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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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This undated drawing of the LaConner waterfront from the LaConner Historical Museum is looking east-northeast across the Swinomish flats, the first area on the future mainland Skagit county to be settled. |
[Ed. note: This is a transcript of the 1906 book, Illustrated History of Skagit and Snohomish Counties, which was the most comprehensive published history of the area in the early years. We plan to publish more excerpts in the future. The book was in two parts: paid biographies of noted settlers in the back half and research of local newspapers and the results of interviews with pioneers and their descendants in the front half. These pages are in the editorial part and cover the settlement of what became mainland western Skagit county after the settlement of Fidalgo island.]
Although the beginning of permanent settle-ment on the mainland was not till after the first pioneers had established themselves on Fidalgo island, the magnificent valley of the Skagit did not escape notice entirely, while the country to the north and the south was settling up. Indeed there is very good authority for the statement that an at-tempt was made to appropriate a portion of it as early as 1855. The would-be settlers were a party from Island county, consisting of Winfield Ebey, a brother of the well-known Colonel Isaac N. Ebey, George Beam and wife, Walter Crockett and Mrs. Mary Wright, a sister of Colonel Ebey, who after-ward became Mrs. [Urvan] Bozarth. All were newcomers to the sound except Crockett. They were looking for a suitable location to run cattle and horses and thought they had found such a place on the north fork just above the spot where the bridge now spans that stream. Thomas P. Hastie, who was well acquainted with them on Whidby island, says the site of their settlement is known beyond dispute, as a large cedar tree, which is still standing, at one time bore the names or initials of the party. [Ed. note: Whidby was the old spelling through the 1950s, a corruption of the namesake, Joseph Whidbey, who was a member of Captain Vancouver's Discovery crew in 1792. We use the modern Whidbey spelled from here to the end.] Claims were staked out and preparations begun for the erection of cabins. There is no doubt of the inten-tion of these people to form a permanent settlement, but the execution of their designs was cut short by the Indian difficulties which culminated in the war of 1855-6. The ladies returned to Coupeville in haste after only one night's stay in the valley, being thoroughly frightened by the unfriendly demonstra-tions of the Indians.
Major J.J. Van Bokkelen, who called upon us Wednesday, informs us that the day before he left Port Townsend, A.S. Buffington, J.K. Tukey and others, old settlers of this territory, returned from the valley of Skagit river. They stated that in the first twelve miles of the river they met with ob-structions consisting of three rafts, after passing which they prospected the bars, and invariably found gold. When the party reached the forks of the river they went up the northern branch to Mount Baker and fell in with several Indian camps. Mr. Hastie says he remembers this party. While they found god widely distributed, it was not in paying quantities. [Mr. Van Bokkelen was the Jefferson county auditor and postmaster.
"Perhaps," "few pioneers in the history of our country ever attempted to build homes in a more uninviting region. The people of the older settlements of the sound knew of this stretch of marsh and many of them had seen it, but they thought it absurd to try to reclaim such a desolate tide-swept waste. At high tide, the Indians paddled their canoes wherever they wished over what are now tile finest farms in Washington. The marsh was ramified by countless sloughs, big and little, many of them long since filled and cultivated over. In the summer, tule, cattail and coarse salt grass flourished and it was the home of many thousands of wild fowls amid muskrats, an ideal hunting ground for Indians. Before anyone located here, the settlers of Fidalgo island used to visit the Swin-omish in summer and cut the wild grass for hay. The first settlers were the objects of much ridicule from their friends in the neighboring settlements. When we consider the great dikes that must be built around their claims we can understand why it seemed an almost impossible task."For the first few years, Messrs. Sullivan and Calhoun were the only white settlers in their neighborhood. The next permanent settlers, Mrs. Calhoun says, were John Cornelius, Robert White and James Harrison.
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Mike Aiken, descendant of the upriver Minklers, found this postcard with a view looking from Skagit bay through the narrow passage leading north through the Swinomish slough. It was a tricky bottleneck for schooners to sail through but shallow-draft sternwheelers navigated it well. The little fishing cabin to the right is probably the one owned by a Mr. Bryn, who fished there for a couple of decades. The little island by the Hole was the home of John P. McGlinn, who arrived in 1872 as Indian Agent at Lummi with jurisdiction over Swinomish Reservation. When President Grover Cleveland was inaugurated, McGlinn lost his political patronage and in 1877, he moved to LaConner and owned the McGlinn/Maryland House hotel. He moved his family to the Hole-in-the-Wall island for three years. |
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The late Art Hupy was a LaConner photographer who collected photos from many of the pioneer families and was also one of the key leaders behind the movement for the Museum of Northwest Art. This is a photo he discovered that features a family who dressed up and posed on one of the huge stumps that resulted from logging on Fir island in the very early days. |
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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. 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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