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Skagit River JournalSubscribers Edition Stories & Photos The most in-depth, comprehensive site about the Skagit. Covers from British Columbia to Puget sound. Counties covered: Skagit, Whatcom, Island, San Juan. An evolving history dedicated to the principle of committing random acts of historical kindness |
810 Central Ave., Sedro-Woolley, Washington, 98284Home of the Tarheel Stomp Mortimer Cook slept here & named the town Bug |
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The U.S. Corps of Engineers commissioned this map after the three devastating floods of 1894, 1896 and 1897. This 1897 map was discovered by Mike Aiken of Mount Vernon among the papers of his famous upriver ancestor, Birdsey Minkler. You can see the double horseshoe bend. The old channel around the upper bend is now a slough that forms Hart's island. The lower bend hooked around Joe DeBay's property. The river eventually ate through almost due west and eventually formed DeBay's island between the main channel and a slough around the lower bend. That lower channel is now a dry slough. |
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This 1924 photo of the farm on DeBay island shows Joe DeBay in the center with his dog. Bob DeBay is steadying the two horses; Joe Nemo is on the horse to the left and
Josephine Nemo on the other. We don't know the names of the cows. All these island and family photos courtesy of Allen Lyons and his wife, Marsha DeBay Lyons. |
The Skagit river now flows southwesterly from the site of old-Sedro. Back in the early days before 1921, however, it made a sharp northern meandering bow up nearly to where the Seattle & Northern tracks ran west to east, and a corresponding bow south of DeBay's farm. Here is an intriguing description by pioneer Harry Devin in his diary written sometime in the 1920s:
In the early 1890s there was a horseshoe bend [now called Hart's Island] in the Skagit River a couple of miles west of town that was rapidly cutting away the bank and approaching the [S&N] track. After considerable work in 1897, we secured an appropriation of $35,000 from Congress, the cost estimated by the army engineers for a channel through the neck of the peninsula, but with a rider attached that required us to secure waivers of damage from all owners of property abutting on the river for five miles down the river below the proposed cutoff. It was impossible to do this so the appropriation lapsed. The river continued cutting deeper in the bend and by 1908 had washed away hundreds of acres of good farming land and reached the Great Northern [formerly the S&N] Railway, which had to . . .There the diary ends. The river kept eating away the northern bank, especially in flood years like 1896 and1897 [see the Journal story, Mother of all Floods]. The next major flood occurred in 1909, causing much damage in the Sterling and Nookachamps Creek area and breaching a dike near Burlington. narrow sloughs had formed at the south of the loop, forming Hart's island over the years. Finally, in 1911, Burlington-area farmers dynamited a new channel for the river through those sloughs, cutting the channel almost due west from Burn's Bar, east of Sedro as the rider to the 1897 Corps of Engineers support had suggested.
The same authorities also explained the fact that while flood waters at Mt. Vernon reached within inches of an all-time record, the peak at Sedro-Woolley was from four to five feet under the record. This was due to the fact that previous floods had removed two curves below Sedro-Woolley and shortened the river's course nearly one-half mile. This makes the river almost straight from Burn's bar three miles west, and the effect had been to lower the river bed here nearly four feet.Kunzler checked and discovered that there was a minor 1924 flood, so that confirms that the present channel, directly west, formed in 1924 and we deduce that the major flood of 1932 removed most of the log jam. This research process only took 11 years, but we are pleased that we finally know the details of how and when DeBay's island was formed.
Also see these features about Sterling and its settlers. Some are from our old website and the links will not work. Please return here for links. These stories that started on our old website in 2001 are being updated with new information from our research and from readers and will be completely updated, starting in May 2004, with your help.
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Heirloom Gardens Natural Foods at 805B Metcalf street, the original home of Oliver Hammer. Oliver Hammer Clothes Shop at 817 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years. Bus Jungquist Furniture at 829 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 36 years. Schooner Tavern/Cocktails at 621 Metcalf street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, across from Hammer Square. Check out Sedro-Woolley First for links to all stories and reasons to shop here first or make this your destination on your visit or vacation. Peace and quiet at the Alpine RV Park, just north of Marblemount on Hwy 20 Park your RV or pitch a tent by the Skagit river, just a short driver from Winthrop or Sedro-Woolley. Would you like to buy a country church, pews, belfry, bell, pastor's quarters and all? Email us for details. |
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Mail copies/documents to street address: Skagit River Journal, 810 Central Ave., Sedro-Woolley, WA, 98284. |