Featured Apartment:
Seattle NO FEE - "Hotel, Motel, Holiday Inn". Sounds like a catchy tune, but if you seek uncommon, great value, fully furnished rooms, look no further. seattle's exceptional hotel alternative, studio units contain Maple cabinets, Blue Sapphire granite, All Stainless Steel appliances, Italian lighting, White Color TV/VCR; as well as all utilities, free phone, cable, HSD Modem hook up, and Concierge services. Maid service available. Available short-term starting at: $300 per week. View More Listings -->
About Pioneer Square
Pioneer Square is the neighborhood where Seattle, Washington was founded in
1853. It is now a National Historic District. It is bounded by Alaskan Way S. on
the west, beyond which are the docks of Elliott Bay; by S. King Street on the
south, beyond which is SoDo; by 4th Avenue S. on the east, beyond which is the
International District; and extends between one and two blocks north of Yesler
Way, beyond which is the rest of Downtown. Because of the shift in the street
grid north of Yesler, the northern "border" of the neighborhood zigzags along
numerous streets.
Much of the neighborhood is on landfill: in pioneer times, the area roughly
between First and Second Avenue, bounded on the south by Jackson Street, and
extending north almost to Yesler Way (about 2-1/2 city blocks) was a low-lying
offshore island. The mainland shore roughly followed what is now Yesler Way to
about Fourth Avenue, then ran southeast, at an angle of about 45 degrees to the
current shoreline. Slightly inland were steep bluffs, which were largely
smoothed away by regrading in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Photograph courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives
By the end of 1889, Seattle had become the largest city in Washington with
40,000 residents. That same year, the Great Seattle Fire resulted in the
complete destruction of Pioneer Square. Fortunately for the neighborhood the
economy was strong at the time, so Pioneer Square was quickly rebuilt. The new
buildings followed a Romanesque Revival architectural style. Because of drainage
problems new development was built at a higher level literally burying the
remains of old Pioneer Square. Anticipating the planned regrade, many buildings
were built with two entrances, one at the old, low level, and another higher up.
Visitors can take the Seattle Underground Tour to see what remains of the old
storefronts.
Just before the fire, cable car service was instituted from Pioneer Square along
Yesler Way to Lake Washington and the Leschi neighborhood. The line was shut
down on August 10, 1940. Streetcar service returned to Pioneer Square on May 29,
1982 with the opening of the Waterfront Streetcar.
During the Klondike Gold Rush in 1897 and 1898, Seattle was a center for travel
to Alaska. Thousands of so-called "sourdoughs" passed through Seattle making the
city's merchants prosperous. A year later, in 1899, a group of businessmen stole
a Tlingit totem pole and placed it in Pioneer Place Park. When an arsonist
destroyed the pole in 1938, the city sent the pieces back to the Tlingit tribe
who carved a new one and gave it to Seattle. In addition to the totem pole, a
wrought-iron Victorian pergola and a bust of Chief Seattle were added to the
park in 1909. The year 1914 saw the completion of the Smith Tower, which at the
time was the tallest building west of the Mississippi River.
In the 1960s, Pioneer Square became a target of urban renewal. One proposal was
to replace the buildings with parking garages to serve Downtown Seattle. In
1962, the historic Seattle Hotel was replaced with one such parking garage,
commonly referred to as the "Sinking Ship" garage because of its appearance when
viewed from 1st and Yesler; it stands to this day. Another proposal was to build
a ring road which would have required destroying many of Pioneer Square's
buildings. In 1970, preservationists such as Bill Speidel and others succeeded
in making the neighborhood a national historic district. Later that year,
Pioneer Square became a city preservation district.
In early 2001, Pioneer Square suffered three crises. First, on January 15, an
eighteen-wheeler crashed into the pergola, shattering it into thousands of
pieces; it has since been restored. Next, on February 27, violence erupted in
the neighborhood's Fat Tuesday festivities during which a young man, Kris Kime,
was fatally beaten. Finally, the next day (February 28), a major earthquake
damaged some of the buildings. Had most of them not undergone seismic
retrofitting, the damage would likely have been much worse.
Today, Pioneer Square is home to art galleries, internet companies, caf�s,
sports bars, nightclubs, bookstores, and a unit of the Klondike Gold Rush
National Historical Park, the other unit of which is located in Skagway, Alaska.
It is often described as the center of Seattle's nightlife.
