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Built in 1930, this building was purchased by Ruth M. Hilton in October of the same year. Mrs. Hilton worked as a clerk for the Seattle Hardware Company. By 1938, Clifford C. and Harriet G. Harrison resided in the building. The Harrison’s resided previously at 2836 Thirty-Second Avenue South. Mr. Harrison was a sports editor for Star Publishing Company. Ralph Scarborough lived in the house by 1940. By 1943, Leonard T. Phillips resided in the building. In May of 1951, Y. Mizrahi bought the house for $14,250. By 1955 through 1968, Isaac M. Hasson lived in the house.
The Mount Baker neighborhood comprises two north-south tending ridges located southeast of downtown Seattle along Lake Washington. Initial development of the area occurred relatively late, post-1900, following the construction of the Rainier Avenue Electric Street Railway in the 1890s. York Station on Rainier Avenue and the Dose Addition were developed earlier than the Mount Baker Park Addition, platted in 1907 by the Hunter Tract Improvement Company. The Mount Baker Park Addition represents the core of the neighborhood and is its primary character-defining feature. Mount Baker Park is one of Seattle’s earliest planned residential communities that successfully integrated the natural environment and a relatively exclusive residential neighborhood in its layout of lots, streets, boulevards, and parks. The houses, primarily built between 1905 and 1929, reflect a variety of eclectic and Northwest-based architectural styles, and include designs by many prominent local architects.
Other important influences were the streetcar connection with downtown Seattle, the integration of local parks and boulevards into the Olmsted system, the construction of Franklin High School in 1912, and the building of the Mount Baker tunnel and Lacey V. Murrow Floating Bridge to Mercer Island in 1940. Today this middle-to-upper income neighborhood remains predominantly residential, is home to an ethnically diverse population, and retains much of its planned character.
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