From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Licton Springs neighborhood
Licton Springs or North College
Park is a neighborhood in the informal Northgate district of North Seattle. It is bounded by Interstate 5 to the east, beyond which is
Maple
Leaf neighborhood and the Northgate Mall; Aurora Avenue
N (SR 99) to the west, beyond
which is Greenwood; N 85th Street to the south,
beyond which is Green
Lake, and N 105th Street and N Northgate Way to the north,
beyond which is Haller
Lake.[1]
Licton
Springs
Licton Springs, the natural iron spring
Licton Springs is both a residential neighborhood and a natural
spring at the north end of Licton Springs Park, which has a long
history as both a unique recreational spot and a commercial
crossroads. The neighborhood, wedged between the busy corridors of
Interstate 5 and Aurora Avenue, takes its name from
Liq'tid (LEEK-teed) or Licton, the Lushootseed
(Whulshootseed) Coast Salish word for the reddish mud of
the springs—. The Dkhw’Duw’Absh, People
of the Inside and Xacuabš, People of the Large Lake,
Lushootseed (Skagit-Nisqually) Coast Salish native people had used
the springs area as a spiritual health spa since the area was
populated after the last glacial
period (c. 8,000 B.C.E.—10,000 years ago). In the 1850s, the
Dkhw’Duw’Absh and Xacuabš
became the Duwamish tribe of today.
European
settlement
Seattle pioneer David
Denny built a summer cabin near the springs around 1870. The
natural spring fed Green
Lake before it was capped and drained to the Metro sewer system
after it became contaminated by residential development (1920,
1931). The Olmsted Brothers designed a park for
Licton Springs, as part of a grand streets and parks plan for
Seattle (1930s), but this park was never implemented. A park does
exist today (where Woodlawn Avenue curves to connect with N 95th
Street) in which the spring is located.[2] In the
mid-1960s restoration began with bond issues and increasing
volunteer assistance, resulting in a small pond and natural wetland
vegetation as well as urban park amenities.[3] A
Native American presence continues in the neighborhood through the
Indian Heritage School at Wilson-Pacific. This school hosts
frequent Indian Pow Wows and spectacular wall murals by Indian
artist Andrew Morrison.
Exotic waterfowl habitat at Pillings Pond
The Everett and Interurban Railway Company (1900-1936)[4] came
past the neighborhood in 1906. The trolleys became a part of
everyday life and development of residential neighborhoods around
trolley stops. Running on a narrow right-of-way through backyards,
the whistle became part of the atmosphere of neighborhoods like
Licton Springs. In the early years, the line ran through cut forest
and rural farms. A few sawmills along the way gave the line a
business hauling lumber. The rough wagon road became Aurora Avenue
N (1930) after being paved with brick (1913) and asphalt (1928). A
most distinctive early feature was the motorist "tourist camps",
"auto camps", and later, "auto courts", then the now-familiar
motels. One or two still remained at the turn of the 20th
century.
The Pilling family had a dairy farm (1909-1933), out of which
grew the waterfowl habitat and birding site of Pillings Pond
today.[5
] Japanese-Americans had greenhouses and small
farms until they were abruptly forcibly removed with the Japanese American Internment
(1942-1945).
North College
Park
Seattle annexed most of North Seattle in 1954.[6] North
College Park became defined with the Licton Springs neighborhood
with the establishment of North Seattle Community
College (1970).[7]
Licton Springs and the Sunny Walter–Pillings Pond are part of
the Densmore Drainage Basin. The springs at the North Police
Precinct and North Seattle Community College are headwaters of the
south fork of Thornton Creek; this fork flows through
culverts under I-5 and the south lot of Northgate Mall
development.[5
][8]
These neighborhoods are natural extensions of Maple
Leaf downstream.[9]
Neighborhood activists and North Seattle Community College (NSCC)
have been promoting habitat restoration in support.[8][9][10] NSCC
grounds have a nationally-recognized native habitat, a pentimento of restored
native species on a palimpsest of former 1940s suburb, former
dairy farm, former bog where native Dkhw’Duw’Absh
harvested cranberries.[11]
See also
Notes and
references
- ^
(1) ""North College Park"".
Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas. Office of the
Seattle City Clerk. n.d., map .jpg c. 2002-06-17. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/public/nmaps/S/NN-1036S.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
"NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17 June 2002.
(2) ""Northgate"".
Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas. Office of the
Seattle City Clerk. n.d., map .jpg 2002-06-17. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/nmaps/html/NN-1030S.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
(3) ""About the Seattle City
Clerk's On-line Information Services"". Information
Services. Seattle City Clerk's Office. Revised 2006-04-30. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/about.htm. Retrieved
2006-05-21.
See heading, "Note about limitations of these data".
- ^
Licton Springs ParkLicton Springs Park
Homepage
- ^
Sheridan & Tobin, Wilma, ed.
- ^
Then variously the Seattle-Everett Traction Company and the Pacific
Northwest Traction Company.
- ^
a
b Walter & local Audubon chapters
- ^
(1) Phelps, pp. 220-224.
(2) Sheridan & Tobin
- ^
""About NSCC"". North Seattle Community College.
n.d.. http://www.northseattle.edu/info/. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- ^ a
b
Bowditch, Wang, & Wilson
- ^ a
b
Brokaw
- ^
(1) Hodson
(2) ""Restoration Activities: A
Few of Our Accomplishments"". Thornton Creek Alliance, Seattle
Community Network. n.d.. http://www.scn.org/earth/tca/tcarestor.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- ^
Dolan & True, pp. 242–7.
Bibliography
- ""About NSCC"". NSCC Home > About NSCC:
Welcome. North Seattle Community College. n.d.. http://www.northseattle.edu/info/. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- ""About the Seattle City
Clerk's On-line Information Services"". Information
Services. Seattle City Clerk's Office. Revised 2006-04-30. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/about.htm. Retrieved
2006-05-21.
See heading, "Note about limitations of these data".
- Bowditch, Elise; Wang, Man; and
Wilson, Matthew (2002-01-30). ""North Seattle Community
College Trail Siting"". GEOG461 Urban GIS, Department of
Geography. University of Washington.
http://students.washington.edu/mwarrenw/nscc_trail/. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Elise Bowditch, Teaching Assistant; Man Wang, Teaching Assistant;
Matthew W. Wilson, Research Associate.
- Brokaw, Michael (n.d.). ""Grounds Department
Wetland"". North Seattle Community College Grounds
Maintenance. http://www.awdevelopment.com/Grounds/wetland.html. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- Dailey, Tom (n.d.). ""Duwamish-Seattle"".
"Coast Salish Villages of
Puget Sound". http://coastsalishmap.org/new_page_6.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Page links to Village Descriptions Duwamish-Seattle section.
Dailey referenced "Puget Sound Geography" by T. T. Waterman.
Washington DC: National Anthropological Archives, mss. [n.d.] [ref.
2];
Duwamish et al. vs. United States of America, F-275.
Washington DC: US Court of Claims, 1927. [ref. 5];
"Indian Lake Washington" by David Buerge in the Seattle
Weekly, 1-7 August 1984 [ref. 8];
"Seattle Before Seattle" by David Buerge in the Seattle
Weekly, 17-23 December 1980. [ref. 9];
The Puyallup-Nisqually by Marian W. Smith. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1940. [ref. 10].
Recommended start is "Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound".
- Dolan, Maria; True, Kathryn (2003).
"North Seattle Community College Wetlands". Nature in the city:
Seattle. Seattle: Mountaineers Books. pp. 242–7. ISBN
0-89886-879-3 (paperback).
- Hodson, Jeff (2000-02-16). ""Restoration urged for
Thornton Creek: Local News"". The Seattle Times. http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=4005200&date=20000216&query=Creeks. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Was, NF.
- ""Licton Springs Neighborhood:
Local Interest"". Licton Springs Community Council. Winter
2000. http://www.lictonsprings.org/localin/localopen.html. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- Lakw’alas
(Speer, Thomas R.) (2004-07-22). ""Chief Si’ahl"" (DOC).
"Chief Si’ahl". http://www.duwamishtribe.org/Life_siahl.doc. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Includes bibliography.
- ""North College Park"".
Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas. Office of the
Seattle City Clerk. n.d., map.jpg c. 2002-06-17. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/public/nmaps/S/NN-1036S.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
"NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17 June 2002.
- ""Northgate"".
Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas. Office of the
Seattle City Clerk. n.d., map.jpg 2002-06-17. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/nmaps/html/NN-1030S.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- Phelps, Myra L. (1978). Public
works in Seattle. Seattle: Seattle Engineering Department.
ISBN 0-9601928-1-6.
- ""Restoration Activities: A
Few of Our Accomplishments"". Thornton Creek Alliance, Seattle
Community Network. n.d.. http://www.scn.org/earth/tca/tcarestor.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- Shenk, Carol; Pollack, Laurie;
Dornfeld, Ernie; Frantilla, Anne; and Neman, Chris (2002-06-26,
maps.jpg c. 2002-06-15). ""About neighborhood
maps"". Seattle City Clerk's Office Neighborhood Map
Atlas. Information Services, Seattle City Clerk's Office. http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/nmaps/aboutnm.htm. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Sources for this atlas and the neighborhood names used in it
include a 1980 neighborhood map produced by the Department of
Community Development (relocated to the Department of
Neighborhoods and other agencies), Seattle Public Library indexes,
a 1984-1986 Neighborhood Profiles feature series in the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, numerous parks, land use and
transportation planning studies, and records in the Seattle Municipal
Archives.
[Maps "NN-1120S", "NN-1130S", "NN-1140S".Jpg [sic] dated 13 June
2002; "NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17 June 2002.]
- Sheridan, Mimi; Tobin, Carol (n.d.).
""A Neighborhood
History"". Licton Springs Community Council. http://www.lictonsprings.org/localin/history.html. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
- Sheridan, Mimi; Tobin, Carol
(2001-07-17). ""Seattle Neighborhoods:
Licton Springs – Thumbnail History"". in Wilma, David, ed..
HistoryLink.org Essay 3447. http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=3447. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
Authors referenced Clarence B. Bagley, History of Seattle
(Chicago, S. J. Clarke Publishing, 1916); Sophie Frye Bass,
Pig-Tail Days in Old Seattle (Portland: Binfords & Mort, 1937); David Buerge,
"The Maps of the Early Shoreline Area", typescript dated 1996,
Shoreline Historical Museum; David Buerge, "Any There There?"
The Weekly, June 18, 1997; David Buerge, "Seattle Before
Seattle", The Weekly, December 17-23, 1980; Paul Burch,
"The Story of Licton Springs", The Westerner, September
1908; W. E. Chambers, "The Pacific Highway", The Argus,
December 17, 1921; Isobel Chapman, Northgate Reflections
(Seattle: Isobel Chapman, May 1977); "The Club Salutes Lawrence
Denny Lindsley", The Mountaineer, June 1974; Laura C.
Daly, "A History of Cemeteries in the City of Seattle...",
typescript dated 1984 in possession of Evergreen-Washelli, Seattle;
Laura C. Daly, "Seattle's 'Cemetery of the Land of the Hereafter'",
Portage, vol. 5, No. 1-2 (Winter/Spring 1984); Emily Inez
Denny, Blazing the Way (Seattle: Rainier Printing Company,
1909); Emily Inez Denny, Notebooks, Museum of History and Industry,
Seattle (hereafter MOHAI); Victory Denny, Notebooks – Licton
Springs, MOHAI; "Denny’s Mineral Springs", Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, October 13, 1883, p. 2; Margaret Collins
Denny Dixon and Elizabeth Chapman Denny Vann, Denny Genealogy,
Vols. 1-3 (New York: National Historical Society: 1944-1951); Paul
Dorpat, "Licton Park Home", The Seattle Times, September
15, 1996; The Freeways in Seattle, (Olympia: Washington
State Highway Commission, 1962); Faye M. Garneau, "History of
Aurora" in Aurora Avenue Merchants Association Newsletter; "Henry
L. Denny, Sound Pioneer, Celebrates 91", The Seattle
Times, September 15, 1929; King County, Real Property
Assessment Rolls, various dates; Janice Krenmayr, Footloose in
Seattle, Vol. 1 (Seattle: Seattle Times Company, 1963);
Kroll’s Atlas of King County (Seattle: Kroll Map Company,
1912 and 1926); Calvin Lew, "Principles Used in Planning and
Developing Suburban Shopping Centers...", MBA thesis, University of
Washington, 1951; "Licton Park to be Site of Sanitarium", The
Interlaken, March 9, 1907; Rae Tufts, "Little-known Park has
Hot Springs", The Seattle Times, September 12, 1982; Jay
Miller, Shamanic Odyssey: The Lushootseed Salish Journey to the
Land of the Dead (Menlo Park, CA: Ballena Press, 1988); Brandt
Morgan, Enjoying Seattle’s Parks, (Seattle: Greenwood
Publications, 1979); Gordon Newell, Westward to Alki: The Story
of David and Louisa Denny (Seattle: Superior Publishing,
1977); "The Northgate Story", Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
December 3, 1965; "Oak Lake School Scrapbook", 1886-1959, Seattle
School District; Olmsted Brothers Office, plans of Licton Springs,
Job No. 3347, 1907; National Park Service, Frederick Law Olmsted
National Historical Site, Olmsted Plans and Drawings Collection,
Brookline, MA; R. L. Polk, Seattle City Directories (various
dates); Puget Sound Regional Archives, Property Record Cards;
"Scenes Around Licton Springs...", The Seattle Times,
March 10, 1907; "Seattle Spa", Ibid., September 13, 1964; Jan
Silver, "Seattle’s Painted Waters", in Puget Soundings,
October 1980; A Field Guide to Seattle’s Public Art ed. by
Diane Shamash and Steven Huss (Seattle: 1991); Don Sherwood,
"Licton Springs Park", in "Interpretive Essays of the Histories of
Seattle's Parks and Playfields", handwritten bound manuscript dated
1977, Sherwood Collection at Seattle Municipal Archives; Paul
Burch, "The Story of Licton Springs", The Westerner,
September 1908; Nile Thompson and Carolyn J. Marr, Building for
Learning: Seattle Public School Histories (Seattle: Seattle
Public Schools, 2002); Nile Robert Thompson, "The Original
Residents of Shilshole Bay" in Passport to Ballard
(Seattle: Ballard News Tribune, 1988); U.S. General Land Office,
Washington Plat Book, Vol. 26, 127, National Archives, Pacific
Northwest Region; Oregon and Washington Donation Land Files,
1851-1903, (Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives, 1973);
Rebecca E. Walls, "Growing and Gathering: An Adaptive Re-use Plan
for Greenwood Greenhouse", master's thesis, University of
Washington, 1999; Thomas Talbot Waterman, "The Geographical Names
Used by Indians of the Pacific Coast", The Geographical
Review, Vol. 12 (1922); John R. Watt, Pioneering From
Covered Wagons Onward (Roswell, GA: WH Wolfe Associates,
1995); Roberta Frye Watt, Four Wagons West, (Portland:
Binford & Mort, 1931); Warren W. Wing, To Seattle by
Trolley (Edmonds, WA: Pacific Fast Mail, 1988); Mimi Sheridan
and Carol Tobin interview of Chuck and June Pilling, November 17,
2000; and of Sayo Harmeling and Bea Kumasaka, February 24,
2001.
- Walter, Sunny; local Audubon
chapters (Updated 2006-02-10). ""Sunny Walter's Washington
Nature Weekends: Wildlife Viewing Locations - Greater Seattle
Area"". http://www.nwlink.com/~sunnywww/WhereView-WNW-Birds-PugetSound.html. Retrieved
2006-04-21.
"with additions by Sunny Walter and local Audubon chapters."
Viewing locations only; the book has walks, hikes, wildlife, and
natural wonders.
Walter excerpted from
- Dolan, Maria; True, Kathryn (2003).
Nature in the city: Seattle. Seattle: Mountaineers Books.
ISBN 0-89886-879-3 (paperback).
See "Northeast Seattle" section, bullet points "Meadowbrook",
"Paramount Park Open Space", "North Seattle Community College
Wetlands", and "Sunny Walter – Twin Ponds".
Further
reading
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