Marsh Island and
Foster Island are located in Union Bay, and are connected to the mainland (and each other) by the
Arboretum Waterfront Trail and the Foster Island Trail. Union Bay ends at the eastern opening of the
Montlake Cut, which connects Union Bay with
Portage Bay (an arm of
Lake Union) to the west—this marks the beginning of the
Lake Washington Ship Canal, which runs through Seattle and connects Lake Washington to
Puget Sound.
Broken Island is adjacent to
Husky Stadium and was formed in 1916 when Lake Washington was lowered several feet by the opening of the
Lake Washington Ship Canal. The island, and the wetlands in which it sits on the lake's shore, were "the result of conversion of shallow water lake habitats following lake level lowering."[1] The island's soil is mostly
peat laid down from earlier times.[2]
History
When the level of Lake Washington was dropped nearly nine feet (2.7 m) in 1916 as a result of the opening of the Ship Canal,[3] a good portion of Union Bay and Union Bay
Marsh and
wetland became dry
land, furthered by
landfill activities. The marsh and much of the bay was filled from 1911 to 1967. The
Montlake Landfill (in use from 1926 to 1967) was the fictional home of television clown
J. P. Patches, resident 1958 through 1981.[4] The
University Villageshopping center (1956) and most of the east main campus of the
University of Washington (UW) but for
Husky Stadium sit on this land today. What remains of Union Bay Marsh is the restored remnant within the
Union Bay Natural Area of the UW.[5]
The village of hehs-KWEE-kweel ("skate") was of the hloo-weelh-AHBSH (from s'hloo-WEELH, "a tiny hole drilled to measure the thickness of a canoe"), for the narrow passage through then-large and resource-rich Union Bay marsh. Traces of the marsh survive as the
Union Bay Natural Area and the Foster Island area of north
Washington Park Arboretum. The trees and the island of Stitici (Stee-tee-tchee) were their ceremonial burial ground. Stitici, Little Island, is now called Foster Island.[6] The village was at the northeast tip of what is now
Madison Park. One of the
longhouses (forerunners of
cohousing for tens of people) may have been used as a potlatch house. The Duwamish Tribe is today leveraging the sacred site in the path of substantial enlargement of
State Route 520 through south Union Bay between
Redmond and
Interstate 5, in their quest for recognition.[7]
The prominent village of SWAH-tsoo-gweel ("portage") was on an abundant and much larger Union Bay, and what is now
Ravenna was their backyard before the arrival of European settlers,[8] Laurelhurst in summer.[9] The
Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway was built around 1886 along what is now the
Burke-Gilman Trail, following what was the shoreline past where the UW power plant and University Village are today.[10] A longhouse was near the present UW power plant (across Montlake Boulevard from the IMA building), others were around the north shores which were about mile farther north than today, and shores east of what is now the
Union Bay Natural Area, with a longhouse or two between what is now the Center for Urban Horticulture and Children's Hospital. Villages were diffuse.[8]
Cheshiahud or Lake John and his family were among the memorable residents around Union Bay in the early decades of Seattle.
^Phelps, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project 1913-1916, pp. 67–69
^(1) Fill sites 1911, 1920, 1926; last acreage, in the University District, closed 1966 or 1967). (1.1) Phelps, pp. 208, 210; "HISTORY @UBNA", below. (2) Stein
^(1)
"HISTORY @ UBNA". Center for Urban Horticulture. Departments, University of Washington. January 1999. Archived from
the original on 2006-05-17. Retrieved 2006-04-21. (2)
"Ravenna". Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas. Office of the Seattle City Clerk. 17 June 2002. Retrieved 2006-04-21. (3)
""University District", map". Office of the Seattle City Clerk. 13 June 2002. Archived from
the original on 7 November 2006. Retrieved 21 April 2006.
Higman, Harry Wentworth. Union Bay, the life city". Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1951. Print.
Bibliography
Dailey, Tom (n.d.).
"Duwamish-Seattle". "Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound". Retrieved 2006-04-21. {{
cite web}}: External link in |work= (
help) Page links to
Village Descriptions Duwamish-Seattle section. Dailey referenced "Puget Sound Geography" by T. T. Waterman. Washington DC: National Anthropological Archives, mss. [n.d.] [ref. 2]; Duwamish et al. vs. United States of America, F-275. Washington DC: US Court of Claims, 1927. [ref. 5]; "Indian Lake Washington" by David Buerge in the Seattle Weekly, 1–7 August 1984 [ref. 8]; "Seattle Before Seattle" by David Buerge in the Seattle Weekly, 17–23 December 1980. [ref. 9]; The Puyallup-Nisqually by Marian W. Smith. New York: Columbia University Press, 1940. [ref. 10]. Recommended start is
"Coast Salish Villages of Puget Sound"
Phelps, Myra L., Public works in Seattle. Seattle: Seattle Engineering Department, 1978.
ISBN0-9601928-1-6.
"Ravenna". Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas (n.d., map.jpg c. 17 June 2002), retrieved 21 April 2006. Note caveat in footer. Maps "NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17 June 2002.
Rochester, Junius (2002-11-20) [2001-06-09].
"Seattle Neighborhoods: Laurelhurst – Thumbnail History". HistoryLink.org Essay 3345. revised. Retrieved 2006-04-21. Rochester referenced Christine Barrett, A History of Laurelhurst (Seattle: Laurelhurst Community Club, 1981, revised 1989); Paul Dorpat, Seattle: Now & Then, Vols. II and III (Seattle: Tartu Publications, 1984 and 1989); Lucile Saunders McDonald, The Lake Washington Story, (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co., 1979); Brandt Morgan, Enjoying Seattle's Parks (Seattle: Greenwood Publications, 1979); Harry W. Higman and Earl J. Larrison, Union Bay: The Life of a City Marsh, (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1951); J. Willis Sayre, This City of Ours (Seattle: Seattle School District No. 1, 1936); Sophie Frye Bass, Pig-Tail Days in Old Seattle (Portland, OR: Binfords & Mort, 1937); Roger Sale, Seattle: Past to Present (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1976).
Stein, Alan J.
"Patches, Julius Pierpont", HistoryLink. 2 March 2003, retrieved 21 April 2006. Stein referenced Jack Broom, "The J.P. Generation," Pacific Magazine, The Seattle Times, 4 April 1993, pp. 6–11,14-17; Bill Cartmel, "Hi Ya, Patches Pals," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 11 April 1971, pp. 6–7; Erik Lacitis, "Patches Understands – and Survives," The Seattle Times, 23 February 1978, p. A15; [no title], The East Side Journal, 31 May 1962, p. 3; Ibid. 14 May 1969, p. 19.