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Discovery Park History
Address: 3801 Discovery Park Blvd, Seattle, WA 98199 > directions
Visitors Center Contact Information: (206) 386 - 4236 | E-mail:
discover@seattle.gov
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Fort Lawton | West Point
Fort Lawton
Fort Lawton originally occupied much of the northwestern part of Magnolia
Bluff. The bluff was named by Lt. George Davidson during a U.S. Coastal
Survey in 1857, mistakenly identifying red-barked madrone trees as magnolias.
The original high hopes that the post in Magnolia would become a major
military installation by Seattle's turn-of-the-century civic leaders
were never realized. Fort Lawton was developed in the late 1890s, opened
in the early 1900s, and had long periods of underuse after each world
war. By the 1970s, much of the fort's land was turned over to the City
of Seattle to become Discovery Park.
Early Development
- 1853: Dr. Henry A. Smith staked a donation land claim of
160 acres at the south end of Magnolia Bluff.
- 1860-70s: Private property owners logged the bluff.
- 1881: West Point Lighthouse was built.
- 1891: Congress established a Navy yard on Puget Sound, at
Port Orchard Bay (Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton). Military
planners considered defense of the area a high priority.
- 1894: 11 sites for fortifications were identified, including
Magnolia Bluff.
- 1895: Congress appropriated funds to build a regimental post
in Seattle, but the Secretary of War required that the property be
acquired without cost to the U.S. Government. The Seattle Chamber
of Commerce appointed an Army Post Committee to solicit donations
of land and cash. Initially 613 acres were acquired from 27 owners
at $1 per owner.
- 1896: Secretary of War selects Magnolia as a fort site.
- February 1898: Seattle Chamber of Commerce turned over to
the U.S. Army title to 703 acres.
- June 1898: Buildings and roads were built, and development
of the fort included a pier to the north on Salmon Bay, a vegetable
garden, large stockade for cavalry horses, a water line from Seattle,
and barracks.
- December 1899: The first soldiers arrived. The first seven
buildings were occupied by 1900, with another 18 permanent structures,
including a hospital, eventually ringing the oval parade ground.
- February 1900: U.S. Army designates the military installation
as Fort Lawton.
- 1901: Coast Artillery unit arrived, guns installed only temporarily
until 1902. Fort Worden and Fort Flagler near Port Townsend and Fort
Casey on Whidbey Island were built heavy as the first and second lines
of defense. Fort Lawton would be the third line of defense.
- 1902-1927: Fort Lawton was designated an Infantry post designed
to accommodate a full regiment (approximately 3,500 men). but rarely
was more than one battalion were ever stationed at the site.
- 1903: Olmsted Brothers' Seattle Parks and Boulevards plan
includes Fort Lawton.
Pre-World War I
- 1908-1941: Fort Lawton was dormant, had minor use.
- 1910: John C. Olmsted prepared a master plan for housing
officers and enlisted men, "Report on the Improvement of the
Fort." The report identified continuation of a bicycle path along
the Bluff, tide-fed swimming pools on the salt marsh at West Point,
and military facilities in center of the area, to be "protected"
from civilians by a fence.
- 1917: Civic leaders and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer call
for return of the fort for use as a park.
Pre-World War II
- 1927-1941: Fort Lawton was converted to a U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers installation.
- 1927: Seattle Parks drafted legislation for leasing the Fort
for park purposes, resulting in a Senate Bill, rejected by the Secretary
of War, declaring the Fort to be indispensable.
- 1938: U.S. Army offered all of Fort Lawton to the City of
Seattle as a park for the cost of one dollar. The City Council declined
because it was unsure whether the City could bear the cost of maintenance.
- 1940s: Before World War II, Fort Lawton became part of the
Port of Embarkation, San Francisco. Up to 20,000 troops were staged
there at one time, and a total of 1.1 million troops passed through
the installation during and after the war. Some 1,150 German prisoners
of war were housed there, and 5,000 Italian prisoners of war passed
through on their way to confinement in Hawaii. More than 450 buildings
were constructed to house soldiers during the war; most were temporary
and designed to be built quickly, with minimum standards of comfort.
Post-World War II
- 1950s: During the Korean War, Fort Lawton served both as
an embarkation and debarkation station. During the early 1950s, 10,000
replacement troops a day were readied for transport to Korea. After
the Korean War, Army activity at Fort Lawton declined and many of
the WWII structures were demolished.
- 1953: 26th Air Defense group established a Nike Ajax missile
base.
- 1959: Nike Hercules missiles were located at the base.
- 1961: The U.S. House Appropriations Committee suggested the
fort be declared surplus, which initiated a flood of proposed uses
by military, federal, state, and school agencies.
- 1964: The U.S. Secretary of Defense announced that 85% of
Fort Lawton was to be declared surplus. Under applicable Federal laws
at the time, the City was required to pay the Federal government 50%
of the fair market value of the lands acquired for park purposes.
- 1965: U.S. Congressman Brock Adams (D-WA) introduced legislation
providing for the transfer of the surplus acreage at Fort Lawton to
the City at no cost. The rationale for this bill was that since the
site had been donated by the city, it should be returned to the city
when the Federal government no longer needed it.
- 1965: The Department of Defense announced plans to build
an Anti-Ballistic Missile base at Fort Lawton.
- July 1966: Metro dedicated the West Point wastewater treatment
plant.
- 1968: The Secretary of Defense announced the abandonment of plans
for the missile base at Fort Lawton.
- 1968: Voter approval of the City's Forward Thrust bond issue
provides $3 million to purchase the fort for a park.
- March 1969: U.S. Senator Jackson (D-WA) introduced a bill enabling
cities to acquire surplus Federal lands at no cost for park and recreational
purposes. President Nixon signed it in October 1970.
- 1970: The United Indians of All Tribes presented a claim
to all lands that might be declared surplus. The City negotiated an
agreement to lease 17 acres to the organization for an Indian Cultural
Center.
- September, 1972: 391 acres were transferred to the City by
the Federal government. Other lands were transferred to the U.S. Navy
for housing (the Capehart Complex).
- 1972: Fort Lawton Park (Discovery) Master Plan was submitted
to the City.
- 1973: U.S. Senator Henry Jackson dedicated Discovery Park
in honor of the British sloop HMS Discovery, commanded by Captain
George Vancouver during the first European exploration of Puget Sound
in 1792.
- 1974: The Discovery Park Revised Plan updated the 1972 plan.
- 1975: Voters rejected by a 2-1 margin a proposal from the
West Point Golf Association for an 18-hole golf course at Discovery
Park.
- 1977: Daybreak Star Cultural-Education Center opened.
- 2005: Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) 2005
determined that the 70th Regional Support Command headquarters would
close, one of 10 RSC Major Subordinate Commands of the U.S. Army Reserve
Command.
Sources:
Dan Kiley and Partners. Master Plan for Fort Lawton Park. February,
1972.
Fiset, Louis. "Magnolia - Thumbnail History, June 29, 2001".
As seen on the website Historylink.org.
2005
Seattle Parks and Recreation. "Don Sherwood Historical Files,
Discovery Park". As seen on the website, http://www.seattle.gov/parks/history/DiscoveryPk.pdf
United States Army Corps of Engineers. Draft Environmental Assessment,
Fort Lawton Area 500 Demolition, Restoration, and Land Transfer; Seattle,
Washington. May 31, 2001. As seen on the website, http://www.nws.usace.army.mil/ers/reposit/Ft_Lawton__draft_EA.pdf
Wilma, David. "Fort Lawton is established on February 9, 1900."
As seen on the website Historylink.org.
2005.
West Point
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The Burke Museum's
Interactive online feature
Archaeology of West Point
THIS IS THE STORY of a land and its people, and how both changed
over time. It's a tale of urban archaeology and the discovery
of ancient cultures beneath the city of Seattle, cultures with
traditions that endure today.
» The
Archaeology of West Point
» The
Burke Museum
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West Point Light Station
Anticipating further growth of waterborne traffic in the wake of Seattle's
flourishing lumber export business, the U.S. Lighthouse Board recommended
in 1872 that a lighthouse be built at West Point. Congress appropriated
$25,000 for the project, and in 1881, the U. S. Lighthouse Service built
the first manned light station for Puget Sound. Almost 100 years later,
in 1977, the West Point Light Station was listed on the National Register
of Historic Places. Two years later, in 1979, the station was slated
for automation, but the keeper at the time, Marvin Gerber, wanted to
have the lighthouse manned for its centennial. On November 15, 1981,
he climbed atop the lighthouse and celebrated its centennial by dousing
it with champagne. The West Point Lighthouse finally was automated in
1985, the last in the state to be converted.
West Point Treatment Plant
In 1911, workers under the direction of city engineer R. H. Thomson
completed a 12-foot diameter brick-lined sewage tunnel that brought
untreated wastewater from central Seattle to an outfall off West Point.
West Point was nine-tenths an island, connected to the mainland only
by the narrow beach on the south side of the tidepool. This entire area
was later filled, and in 1966 it became the site for the Municipality
of Metropolitan Seattle's (then Metro) West Point Wastewater Treatment
Plant. In 1995, secondary treatment with a bacterial treatment process
was added at the treatment plant to comply with the National Clean Water
Act.
Sources:
Fiset, Louis. "Magnolia - Thumbnail History, June 29, 2001".
As seen on the website Historylink.org.
2005
McClary, Daryl C. "West Point Lighthouse, June 2, 2003".
As seen on the website Historylink.org.
Updated
June 28, 2007
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