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A Special Section of KICK-OFF EVENTS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27 Pancake Breakfast, 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m. • Sequim Prairie Grange Buffet Dinner 6 p.m. • Holiday Inn Express See page 4 for a Calendar of Centennial Events Sponsored by: Sequim City Band • Sequim Gazette Blake Tile & Stone • Evergreen Collision John and Amanda Beitzel Gray & Osborne • Clint Rushton
36

Sequim Centennial

Mar 28, 2016

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Cathy Clark

Celebration of 100 years of Sequim, WA
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Page 1: Sequim Centennial

A Special Section ofA Special Section ofKICK-OFF EVENTS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27Pancake Breakfast, 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m. • Sequim Prairie GrangeBuffet Dinner6 p.m. • Holiday Inn Express

See page 4 for a Calendar of Centennial Events

Sponsored by:

Sequim City Band • Sequim GazetteBlake Tile & Stone • Evergreen Collision

John and Amanda BeitzelGray & Osborne • Clint Rushton

Page 2: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette2 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Page 3: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 3

95 & 97 Deer Park Road, Port Angeles1-800-927-9395360-452-3888

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Welcome to the City of Sequim’s year-long Centennial Celebration! The Sequim Centennial Committee is excited to bring the commu-nity a slate of events and projects that will inspire the entire Sequim-Dungeness Valley to participate in this once-in-a-lifetime event.

From public art projects and cemetery tours to golf tournaments and a street dance, the events strive to fulfill the mission of the Sequim Centennial to “Educate, Celebrate and Commemorate” the 100 years since the city’s incorporation.

The Sequim Centennial Celebration is a prime example of the partnerships and cooperation that make Sequim such a special place

to live. The Sequim Centennial Committee is represented by members of the business community, arts and cultural organizations, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, Sequim pioneers and city staff who are working together to encourage our community to honor our history and look forward to the future.

Throughout the year there will be opportunities to learn, play, create, perform and build community as we gather together and “Get into the Sequim of Things.”

Ken Hays Mayor, City of Sequim

Celebrating Sequim’s First 100 Years!

Celebrating Sequim’s First 100 Years!

HAYS

Centennial SponsorsGolden Sponsor

(donating $5,000 or more)

Sequim City Band Sequim Gazette (in-kind services)

Centennial Sponsor (donating $1,000-$2,499)

Blake Tile & Stone Evergreen Collision – Sequim

(in-kind services)

Pioneer Sponsor (donating $500-$999)

John and Amanda Beitzel Gray & Osborne

Friend of the Centennial (donating $25-$499)

Clint Rushton

Unless otherwise specifed, photos were provided by the Museum & Arts

Center. Our special thanks for all their assistance with this publication.

Page 4: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette4 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

2012October 27 • 7:30 a.m.-1 p.m.

Pancake Breakfast, Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 Macleay Road. $5 adults; $3 children; Bonnie Hagberg, 681-4189

6 p.m. Kick-off buffet dinner, Holiday Inn Express, 1441 E. Washington St.

November • Old photos and artists’ interpretation exhibit; Museum & Arts Center; 683-8110, www.macsequim.org

November 17 • 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Geocoin Challenge event, Pioneer Park, 373 W. Washington St., City of Sequim, 683-4139

2013May 18 • Golf tournament

SkyRidge Golf Course, 7015 Old Olympic Highway; Jeff Pedersen, [email protected]

June 1 • Cemetery tour Pioneer Park, 373 W. Washington St., Museum & Arts Center; 683-8110, www.macsequim.org

July 4 • Old-Fashioned 4th of July Reuse demonstration site/James Center for the Performing Arts; Patsy Mattingley, 683-8226, [email protected]

July 5 • First Friday Art Walk, street dance on Washington Street

July 6 • Morning golf tournament, The Cedars at Dungeness, 1965 Woodcock Road, Bill Shea, 683-6344

July 20 • Barn Dance Location TBA; Museum & Arts Center; Magdalena Bassett, 683-8406, www.macsequim.org/

August 2-4 • Olympic Theatre Arts melodrama, Title TBA, James Center

for the Performing Arts, free, www.olympictheatrearts.org

August 17 • 10 a.m Sequim Valley Airport Fun Day, Sequim Valley Airport; Andy Sallee, [email protected]

August 20-21 • 6 p.m. Music & Movies in the Park: Sequim’s Got Talent, James Center for the Performing Arts, City of Sequim; 683-4139 http://sequimwa.gov/index.aspx?nid=232

October • Cemetery tours Museum & Arts Center; 683-8110, www.macsequim.org/

October 5 • Salmon, clam and crab bake with kayak races and barn dance; Juan de Fuca Cottages, 182 Marine Drive; Missy, 683-4433, www.juandefuca.com

November 2 • 5 p.m. Community celebration finale at Seven Cedars Casino/Club Seven; City of Sequim, 683-4139. http://sequimwa.gov; Karen Kuznek-Reese, 681-3428 or [email protected]

Centennial Calendar

Paint a Tile and be a part of the Sequim Centennial Celebration

Throughout the Centennial Cel-ebration year, Aglazing Art Studio of Port Angeles will set up a tile painting station at Centennial events for residents and visitors. The cost is $10 to paint a 6-inch by 6-inch commemorative tile. The studio will glaze and fire the tile which will be incorporated into a public art display at the completion of the Centennial year. The goal is to have at least 1,000 tiles painted throughout the Centennial Cel-ebration year. Everyone is encour-aged to participate and to be a part of this once-in-a-lifetime commu-nity art project.

Milk Can ProjectAs part of a Sequim Centennial

public art project, 14 vintage milk cans donated by local residents have been decorated by local art-ists and will be displayed through-out Sequim for the duration of the Centennial, then auctioned off as a fundraiser in November 2013.

Milk can donorsMarilyn SiebensJohn and Carmen JarvisKaren SmithKevin HergertFlo LackinoleSue Hagener and Pepper FisherJudith Ketchum

Milk can painters Saundra CutsingerKali BradfordKathy CorriellMonika LivingstoneNancy HofmannDena HenrySunny BenhamSky HeathertonLinda StadtmillerLaRayne ColeEllen SwearsAdrienne PereiraCathy Clark

Centennial Art Projects

Tickets for the Sequim Centennial Kick-Off Dinner, to be held on Satur-day, Oct. 27, at the Holiday Inn Express, 1441 E. Washington St., are now on sale and can be purchased at Sequim City Hall, 152 W. Cedar St.; Pacific Mist Books, 121 W. Washington St.; and the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Cham-ber of Commerce Visitor Information Center, 1192 E. Washington St. Tickets are available for purchase by cash and check at all locations. They are available by credit card and debit card purchase only at City Hall.

The ticket cost is $55 per person and includes a buffet-style roast prime rib dinner with garlic mashed potatoes and gravy, Nash’s glazed carrots, appetizer, salad, local dairy ice cream with Graysmarsh berry toppings, local wines and ciders. The price also includes a commemorative goblet engraved with the Sequim Centennial logo. An alternative main course is available but must be selected at the time of ticket purchase.

The evening activities begin at 6 p.m. with wine and appetizers. Dinner will be served at 6:45 p.m. and the Centennial Kick-Off Program will begin at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets for the Kick-Off Dinner are lim-ited. For questions or more information, contact Barbara Hanna, City of Sequim Communications and Marketing Director, at 681-3422 or [email protected].

Get your tickets for the Kick-Off Dinner!

Centennial Committee membersKaren Kuznek-Reece

Barbara HannaCaroline StuckeyGretha DavisJan JonesJoe Borden

John BeitzelKen HaysKit HelsleyLaura SingerLouise PotterPatsy MattingleyPriscilla Hudson

Renee MizarSaundra CutsingerTom MontgomeryVickie CarrollBobbie UsselmanShelli Robb-KahlerBonnie Hagberg

Page 5: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 5

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Residential & SpecialistsCommercial

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Page 6: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette6 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Looking forward to many more yearsClallam County Economic Development Council

Assisting Sequim businesses for 27 years!

Contact the Clallam Economic Development Council at 360-457-7793 or on the web: www.clallam.org

261461 Hwy 101 W., Sequim, WA (360) 683-8003 • www.sunnyfarms.com

Sunny Farms has been proud to be a part of the Sequim community for over 35 years. From our farms in Sequim and Othello, Washington to your dinner table, we’re pleased to provide your family with quality fresh produce. We are grateful for the rich agricultural history of Clallam County and look forward to continuing that way of life.

Fresh • Quality • Local

-The New Dungeness Lighthouse- Proud to be part of

Sequim’s First 100 Years

Experience Paradise on the Peninsula . . . Be a Lighthouse Keeper for A Week

Openings Available • 360-683-6638 • NewDungenessLighthouse.comphoto by Chad Kaiser

John Donnell and John Bell were the first to homestead on the prairie southeast of the Dungeness

River in the 1850s. Other early farmers were John Brown, Matthew Fleming, William Webster, Joseph Sinclair and George Henry Lotzgesell. Where the property of Bell, Brown, Fleming and Webster adjoined began to be known as Seguin, which, depending on the source, translated from the Klallam language as either “quiet waters” or “hunting place.” A post office was established at Seguin on Aug. 13, 1879, nearly a decade before Washington became a state. Legend has it that an Eastern postal clerk misread the “g” and the “n” and effectively “renamed” the village to Sequim in 1907.

Dungeness and Port Williams were the hubs of commerce until a group of farmers led by D.R. Callen formed the

Sequim Prairie Ditch Company and built and opened a series of wooden flumes and irrigation ditches on May 1, 1896. Merchant William Horner opened the first store, a grocery, in 1892, on the northeast intersection of what’s now Sequim Avenue and Washington Street.

In 1898, Joe Keeler platted the first five acres in Sequim and built the first saloon, called The Corners. By 1907, the population was about 50, a second town parcel was platted and Austin Smith had completed the Opera House. In 1908, at the southwest corner of Sequim Avenue and Washington Street, Keeler built the 50-room Sinclair Hotel, wagered he could have it electrified by a certain date and did, eventually forming the Sequim Light & Power Company. Keeler also brought piped water to the hotel, then to the village from nearby springs, and

Sequim: By the decadesSequim: By the decadesPre-incorporation

also founded the Independent Telephone Company. Gladys Long, an elementary school student, was named as the first May Day (later Irrigation Festival) queen

in 1908. Lehman’s Meat Market, later Lehman’s Mark ‘N Pak, opened on East Washington Street in 1911, the site of Lehman Court Shops today.

Horse racing on Washington Street was an important part of early celebrations in Sequim.

Page 7: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 7

490 South Blake Ave., Sequim681-2877

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Landscape and Tile Headquarters

Wide selection of tile, landscape materials& masonry supplies.

The Blake’s have been in Sequimsince 1900 and the 6th generation

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Charles & Margaret started the family business in 1953, and the third generation is now leading

the company.

The family traditions of caring forour customers and community are as important today as they were in 1953.

We look forward to being part ofSequim for another 60 years.

A two-horse cart decorated for the Fourth of July celebration in 1905 stands in front of the Sequim Trading Company, at

the northwest corner of Sequim Avenue and Washington Street.

Page 8: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette8 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

1-800-422-7854 • Phone: 452-7278 • Fax: 417-01222058 W. Edgewood Dr. • Port Angeles

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Sixty years after settlers began moving south from Dungeness and Port Williams, the village of

Sequim had a population of more than 300 and some of its residents began pushing to incorporate as a fourth-class town. On Oct. 14, 1913, the vote was 90-66 in favor and the state approved incorporation on Oct. 31, with the corporate limits set as one mile north and south and three-quarters of a mile east and west of Sequim Avenue and Washington Street, approximately 440 acres.

It was a rocky start — in May 1914 fire caused $1,000 damage to the brand new city hall. Jilson White became the first mayor and with the city council, passed ordinances prohibiting concealed weapons, gambling and swindling, and set the speed limit to 15 mph for autos and 8 mph for horses. Also in 1914, the town received grants for telephone and electric power franchises and established a volunteer fire bucket brigade. The next year railroad passenger and freight service began between Sequim and Port Angeles and Sequim and Port Townsend. Sequim

blossomed as the peninsula’s agricultural center, with potatoes being a main crop.

Dungeness merchant Charles Seal built a mercantile, the Sequim Trading Company, across from the Sinclair Hotel where a dinner cost 35 cents. In 1914, the Olympic Theater opened on Sequim Avenue and ran until about 1937. At the annual May Day celebration in 1913, commemorating the opening of Sequim’s irrigation ditches in 1896, barnstormers landed in nearby fields and offered rides in their flying machines.

In 1915, Sequim High School held its first graduation with four students. Sequim’s World War I (1914-1918) casualties in France included Carl Eckstad, Jack Grennan, Tony Moniz, Clyde Rhodefer and Mike Zaccardo.

During the next eight years streets and alleys started getting names, the Masonic Hall was chartered and IOOF Hall was built. Prospectors drilled for oil in 1917 and 1919, but apparently found none. In 1920, Sequim Prairie Hospital opened on Washington Street and Keeler sold the Keeler Water System to the town in 1922 for $1,700. In 1921, the town built a one-

bay, 320-square-foot fire station for $125 on Cedar Street.

In the 1920s most roads were dirt — and often hub-deep mud — so it was a boon to local transportation when the first paved route opened in 1920, now Old Olympic Highway.

The big excitement for 1922 was a

robbery at the State Bank of Sequim on March 24. The robbers entered through a window, drilled through an old-fashioned vault, went through 180 safe deposit boxes and strode away with $35,000. Authorities caught up with them at Quilcene, killing one and capturing the other. All of the money was recovered.

1913-1922

A circa 1906 Buick was the first locally owned car in Clallam County, purchased by James H. Gibson, and brought by ferry to Port Williams and then Sequim in May 1907. It’s parked in front of the Bugge Mercantile Company. At that time, it took two hours to drive the car to Port Angeles.

Page 9: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 9

Local Bankers l Local Decisions l Competitive Rates

Celebrating 100 Years,Congratulations Sequim!

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Soldiers march in long lines west down Washington Street prior to World War I. There was a military

encampment near where Sequim’s athletic fields are today.

Page 10: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette10 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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Page 11: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 11

1933-1942

In the 1920s, the downtown core grew west on Washington Street.

Among the stores were a mercantile, cafe, billiards parlor, drugstore, Ford garage, shoe repair shop, meat market, tire store and gasoline station. The town council later established Sequim’s “business center” as one block on the east and west sides of Sequim Avenue from Hammond to Spruce streets in 1929. At the far edge of town next to railroad tracks a lettuce shipping shed was built in 1924, where Sequim’s iconic granary is now. In 1929, with its population increasing, voters approved a bond issue to enlarge the water system and build a reservoir and pipeline from

the Dungeness River. The stock market crash on Oct. 29, 1929, led to the closure of the State Bank of Sequim in 1930. The town’s population stood at 534 that year. In 1930, the annual May Day celebration was renamed the Irrigation Festival.

With the automobile firmly entrenched in American culture, U.S. Highway 101 through Sequim opened in 1931, linking the Olympic Peninsula’s towns. The 1920s and 1930s were Sequim’s heyday for dairying, with an estimated 5,200 cows and 950 dairy farms in Clallam County. By this time, there were some 20 irrigation companies making the valley green and allowing farmers to grow alfalfa and other grains.

Even with 34-inch by 4-inch tires, roads in the Sequim-Dungeness valley were something to be reck-oned with before 1920, when a paved highway opened, now part of the Old Olympic Highway.

The Rhodefer Library with the Works Progress Administration sign in front.

From statistics issued by the University of Washington in 1934, Sequim was declared

“The Healthiest Place in the World.” Sequim’s biggest project of the decade was bonding for and building a sewer system in 1936 with 246 connections. The town sold $43,000 in bonds and the rest was funded by the Works Program Administration.

After two previous attempts over several decades, the town finally established its first formal library, naming it after Clyde Rhodefer, Sequim’s first World War I casualty. The library was built in 1936 at 415 N. Sequim Ave. with Works Progress Administration funds on land donated by the Progressive Club of Sequim. Up until that time, the American Legion Auxiliary had kept a lending library. Traffic was such that the town put up a “slow” signal and flashing light at Washington Street and Sequim Avenue in the 1930s. The town installed its first stoplight there in 1940 but drivers largely ignored it.

The Dresden Theater, now the Gazette building on the south side of Washington Street, opened its doors on Aug. 8, 1935. Its first feature was

“The Hoosier Schoolmaster” starring Norman Foster and Gabby Hayes. With a seating capacity of 450 and features such as a modern oil-burning furnace, second-floor lounge room, and box office and front doors made of mahogany, the Dresden was considered one of the finest talkie motion picture houses of its size in the Northwest.

Sequim’s population swung wildly in this decade, from a high of 675 in 1937, to a low of 300 in 1940, and back to 530 in 1941. Area farmers established the Clallam Co-operative in 1938 as agriculture expanded with the addition of large-scale contracted pea production and farmers founded the Sequim Prairie Grange in 1942. At its peak in 1941, 65 train carloads were shipped from the Sequim area to East Coast markets. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an act establishing Olympic National Park in 1938. On Dec. 7, 1941, two Sequim sailors died in the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese. Several thousand soldiers arrived in the Sequim area to patrol beaches and blackouts and food rationing soon followed. World War II ended in 1945 with 58 servicemen from Clallam County killed.

Page 12: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette12 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

After World War II, the population nearly doubled to 880 in 1947 and the town annexed two acres west along Washington Street, its first expansion since its initial plats at the beginning of the century. They included the gra-nary that the Clallam Co-operative had constructed in 1944. In 1947, the Sequim Volunteer Fire Department moved into its new three-bay fire sta-tion just west of the town hall and the council directed the city clerk to blow a noon whistle at the request of residents. In 1946, the Sequim Library

joined the county library system with 1,200 books in its collection. The town bought its first police car in 1950 and established a curfew. Downtown got a boost in 1950 when the Sequim Vari-ety Store, now A-1 Auto Parts, opened. Television reception came to Sequim in 1950. Dave Burrowes and Reed Mc-Carthy recovered the area’s first mast-odon tusks from bluffs at Washington Harbor. In order to conserve water, the council approved metering the water usage of businesses in 1951.

In 1952, at the council’s request,

electric poles were moved to the al-leys north and south of Washington Street and house numbers were as-signed for the first time, despite com-plaints by homeowners that the mea-sure invaded their privacy. The eastern city limit was at Pioneer Park. Also in 1952, the federal government bought 1,200 acres northwest of Sequim for a Voice of America broadcasting sys-tem, displacing many pioneer farm families, but the project was cancelled a year later when the site was deemed unsuitable.

1943-1952Mayors of Sequim

Sequim incorporated Oct. 31, 1913, as a fourth-class town; Sequim reclassified by election to a third-class city on Nov. 6, 1974; on Oct. 25, 1993, Sequim became a non-charter code city and changed from a council-mayor to council-manager form of government by election Nov. 8, 1994.

Jilson White 1913-1914

H.P. Barber 1914-1914

W.M. Schumacher 1915-1918

J.S. Bugge 1918-1926

Harry E. Peterson 1927-1928

Herbert Godfrey 1929-1930

P.S. Govan 1931-1933

J.S. Bugge 1933-1940

J.N. Otto 1941-1942

W.T. Alton 1943-1948

W.E. Nelson 1949-1952

W.T. Alton 1952-1952

William Merrill 1953-1958

Peter F. Black 1958-1967

Thomas L. Groatz 1968-1971

Carl O. Klint 1972-1974

Henry T. Pruett 1974-1975

Oliver O. Hamilton 1975-1979

James P. Dinan 1980-1987

Ed Beggs 1988-1995

Bill Thomas 1996-2001

Walter E. Schubert 2002-2007

Laura Dubois 2008-2009

Ken Hays 2010-present

Above: Area farmers founded the Sequim Prairie Grange in 1942 and soon began participating in the Irrigation Festival parade.Right: The Sequim High School football team poses in 1941.

Page 13: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 13

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Page 14: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette14 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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In 1953, voters approved a $49,000 bond issue to consoli-date the Dungeness and Sequim

school districts and a $200,000 bond for a reservoir; the town also bought another police car as its 3-year-old model had 33,000 miles on it and needed extensive repairs. The mid-1950s brought growth and expansion on several fronts. The population rose to 1,125, the town annexed more land and 1,200 telephones converted to dial service. In 1955, construction on a new junior/senior high school was under way at Sequim Avenue and Fir Street.

This period gave rise to Sequim’s rep-utation as a dairying community with approximately 13,000 cows being milked on surrounding dairy farms. Streets in town remained unpaved until 1957.

The most significant event of the de-cade occurred in August 1961 when the

Hood Canal floating bridge opened. Gov. Albert D. Rosellini cut a ribbon and cars lined up bumper to bumper for 3 miles to cross behind the gov-ernor’s automobile. The $26 million project was touted as “an engineering masterpiece” making, as one official said, “the Olympic Peninsula part of the state.” More than 11,000 vehicles crossed the bridge during opening day. The toll was $1.30 per vehicle and 30 cents per passenger.

By the end of the decade, dairy farms were being sold and annexed into the city at a rapid pace. In 1962, Jess Tay-lor, son of Sequim pioneer A.N. Tay-lor, partnered with Seattle developer Albert Balch to develop a subdivision with a golf course on the old Dunge-ness-Sequim Road three miles north-east of Sequim. The first residents of Sunland moved into their homes in October 1963 and by 1964, 200 lots had been sold.

Rudy Radich’s Swap Shop, located at the

former site of The Buzz, entered this float in

the Irrigation Festival parade in 1951.

Page 15: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 15

The Hood Canal floating bridge opened in August,

1961 to more than 11,000 vehicles.

Portions of the bridge sank on Feb. 23, 1979, due to gusts of about 120 mph.

Photo from The Olympic Review

Aug. 16, 1961, by Harry Boersig.

Hood Canal Bridge - 1961

Page 16: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette16 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

This decade began tragically with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22,

1963, with today’s Sequim baby boomers, as pre-teens and teenagers, no doubt huddled with their parents around black and white televisions for three days. Sequim received the 98382 ZIP Code in 1963 and the council voted to require water meters be installed at all new residences. In 1964, an outdoor pool, funded by a city bond issue, opened on the Sequim High School premises, operating in the summers only until 1984. The city opened a modern sewage treatment plant in 1967.

In the mid-1960s, even as Sequim’s population rose only modestly to 1,325, the town began annexing adjacent land that had been in dairy production. In 1966, Sequim was first touted nationally as a retirement location and two years later had

expanded to 640 acres or one square mile. From Sequim Avenue, Washington Street now was 1.25 miles long. Battelle Marine Science Lab purchased the former Bugge Clam Cannery property on West Sequim Bay Road in 1966 and the Sequim railroad depot closed. Developers began noticing the Sequim-Dungeness Valley and by 1973, Sequim’s population had risen to 2,287. In reaction to the town’s growth, the city council passed a comprehensive planning/zoning ordinance. Olympic Game Farm opened to the public. In the early 1970s, the council supported the creation of a new Senior Citizen Center and began discussion of a bypass. The city formally established a police department in 1970 with Donald Salonen as chief and set Sequim’s curfew at 9 p.m. In 1972, the town’s noon whistle was replaced with chimes from the Presbyterian Church.

The town and Sunland entered into an agreement for Sequim to operate and maintain the Sunland sewer system and the council adopted a 20-year plan. In 1969, local crops included 855

acres of peas, 800 acres of mint, 300 acres of Christmas trees, 85 acres of strawberries, 75 acres of raspberries and 65 acres of vegetables.

Max Schmuck, president of the Bank of Sequim, with the Sequim Irrigation Festival royalty as Queen Sherry cuts a white ribbon to officially open the new drive-in branch of the bank.

Page 17: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 17

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Looking east toward Sequim Bay, with railroad line running

diagonally across town.

Image by Harry Boersig of Tacoma.

Aerial View of Sequim,

1961

Page 18: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette18 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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1973-1982With a population of 2,600 in

1974, voters approved a mea-sure to reclassify Sequim as a

third-class city, with a seven-member coun-cil, mayor, treasurer, clerk and attorney, all elected positions. A new city hall opened on Cedar Street in 1973 at a cost of $110,000. In 1974, Charles Blake offered the city nine acres on the east side of town for a park to be named in honor of his wife, Caroline “Car-rie” Blake. Garbage pickup rates increased to $1.75 per month for one can and 75 cents for each additional. The Sequim Creamery was razed for a new shopping center at Washing-ton Street and Sunnyside Avenue and the city purchased a church adjoining city hall for the Sequim Community Center. The post office moved into its new building on Sunnyside Av-enue, the longtime site of pioneer John Bell’s barn, and the Sequim-Dungeness Museum organized, moving into the former post office on Cedar Street in 1979. It had purchased the building for $60,000. In 1976, the council put a one-year moratorium on annexations

and the next year renumbered the avenues west of Sequim Avenue, eliminating First Avenue and “moving” them all one block west. On Aug. 8, 1977, a farmer named Emanuel Manis was excavating his prop-erty with a backhoe when he found the tusks of an American mastodon. Archeological research at the time found them to be 12,000 years old, but later re-search determined the relics to be 13,800 years old.

The Washington Department of Trans-portation began a feasibility study on a U.S. Highway 101 bypass around Sequim in 1977. Volunteer firefighter Dale Kruse was killed on Aug. 30, 1978, at the scene of a fire and the council later had a monument honoring him installed in front of the city hall. Vot-ers approved an emergency medical services levy in 1981 to fund the hiring of Clallam County Fire District 3’s first paramedics in 1982. Also that year the new library opened on Sequim Avenue. The Manis Mastodon relics can be seen on display at the Museum & Arts Center.

Page 19: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 19

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1968 Peter Black1969 Carl Klint1970 Virginia Keeting1971 Virginia Peterson1972 Tom Groat1973 None1974 Katie & Bill Merrill1975 Jerry Angiuli1976 Chuck Southern, Howard

Wood, Lorna McInnes1977 Nellie Tetrude1978 Marcia Welch1979 Ruby Trotter1980 Iris Marshall1981 Howard Herrett1982 Guy Shephard1983 Don & Vivian Swanson1984 Bill & Shirley Keeler1985 Ed & Marcia Beggs1986 Ruby Mantle1987 Jeff Shold1988 Annette Kuss1989 Jim Haynes

1990 Bill & Judy Rowland1991 Nina Fatherson1992 Bud Knapp1993 Paul Higgins1994 Rand Thomas1995 Rochelle McHugh1996 Esther Nelson1997 Annette Hansen1998 Jim & Cathy Carl1999 Bill Fatherson2000 Robert Clark2001 Don Knapp2002 Gil Oldenkamp2003 John Beitzel2004 Emily Westcott2005 Lee Lawrence2006 Bob & Elaine Caldwell2007 Stephen Rosales2008 Walt & Sherry Schubert2009 Tom Schaafsma2010 Jim Pickett2011 Dick Hughes

Sequim Citizens of the Year

Page 20: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette20 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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1983-1992Rail service in Sequim ended with

the removal of the Milwaukee Line tracks in 1986. With the commu-

nity outgrowing the small outdoor pool at the high school, a bond was proposed to build an indoor facility in 1980. With the failure of that bond the planning pro-ceeded and a $2,436,000 bond to be paid over 20 years was passed by the voters on Sept. 18, 1984, with a 62-percent major-ity vote. Five acres of land were purchased on Fifth Avenue and Cedar Ridge Con-struction of Port Angeles was hired to construct the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center. In 1987, the Sequim Volunteer Fire Department merged with Clallam County Fire District 3 and a new five-bay manned station opened on Fifth Avenue a year later. In 1992, the then-named Sequim-Dungeness Museum merged with the Peninsula Cultural Arts Center to be-come the Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley. Between the 1980 census and 1990 census, Sequim grew in population from 3,013 to 3,617.

Rail service in Sequim ended with the removal of the Milwaukee Line tracks in 1986. This view is from the back side of the Clallam Co-operative grain elevator.

Page 21: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 21

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Before the engineering feat of irrigation ditches in the late 1890s, the Sequim Dungeness valley in the

summer was described as a “desert prairie,” and as such, settlers found in their path the brittle prickly

pear cactus (Opuntia fragilis). In 1911, George W. O’Brien, owner and

publisher of the Sequim Press, wrote in an editorial, “On the first day of May 1896,

water from the Dungeness River was turned into a little ditch and it began

flowing down into Sequim prairie, three and a half miles away.

The irrigation of the prairie started that day, a start that meant converting 5,000

acres of desert and barren land into fields of clover and fields of grain, into orchards and gardens; from a sullen waste spot of

nature, neglected and desolate, into a smiling land of beauty

and abundance.”

Page 22: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette22 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

In this decade, the face of Sequim changed dramatically with an explo-sion in commercial/retail building

west of Seventh Street. No doubt the link between Washington Street and River Road, leading to the new U.S. Highway 101 bypass made the former dairy farms prime pickings. Walmart’s announcement in 2003 to build a superstore at Priest Road and Washington Street, on land formerly the Alfred Robb dairy farm, triggered pro-tests, appeals and a lawsuit, to no avail. The first big box surge began with Walmart opening in October 2004, rapidly followed in succession by The Home Depot, Costco, Applebee’s, Office Depot, Petco and Qual-ity Inn & Suites. A second surge in 2010-2011 brought the Grocery Outlet and Ross Dress for Less plus an extensive addition to Walmart. The Great Recession of 2008-2012 slowed growth somewhat. Two no-table exceptions were the 77-room Holiday Inn Express, which opened in April 2010 and the Black Bear Diner in 2012 on East Washington Street.

A morning fire May 11, 2005, gutted a 13-unit apartment complex downtown. In 2006, the city began discussions about building a new city hall on West Cedar Street but left out plans for a new police department. The Sequim Lavender Festival set news records in July 2006 with an esti-mated 35,000 attendees and some 15,000 festival buttons sold. Also that year, Olym-pic Medical Center opened its $12 million Medical Services Building with laboratory, imaging and cardiology facilities. A $2.5 million medical oncology addition to the radiation oncology center was built con-currently. On Feb. 23, 2012, the city pur-chased Serenity House property on Cedar Street and Sequim Avenue for $1.25 mil-lion for a proposed combination city hall and police department to cost about $14 million.

By 2010, the city limits of Sequim had increased to 6.31 square miles and in June 2012 its population stood at 6,795, up from 4,334 in the 2000 census, with the greatest boom between 2005-2012.

On Oct. 25, 1993, Sequim became a non-charter code city and changed from a council-mayor

to council-manager form of govern-ment by election on Nov. 8, 1994. Se-quim 2000, a committee of the Cham-ber of Commerce, formed in 1995 to seek ways to spark tourism in the area and the concept of lavender farming as agritourism was born. By 1997, there were seven lavender farms with 10,000 plants and growers united for the first Sequim lavender festival in August of that year. Four farms “attracted hun-dreds” in the event called Fields of

Flowers and 300 farm tour tickets were sold.

In 1996, the Open Aire Market debuted. In 1997, some 20,000 vehicles passed through Sequim on Washing-ton Street, often causing traffic to back up three blocks in both directions from Sequim Avenue. Downtown merchants were both frustrated with the conges-tion but fearful that the proposed by-pass would harm business.

In December 1998 workers began pre-liminary work on building bridges and overpasses at Sequim, Third and Sev-enth avenues. A new four-mile bypass

opened south of Sequim on Aug. 18, 1999.

As 1996 ended and 1997 began, Sequim was blasted with two feet of snow followed by a deluge of 1.25 inch-es of rain. The New Year’s flood swept torrents of water into neighborhoods and businesses, the worst being East Washington Street from Brown Road to Blake Avenue, with water up to two feet deep in Bell Creek Plaza (QFC). A resident reported in the Sequim Gazette of Jan. 8, 1997, that Bell Creek had swollen to “10 times its size.” Officials estimated damage “in the millions.”

1993-2002 2003 to 2013

Sources: Laura Arksey, “Jimmy Come Lately history of Clallam County” (Virginia Keeting and Peter Black), “Sequim: Pioneer Family Histories From 1850-W.W. II” (Museum & Arts Center), City of Sequim, Doug McInnes columns in the Sequim Gazette.

Dick Dobbs pushes water and melting snow at Bell Creek Plaza as warm temperatures and heavy rainfall turned the shopping mall into a lake in January 1997. Sequim Gazette file photo

Page 23: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 23

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Page 24: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette24 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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On Feb. 18, 2007, Monroe House Moving employees

maneuvered the then 92-year-old red town hall underneath a utility line

on East Spruce Street. Jack and Helga McGee bought the piece of history and arranged for its move

near two other historical buildings, including the

former St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, now Lipperts’, on

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built in 1914.Photo by Evan McLean for

the Sequim Gazette.

Moving the Town Hall

Page 25: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 25

A century of fire protectionAs the City of Sequim’s centennial year

comes to a close in December 2013, its fire department will mark 100 years in 2014. Clallam County Fire District 3 Fire Chief Steve Vogel has spent long hours combing through city records and newspaper ar-ticles of the past century and is a knowl-edgeable resource on the history of fire protection in Sequim. Following are some highlights of his findings.

On March 11, 1914, the town council or-dered the organization of a Volunteer Fire Company and Bucket Brigade and four months later the town purchased a fire bell for $25.50. It was installed in the bel-fry of the 1914 town hall on Cedar Street. (The town hall was moved to Bell Street in 2007 and the bell is at City Hall.)

The first recorded fire in the Sequim Press was on Aug. 15, 1914, on the east prairie. According to longtime fire chief Iris Mar-shall, Sequim’s first fire suppression units were a man-powered 40-gallon chemical engine and a hand-drawn fire pumper or hose cart pulled by eight men. It was noted, “the company soon enlisted a horse into its membership,” but that didn’t last too long as the council asked a local black-smith to build a hitch to attach to an au-tomobile. For five years the equipment was stored in a shed behind the town hall. In 1921, the shed was converted into a one-bay, 320-square-foot fire station for $125 on Cedar Street.

In 1917, the council named Frank Daw-ley the first fire chief and instructed him to organize a 10-man department and to have practical drills and demonstrations monthly. Sequim had a population of about 300 into the late 1920s. In 1923, the company reorganized under the Wash-ington State Board of Firefighters and under its new bylaws, Mayor Jens Bugge appointed Jim N. Otto as fire chief. The first department had 16 members, mostly town businessmen. There was one fire hydrant at Sequim Avenue and Washing-ton Street.

One of their first actions was to buy a siren for $42.25 and divide the town into four zones, each with its own distinctive siren blast pattern. The company also established a fire alarm system which

worked like this: A fire call would come into the telephone exchange, the operator would sound a siren downtown, firemen would assemble at the fire station, then call back the operator for the information and the firemen would sound the fire sta-tion siren for the appropriate zone. The department raised money for equipment through dance fund-raisers and by 1919 it had purchased lanterns, hoses and a lad-der. In 1924, the department purchased a Model T Ford truck for $250 and its first fire engine – on a 1925 Reo Speedwagon chassis with a large brass chemical tank behind the seat, charged with soda and sulfuric acid, to pressurize the water in the tank – plus 1,000 feet of hose, for $1,465.

Members had to sign a pledge to obey the fire chief and were paid $1 per fire call and 75 cents per hour after the first hour. Members failing to or refusing to show up at fires were fined $1 per event, 25 cents for missing drills.

In 1939, the fire department pur-chased first its true pumper, a 1939 Ford Mercury with a 250-gallon water tank with a 500-gallon-a-minute pump. It moved into a modern three-bay fire

station just west of the town hall in 1947. Sequim’s population was about 880. Into the 1950s, fire calls went to a 24-hour telephone operator, relying on the same fire alarm system the town had used for 30 years. In the late 1940s, the rural resi-dents in eastern Clallam County asked commissioners to establish a county fire department, from Sieberts Creek to East Sequim Bay, and from Dungeness to Agnew, excluding Sequim. The entity was

called Clallam County Fire District 3 and it purchased its first truck for about $9,000 in 1949. The truck was stationed at the Sequim fire station and Sequim fire-fighters manned it but the organizations were separate.

Well into the mid-1970s, Sequim’s volun-teer firefighters had no official fire training and not just anyone could join. Approval required 100 percent agreement among members in a secret white ball/black ball voting process. Nor did they have any medical training — vehicle accident vic-tims were loaded into a privately owned ambulance/hearse and driven to Olympic Memorial Hospital in Port Angeles.

In the National Highway Safety Act of 1966, the concept of emergency medical services was mentioned for the first time and in 1968, the first paramedic class grad-uated in Miami, Fla. The EMS Systems Act of 1973 defined the hierarchy and scope of emergency medical services providers.

The television show “Emergency!” aired from 1972-1979 and spurred the public’s interest in professional emergency medi-cal and firefighting training across the U.S. in the late 1970s and 1980s. In 1980,

Above: The Sequim Volunteer Fire

Department circa 1925.

Page 26: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette26 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Clallam County Fire District 3 hired Fred Barrett as fire chief and began responding to medical calls. The district began a para-medic program in 1982 but between 1982-1984 there were only two paramedics with the district and they worked 24/7/365. Vo-gel was one of them and well-experienced in trauma care.

Tom Lowe, who was Sequim’s first paid fire chief, was hired by the district in 1984 and replaced Barrett. In 1987, the 26-member Sequim Volunteer Fire De-partment, then having nine emergency medical technicians and one part-time female paramedic, merged with Clallam County Fire District 3. Lowe helped fa-cilitate uniting the two into one cohesive agency.

In 1968, 9-1-1 became the national emergency number for the United States but it did not become widely known until the 1970s, and many municipalities did not have 9-1-1 service until well into the 1980s. 9-1-1 physical location addressing began in Clallam County in 1993 and fin-ished in 1996.

Today, Clallam County Fire District 3 has seven stations: Dungeness, R Corner, Carlsborg, Sequim, Diamond Point, Lost Mountain and Blyn, all supported by 88 volunteer firefighters and EMTs. Paid staff

are on duty 24/7 at the Blyn, Carlsborg and Sequim stations.

The district is approximately 140 square miles in size and begins at Gardiner in Jef-ferson County on the east and extends to just east of Deer Park Road. The northern boundary is the Strait of Juan de Fuca,

while the Olympic National Forest forms the southern boundary.

Fire District 3 operates three shifts and each shift works a 24-hour shift rotation consisting of one captain, six firefighter/paramedics and three firefighter/EMTs, plus volunteers who respond from home.

Each of the seven fire stations in District 3 has an ambulance and a fire engine, with Sequim’s Station 34 having two ambu-lances, a rescue truck, fire engine, ladder truck and water tender. The district also employs chiefs, administrative and main-tenance staff.

Fire, continued from page 25

Members of the Sequim Volunteer Fire Department stand by a modern fire engine in 1986. Back row from left are Roger Moeder, Dennis Taylor, Ed Ander-son and Mike Whitney; and front row from left are Les Curtis, Jim Steeby, Dennis Fernandez, Pam Cadden and Susie Spalinger. Below: Sequim’s Station 34 in 2012 with the full array of trucks available for modern firefighting and emergency medical care. Photo by Patricia Coate.

Page 27: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 27

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Page 28: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette28 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

By Reneé MizarCommunications CoordinatorMuseum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley

With two video cameras and a digital audio recorder rolling in a meeting room at the Museum & Arts Cen-ter’s DeWitt Administration Center, a multi-generation-al group of longtime residents waits attentively for their cue to begin recounting a lifetime of Sequim memories.

What began in August with small group meetings of three or four area old-timers to recall the business his-tory of Sequim’s downtown core has grown into lively story-swapping gatherings of 10 or more chock-full of never-before-recorded historical tidbits, personal memo-ries and a few tall tales, some so distant in memory that it takes a group forum to bring them to the forefront.

An extension of the MAC’s ongoing Oral History Pro-gram and collectively dubbed “The Way We Were,” the sessions are held on a weekly basis at the MAC’s DeWitt Administration Center, 544 N. Sequim Ave. in Sequim. In each session, the group figuratively walks through the downtown core, identifying business locations block-by-block and year-by-year, noting in detail how the com-mercial composition of Sequim changed over time.

“Like a lot of small towns, there were no changes in Sequim for 30-40 years. Then hit the ’60s and ’70s, when people started to settle here and businesses came and went,” said regular session participant Judy (Reandeau) Stipe. “This is a really huge step in getting this informa-tion down and it’s just scratching the surface.”

With decades-worth of bygone downtown stores and other businesses now identified on paper, MAC Program

Coordinator Priscilla Hudson, who oversees the Oral History Program, is turning project attention toward filling in the historical record by recording personal nar-ratives about those places before they are lost to time. Gathering the stories of longtime residents of different generations also is of great importance, she said, because all have unique perspectives of the same shared history.

“Channeling the various age groups into discussing a topic that spans time periods is challenging, but I en-joy observing how people document time tables in their mind because folks remember things differently,” Hud-son said about the group session format. “I enjoy hearing of Sequim secrets, too.”

Hudson said plans are to display a large, detailed street

map of the downtown core at the MAC Exhibit Center, 175 W. Cedar St. in Sequim, so that visitors can con-tinue to add to that history.

“When it’s on exhibit, we’ll have notebooks where people can write down their recollections of these busi-nesses,” Hudson said. “Whether it’s memories about lo-cation, what the place looked like inside or out, what was sold there, who owned it, or worked there and when, all of that information is important and will be forgotten if we don’t preserve it now.”

Those interested in participating in “The Way We Were” oral history sessions should contact Hudson at 681-2257 ext. 304 or [email protected].

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Twins Lloyd and Lyle Brown (far right) share memories of being 1940s-era Sequim paperboys to a listening Museum & Arts Center Program Coordinator Priscilla Hudson and longtime area resident Dan Johnson during a group oral history session at the MAC in September. Photo by Renee Mizar

MAC Oral History Program captures town

memories

Page 29: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 29

360.683.4850321 N. Sequim Ave., #C, Sequim

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Irrigation Festival HistoryWith an average rainfall of only

17 inches a year, the early north Olympic Peninsula

pioneers found the Sequim prairie a difficult place to cultivate. Their efforts were fruitful in the spring, but by summer the lack of rain turned the vegetation brown and the land dry. Four early settlers are credited with an idea and a plan which changed that.

On July 7, 1895, James W. Grant and his wife, Harriet, hosted a dinner attended by D.R. (aka D.B.) Callen, H. Hucksford and Capt. Thomas Jones to discuss a plan to divert water from the Dungeness River to the prairie. Callen had lived in Colorado and had seen firsthand that irrigation could be a practical solution to their problem. The group agreed and developed a strategy that included a network of hand-dug ditches from the river to the dry areas.

Callen was known as “Crazy” Callen for this idea. Neighbors actually started a petition to declare the men of the group insane. Despite the ridicule, 16 others joined the group and worked all winter to dig the first canal. There were delays, difficulties, lack of money and tools, but these men remained determined to complete the ditch. The first channel was dug on the east side of the Dungeness River and came into the center of Sequim, near what is now the Sequim High School.

There was a large celebration at Callen’s farm (Old Olympic roundabout) to mark the opening of the first ditch on May 1, 1896. Residents of the Dungeness Valley

and surrounding communities came together to commemorate the occasion.

Families came by wagon, horseback and foot. The Bicycle Club of Port Townsend came by chartered tugboat to Port Williams and many members rode their bikes from the dock to the site of the celebration. Families brought enough food for themselves and others. Long wooden tables were set under trees and loaded with hams, chickens, roasts, bread, butter, pies, cakes, pickles and jellies. Areas were

cleared for games and races. These “May Day” celebrations continued

through the years. Maypole dances, parades and more events were added and the celebration became a three-day event. Grace Long, an elementary school student, was named the first festival queen in 1908. In 1930, the name was more appropriately changed to the Irrigation Festival to reflect the reason for the celebration. The tradition of an Irrigation Festival float began in 1948. Sequim Irrigation Festival grand

pioneers have been selected annually since 1960 when 13 pioneers were nominated and out-of-area judges selected Vern Grant as grand pioneer.

The festival has been held in Sequim every year since that first headgate was opened and has the undisputed distinction of being the oldest community festival in the state of Washington. The 118th Irrigation Festival, with the theme of “Dancing Through the Valley,” will be May 3-12, 2013.

Article courtesy of Tom Montgomery The 1914 May Day celebration, at the intersection of what is today Sequim Avenue and Washington Street.

Page 30: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette30 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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We’re in our 118th year!

Newspapers have been important to Sequim for more than a century. One of the first, if not the first, was

the Sequim Press, publishing its initial edi-tion on April 8, 1911. According to Harriet Fish, a noted Clallam County historian in the 1970s, the newspaper was one broadsheet page, printed front and back, and folded into eighths, pamphlet-style. George W. O’Brien was the publisher and proudly stated in the masthead: “A Republican Paper.” Fish not-ed in that first edition, a third of the front page was was filled by an ad for C.F. Seal’s “Big Stores” in Dungeness and Sequim. Fish reported there were 2½ pages of ads and 5½ pages of local, national and foreign news plus features on travel, agriculture and ani-mals. The Sequim Press cost $1.50 per year and published on Saturdays. Over the next 65 years, the format of the Sequim Press switched to tabloid style. (Apparently it was still publishing in 1976.)

The Sequim Herald first published in July 1932 and closed about a year later.

The Olympic Review first published in August 1960 and sold for 10 cents per single copy. It only lasted for 14 months. On the front page of its Aug. 16, 1961, edition, ran

a story on the opening of the $26 million Hood Canal Floating Bridge, “an engineer-ing masterpiece” making, as one official said, “the Olympic Peninsula part of the state.” Staffer Genevieve Smith reported Gov. Albert D. Rosellini cut the ribbon and cars lined up bumper to bumper for 3 miles to cross behind the governor’s vehicle. During the toll-free grace period from 12:30-6 p.m. that day 5,916 vehicles crossed; a total of 11,000 crossed on Saturday. The toll was $1.30 per vehicle and 30 cents per passenger. A five-column aerial photograph, taken by Harry Boersig, accompanied the article and showed a string of cars in both directions.

Shirley Larmore founded The Sequim Shopper in January 1974. She and her hus-band, Bob, transformed the free distribution shopper into a weekly tabloid community newspaper, The Jimmy Come Lately Gazette on July 10, 1974. Its masthead proclaimed “A friendly little newspaper in a friendly little town.” A copy was 15 cents. In its second issue, a letter to the editor by Mrs. John Jarvis read, “We wish you a long and prosperous reign as one of the most ‘readable’ papers on the Peninsula.”

In 1978, Larmore sold The Jimmy Come Late-

ly Gazette to Leonard and Linda Pauls-en. He was publisher until his death in 1982 and Linda Paulsen carried on as publisher until she sold the newspaper to Brown M. Maloney in September 1988.

On April 4, 1990, a redesign of the paper brought about a change in the masthead to Sequim Gazette. Tim Quinn, who would be the Gazette’s cartoonist for 25 years, posed the question, “Has any-body seen the Jimmy?”

Jim Manders was the Gazette’s editor from 1988-2002. Sue Ellen Riesau be-came publisher in 2002 and retired in July 2012. Michael Dashiell was named editor in October 2010.

The Gazette earned “General Excellence” awards from the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association from 2005 through 2008, and 2010. The Gazette also won first place in General Excellence in the Society of Professional Journalists Pacific Northwest Division in 2011, and a third-place Gen-eral Excellence award from the National Newspaper Association in 2012.

Maloney sold the Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum to Sound Publishing Inc., effective Nov. 1, 2011.

Sequim Newspapers

Page 31: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 31

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Approximately 44 percent of Sequim’s populace turned out at

the village’s single polling station in the G.A.R. Hall on Oct. 14, 1913, to vote on Sequim’s future. By a 90 to 66 margin, Sequim became the second town in Clal-lam County to incorporate, the first being Port Angeles, and residents also selected its first governing body.

Jilson White, a Sequim resident since age 9 whose diverse professional re-sumé included having served as Clal-lam County deputy sheriff and Sequim Trading Company resident manager, was elected mayor with 89 votes. White originally had intended to run for trea-surer but was named a candidate for the top position by majority vote at a public meeting following the passing of may-oral candidate C.N. Sprague just weeks before the election.

White and Sequim businessman Her-bert Godfrey, who was elected treasurer, were sworn into office by notary public Joseph L. Keeler at the old Sequim school-house the evening of Nov. 19. At that very

first town council meeting, councilmen Jens Bugge, Frank Babcock, Austin Smith, Clinton McCourt and H.P. Barber, who would succeed White as Sequim’s second mayor, drew lots for their term limits and were appointed to various committees.

When White accepted the inaugural mayoral post in 1913, he became the political figurehead of a small yet highly progressive farming community boasting a population of 352 and town limits en-compassing 440 acres that extended one mile north to south and three-quarters of a mile east to west.

On the heels of incorporation, the town council wasted no time in enacting sev-eral ordinances ranging from licensing peddlers, solicitors, shows and carnivals, bowling alleys, pool halls, shooting gal-leries and gambling establishments to en-acting taxes and regulating public safety. The latter included ordinances prohibit-ing concealed weapons, imposing an 8 mph speed limit for horses and 15 mph for automobiles – which had to sport a horn or other warning device – and for-

Jilson White was elected Sequim’s first mayor in 1913 and served for one year. He died in 1964 at the age of 85 and is buried alongside his wife, Edith, at Dungeness Pioneer Cemetery. Virginia Keeting Collection, Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley.

Jilson White, Sequim’s first mayorbidding horses, mules and burros to run at large but allowing cattle to graze on streets, alleys and the public square from 7 a.m.-7 p.m.

Additional civic projects accom-plished during that first year of for-malized town governance include Sequim establishing its first volun-teer fire department, dog pound, telephone and electric power franchises, town hall and town jail, and the new Sequim View Cemetery – Sequim’s second town cemetery – being cleared of trees and stumps. In the fol-lowing year of 1915, the coming of railroad passenger service be-tween Sequim and Port Angeles gave rise to further town expan-sion and commerce.

Page 32: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette32 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

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Congratulations Sequim,on the 100 wonderful years!

SEQUIMPopulation 385, situated on Sequim Prai-

rie, in the east end of Clallam county, mid-way between Port Angeles, the county seat, and Port Townsend, and 3½ miles south of Port Williams, the shipping point. About five thousand acres of this prairie are wa-tered from the Dungeness river, a few miles away, making the Sequim country one of the most fertile, productive and prosperous sections in the state of Washington.

The chief industries now engaging the people are dairying, fruit raising, hay, po-tatoes and produce. All kinds of garden produce, small fruits, cherries, plums, apples and grass products are wonderfully prolific.

Near Sequim are two sawmills, several shingle mills, a planing mill and a number of logging camps. It has a modern two-story hotel of good accommodations, three large general merchandise stores, a drug store and a number of other stores; a bank; a weekly newspaper, the Sequim Press; an opera house and fraternal halls, livery stable

and garage ; telegraph and telephone offices; automobile service, churches, a graded and high school with seven teachers. Rural mail delivery. Mail daily. J.S. Bugge, P.M.

The town has good, pure water from a deep 6-inch driven well. Water tower pres-sure.

Land clearing and house building is go-ing on all the time and Sequim is prosper-ing, with rich and substantial agricultural wealth to back it. The Olympic Power Co. will have its power line running through Sequim this year, with an electric railway to follow later on. There is room at Sequim for a machine shop, steam laundry and oth-er like industries. Lots of room for new set-tlers desiring small tracts of land for raising fruits, poultry or farm crops and dairying. The climate is the best in the world. The land is fairly level between mountain and seashore, and for health or business offers as good a location as there is on the Pacific Coast. Average rainfall yearly 23 inches.

Source: 1913-1914 R. L. Polk & Co.’s Port Angeles and Clallam Co. Directory (Note: The above was typed verbatim from pages 86-87.)

Women who lived in the Northwest during the early 1900s were a tough variety. They weren’t afraid to hunt or blaze the trails. These women were living hard and somewhat dangerous lives in the Olympic forests, farming in New Dungeness and homesteading in Sequim Valley.

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Page 33: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 33

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For thousands of years, the S’Klallam (“strong”) people

lived in villages along the north coast of the Olympic Peninsula, moving with the seasonal resources and living in harmony with nature. While historians originally thought that man could be traced back 10,000 years on the Olympic Peninsula, the discovery of the Manis mastodon in 1977 offered definitive evidence that humans, presumably natives, hunted on the Olympic Peninsula as long as 14,000 years ago. In addition to hunting in the mountains and harvesting and fishing in the salt and fresh waters of the area, the S’Klallams maintained the Sequim prairie by burning it back each year, to create habitat for berries and other ed-ible plants, and new grass to feed the deer and elk they hunted. Their culture relied heavily on the red cedar tree, which pro-vided wood for shelter and canoes as well

as bark, which was used for clothing and blankets.

In the 19th century, non-Indian settlers began to arrive in the area, desiring the same abundant lands and waters that were so important to the S’Klallam peo-ple. In 1855, the S’Klallam leaders signed a treaty with the federal government with the understanding that they always would be able to hunt, fish and gather in their “usual and accustomed” grounds. Yet over time, the settlers forced the S’Klallam to move off of their traditional land at Dungeness, out to the Dungeness Spit. The S’Klallam people looked for ways to preserve their lifestyle, identity and cultural ways.

In 1874, under the leadership of Lord James Balch, the S’Klallam people living in the Dungeness area decided that in order to survive, they had to adopt a new value system that included property ownership. They pooled $500 in gold coins and

Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe HistoryBy Betty OppenheimerPublications Specialist, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe

Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe women from the early 20th century were adept at basket weaving.

Page 34: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette34 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

purchased the 210 acres along the Strait of Juan de Fuca now called Jamestown. Many S’Klallams joined the local work force, as farmers and dairymen. Others continued to practice their traditional hunting and fishing, using these goods for trade with the local settlers.

Throughout the late 19th and the first half of the 20th century, the S’Klallam people withstood racism by local citizens who often treated the darkest-skinned among them as second-class citizens. They also weathered many political struggles with the federal, state and local governments, which at times recognized them as a sovereign people (as promised in the Treaty of Point No Point), but more often did not – instead choosing to refuse them any treaty rights. Still, the S’Klallam people raised families, worshipped, con-tributed to the local economy and sent their children to schools in Sequim.

Jamestown S’Klallam Charles Fitzgerald Sr. (1871-1940) was just one example of a S’Klallam Indian who contributed to the development of Sequim in many ways. He not only ran the family farm and mill on land that is now located at the corner of

Old Olympic Highway and Evans Road, he also built the first “business house” in the new town of Sequim which served as the post office and grocery store, and from 1929 until his death, he managed the Dungeness-Sequim Cooperative Cream-ery. His obituary states, “Mr. Fitzgerald was one of the largest property holders in the East End. Beside the original home-stead, in recent years he had purchased the Woods farm at Dungeness, and the original Thornton government donation claim at Old Dungeness …”

In the 1970s, the Jamestown S’Klallam people joined with tribes across the na-tion in a movement to gain justice for those whose treaty rights had been ig-nored for more than a century by the federal government. Through a long legal process, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe was “re-recognized” by the United States government on Feb. 10, 1981. This finally confirmed the tribe’s rights as a sovereign nation, and as they formed a government (similar to any local, state or federal gov-ernment), they became eligible for cer-tain programs to build economic security for their people and to protect their tradi-

tional resources.Under the leadership of W. Ron Al-

len, Tribal Chair since 1977, the many S’Klallam leaders who have worked on the Tribal Council and tribal committees, and the tribal staff who have worked on the tribe’s behalf for the past 30 years,

the tribe has become a highly collabora-tive, well-respected partner in dozens of programs in the areas of economic devel-opment, health care, natural resources, cultural preservation and the arts. The tribe is now the second largest employer in Clallam County.

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Page 35: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013Sequim Gazette Wednesday, October 24, 2012 • 35

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Page 36: Sequim Centennial

Sequim Centennial 1913-2013 Sequim Gazette36 • Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Th e Jamestown S’Klallam Triberesidents of Sequim since time immemorial, property owners since 1874, congratulates the City of Sequim (sxwčkwíyǝŋ) on reaching its centennial anniversary! We look forward to a

second century of collaborative community partnerships.

Proud partners of Clallam County Sheri� ’s O� ce, Clallam County

Fire District #3 and Olympic Medical Center

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