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Skagit River JournalSubscribers Edition Stories & Photos The most in-depth, comprehensive site about Skagit County Covers from British Columbia to Puget Sound. Counties covered: Skagit, Whatcom, Island, San Juan, Snohomish & BC. An evolving history dedicated to 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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Boots on — the job search begins. Slopping back toward ocean dock, I am hailed by S.G. Ketchum, S for Seneca (G for Galen, he says, but I think it's for Garrulous), a man with classical roots, now a journalist for the Plaindealer. Within five minutes we're firm friends, boarding the Mikado for the Broadway dock over in Bellingham and a certain tavern, Fairhaven being deficient in such establishments at present. [Footnote 130 cites History of Whatcom County, Lottie Roeder Roth, 1929, page 320: "With saloons at Sehome and Whatcom, Fairhaven received all the ill-effects of the liquor traffic without any of its compensations in the way of business or license fees and by August (1889), Mr. Bennett was forced to recede from his advanced position and the first saloon was established at Fairhaven."]Aside from his bylined articles in the Plaindealer, we know very little about Seneca's stint in Fairhaven, other than the fact that he tippled often and had a grand time while the boom lasted, which may have led to his gastric illness in 1901 and his death two years later. Col. Jay B. Edwards, publisher of the Plaindealer, sold the newspaper on Sept. 1, 1890 to G.H. Culver and E.G. Earle, who renamed it The World. They later renamed it the Weekly World-Herald, when they combined with the afternoon daily, Fairhaven Herald, which launched on March 11, 1890, and eventually became the Bellingham Herald, which is still published today.
Conveniently located near the dock on Front street, the saloon proclaims itself "Bellingham Saloon, T.E. Monohan, proprietor. Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Straight Kentucky Whisky [Footnote 131: quoted from The Reveille, June 7, 1889]. Not averse to that, we enter to be immediately assailed by strange smells, sounds and sights.
The brass rod around the bar was . . . a greenish-black, and there came from it an unpleasant odor of verdigris [the river that flows south into the Arkansas River and the smells thereof]. The walls were fairly coated with dust, smoke and fly-specks, and the windows let in the light but feebly through dust-obscured glass. The floor was filthy. Behind the bar, on the shelves designed for a display of liquor, was a confused mingling of empty or half-filled decanters, cigar boxes, lemons and lemon peel, old newspapers, glasses, a broken pitcher, a hat, a soiled vest, and a pair of blacking-brushes, with other incongruous things . . . The air in the room was loaded with offensive vapors . . . Pictures, too, were hung upon the walls, or more accurately [p. 31] speaking, coarse colored lithographs, the subjects of which, if not really obscene, were flashing or vulgar. [Footnote 132, noting this description was actually derived from a book by T.S. Arthur, Ten Nights in a Barroom]
The sounds of laughter, clinking glasses and the sweet smell of straight Kentucky Whisky lure us to a dark corner where my garrulous friend, a Bellingham Bay resident since last October, begins his monologue
Jobs? Plenty! Capitalist or speculator? Neither — no money. No matter! Bennett says he needs "Merchants and Professional Men! Mechanics and Laborers. Sell lots for Mrs. Peck over in Sehome. Since last June she's been advertising on the front pages of the Reveille Boom! Boom!! Boom!!! Buy a few lots, the best at $175 to $250 — price will double by December. Buy more, you'll be rich. Why a $25 lot in Tacoma ten years ago is worth $4,000 now! Mr. P.J. Hennelly has made over $50,000 in the last three months selling land in Whatcom. He sold just one of twenty fine lots in Fairhaven and is setting up the finest real estate office on the sound." [Footnote 133: the Reveille; Journal ed. note: Hennelly was a San Francisco capitalist who platted subdivisions in Fairhaven built a mansion that was reported to have cost with $32,000, with furnishings, and burned in 1895].
"By December we'll have at least 20 real estate offices right here in Fairhaven [Footnote 134: tabulated from Speirs and Anderson 1889 Directory of Fairhaven]. Good jobs. Fast money. Harder work with oxen for Bennett pulling stumps, logging on the railroad at $2.25 a day. Go over to Happy Valley — the brickyard's heating up. 15 hands are already working overtime.
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Upon my arrival in Nelson in the fall of 1896, I was greeted by Seneca G. Ketchum, who was [later] chief of police under John Houston, the city's first mayor. Ketchum was a printer by trade as well as Houston, and both had been what is known as "tourist printers," who rode in boxcars, on the blind baggage or on the rods going from town to town, picking up a few days' work and moving on. I had known Ketchum down in Pullman, where I started to learn my trade. The mayor and his chief of police had much in common — sometimes the chief of police took the mayor home, and then again some times the mayor took the chief of police home, a most fraternal arrangement, as it were. [Smyth wrote for the nearby Slocan City News during the paper's short life from 1896-98.]
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No small part of the reputation conceded to Seneca is due to the fame of his tales of achievements during a term of Chief of Police of Nelson, B.C. It was in June of 1897 while he was chief that several holidays came in quick succession, says the veracious P-I [Seattle Post-Intelligencer]. They included the Queen's Jubilee and the Fourth of July. They were celebrated in wild western fashion. In fact, the celebration became so intense that the whole City Government was incapacitated from business for a week.Apparently Houston and/or the city fathers decided that Seneca was too much fun. On July 21, 1897, the Nelson Economist newspaper announced the end of Chief Ketchum's short reign:
"The mayor began the celebration," said Editor Ketchum. "I found him around one evening celebrating in a fashion that was altogether too wild and western even for Nelson, so I arrested him.
" 'What?' said he, 'you arrest me? I'm Mayor of Nelson, and you're only the Chief of police. I discharge you.'
" 'Oh, no!' Don't' do that now,' I said. 'I won't be discharged. I refuse. Come along.'
"Well, I took him around for a time until his ardor wore off somewhat. Then we went into a refectory and squared our differences. We concluded that we would celebrate together. The City Clerk couldn't do anything without the Mayor, so we played poker; the policemen couldn't get long without me, so they quit work. The machinery of the Government was stopped. I think that if the Queen had known what going to happen she would have postponed the jubilee.
"I have had some pretty wild experiences, but none of them beat my career as Chief of Police. Here I had been for years a man trying to dodge policemen, and I became one of the most important of them. It gives you a remarkable feeling to be the Chief of such a town. You can very readily imagine yourself a king, for you come very near being boss of all you survey."
To gaze upon the stern features of ex-Chief of Police Ketchum as he stretched out the strong arm of the law and gathered in the rich and poor alike, the keenest observer would never suspect that all the while sly Cupid was bombarding the heart of the uncompromising preserver of the peace. Yet such was really a fact, and last Sunday night the garrison surrendered unconditionally, when Rev. Mr. Morden tied the knot that made Miss N. [Naomi] Kline of Los Angeles and Mr. Seneca G. Ketchum one. Joy be with you Seneca and your bride. When interviewed on the subject Mr. Ketchum said he had nothing to say for the press.We unfortunately know much more about Seneca's brief reign as police chief than we know about his resume as a journalist in Nelson. Although Houston sold the paper in Rossland, he retained his interest in the Tribune during his campaign, as a useful tool, so perhaps Seneca wrote for him or worked as a printer. Greg is still searching for bylined articles, but all he has found so far is references to Seneca rather than signed stories.
The Nelson police force as it is now officered and manned is in a position to accomplish beneficial results .. This assertion is not intended as a reflection on any member of the former force, for everyone knows that under the careful training of that experienced thief-catcher Seneca Ketchum (who could detect a clue in a whirlwind), the old organization was a thing of beauty and joy forever.
The Press apparently failed, or else Seneca moved on, judging from the report above that he was back working as a printer at another plant in Spokane in the spring or summer of 1898. And then, soon thereafter, the bride and groom reappeared in old Woolley, just before the merger of the twin towns. What we do know for sure is that while the newlyweds were in Spokane, they conceived their first child, sometime in November 1897.Nelson Economist, Oct. 27, 1897: The Spokane Saturday Press has made its appearance and is a neat four-page publication with a border around it and printed on a chromo-lithographic press. The editor is Mr. Seneca G. Ketchum, whose official duties as chief of police at Nelson at one time brought him in contact with the leading men of the world. It will be remembered that it was some of Mr. Ketchum's clever detective work that unearthed some of the greatest crimes ever perpetrated in the Kootenays, and if we mistake not, it was the same gentleman who arrested the man that got drunk last summer in this city. As an extra inducement to subscribe, Seneca will give an oil painting of himself to anyone sending $100 for the paper. [Journal ed. note: at first, Greg and I thought the story about arresting Houston might have been apocryphal, but the reference in this story to the "same gentlemen" lends credence to the story, especially since it appeared in one of the papers that competed with Houston's paper, the Tribune.]
Slocan City News, Oct. 30, 1897: Re: Spokane Saturday Press Vol. 1., No. 1, of the Spokane Saturday Press has reached this office. Seneca G. Ketchum, the editor, and John M. Cole, the manager, are both well known in the Slocan country. Seneca G. Ketchum was at one time chief of police in Nelson, and has probably ridden in more boxcars than any other 'print' who ever struck west. He is generally known as the auburn-haired poet of the Cascades and is noted for his extreme beauty. John M. Cole held a position in the News office for a while last summer.
In their introduction to the public they say they "have decided that in the matter of subscriptions they will accept string beans, old iron, baby carriages, baled hay, coffin varnish, and barbed wire in lieu of cash. Anyone having cash concealed about his person will please step in some place where they need it.
"We have in our possession now several cases of type, and three or four slingers thereof; an office cat, a bottle of red ink, four nails for the employees' coats, and the pen with which this declaration of independence is written. There are also in the land adjacent three cords of wood and a low, musical hen house.
"It will thus be seen that we are fully prepared at every point, and that people who don't approve of our style of pitching may as well leave town." The boys have the best wishes of the News in their venture.
The Paystreak (Sandon), Oct. 30, 1897: Seneca's latest graft The irrepressible Seneca G. Ketchum is to the front again. After a varied experience as chief of police at Nelson, itinerant journalist, and other occupations, Seneca is before the public and incidentally after it, as editor of the latest acquisition to Spokane journalism, The Spokane Press. The new paper is humorous to a degree and to those acquainted with the editor's antecedents, the salutary which informs the public that the sheet is run in interests of the reputable liquor dealers is particularly droll. Seneca has been working for the saloon keepers for a long time but this is the first occasion on which he has obtained recognition. By the way, Editor Ketchum once accepted a situation on the staff of the Paystreak but after a few days — he was not prepared to state precisely how many — during which his exuberance so greatly exceeded his verbosity that he was far too full of utterance, left for other parts. Mr. Cole's friends also will be glad to hear of his good fortune in obtaining a sit on the new paper. Quite a number of people in the Slocan would like to see Johnny Cole — just for about two minutes.
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This photo by Darius Kinsey shows an 1899 view of Metcalf Street from almost the same spot as the photo above. One interesting detail is the same street surface of mud, gravel and dirt. Some sources have spoken of planked streets, but we have yet to find planks on Metcalf. The only planked streets for which we have evidence are State Street/Hoehn Road and Northern Avenue. We hope that a reader will have other such photos. |
That is the last record we have during Seneca's life. His brief obituary in the Puget Sound Mail of LaConner, dated Aug. 27, 1903, reads: "Ketchum, Seneca G. At one time a prominent journalistic light in Skagit County, passed away at Sedro-Woolley last Friday from stomach trouble. Seneca ably presided over the destinies of the Skagit County Times for over two years, relinquishing the property about two years ago." Seneca's widow must have been besieged by grief, losing her infant son and her husband within three years. We also know that Seneca sold the newspaper in 1901, so he may have been an invalid for much of the time until his death.
This is a photo by Darius Kinsey on this trip of Cedar Bar, the Roadhouse and ranch owned by the Lucinda Davis family. See Issue 35 of the Subscribers-Paid Journal magazine online for the story of the Davis family. The caption from the Kinsey Photographer book reads: "Road House surrounded by towering firs, near banks of Skagit River, Washington. Thanks to Rodolfo Petschek for permission to use the photos. Kinsey Photographer (Dave Bohn and Rodolfo Petschek. In August of 1900, two men and a heavily laden packhorse set out from Hamilton — destination Barron, up in the Slate Creek mining district and not much more than one hundred miles out. It was Darius Kinsey heading for the mountains again, this time with Seneca G. Ketchum, then editor and publisher of the Skagit County Times of Sedro-Woolley.
Chronicle Books: San Francisco, 1982, Page 94)
No small part of the horse burden was cameras. The indefatigable 6 1/2x8 1/2" was aboard, with a strong supply of glass plates to match. Also aboard was the camera destined to become the indispensable tool in the hands of a genius photographer — the 11x14" Empire State. Almost certainly this was the first trip for the 11x14" because the earliest surviving plate in that format is from the Expedition of 1900.
Fifty-one miles from Hamilton — along the Skagit River — Kinsey and Ketchum hit Goodell's Landing and Ketchum was posed in front of the roadhouse. Then another eight miles or so to Cedar Bar, where they hauled up for a day or two. The Hotel Cedar Bar — or the Davis Roadhouse — was run by Lucinda Davis, her daughter Dessa, and sons Frank and Glee [see Issue 35 of the optional Subscribers-Paid Magazine Online for the story of the Davis family]. It was a good place to stop, not only for the excellent food but because Glee was an expert at loading horses and the intrepid travelers were not.
In August of 1900, Glee Davis was fifteen years old. Now — December of 1973 — Glee is eighty-nine and willing to reminisce at some length about the Kinsey/Ketchum effort and on Skagit river history in general. Glee recalls that about two weeks after the travelers passed through on the way into the mountains. Darius came down from Barron alone, because Ketchum had decided to walk out to the east.
This Darius Kinsey photo from the same trip shows some of the buildings at Goodell's Landing, about a mile north of present-day Newhalem. The caption from the Kinsey Photographer book reads: "Roadhouse on Skagit River. Seneca Ketchum standing. This is Goodell's Landing."
"But Kinsey came back and then he stayed with us. And I took him around quite a bit getting pictures, sort of in inaccessible places. He was a very religious man, a Methodist, and one of those days was Sunday. He told my mother, he says, 'You don't need to get any dinner for me. I am going to stay over the day, and I want you to let me have that bunkhouse down by the river, and I want to stay there and I don't want to be disturbed.' And he stayed there all Sunday. Had his Bible with him. Didn't eat any dinner. No, he just wanted to be quiet. He just shut what windows there were and he wanted to sit there and study his Bible."
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Thanks to author David Dilgard in Snohomish, we also have Jesse's obituary, which appeared in the Everett Herald of May 5, 1981: "Jesse M. Ketchum, 82, of Snohomish, died May 3, 1981 in a local hospital. He was born August 5, 1898, in Mount Vernon, Wa., and was a retired Merchant Marine Seaman. He fought in the British Army in WW1. He leaves a good friend, Gertrude Booten, Snohomish. In keeping with his wishes, no services will be held. Arrangements under direction of Bauer Funeral Chapel, Snohomish. Remembrances to the Cancer Fund. We hope that any reader who is a relative or who knows any other details of Seneca's life will contact us, and we especially hope that someone has a photo of him or his family and will share it with us.Seneca G. Ketchum dead Former resident of Nelson and ex-chief of police, A remarkably brilliant but erratic character. Vancouver, Aug. 21 — Seneca Ketchum, well known throughout the northwest as a printer, writer, poet, and for a brief period six years ago, chief of police of Nelson, died Wednesday last of inflammation of the bowels at Sedro-Woolley, Wash., where a widow and one child are left bereaved. Ketchum was 40 years of age and an unballasted genius in his particular field as versifier and cynic, he had perhaps but one Canadian rival in the person of "The Khan." His father's estate, now in the process of settlement, will comfortably provide for Ketchum's family.
The Daily News (Nelson), Aug. 22, 1903
The Ledge (New Denver), July 23, 1904 Bill McNeish sends in his subscription from Vancouver and wishes that we have something stronger to drink than Carpenter Creek water. Contrary to evil reports that is the only tipple that has been around this print shop since Peck McSwain borrowed the flask that Seneca Ketchum left with us for safe keeping many years ago. (The Ledge and the Paystreak had the same publisher.)
Finally, Nesteroff also discovered Ketchum's obituary from the Daily Olympian:Ketchum Wanted Cash (Mt. Vernon Argus) It is said that Seneca, the philosopher of the Sedro Times, not long since, published a long obituary of a man who had died in that part of the country, closing with the statement that "a long procession of people followed the remains to their last roasting place." The family read the notice and discovered the supposed error, and asked the editor to make a correction in the word "roasting" but he said he couldn't do it until the seven years' back subscription the deceased owed had been paid.
We wish the writer would have nailed down his years in Olympia, or if he left before 1893, but alas. The new additions do, however, help fill that time gap we had before between 1890-96As for his inherited wealth, we have not yet established what the result was for his family. His widow continued to live modestly in Sedro-Woolley and his son lived and died in Snohomish County without any sign of wealth. And we have not found evidence of an actual town of Ketchum, Ontario, at that time, prosperous or otherwise. We are guessing here that when the tale was passed around, people out here confused a namesake town with the village of Melville Cross, which was Seneca's father's pet project, as we explain in Part One. But we are still looking and this story will continue to evolve as readers add to it.Seneca Ketchum dead
Well known printer passes away — was heir to large fortune in OntarioDaily Olympian, Aug. 22, 1903 Seneca G. Ketchum, a printer and newspaper man, well known in many states of the Union and particularly in the northwest, died at his home in Sedro-Woolley, Skagit county, of inflammation of the bowels. He leaves a widow and one child, living in Sedro-Woolley.
Seneca Ketchum was about 40 at the time of his death and spent most of his life in the editorial and mechanical departments of various newspapers throughout the country, several of which were his own property. He was born in New York state and moved with his parents at an early age, to Ontario, Canada, where his father founded what has since become the prosperous town of Ketchum. The father died ten years ago, leaving a big estate to his four children. The estate has not yet been divided, owing to the persistence of Seneca Ketchum, who objected to the plan of division proposed by the other heirs.
Meanwhile Ketchum has drifted about the northwest working on newspapers most of the time, and occasionally dipping into politics. Six years ago he was chief of police at Nelson, B.C., temporarily quitting his newspaper work to fill the position. Later he worked in Spokane and about three years ago came to the Sound, since when he has lived almost continuously in Sedro-Woolley. He was a clever writer and turned out a good deal of humorous verse.
Personally Seneca Ketchum had accumulated no sort of a fortune, but his father's estate will probably now be settled up so that his widow and child will be well provided for. Ketchum is well remembered in Olympia by reason of frequent visits during the legislative sessions. A number of years ago he was connected with the Daily Olympian for a short while in the capacity of city editor.
Return to — Seneca G. Ketchum Biography Part 1. Feisty pioneer 1899 Sedro-Woolley newspaper editor in his years before arriving in Washington Territory in 1888. And his family, 17th-century English immigrants, pioneer settlers of Toronto, Ontario, and businessmen of New York State.
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Story posted on Aug. 17, 2006, last updated Feb. 15, 2007 See this Journal website for a timeline of local, state, national and international events for years of the pioneer period. Did you enjoy this story? Remember, as with all our features, this story is a draft and will evolve as we discover more information and photos. This process continues until we eventually compile a book about Northwest history. Can you help? We welcome correction and criticism. Please report any broken links or files that do not open and we will send you the correct link. With more than 550 features, we depend on your report. Thank you. Read about how you can order CDs that include our photo features from the first five years of our Subscribers Edition. Perfect for gifts. Jones and Solveig Atterberry, NorthWest Properties Aiken & Associates: . . . See our websitePlease let us show you residential and commercial property in Sedro-Woolley and Skagit County 2204 Riverside Drive, Mount Vernon, Washington . . . 360 708-8935 . . . 360 708-1729 Schooner Tavern/Cocktails at 621 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, across from Hammer Square: www.schoonerwoolley.com web page . . . History of bar and building Oliver Hammer Clothes Shop at 817 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years. Joy's Sedro-Woolley Bakery-Cafe at 823 Metcalf Street in downtown Sedro-Woolley, 82 years. Check out Sedro-Woolley First section for links to all stories and reasons to shop here firstor make this your destination on your visit or vacation. DelNagro Masonry Brick, block, stone — See our work at the new Hammer Heritage Square Are you looking to buy or sell a historic property, business or residence?We may be able to assist. Email us for details. Peace and quiet at the Alpine RV Park, just north of Marblemount on Hwy 20Park your RV or pitch a tent by the Skagit River, just a short drive from Winthrop or Sedro-Woolley |
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