Art Deco movie theater in Chehalis, Washington. The theater is situated at the north end of the Chehalis Downtown Historic District near the Hotel Washington. Known locally for the hand-painted illustrations of popular children's fantasy characters that once populated the ceiling, it is the only surviving movie house in the city.
Parks and recreation in Chehalis, Washington is administered by the Chehalis Parks and Recreation Department. Trails that connect Chehalis with locations beyond the city limits are maintained in conjunction with other local jurisdictions, state government agencies, and/or local non-profit groups and volunteers.
Westside Park is located in Chehalis, Washington in the city's Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District which was catalogued on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1991.
Millett Field is the oldest, continuously used public park in Chehalis, Washington and is most noted as home to a Chehalis minor-league baseball team in the early 20th century. The ballfield was regularly used as the central hub of Chehalis sporting activity for decades, including hosting games for several Negro League teams in the 1920s. Located in the city's South Market district, one block north of the NRHP-listed O. B. McFadden House, the 3.3-acre (1.3 ha) park began in 1898.
John Dobson and McFadden Parks were once the center of the Chehalis, Washington park system and they were referred to by residents as the "Top-of-the-Hill" parks due to their proximity to one another. They are the two oldest non-athletic parks in Chehalis. Begun as memorials to well respected Chehalis residents, they are located in the Hillside Historic District on Park Hill, above and east of the Chehalis Downtown Historic District. The parks are connected by the Dobson-McFadden Trail and the Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge is often considered part of John Dobson Park.
Henderson Park is located in Chehalis, Washington in the city's South Market district and is a block northeast of nearby Recreation Park.
Mary's Corner is an unincorporated community located in Lewis County, Washington. The area sits at the crossroads of U.S. Route 12 and Jackson Highway. The community is 11 miles (18 km) south of Chehalis and 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the town of Ethel.
Jackson House State Park Heritage Site is a 1.4-acre (0.57 ha) Washington state park centered around the John R. Jackson House, the restored homestead cabin of John R. and Matilda Jackson, who were among the first Euro-American settlers north of the Columbia River.
The Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District is a neighborhood located in Chehalis, Washington and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) since 1991. The district is one of three NRHP neighborhoods in the city, including the Chehalis Downtown Historic District and the Hillside Historic District. The city of Chehalis recognizes a much broader and expansive historic district, known under such monikers as the Historic West Side or the Westside neighborhood, with the inclusion of several other homes and streets.
The O. K. Palmer House is the historic home of Osmer K. Palmer and is located in Chehalis, Washington. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1986 and is situated in the city's NRHP-listed Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District.
The Scout Lodge, also known as the Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge, is located in Chehalis, Washington in the Hillside Historic District. Constructed by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) beginning in 1937, the lodge was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2004.
The St. Helens Hotel, also known as the St. Helens Inn, is located in Chehalis, Washington and has been registered on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) since 1991. The historic hotel is situated on the south end of the Chehalis Downtown Historic District, an NRHP-listed district.
The Chehalis Post Office is a federal post office in Chehalis, Washington. The Georgian Revival building has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) since 1991. The site has been declared a historic building by the Chehalis Historic Preservation Commission.
The O. B. McFadden House is the historic home of Obadiah B. McFadden and is located in Chehalis, Washington. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1975 and is situated south of Millett Field. The house is the oldest structure in Lewis County and the oldest residence in Chehalis.
The history of theaters in Chehalis, Washington started in 1886 with the construction of a mixed-use opera house and town hall, followed by the Tynan Opera House in 1889. The city experienced more than a 50-year stretch of the build or opening of over a dozen theaters and movie houses in the city, culminating with the opening of the Pix Theater in 1938. No further theater was built or established until the opening of a multi-screen cinema at a local shopping center in 1982.
The Chehalis Downtown Historic District is located in Chehalis, Washington and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. One of three NRHP districts in the city, including the Hillside Historic District and Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District, the district represents three separate development periods. The community was an important timber hub and freight exchange stop between south Puget Sound and Portland, Oregon.
See 2nd column
See 3rd column, near bottom, 'The paving of Terrace Road...'