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Summary for this site is under review and the displayed data may not be fully up to date. If you need additional info, please call (206) 684-0464

Historic Name: Denny, Emily Inez, House Common Name: Zamudio, Gregory and Pagalilauan, Tisha, House
Style: Arts & Crafts Neighborhood:
Built By: Year Built:
 
Significance

The Roanoke Park Historic District is eligible for listing on the National Register under Criterion "A" for its direct association with events that made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of local and national history. The district is also significant under Criterion "C" for its collection of early 20th century residential architecture designed by many notable Seattle architects. The period of significance for the Roanoke Park Historic District begins in 1899, the earliest construction date, and ends in 1939, the date the neighborhood was built out. Many residents in the district were directly involved in the local and sometimes national historic context, some as much creating the history as expressing or representing it. The politicians, jurists, medical people, and earliest historians of Seattle who lived in the district were powerful actors, and many local themes of the day were played out with varying degrees of self-consciousness by other residents. The work and careers of the district's residents epitomize patterns and preoccupations in the settlement of the American west coast maritime cities.

The events of that pre-war period of political, economic, and cultural activity coincide with the period of the district's architectural significance, in which many of its architects trained on the east coast of the United States, the Midwest, England, and Europe designed the district's residences at the same time that they were designing the city of Seattle's significant buildings during and even after the only partial realization of the City Beautiful movement's ideals in the cities of the United States. The rise of world fairs and expositions and the realization of City Beautiful ideals in the layouts and buildings of these "cities within cities"1 is directly involved as well on the Roanoke Park plateau, whose major period of development was occasioned in large part by its overlooking the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition grounds. And the settlement of residential suburbs-in Seattle's case, "streetcar suburbs" ever farther outside the city center-is a pattern of development to be seen in the environment of most cities in the United States and in Seattle, particularly in the Roanoke Park Historic District.

Major Bibliographic References

4Culture, B. N. Barleycorn. "Landmark NOMINATION Application for Washington Hall, 153-14th Avenue." August 2008.

Access Seattle. Access Seattle, 5th ed. Seattle: Access Press, 2003.

Aldredge, Lydia, ed. Impressions of Imagination: Terra-Cotta Seattle. Seattle: Allied Arts, 1986.

Ancestry.com. http://www.ancestry.com (accessed 5 October 2008 and on many other dates).

"Avarilla Waldo Bass." Obituary in the Weekly Oregon Statesman 4-17-1885, 3:2. Online 2-12-2008 at www.open.org/pioneer/pg03.html (accessed 12 February 2008).

A Volume of Memoirs and Genealogy of Representative Citizens of the City of Seattle and County of King, Washington. New York & Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1903. http://www.usbiographies.org (accessed 31 March 2008).

Bagley, Clarence B. History of King County, Volume 1. Chicago-Seattle: S. J. Clarke Publishing, 1929.

---.History of Seattle from the Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. Seattle:

S. J. Clarke Publishing, 1916.

Bass, Sophie Frye. Pigtail Days in Old Seattle. Portland: Binfords & Mort, 1937.

---.When Seattle Was a Village. Seattle: Lowman & Hanford, 1947.

Bemer, Richard C. Seattle in the 2dh Century, Volume], Seattle 1900-1920: From Boomtown, Urban Turbulence, to Restoration. Seattle: Charles Press, 1991.

---.Seattle in the 2dh Century, Volume 2, Seattle 1921-1940: From Boom to Bust. Seattle: Charles Press, 1992.

Booth, T. William and William H. Wilson. Carl F. Gould: A Life in Architecture and the Arts. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1995.

Buchanan, Odile. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 8 April 2008.

Calvert, Frank, ed. Homes and Gardens of the Pacific Coast, Volume 1 Seattle 1913.

Beaux Arts Village, Lake Washington: Beaux Arts Society Publishers, 1913. Republished by Christopher Laughlin, Historic Preservation Committee of Allied Arts of Seattle, 1974.

Chandonnet, Ann. "Tragedy at Sea: Shipwreck was one of worst west coast disasters." www.juneauempire.com/stories/060803/sta sophia.shtml (accessed 1/7/2009).

Chesley, Frank. "Stem, Bernice (1916-2007)." History Link.org Essay 8003.

City of Seattle. Building Permits. Department of Planning and Development, Microfilm Library. Seattle, Washington.

---.Parcel Data. Department of Planning and Development. Seattle, Washington.

---.Side Sewer Cards. Department of Planning and Development. Seattle, Washington.

Community Council Newsletter. Portage Bay/Roanoke Park, Seattle. Conley, Gerry to Allan Seidenverg, 11 January 2008, email. Conley, Gerry to Erin O'Connor, 8 March 2008, email.

Conover, C. T. Mirrors of Seattle: Reflecting Some Men of Fifty. Seattle: Lowman & Hanford, 1923.

Crowley, Walt. "Municipal League-Thumbnail History," 6 May 1999. http://www.munileague.org/history/thumbnail.htm May 13 (accessed 2008).

---.National Trust Guide, Seattle: America's Guide for Architecture  and History Travelers. New York: John Wiley, Preservation Press, 1998.

Daily Reveille. Whatcom County, Washington, 1895. http://www.rootsweb.com/~wawhatco/newspapers/reveille1895.htm (accessed Feb. 6, 2008).

Denny, Emily Inez. Blazing the Way. Seattle: Rainier Printing Co., 1909.

Dorpat, Paul . 494 More Glimpes of Historic Seattle, Volume 2, "Glimpses Series."

-- . Seattle Now and Then, Volume 1 2d ed. Seattle: Tartu, 1984.

- -. Clemmer's Dream." Seattle Now and Then, Volume 1 2d ed. Seattle 1984. Duchscherer, Paul. Outside the Bungalow. New York: Penguin Putnam, 1999. "Duwamish (tribe)." Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duwanmish (tribe) (accessed I 0-24-2008).

748 243 Federal Reporter STATE OF WASHINGTON ex. rel. CITY OF SEATTLE v. PUGET SOUND TRACTION, LIGHT & POWER CO.

            http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/Fl/0243/001/00000762.txt (accessed 5-13-2008.)

Ferguson, Robert L. The Pioneers of Lake View: A Guide to Seattle's Early Settlers and Their Cemetery. Bellevue, Wash.: Thistle Press, 1995.

Garfield, Leonard. Conversation with Erin O'Connor and other participants in MOHAI­ sponsored walking tour of the Roanoke Park district, 6 September 2008.

Greenberg, Allan. Luytens and the Modem Movement. London: New Architecture Group, Papadakis, 2007.

Hackett, Regina. "Queen Anne reels after Wright-style house is tom down." Seattle Post­ Intelligencer, 23 January 2004.

Hillman, Donald. Conversation with group, 24 June 2008.

Hines, D. D., Rev. H.K. An Illustrated History of the State of Washington (Chicago: Lewis Publishing, 1893). http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jtenlen/slcrawford.txt

(accessed 3-3-2008).

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Hongladarom, Gail. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 1 May 2008. Hongladarom, Gail to Erin O'Connor, 13 April 2008, email.

Houser, Michael. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 14 May 2008.

Jacobson, Arthur Lee. Trees of Seattle: The Complete Tree-finder's Guide to the City's 740 Varieties, 2d edition. Seattle: Jacobson, 2006.

Johnson, Burt. "Roy Olmstead's Story: The Background Story of United States v. Olmstead."

www.soc.umn.edu.

Kavanaugh, Marilyn, ed. The History of St. Patrick's Parish, Seattle, Washington. Seattle, 2005.

---."The Summer of Saving Seward." The Portage Bay/Roanoke Park Community Council Newsletter.

.to Erin O'Connor, 20 January 2008, email.

.to Erin O'Connor, 21 April 2008, email.

.to Erin O'Connor, 26 April 2008, email.

---.Conversation with Erin O'Connor and other participants in MOHAI-sponsored walking tour of the Roanoke Park district, 6 September 2008.

King County. Parcel Viewer. http://www5.metrokc.gov (accessed 6 October 2008 and many other dates).

"Klontz, James M." Documentation and Conservation of the Modem Movement, Western Washington." www.docomomo-wewa.org/architects deatil.php?id=75.

Kreisman, Lawrence and Glenn Mason. The Arts and Crafts Movement in the Pacific Northwest.

Portland, Ore.: Timber Press, 2007.

Logan, Don. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 7 April 2008.

Matthews, Henry C. Kirtland Cutter: Architect in the Land of Promise. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1999.

McAlester, Virginia and Lee McAlester. A Field Guide to American Houses. New York: Alfred Knopf, 1984.

McChesney, Frank. "Ravelle, Randall 'Randy' b. 1941." HistoryLink.org Essay 7897 (8-13-2006) (accessed 2-17-2008).

"McClelland, Robert F." "Documentation and Conservation of the Modem

Movement, Western Washington." www.docomomo-wewa.org/architects deatil.php?id=99.

McDonald, Lucille. Where the Washingtonians Lived: Interesting Early Homes and the People Who Built and Lived in Them. Seattle: Superior Publishing, 1969.

Morgan, Murray. Skid Road: An Informal Portrait of Seattle. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1982.

Newton Keith, Agnes. Three Came Home. New York: Book of the Month Club, 1946.

Ochsner, Jeffrey Karl, ed. Shaping Seattle Architecture: A Historical Guide to the Architects. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1994.

Owen, John, "The Intermediate Eater: The streets are alive, with the smell of Seattle." Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Wednesday, 1-2-2002.

Ore, Janet. The Seattle Bungalow: People & Houses 1900-1940. Seattle & London: University of Washington Press, 2007.

Ostrander, Talcott. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 15 November 2005.

Peckham, Mark. "Washington State Historic Preservation Inventory Project," 11 July 1979, Washington State University.

Pierce, J. Kingston. Eccentric Seattle. Pullman, Wash.: Washington State University Press, 2003.

Polk's Seattle Directory, various years.

Property Record Cards. Washington State Archives, Puget Sound Regional Branch, Bellevue, Wash.

Real Property Assessment and Tax Rolls, 1891, 1892, 1895, 1900, 1905, 1910, 1915, 1920, 1925, 1935, and 1941. Washington State Archives, Puget Sound Regional Branch, Bellevue, Wash.

"Roanoke Park Historic District." Historic Property Inventory Form 44343, 8-1998. Rootsweb.com (accessed 3-8-2009 and other dates).

Rosenberg, Casey. Streetcar Suburb: Architectural Roots of a Seattle Neighborhood. Seattle: Fanlight Press, 1989.

Ruby, Robert H. and John A. Brown. A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest, rev. ed. Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1992.

Rundquist, Nolan, City Arborist. Meeting with Roanoke Park residents Robert Buchanan and Erin O'Connor and commercial arborist John Hushagen, of Seattle Tree Preservation, 2 April 2002, to discuss plans for prophylactic measures to protect Roanoke Neighborhood elms from the risk of Dutch elm disease.

Sale, Roger. Seattle Past to Present: An Jnterpretaion of the History of the Foremost City in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1976.

Seattle Architectural Foundation. "2002 Tours & Events: Building Public Appreciation of Architecture and Design in the Northwest," a brochure of tours marking the foundation's 20th Anniversary Celebration. Seattle, 2002.

Sherwood, Don. Park History Files. http://www.seattle.gov/parks/history/sherwood.htm#r (accessed 21 October 2008).

Smith, Eugene. Montlake: An Urban Eden, A History of the Montlake Community in Seattle. La Grande, Ore.: Oak Street Press, 2004.

Speidel, William C. Sons of the Profits: There's No Business Like Grow Business, The Seattle Story 1851-1901. Seattle: Nettle Creek Publishing, 1967.

Stokke, Diane. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, Autumn 2005.

Stokke, Larry. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 15 September 2008.

Storm, David. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 10 February 2005.

---.Conversation  with Erin O'Connor, 9 February 2006.

Swope, Carolyn. Classic Houses of Seattle: High Style to Vernacular, 1870-1950. Portland, Ore.: Timber Press, 2005.

Sylliaasen, Sally Hurd. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 9 October 2008. Taylor, Sue. Conversation with Erin O'Connor, 2-14-2009.

Territorial Census. Various years..

University of Washington Foundation newsletter. http://uwfoundation.org/newsletter/Fall2007/news stories.asp (accessed 13 May 2008).

University of Washington Library, Special Collections. "Preliminary Guide to the Alice Franklin Bryant Papers, circa 1915-1977." http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcoll/ (accessed 8 October 2008).

U.S. Census, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930.

U.S. National Archives, Pacific Alaska Region, Seattle, Wash. "Series Description: Investigatory Case Files of the Records of the Department of the Treasury (Record Group 56), Bureau of Prohibition 1927-33, compiled 2-23-94." http://www.archives.gov/pacific-alaska/seattle/finding-aids/prohibition.html (accessed 8 October 2008).

Watt, Roberta Frye. Four Wagons West: The Story of Seattle. Seattle: Lowman and Hanford, 1932.

Wolfe, Wellington C. Sketches of Washingtonians: Containing Brief Histories of Men of the State. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com (accessed 8 March 2008).

"Women in City Government." Seattle Municipal Archives. www.seattle.gov/CityArchives/Exhibits/Women/panel.htm (accessed 8-19-2008.)

Woodbridge, Sally and Roger Montgomery. A Guide to Architecture in Washington State. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1980.

Worley, Providence. Conversation with Erin O'Connor and other participants in MOHAI-sponsored walking tour of the Roanoke Park district. 6 September 2008.

 

 
Appearance
Building Permit No. 86411, dated 1-28-1910, authorized designer-builder J. A. Blom to build a two-story frame residence 29 feet by 58 feet for owner Blom & Oscar Johnson. (See 804 E Hamlin St, Site ID #30, for another substantial brick house, the Stephens House, in which designer-builder Blom had a sole interest in 1913.) The house, which sits on the southeast comer of E Shelby St and Broadway Ave E, is a two and a half-story, Arts & Crafts-inspired dwelling. The first floor is clad in Flemish-bond red and cream brick, and the second story is spatter-dash stucco with half-timbering. The side-gabled roof is topped by a double-gabled dormer, also spatter-dash stucco with half-timbering. The chimney is on the west side with Flemish-bond brickwork on the lower part. Centered on the main fa9ade is a flat-roofed front porch with square brick pillars topped by spatter-dash stucco arches. The stairs approach the front porch from the side. The house front faces E Shelby St. All of the windows feature cut glass transom lights above a set of casement sashes.

Detail for this site is under review and the displayed data may not be fully up to date. If you need additional info, please call (206) 684-0464

Status:
Classication: District Status:
Cladding(s): Stucco, Brick - Flemish Bond Foundation(s):
Roof Type(s): Gable Roof Material(s):
Building Type: Domestic - Single Family Plan:
Structural System: Timber Frame No. of Stories: two
Unit Theme(s): Architecture/Landscape Architecture, Commerce, Politics/Government/Law
Integrity
Major Bibliographic References

Photo collection for this site is under review and the displayed data may not be fully up to date. If you need additional info, please call (206) 684-0464


Photo taken Apr 10, 2008
App v2.0.1.0