King County Washington has 50 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 6 places of National significance and 9 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include ADVENTURESS, ARTHUR FOSS (tugboat), Alaska Trade Building, Arctic Building and Boeing, William E., House dating back to 499 BC.
Many famous people are associated with these King County historic places including William E. Boeing, William Edward Boeing, Richard A. Ballinger, Dr. Reuben Chase, Bothell, David C., et al. and Martin D. Ballard.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the King County places including Rice Bros., Oregon Railway & Navigation Co., Charles Herbert Bebb, Bowdoin B. Crowninshield, Warren A. Gould, E.W. Heath, J.O. Taft, Jacobs & Ober, Harlan Thomas and U.S. Steel Products Corp.. Prominent architectural styles found in King Country are Bungalow/Craftsman, Tudor Revival and Colonial Revival.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering, Event
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Oregon Railway & Navigation Co.
Area of Significance:
Military, Industry, Maritime History, Architecture
Period of Significance:
1925-1949, 1900-1924, 1875-1899
Historic Function:
Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Water-Related
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Museum
Built in 1889 as the Wallowa, the Arthur Foss is one of the oldest and most historic wooden tugboats in the United States, representing over a century of maritime history in the Pacific Northwest. Constructed in Portland, Oregon, of heavy Douglas fir, the vessel first gained prominence during the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush, transporting gold seekers and supplies from Puget Sound to Alaska. In 1929, the vessel was acquired by the prominent Foss Launch and Tug Company of Tacoma and renamed the Arthur Foss. Under Foss ownership, she was cast as the star vessel Narcissus in the 1933 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer motion picture Tugboat Annie. In 1934, the tug underwent a major refit and was repowered with a 700-horsepower, six-cylinder Washington Iron Works diesel engine-an innovative piece of Northwest maritime engineering that remains operational today and established the vessel as one of the most powerful tugs on the West Coast at the time.
During World War II, the Arthur Foss performed vital military service after being chartered by the U.S. Navy in 1941 to support the construction of military bases on Pacific islands. In December 1941, the tug was at Wake Island during the Pearl Harbor attack and famously became the last American vessel to successfully escape the island before its capitulation to Japanese forces. Following the war, the tug returned to commercial service on the West Coast, towing log rafts and barges until her retirement in 1968, marking the end of the longest active service career of any wooden tugboat in the region. Now preserved by Northwest Seaport at Seattle's Lake Union Park, the Arthur Foss is designated as a National Historic Landmark, serving as a rare, highly intact survivor of the wooden shipbuilding era and the commercial towing industry that shaped the economic development of Washington and the Pacific Rim.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Social History
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Commerce/Trade
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade
The Alaska Trade Building, located at 1915?1919 First Avenue in Seattle, Washington, is a highly significant commercial structure that represents the city's rapid economic and physical expansion during the early twentieth century. Designed by the prominent regional architectural firm of Saunders & Lawton and constructed in 1909, the three-story brick building is an excellent example of early-twentieth-century commercial architecture. Its design features a restrained yet handsome brick facade, large street-level storefront bays, and symmetrical arched window openings on the upper floors, reflecting the transition away from Victorian-era revival styles toward more utilitarian, classical commercial designs that defined Seattle's developing downtown business district.
Historically, the building is deeply intertwined with Seattle's identity as the premier "Gateway to Alaska" and the maritime trade hub of the Pacific Northwest. In the wake of the 1897 Klondike Gold Rush, Seattle established a dominant position in shipping, outfitting, and financing ventures in the Alaska Territory. The Alaska Trade Building was specifically constructed to accommodate the offices, suppliers, and shipping firms that facilitated this lucrative northern commerce, serving as a physical hub for the businesses that fueled Seattle's dramatic rise to metropolitan prominence. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971, the building remains a vital, well-preserved monument to the turn-of-the-century maritime and mercantile enterprises that shaped the economic foundation of the city.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Gould,Warren A.
Architectural Style:
No Style Listed
Area of Significance:
Architecture, Social History
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Social
Historic Sub-function:
Civic
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade
Completed in 1916, the Arctic Building is an architectural masterpiece of downtown Seattle, reflecting the city's rapid growth and prosperity in the early twentieth century. Designed by the prominent local architect A. Warren Gould, the third-renaissance, Beaux-Arts-style structure is highly celebrated for its distinctive cream-colored, glazed terra-cotta exterior. Produced by the local Denny-Renton Clay and Coal Company, the ornamentation is uniquely highlighted by a striking band of twenty-seven life-sized, three-dimensional walrus heads that wrap around the third-story frieze, complete with tusks. The building's interior boasts a spectacular dome of amber-colored leaded glass in the grand ballroom, making the edifice one of the most visually dramatic and well-preserved examples of terra-cotta architecture in the Pacific Northwest.
Historically, the building is highly significant for its association with the Arctic Club, an elite social organization founded in 1908 by successful veterans of the Klondike Gold Rush and businessmen invested in the development of the Alaska and Yukon territories. As the club's permanent headquarters, the building served as a vital social and financial hub for Seattle's civic and business leaders who shaped the economic destiny of the region. The Arctic Building stands as a physical monument to Seattle's historic role as the "Gateway to Alaska" and the immense wealth that flowed into the city during the gold rush era, representing a crucial chapter in the economic and cultural development of King County.
Historic Significance:
Person
Historic Person:
Boeing,William Edward
Area of Significance:
Engineering, Transportation, Industry
Period of Significance:
1925-1949, 1900-1924
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Secondary Structure, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Domestic
Current Sub-function:
Secondary Structure, Single Dwelling
The William E. Boeing House, constructed in 1913, is historically significant for its direct association with William Edward Boeing, the pioneering industrialist who founded the Boeing Company and revolutionized the global aviation and aerospace industries. Situated within the exclusive, Olmsted-designed residential enclave of The Highlands just north of Seattle, this sprawling estate served as Boeing's primary residence during his most productive years of corporate leadership and innovation. It was here that Boeing lived while orchestrating the early growth of his aviation empire, transforming a small, timber-funded airplane manufacturing startup into a massive multinational aerospace leader that would forever shape the economic, social, and technological landscape of the Puget Sound region and the world.
Architecturally, the mansion is a superb and highly intact example of Mediterranean Revival design, conceived by the prestigious Seattle architectural firm of Bebb and Gould. Principal architect Charles Bebb crafted the grand, stucco-clad residence to harmonize beautifully with its rugged, heavily forested surroundings overlooking Puget Sound, incorporating elegant proportions, wrought-iron detailing, and expansive terraces. The estate's masterfully designed grounds and its architectural sophistication reflect the peak of early 20th-century country estate planning in the Pacific Northwest, embodying the lifestyle of Seattle's industrial elite while standing as a physical monument to the man who established the region as the birthplace of modern commercial flight.
Historic Significance:
Person, Event
Historic Person:
Boeing,William E.
Significant Year:
1975, 1909
Area of Significance:
Engineering, Transportation, Industry
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Commerce/Trade, Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Air-Related, Professional
Current Function:
Vacant/Not In Use
Building No. 105, Boeing Airplane Company, popularly known as "The Red Barn," is historically significant as the birthplace of the Boeing Company and the cradle of the modern American aerospace industry. Originally constructed in 1909 as the Edward Heath Shipyard on the Duwamish River, the two-story, yellow pine timber-frame structure was purchased by timber magnate William E. Boeing in 1910. In 1916, Boeing incorporated the Pacific Aero Products Company (renamed the Boeing Airplane Company in 1917) and utilized this building as his first manufacturing plant, design studio, and corporate headquarters. Featuring a utilitarian design with red-painted cedar siding, this modest workshop was the site where Boeing's earliest aircraft, including the B&W Seaplane and the military-grade Model C, were handcrafted, marking the transition of aviation from a hobbyist's pursuit into a major industrial enterprise.
During World War I, the building served as the production hub for the company's first military contracts, establishing the Pacific Northwest as a cornerstone of the nation's defense and aerospace sectors. After decades of serving various industrial purposes, the historic structure was threatened with demolition in the 1970s. Recognizing its immense historical value, preservationists successfully organized its relocation in 1975, barging the building down the Duwamish River to Boeing Field (King County International Airport). Now meticulously restored as the centerpiece of the Museum of Flight, Building No. 105 is recognized as the oldest surviving aircraft manufacturing plant in the United States and stands as a monumental testament to early 20th-century technological innovation and industrial design.