King County Washington (Page 2) has 50 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 8 places of National significance and 10 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Chittenden Locks and Lake Washington Ship Canal, Coliseum Theater, Cornish School, DUWAMISH and Duwamish Number 1 Site.
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Duwamish dating back to 1999 BC.
Many famous people are associated with these King County historic places including James G. Eddy, Henry H. Dearborn, James Colman, James W. Clise and Thelma DeWitty.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the King County places including Otto Holmdahl, James G. Eddy, Marcus B. Priteca, Howard Wright Sr., John Graham Sr., Richmond Beach Shipbuilding Co., Abraham H. Alberston, Young and Richardson, Clark H. Eldridge and James A. Wetmore. Prominent architectural styles found in King Country are Colonial Revival, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals and Art Deco.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Multiple
Architectural Style:
Other, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals
Area of Significance:
Engineering, Politics/Government, Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Commerce
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Government, Industry/Processing/Extraction
Historic Sub-function:
Government Office, Public Works, Water Works
Current Function:
Government, Industry/Processing/Extraction, Vacant/Not In Use
Current Sub-function:
Government Office, Public Works, Water Works
The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks and Lake Washington Ship Canal, constructed between 1911 and 1916 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, represent a monumental feat of early 20th-century civil engineering. Supervised by and named after Major Hiram M. Chittenden, the district engineer who championed the project, the complex serves as a vital conduit connecting the saltwater of Puget Sound with the freshwater of Lake Union and Lake Washington. The historic district encompasses the large and small locks, a concrete spillway dam with tainter gates, a fish ladder designed to assist migrating salmon, and the surrounding Carl S. English Jr. Botanical Gardens. Officially opened in 1917, the locks remain among the busiest in the United States, embodying a masterful integration of industrial utility, public park planning, and environmental management.
Historically, the canal and locks fundamentally reshaped the geography, hydrology, and economy of the Seattle metropolitan area. By providing a navigable waterway for ocean-going vessels to access protected freshwater harbors, the project catalyzed Seattle's maritime trade, shipbuilding, and timber industries, allowing the city to grow into a premier Pacific port. However, the project also dramatically altered the regional landscape opening the canal lowered the water level of Lake Washington by nearly nine feet, dried up the Black River outlet, diverted the Cedar River, and created miles of new dry shoreline that spurred rapid urban development. Today, the Chittenden Locks and Ship Canal stand as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, illustrating the profound impact of federal water infrastructure on the development of the Pacific Northwest.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Priteca,Marcus B.
Architectural Style:
Other, Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals
Area of Significance:
Architecture
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Recreation And Culture
Historic Sub-function:
Theater
Current Function:
Commerce/Trade, Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Specialty Store, Sport Facility
The Coliseum Theater, constructed in 1915 at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Pike Street in downtown Seattle, stands as one of the earliest and most significant examples of the "movie palace" in the United States. Designed by the nationally renowned theater architect B. Marcus Priteca, the building is a masterpiece of Spanish Renaissance Revival architecture. Its striking exterior is clad in brilliant white terra cotta, meticulously detailed with elaborate ornamentation, grand arched windows, and whimsical decorative motifs. Commissioned by pioneer showmen Claude Jensen and John von Herberg, the Coliseum was among the first grand theaters in the nation designed specifically for the exhibition of motion pictures rather than being adapted from a traditional vaudeville stage, marking a seminal moment in the evolution of American cinema and commercial architecture.
Upon its opening, the theater was heralded as "the world's largest and finest photoplay palace," boasting a luxurious interior that featured a 1,900-seat auditorium, a giant dome, a custom-built eight-piece orchestra, and a massive Wurlitzer organ to accompany silent films. The Coliseum served as the cornerstone of Seattle's downtown entertainment district for nearly eight decades, adapting to the advent of talkies and shifting cinematic trends before finally closing as a cinema in 1990. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, the building was saved from demolition and underwent a highly praised adaptive reuse project in the mid-1990s, which converted the interior into a retail space while carefully restoring and preserving its historic terra cotta facade.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Education, Performing Arts
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Education
Historic Sub-function:
School
Current Function:
Education
Current Sub-function:
School
The Cornish School, located in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, is historically significant as a pioneering institution of interdisciplinary arts education in the Pacific Northwest and the nation. Founded in 1914 by Nellie Cornish, a visionary educator who believed in the integration of music, drama, dance, and the visual arts, the school quickly grew into a nationally recognized cultural incubator. Under her leadership, the school championed avant-garde movements and served as a creative crucible for some of the twentieth century's most influential artists. It was here that dancer Merce Cunningham and composer John Cage began their seminal collaborations, and where modern painters Mark Tobey and Morris Graves taught, helping to shape the distinctive aesthetic of the Northwest School of art.
The school's permanent home at 710 East Roy Street was completed in 1921 and designed by the prominent Seattle architect A. H. Albertson. Reflecting the Spanish Colonial Revival style, the three-story building features a textured stucco exterior, elegant arched windows, and a red-tiled roof, purposefully designed to accommodate the diverse needs of the school with a theater, art studios, and acoustic practice rooms. The construction of this dedicated facility was a major civic achievement for Seattle, funded by local patrons who sought to establish the city as a major cultural center. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977, the Cornish School building remains an enduring monument to the region's artistic and architectural heritage.
Historic Significance:
Event, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Richmond Beach Shipbuilding Co.
Area of Significance:
Politics/Government, Architecture
Period of Significance:
1925-1949, 1900-1924
Historic Function:
Government, Transportation
Historic Sub-function:
Fire Station, Water-Related
Current Function:
Vacant/Not In Use
The Duwamish No. 1 Site (State Archaeological Site 45-KI-23), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989, is one of the most culturally and archaeologically significant indigenous sites in the Puget Sound basin. Located along the transition zone of the Duwamish River in King County, Washington, this multi-component shell midden and habitation site represents more than a millennium of continuous and seasonal occupation by the Duwamish (Coast Salish) people, with radiocarbon dates indicating use from approximately 600 CE well into the historic period of European contact. As one of the few surviving, intact archaeological resources in a highly industrialized river valley, the site holds immense significance for its potential to yield critical information regarding pre-contact settlement patterns, technological adaptations, and the socio-economic organization of the region's native inhabitants.
Excavations at the site have revealed a rich deposit of cultural material, including dense shell middens, hearths, fire-cracked rock, and a diverse assemblage of bone, antler, and stone tools. These findings document a sophisticated subsistence strategy focused on the intensive harvesting of estuarine resources, particularly salmon, flatfish, and various shellfish species, complemented by the hunting of terrestrial mammals and waterfowl. Beyond its scientific value to Pacific Northwest archaeology, the Duwamish No. 1 Site carries profound historical and spiritual importance for the contemporary Duwamish Tribe, serving as a tangible link to their ancestral homeland, traditional lifeways, and enduring presence in the Seattle metropolitan area.
Historic Significance:
Information Potential
Area of Significance:
Prehistoric, Historic - Aboriginal
Cultural Affiliation:
Duwamish
Period of Significance:
500-999 BC, 1500-1999 BC, 1000-1499 BC
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Camp
Current Function:
Industry/Processing/Extraction
The Duwamish No. 1 Site (designated archaeologically as 45-KI-23) is a highly significant archaeological site located along the Duwamish River estuary in King County, Washington. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977, the site represents one of the most vital surviving links to the pre-contact and proto-historic heritage of the Duwamish (Coast Salish) people within the heavily industrialized Seattle metropolitan area. Occupied periodically from as early as 600 CE up through the period of early European contact in the early 19th century, the site functioned as a major seasonal settlement and resource processing camp, strategically positioned to exploit the rich riverine, estuarine, and upland environments of the Puget Sound basin.
Archaeological excavations at the site have yielded extensive shell middens, hearths, fire-cracked rock, and structural features such as post molds that indicate the presence of seasonal dwellings. The recovery of a diverse array of artifacts-including bone, antler, and stone tools-alongside a rich assemblage of faunal remains like salmon, shellfish, waterfowl, and land mammals, has provided researchers with invaluable data regarding Coast Salish subsistence strategies, technological development, and environmental adaptation over more than a millennium. Today, the Duwamish No. 1 Site stands as a location of paramount historical and cultural significance, offering a rare, tangible record of the traditional lifeways and the enduring legacy of the Duwamish Tribe in their ancestral homeland.
Historic Significance:
Person, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Holmdahl,Otto, Wright,Howard,Sr.
Architectural Style:
No Style Listed
Historic Person:
Eddy,James G.
Significant Year:
1927, 1925
Area of Significance:
Science, Architecture, Landscape Architecture
Period of Significance:
1925-1949
Historic Function:
Domestic, Landscape
Historic Sub-function:
Forest, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Domestic, Landscape
Current Sub-function:
Forest, Single Dwelling
The James G. Eddy House and Grounds, located in Medina, Washington, is historically significant for its direct association with James G. Eddy, a giant in the Pacific Northwest timber industry and a pioneering figure in the field of silviculture. Constructed between 1928 and 1930, the estate reflects the interwar development of Lake Washington's "Gold Coast" as a premier residential enclave for Seattle's industrial and financial elite. Eddy, who co-founded the highly influential Port Blakely Mill Company's later enterprises, is internationally recognized for founding the Eddy Tree Breeding Station (now the Institute of Forest Genetics) in California. His pioneering work in applying scientific hybridization and genetics to Douglas firs and other softwoods revolutionized modern forestry, and this estate served as his primary residence and laboratory of ideas during his most influential years.
Architecturally, the estate is an exceptional, highly intact example of Tudor Revival residential design and the "Country Place" era of landscape architecture. The grand residence was designed by the acclaimed Seattle architect Edwin J. Ivey, with significant collaborative design contributions from Elizabeth Ayer, Washington State's first licensed female architect. The home displays masterful craftsmanship, featuring steeply pitched gable roofs, intricate half-timbering, prominent brick chimneys, and leaded-glass windows. The house is seamlessly integrated into its expansive, formally landscaped grounds, which slope toward Lake Washington and retain their original estate character, embodying the elegant lifestyle and architectural sophistication of the Puget Sound region's early 20th-century leadership.
Historic Significance:
Person, Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Holmdahl,Otto, Eddy,James G.
Historic Person:
Eddy,James G.
Significant Year:
1927, 1925
Area of Significance:
Science, Landscape Architecture
Period of Significance:
1925-1949
Historic Function:
Landscape
Historic Sub-function:
Forest
Current Function:
Landscape
Current Sub-function:
Forest
The James G. Eddy House and Grounds, historically known as "Parkside," is a magnificent country estate located in Medina, Washington, overlooking Lake Washington. Constructed in 1928, the estate is highly significant for its association with James G. Eddy, a prominent Pacific Northwest timber industrialist and a pioneer in forest genetics who co-founded the Eddy Tree Breeding Station. The main residence is an exceptional regional example of the French Provincial and Norman Revival styles, designed by Elizabeth Ayer-the first licensed female architect in the state of Washington-during her tenure with the prominent Seattle firm of Edwin J. Ivey. The architectural grandeur of the home is matched by its estate grounds, which were masterfully designed by the renowned landscape architecture firm Olmsted Brothers to harmonize the formal residence with its natural lakeside topography.
The 1986 boundary increase (Reference #86003139) is historically significant because it expanded the property's protected acreage to encompass the full, unaltered scope of the original estate's designed landscape. This expansion incorporated crucial surrounding gardens, original plantings, and pathways that were central to the Olmsted Brothers' master plan, which had been excluded from the initial National Register listing. By preserving the spatial relationship between the monumental Ayer-designed residence and its complete, estate-scale setting, the boundary increase ensures the long-term integrity of one of the Puget Sound region's premier early 20th-century "Country Place Era" estates.
Historic Significance:
Architecture/Engineering
Architect, builder, or engineer:
Graham,John,Sr.
Architectural Style:
Bungalow/Craftsman
Area of Significance:
Art, Architecture
Period of Significance:
1900-1924
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Domestic
Current Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Constructed in 1904, the Pierre P. Ferry House is an outstanding and highly preserved example of Tudor Revival and Jacobethan residential architecture, located in Seattle's historic Capitol Hill neighborhood. Designed by the prominent Pacific Northwest architect John Graham, Sr., the residence is characterized by its imposing brick first story, decorative half-timbering on the upper floors, asymmetrical gables, and intricate leaded-glass windows. The mansion reflects the affluent growth of Seattle at the turn of the twentieth century, when the city's business and civic elite established grand estates on the ridges overlooking Lake Union and Downtown. Graham's sophisticated design seamlessly blends grand English manor aesthetics with early Craftsman sensibilities, making the house a prominent visual anchor in the neighborhood and a testament to the high-quality craftsmanship of the era.
Beyond its architectural merit, the property derives significant historical importance from its association with Pierre P. Ferry, a highly influential Seattle attorney, diplomat, and civic leader. As the son of Elisha P. Ferry, the first governor of the State of Washington, Pierre Ferry carried on a legacy of public service and civic promotion. He served as a consular agent for France and Belgium and played a pivotal role in Seattle's early cultural development, particularly in the cultivation of the arts. His home became a center of social and diplomatic activity, hosting international dignitaries and local elites during a period of rapid regional growth. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, the Pierre P. Ferry House stands as a physical monument to the influential figures who shaped the political, legal, and cultural landscape of Seattle during its formative years of urbanization.