Change Over Time. Climie Hill (c )

Similar documents
Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission Oral History Interview

Walking Horace Greeley s Farm A New Castle Historical Society Project

Interviewers: Wynell Schamel and Ed Schamel IntervieweEd Schamel: Lucille Disharoon Cobb. Transcriber: David MacKinnon

Interview with Walter C. Robbins ID0005 [Sr] 20 September at his home Transcribed by Walter C. Robbins, Jr. ID0001 [Jr] 20 September 2005

Oldemulders, Fred Oral History Interview: General Holland History

Guide to the Flora and Stuart Mason Photographs and Event Programs

2016 YEAR END waterfront activity report THEWATERFRONTREPORT.COM. mercer island, seattle and the greater eastside

Tape Index. 002 Jones's move to Chatham in She was originally from New York City, raised in Connecticut. Her father was from North Carolina.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW. EMT DULCE McCORVEY. Interview Date: October 3, Transcribed by Laurie A.

A.M. Irene, how long has your family been farming in this area?

FRANK AND FRANCES DITTLE. An Oral History Interview Conducted by Joan Murray in 2001

Do you know who he purchased the property from?

Arthur Rothstein s. American Portraits. Pictures from the road Farm Security Administration

Personal History. Horse Lake in 2002 (USF) Girls swimming in Horse Lake in 1940 (Riek)

Interview of Dean & Marge Mullenix Antler s Store Owners:

1MMILLIAM, SAI.TUKL L. INTiBVliiW,f9S00

Born June 4th, 1922 to Charles Manning Jaquette and Aura Louise Smith

Subject(s): Innes, Walter/Innes Department Store

Mar 3, 2012 Herb s last meeting with his Thunderbird friends before passing away on March 20, 2012 We will all miss you Herbie!!!

ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW with. Marguerite Lee Peach

Guide to the Frank Scott Papers

JACKSON TOWNSHIP BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Thursday September 27, 2012

Chapter 1 From Fiji to Christchurch

Socorro County Historical Society, Oral History Tapes

Jackson Township Board of Zoning Appeals November 15, 2018

Top down vs bottom up

How the Romans changed Britain By Michael Coleman

Autumntime By Anthony Lentini 1999

VOICES FROM THE PAST CLEMENTSVILLE. By Silas Clements. Tape #494. Oral Tape by Tony Clements. Oral Tape by David Christensen

Photo collection: Heuer family farm (Bertha, Minnesota)

Capitol Hill Prime Retail Space For Lease

Finding aid for the Charles Merrill photo collection Collection 070

A FOREST WITH NO TREES. written by. Scott Nelson

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER THOMAS LYNN. Interview Date: December 26, Transcribed by Laurie A.

[Here follows another passage in Blackfoot followed by a passage in English.]

Cherokee And The Concow Dam

Doylestown Historical Society local history collection

INLAND STEEL COMPANY, INDIANA HARBOR WORKS PHOTOGRAPHS,

A Q&A with Nickel Plate Railroad Supervisor. Barney Andrews. Talks About His Work Experience and Recollections of the Railroad in Tipton, Indiana

Planning Commission Meeting Minutes Thursday, January 22, 2009 City Council Chambers 220 East Morris Avenue Time: 7:00 p.m.

VINNY - CHARACTER REPORT "MAGGIE"

Jerry Watson Interview Transcript

Wilkins, Nevada A 20 th Century Ghost Town

Interview with Pete Minneau Gladstone, Michigan No Date Given

The Lightfoot Tower. Background Information. Librarian Zoé Vallé Memorial Library 63 Regent Street Chester Nova Scotia. July 2007

Young people in North America10

GRANDMA SYLVA MODESITT by Scott Mills

Inventory of the William M. McCarthy Photograph Collection. No online items

Utah Valley Orchards

WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW. BATTALION CHIEF DOMINICK DeRUBBIO. Interview Date: October 12, Transcribed by Laurie A.

FINAL COPY TAPED INTERVIEW - Ray Ditzel

ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS 238 Main Street, Cold Spring, New York April 8, :30 P. M. Regular Monthly Meeting

Charlotte found a wild horse whilst living near some moor lands. The horse would gallop away every time Charlotte would walk toward him.

PLAINFIELD BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS October 15, :00 P.M.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER JOHN AMATO. Interview Date: January 2, Transcribed by Laurie A.

A short story by Leo Schoof, Kelmscott, Western Australia. The Sexton s Wife

Name: Mr. Dominick Duggan From: Kiltrogue, Claregalway Age: 75 Interviewers: Brona Gallagher & Martina Hughes Date: 10 th July 1991

The Tanska Resort and Family Tanska Auto Camp

and led Jimmy to the prison office. There Jimmy was given an important He had been sent to prison to stay for four years.

Bill and Chuck on furlough January 1946 Dad, Mother, Ginny CROSSING THE ATLANTIC ON USS COALDALE TROOP SHIP

FILE NO WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT ALLEN CRUZ

TOGETHER By Michael Yu.

A Bridge to the Past: The Euharlee Covered Bridge Written By Amanda Closs Edited for web application by Judi Irvine

1923: Tampa to Denver in a Model T Ford

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW

Glacier National Park, MT

Thank You, Ma am Langston Hughes

ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM INTERVIEW ABSTRACT

Up and Down Bridge Street

The Search for Gull Cottage By John D'Angelo

John B. Adams Zion National Park Oral History Project CCC Reunion September 29, 1989

My grandmother experience making a family in the U.S. citizen during the times were so rough. condemn and there house was haunted.

The Explorers: Amelia Earhart

Thank You, M am. By Langston Hughes. By that time two or three people passed, stopped, turned to look, and some stood watching.

Seller Highlights 148 Wardtown Rd, Freeport Top 5 things we will miss the most!

00:00 Introduction, welcome and information about respondent. 0:0-0:43. Q1. What is your connection to Pennylands?

Personal History. Curiosity Creek on the end of Jenal Road in 2003 (USF) Curiosity Creek in 2003 (USF)

Small Cassette Tape Collections, circa

Castleton and Its Old Inhabitants.

Chapter 1 You re under arrest!

Mrs. Moore. Titanic Tribute

1 Listen to Chapters 1 and 2 on your CD/download and decide if these sentences are true or false. Can you correct the false ones?

Yankee Hill Dispatch

WILLIAM ESTABROOK. Interviewer: Cliff Crawford

11101 NE 9th Street Bellevue, WA

Feature Article. Fall City: The Hotel Corner since (southeast corner of 337th SE and Redmond-Fall City Rd)

Core Vocabulary: Older Adults (Across Topic)

Niehaus/Nienhueser Family Information

Why is it important to commemorate the anniversary of 9/11? How do artifacts and other primary sources tell stories about 9/11?

Sheli Lulkin Papers 1859, n.d.

October to provide

ONE BELLEVUE CENTER th Avenue NE Bellevue, WA

Thank You, Ma am. By Langston Hughes

Charles Ingram Stanton, Sr., Papers

Bikes owned / Still own: 2000 Honda Shadow VT750CD Ace Deluxe, 72 Suzuki Rv90, 73 Suzuki Rv90, 84 Honda Z50, 82 Honda Z50

Exploration Updates. Spring Issue 1

Jessica Fletcher is on the Maui College campus to conduct a class on community

Fritho Rudger, Erick Mulder and Lillias Grace (Halburt) Murder interviewed by David Finch, November 22, 1990

Limmy's Show 2 Shooting Batch 7 28/09/10 1. DEE DEE - YOKER EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET. DAY

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE ND AVENUE NE, BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON

Transcription:

Change Over Time The Lowering of Lake Washington Climie Hill (c. 1875 1956) Hill Biography Climie Hill was born in California and moved to Seattle with his family when he was a small boy. He and his three brothers all attended the University of Washington and received degrees in engineering. After graduating, Climie and his brother Sterling started the Hill Hydraulic Machinery Co., which had an office in Smith Tower. The two brothers invented and sold equipment for irrigation and pumping systems, including the Hill Hydraulic Ram, the Hill Chlorine Sterilizer, and the Hill Hydraulic Air Compressor. In about 1910, Climie met and married his neighbor Grace Cruse. One year later, Grace s father William decided to move out to Bellevue to become a gentleman farmer. Climie and Grace came with him and purchased a property on NE 8 th and 100 th Ave NE. Climie s office was still in Seattle, and he was often away from the Puget Sound area doing surveying or engineering projects. However, he also took an interest in the development of Bellevue, especially the water supply.

Shoreline Map: Bellevue Hill Map Source: Michael J. Chrzastowski, Historical Changes to Lake Washington and Route of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, King County, Washington, U.S. Geological Survey Water-Resources Investigations Report 81-1182

Map Key: Hill Map

Hill Primary Source 1 Photograph of Rev. Strong s Tower House with water tank, circa 1910. Source: Eastside Heritage Center. 2000.008.001.

Josephine Godsey Oral History June 5, 1978 Interviewer: Lilly Mae Anderson Note: The original manuscript was quite confusing, due to the tendency of the narrator and interviewer to change subjects without warning, and some inaccuracies in Ms. Anderson s own historical knowledge. The following document has been edited for clarity. LILLY MAE ANDERSON: Now, you were talking on the tape we ran the other day about the water supply. And I m interested in the beginnings of the water supply here. I didn t hear it very well and I wondered what you could tell me about the first wells. JOSEPHINE GODSEY: Oh, everybody maintained their own water system before [they lowered the lake]. Bellevue had little separate systems, private systems. If anybody had a good well, that s where the neighbors would go for their water or even pipe it into their own. And in this Lochleven Community here, people were supplied by a well on the Strong property. And the storage tank for that was the Tower House. LMA: Where was the Strong property and what was Strong s whole name? UNKNOWN WOMAN: Reverend Strong, Reverend Strong. JG: What was his first name? His brother was Sidney Strong in Seattle and [Rev. Strong] was on the way to the gulch. UW: Meydenbauer Park. JG: Meydenbauer Park. Just about halfway down the slope there almost under the First [Street] Bridge. And he I think he had a pump. A gasoline pump. I don t know how people from other little districts got their water. There was an awfully good spring across the bay and I know lots and lots of people got their water from there. There was no trouble about water in Bellevue until the lake was lowered. People maintained their own wells and good water. And you didn t have sprinkling systems like you had now. If you did much [garden] watering, you carried it in a bucket. Hill Primary Source 2A LMA: And lowering the lake, did that lower the water table? JG: That lowered the water table. [Ms. Godsey and Ms. Anderson talk about the water system in Midlakes for a few moments, and then return to the subject of the Meydenbauer Bay/Lochleven area.] LMA: I dug up some facts about the water system here in Bellevue to see if there was anything to fill in on it. I once did an article about I went over there with a photographer, and we took a picture of the tank on the hill. The [current] water district bought out the old Bellevue Water Company late in 1946 when it served 400 customers. What was the Old Bellevue Water Company? Do you know? Excerpts from the 1978 oral history of Josephine Godsey, a Lochleven resident. Source: Marymoor Museum Oral History Collection.

JG: 1946? LMA: Um-hum. It said at first there were wells but the water table dropped and this was remedied temporarily when [a] pumping station began taking water from the lake. JG: Oh, that s the lake plant. LMA: That was the lake plant. JG: That s right here on Meydenbauer. On Meydenbauer Point. At the top of the hill. Well, they experimented. They dug wells. LMA: That was what the Bellevue Water Company was? JG: Yeah. It seems to me they had a supply before which was quite limited and then Bellevue started to grow so, and the wells were not successful. The terrain was so that wherever their pipe they couldn t keep the gravel out of the pipes. So that is when they decided they would have to have a different system that went into the lake. And at first they pumped directly from the lake into, up the Meydenbauer Park gulley and up to a tank here, a wooden tank. UW: JG: UW: JG: UW: It was by Grace Methodist, I mean Grace Lutheran Church. Right back of my property. Right there. That s a concrete tank, now. JG: Well, they had a wooden tank, and it lasted, gee, it had two roofs on it. I remember the night that the roof fell in. And Mr. Rudolph maintained the pumping plant down on the lake and took care of the system up here. He d come up every day to see it and take the measurement of the water and see how much was used. Hill Primary Source 2B Excerpts from the 1978 oral history of Josephine Godsey, a Lochleven resident. Source: Marymoor Museum Oral History Collection.

Hill Primary Source 3 Self-description of Bellevue Water Company, early 1923. Source: Eastside Heritage Center. 00.22.04.

Hill Primary Source 4A Sections of King County Resolution 1248, granting a franchise to the Bellevue Water Company (1/2), August 6, 1923. Source: King County Archives.

Hill Primary Source 4B Sections of King County Resolution 1248, granting a franchise to the Bellevue Water Company (2/2), August 6, 1923. Source: King County Archives.

Hill Primary Source 5A Guest editorial from the Bellevue newspaper Lake Washington Reflector, September 10, 1923 (1/2). Source: Eastside Heritage Center Newspaper Collection.

Hill Primary Source 5B Guest editorial from the Bellevue newspaper Lake Washington Reflector, September 10, 1923 (2/2). Source: Eastside Heritage Center Newspaper Collection.