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University District, Seattle

Coordinates: 47°39′18″N 122°18′12″W / 47.65500°N 122.30333°W / 47.65500; -122.30333
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University District
U District
Aerial view of the University District from the southwest with the Ship Canal Bridge in the foreground
Aerial view of the University District from the southwest with the Ship Canal Bridge in the foreground
Map of the University District's location in Seattle
Map of the University District's location in Seattle
Websitevisitseattle.org/university-district

The University District (commonly the U District) is a neighborhood and a major district in central northeastern Seattle, Washington, comprising several distinct neighborhoods. The main campus of the University of Washington (UW) is located in the district, lending its name to both the district as well as University Way NE (commonly The Ave).

Location

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Like all Seattle neighborhoods, the boundaries of the University District are informal; by common usage, the University District is bounded on the west by Interstate 5; on the east by University Village and Union Bay; on the south by Portage Bay and the Lake Washington Ship Canal; and on the north by NE Ravenna Boulevard.[1]

History

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What is now the University District has been inhabited since the end of the last glacial period (c. 8,000 BCE—10,000 years ago). The most recent Native American settlement in the area were the Duwamish villages of the Lushootseed (Skagit-Nisqually) Coast Salish peoples. The Duwamish had several prominent villages in and around the University District, including "SWAH-tsoo-gweel" ("portage") and "hehs-KWEE-kweel" ("skate)" on Union Bay. The Duwamish peoples living in this area were known as "hah-choo-AHBSH" (people of HAH-choo, meaning 'a large lake' and referring to present-day Lake Washington).[2][unreliable source?]

The Duwamish also had trails through the areas that connected the village sites with waterways and fire-managed (burned) areas. These areas were cleared by fire for hunting purposes and to promote good crop growth. Blackberries, salmonberries, and root crops were plentiful, along with game including wolves, cougar, bear, deer and elk. One trail found by early non-native surveyors of the area extended from Portage Bay to Lake Washington and connected two native encampments, one on Portage Bay near the foot of Brooklyn Ave and one on Union Bay. No remnants of the Native American use of the area are extant in the University District today.[3] The area now occupied by University Village was at that time a much larger Union Bay prior to the artificial lowering of Lake Washington.

1893 map of recently platted Brooklyn

The district was first surveyed in 1855, and its first white settlers arrived 12 years later. In 1890, the district began to enter a growth phase, and the portion due west of the present University of Washington campus was laid out as the Brooklyn Addition. This land was owned by real estate developer James A. Moore, his wife, and the Clise Investment Company and included much of the original Brownfield homestead.[4] This central area was called Brooklyn, which gave the current Brooklyn Avenue in the neighborhood its name.

Nielsen notes that the area was slower to develop than areas to the north and west such as Ravenna and Latona, due to those areas being more gently sloped and located closer to the central lakes (Union and Green Lakes). Materials for land/street development and improvements were hauled in by horse-drawn wagons.[4] One year later (in 1891) much of the land north of the Ship Canal, including the future University District, was annexed by the City of Seattle.[5]

In the early 1870s, coal was discovered east of Seattle in the Newcastle area near Bellevue. The coal was transported across Lake Washington to Union Bay, and initially was portaged across Montlake to eventually reach Elliott Bay. After around 1888, the Seattle Lake Shore and Eastern Railway was built and ran along tracks which now form the Burke–Gilman Trail, a major bike commuting and recreation path across North Seattle.[4]

Below, an 1894 report describes a train wreck just west of the current University District in the Latona neighborhood (now located west of I-5).

August 20, 1894. Wreck on [the] Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern just west of Latone [now Latona Avenue]. Freight train from Gilman [now Snoqualmie] hit a cow. [Trainload was a] [m]ixer freight train, 10 co[a]l cars, logs and box cars. Train had slowed down at Brooklyn [Avenue] for cows. Engineer saw cows on a bank beyond Latona looking (?) one another[!]. One cow was tossed over [the] bank and hit the track just as [the] engine came by. [The] [e]ngine was raised off the track[,] and when it came down [the] wheels went off the rails. Engineer reversed but [it] was too late. [The] [c]oal tender shot ahead[,] tearing part of [the engine] car [(cab)] off and decapitating [the] fireman and killing [the] brakeman. Engineer and coal passer [were][6] unhurt. Steam and dust enveloped the derailed cars. Engineer ran to Fremont to telegraph to stop [the] evening passenger train[;] also [illegible] Engineer claimed train going 20 miles per hr.[7]

Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern train wreck in the University District, August 20, 1894.

The old neighborhood name "Brooklyn" began to fade around this time. Electric trolley tracks had been laid up Columbus Avenue (later known as 14th Avenue, and later still University Way) either in 1891 or 1892, and the neighborhood soon began to be called "University Station" after the heated waiting house at the corner of what is now NE 42nd Street.[5] The street cars eventually came to be operated by the Seattle Municipal Street Railway, which ceased operations in 1941.[5]

The University of Washington relocated to the U District in 1895, leaving its previous location in the Metropolitan Tract in downtown Seattle. Much of the U District was still clear cut forest or stump farmland.[3]

As a result of a contest held by the University Commercial Club in 1919, 14th Avenue (by then already known as "The Avenue" or "The Ave") was renamed University Way, and the neighborhood was renamed the University District.[5] An alternative proposal was to rename the area "UniverCity," in recognition of the urban feel of the district and the major commercial presence along its main streets.[4]

Neighborhoods

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The City of Seattle does not publish an official neighborhood map, and many neighborhood boundaries in Seattle are somewhat informal.

Neighborhoods within the district include:

  • University Park (east from 15th to 25th Avenues NE, north from NE 50th Street to NE Ravenna Boulevard)
  • Greek Row (NE 45th to NE 50th Streets, 15th to 22nd Avenues NE)
  • University Heights (north of NE 45th Street and west of 15th Avenue NE)
  • Brooklyn Addition (west of 15th Avenue NE and south of NE 45th Street)
  • University Village (east of 25th Avenue NE)
  • Main, West, and South campuses of the University of Washington, including the University of Washington Medical Center
University Bridge and U District, Looking North from I-5 Ship Canal Bridge in 1963
University Bridge and U District, Looking North from I-5 Ship Canal Bridge (1963)

Infrastructure

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Graduate Hotel Seattle

Public Transit

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The district is served by two Link light rail stations: University of Washington Station near Husky Stadium opened in 2016 as part of the University Link Extension;[8] and U District on Brooklyn Avenue near NE 45th Street which opened in October 2021 as part of the Northgate Link Extension. Light rail service connects the U District to Capitol Hill and Downtown Seattle to the south, and Roosevelt and Northgate to the north.[9]

Streets

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The neighborhood's north-south arterials are (from west to east) Roosevelt Way NE (southbound only), 11th Avenue NE (northbound only), Brooklyn Avenue NE, University Way NE, and 15th Avenue NE. East-west arterials include NE Pacific Street, NE 45th Street, and part of NE 50th Streets. NE Campus Parkway is a minor east-west arterial, running only west of the campus.[10]

Upzoning and Urban Development

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The district's skyline was formerly defined primarily by the UW campus, UW Tower, and the art deco style Graduate Hotel Seattle (originally the Meany Hotel).

More recently, the U District has entered a new period of growth and several residential and office towers have recently been constructed, and several more are under construction and proposed.[11][unreliable source?]

Culture

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This 1980s sign painted on the side of the 1934 Blue Moon Tavern commemorates its association with the counterculture of the 1960s; the small street sign at upper right declares the alley to be "Roethke Mews" after poet Theodore Roethke, a regular at the tavern when he was a professor at the University in the 1950s and early 1960s.

The annual U District Street Fair is held over a weekend in May, primarily on The Ave, and is among the longest-running street fairs in the United States. It was first held in 1970 with 300 vendors and organized by local merchant and peace activist Andy Shiga; it grew to 600 vendors and 100,000 visitors later in the decade.[12] The fair was paused in 2020 and 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and returned in 2022;[12] it now attracts over 50,000 visitors and has 250 vendors.[13]

The Blue Moon Tavern has become an unofficial cultural landmark and was founded in 1934.[14] The neighborhood is home to several long-running movie theaters and performing arts venues. The Neptune Theatre opened as a movie theater in 1921 and was converted into a performing arts venue in 2011 under the ownership of Seattle Theatre Group.[15] The independent Grand Illusion Cinema was founded in a renovated dental's office in 1970 by Randy Finley and is run by the nonprofit Northwest Film Forum.[16][17] Finley also founded the Seven Gables Theatre at a converted American Legion building in 1976.[16] It was an arthouse theater that operated until 2017; the building was destroyed by a fire in December 2020.[18] The locally-owned Scarecrow Video, the largest video rental store on the West Coast, was founded in 1988 and is the last of its kind in the city.[19] It has 140,000 titles and is operated by a nonprofit organization.[20]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "University District Map". Seattle City Clerk's Geographic Indexing Atlas. City of Seattle. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  2. ^ "Seattle Duwamish Indigenous Place Names and Settlements". Cascadia Department of Bioregion. August 31, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  3. ^ a b Caroline Tobin; Sarah Sodt (September 2002). "University District Historic Survey Report" (PDF). Seattle Department of Neighborhoods. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Nielsen, Roy (1986). UniverCity: The Story of the University District in Seattle. Seattle, WA: University Lions Foundation. p. 8. ISBN 0-9617052-0-5.
  5. ^ "[illegible]"—likely "The engineer and coal passer were unhurt." Relatively.
  6. ^ (1) The mentioned streets at that time were rural, more tracks or plat lines than avenues. The run to Fremont Station was more than a mile (about 2 km). A small freight depot remains today at the foot of Stone Way N. Railroading before labor rights and worker safety was appallingly dangerous.
    (2) Photographer unknown (August 20, 1894) [photo]. "Train wreck in University District, August 20, 1894" (description of photo). University of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division. Archived from the original on December 15, 2012. Retrieved July 21, 2006. Quoted text is from the verso of the original paper print, verbatim but for grammar in square brackets.
  7. ^ "University of Washington Station". Sound Transit. Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved June 24, 2015.
  8. ^ "Routes and Schedules: 1 Line - Northgate – Angle Lake". Sound Transit. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  9. ^ "Seattle Streets Illustrated Map". City of Seattle. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  10. ^ Kuo, Shaun (July 2, 2021). "A Skyline by UW – U District Development Spree Part 2". The Urbanist. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  11. ^ a b Phair, Vonnai (May 19, 2022). "Celebrate the return of the U District Street Fair, and more fun around Seattle". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  12. ^ Wakayama, Brady (May 19, 2024). "Tens of thousands attend Seattle's largest outdoor arts, crafts fair". KING 5 News. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  13. ^ Walt Crowley, Blue Moon Tavern, An Unofficial Cultural Landmark, HistoryLink.org Essay 1001, April 1, 1999.
  14. ^ Kreisman, Lawrence (January 21, 2012). "Seattle's old buildings: Opportunities, not obstacles". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  15. ^ a b Merlino, Doug (March 22, 2005). "Finley, Randy (b. 1942)". HistoryLink. Retrieved December 1, 2006.
  16. ^ Eals, Clay (April 6, 2023). "After 53 years, this Seattle theater maintains its Grand Illusion...for now". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  17. ^ Baruchman, Michelle; Takahama, Elise; Romano, Benjamin (December 24, 2020). "Seven Gables Theatre gutted by fire in Seattle's U District". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  18. ^ Holson, Laura M. (March 18, 2019). "Scarecrow Video Has Survived This Long. Can It Hang On?". The New York Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.
  19. ^ Macdonald, Moira (August 10, 2021). "How Seattle's Scarecrow Video plans to share its vast library nationwide". The Seattle Times. Retrieved May 23, 2024.

References

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47°39′18″N 122°18′12″W / 47.65500°N 122.30333°W / 47.65500; -122.30333