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Streetcar at south entrance to Mount Baker Park, Seattle, 1911
Streetcar at south entrance to Mount Baker Park, Seattle, 1911
TitleStreetcar at south entrance to Mount Baker Park, Seattle, 1911
PhotographerGamble
Date1911
CaptionThe streetcar is shown on McLellan Street at the south entrance to the park. It ran on the Mount Baker line that ran from downtown Seattle to the Mount Baker Park residential area.
NotesCaption on image: Mt. Baker Park.

Embossed on image: Gamble, Seattle.

South entrance to Mt. Baker Park on McClelland Street.

See transcribed article in "Additional Information" below for more information.
SubjectsStreet railroads--Washington (State)--Seattle
Street railroad tracks--Washington (State)--Seattle
PlacesUnited States--Washington (State)--Seattle
Mount Baker (Seattle, Wash.)
Digital CollectionRainier Valley Historical Society Photograph Collection
Accession Number93.001.659
Ordering InformationTo order a copy of this photograph, please email Rvhsoffice@aol.com and mention the Accession Number.
RepositoryRainier Valley Historical Society, Seattle
Repository CollectionHall-Summers Collection
Physical Description1 photographic print: b&w; 4 x 5 3/4 in.
TypeImage
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned as a 3000 pixel TIFF image in 8-bit grayscale, resized to 640 pixels in the longest dimension and compressed into JPEG format using Photoshop 6.0 and its JPEG quality measurement 3.
Additional InformationThe Mount Baker Clubhouse is 85 years old this year (1999). The facility, at 2811 Mount Rainier Drive S., still serves the purpose for which it was built, as a place for meetings and social events in this closely knit community.

Completed in 1914, the clubhouse was home to the Mount Baker Social Club. Activities held at the facility in its first year included formal balls, informal dances, masquerades and "Auction Bridge" as well as an annual rose show.

A well remembered activity of later years was the dance for Franklin High School students, held every Friday evening during the 1940s. Chaperoned by the elderly Mrs. Dose, smoking and drinking were not allowed.

Though small in stature, Mrs. Dose had a reputation for ejecting anyone who didn't follow the rules. Those who chose to toe the line had a good time.

In the first decade of this century, when the Mount Baker neighborhood was being developed, it was named Mount Baker Park. Its attraction today is based on the park-like layouts of its streets and the mature plantings around its attractive houses.

These features are no accident, as the neighborhood plan was designed by the Olmstead Brothers, the premier landscape designers of their day.

A 1914 booklet advertising the neighborhood states that building restrictions prevent the construction of "cheap" houses, apartment buildings and undesirable business structures. The booklet describes the Mount Baker Improvement Club, which was established to beautify the neighborhood and encourage homeowners to beautify their property. The booklet ends with a list of the roses that grow well in the Northwest and how to cultivate them.

The park at the community's center has been recently re-landscaped and provides a lovely meander from South McClellan Street north to Lake Washington. The tennis courts, drinking fountains, restroom structure, beach, bathhouse and dock all are part of the original Olmstead design.

The Mount Baker Clubhouse burned a little over a decade ago and was rebuilt after a well-orchestrated community fund-raising effort. It was rebuilt in the original style, and the fund-raising campaign echoed the community fund raising done to accomplish its construction the first time around.

A well-loved event in the early years of Mount Baker Park was the New Year's Men's Day. All of the "Mixers, Good Fellows and Boosters" in the neighborhoods would assemble at the Clubhouse at 10 a.m. Wearing top hats and dress clothes, they strolled down the streets wishing the neighborhood a happy new year.

Perhaps there should be a return of this event for those looking for an unusual way to celebrate this year's millennial News Years Day.

By Marina King, 3/10/99
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