Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Let's Meet Mr. Frank Grinnell...


This week’s segment deals with the change in the neighborhoods in Spokane following the exhumation and relocation of the cemeteries in Spokane that lied inside the city limits.   As we continue throughout the story, we will begin seeing how the new neighborhoods around our beloved Manito Park, and other areas of Spokane, get burgeoning growth.  All of the information reported here comes from a book by Tony Bamonte and Suzanne Schaeffer Bamonte entitled, , “Manito Park:  A Reflection of Spokane’s Past”.  You can learn more about this book at  www.tornadocreekpublications.com.  

Following the removal of Mountain View Cemetery from Cannon Hills, a rich showcase of homes, built in the late 1880s to about 1913, filled in the surrounding neighborhood.  During the depression years of the 1930s, many of the large older homes were converted to apartments.  Later, because of lenient zoning regulations, numerous apartment houses were built on many of the remaining lots.  A number of social-rehabilitation homes have also been concentrated in this area – typically located in some of the original homes.  In the era of the original single-family homes (classified as Grid #40 on the Spokane real estate maps), this area was one of Spokane’s most beautiful locations, inhabited largely by medical and business professionals.  The styles of homes in this neighborhood were eclectic, ranging from Victorians and American Four-Squares to Colonial Revivals.  By the time the Manito Park neighborhood began to develop, the Cannon Hill area was fairly populated.  There was a natural geographical corridor between the two areas, making Manito Park a favorite and frequently used recreation area for Cannon Hill residents.

By 1907 the Manito area entered a steady growth pattern.  During that year, Jay P. Graves hired Fred Grinnell, a seasoned real estate salesman, to sell his property.  Grinnell owned one of the largest real estate companies in Spokane.  His office was located at the intersection of Main and Lincoln Streets on the main floor of the Interurban Terminal Building (now the location of the main branch of the Spokane Public Library.)  Upon assuming the sales of the Spokane-Washington Improvement Company’s land for Graves, he set up an office at the southwest corner of 29th and Grand, and later added a smaller office at the intersection of 21st and Grand, across from Manito Park.  Grinnell had a reputation for aggressively pursuing the city to comply with the conditions of the park land donation. 

Next week, we will learn more about Grinnell, his advertising practices, and how he populated the area around Spokane’s beloved Manito Park.  Be sure to click over to www.ManitoPark.org or to www.ManitoParkOrg.blogspot.com for the latest chapter.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

The battle over Spokane cemeteries continues….


For several months now, we have been exploring the facts and history surrounding the founding of Spokane’s Manito Park.  All the information has been gleaned from the book, “Manito Park:  A Reflection of Spokane’s Past”, by Tony Bamonte and Suzanne Schaeffer Bamonte of www.tornadocreekpublications.com.  This week, we continue the story of the cemeteries in Spokane, their importance to the real estate business here, and those involved in trying to move them to a more convenient place.

Mountain View, another of the first cemeteries, appeared on early maps between Cedar and Ash from about 10th to 12thg Avenue (part of the Cannon Hill neighborhood).  It began receiving bodies as early as 1881, but was not officially declared a cemetery until the fall of 1883.  Anthony Cannon was one of the early residents who had planned on Mountain View as his final resting place.  The November 17, 1883 issue if The Spokane Falls Review contains a lengthy description of Mountain View Cemetery.  An excerpt follows:

About one mile southwest of the center of Spokane Falls is situated “Mountain View Cemetery”, the city of our dead.  The location has been well chosen, and the name, recently adopted, in every respect appropriate.  The necropolis occupies a clear space of some 40 acres, on a ridge overlooking Hangman Creek, and is surrounded with a forest of noble pines.  The piece of ground was dedicated to the purpose for which it is used last spring, and already is dotted, here and there with those slim, rounded mounds that indicate the last resting place of those near and dear to the members of our community…  We see that a number of persons have made the right move in this direction, several neat head-stones having been put in place during the past week.  In this Mr. A.M. Cannon has taken the lead.  On his lot near the center o0f the grounds, he has a handsome monument erected.  It is a square shaft of Italian marble resting on a solid granite base.  The four sides of the shaft are smooth, leaving spaces for future inscriptions; near the top on the four sides are two branches of laurel leaves, resting on which is a crown, the shaft surmounted with a finely carved urn.  On the east side, at base of shaft, is the single name “Clarke,” while on the west side, in the same position, is the name “Cannon”.  Above the east side, is the inscription, “George Pl Clarke [Cannon’s stepson], born June 23, 1867, died April 5, 1883.”  [The monument was subsequently moved to Greenwood Cemetery.]…  It is a quiet place to sleep that sleep of eternity.  Here the rich and poor, high and low, find a common level in one sepulcher, watched by the spirits of an invisible empire, while the winds of winter and the zephyrs of summer sing through the branches of solemn requiem.

Mountain View Cemetery was officially discontinued in June of 1888, when the city council and the county commissioners selected Fairmont Cemetery, incorporated that year, as Spokane’s official burial grounds.  On May 12, 1888, Anthony Cannon, along with four partners, developed and incorporated Greenwood Cemetery.  The bodies from Mountain View were exhumed and removed to Greenwood and Fairmont.  Early politics clearly played a role in this event.  Cannon had just completed a two-year term as the mayor of Spokane Falls, and previously served as a city councilman, and was well ingrained with the “city powers.”  Within five months of leaving office on May 23, 1888, the city council passed an ordinance stating:  “No body or remains of any deceased person shall be interred or buried in any cemetery, burial ground or other place within the city limits.”  Mountain View was within the city limits; Greenwood and Fairmont were not.  Cannon held 360 of the 500 Greenwood shares.

Be sure to join us next week when we will learn about how the neighborhood starts to develop around Manito Park.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Spokane was growing quickly and a political battle ensued over moving its first cemetery


Spokane was growing quickly and a political battle ensued over moving its first cemetery.

About the time of Cannon’s arrival, the railroads began connecting Spokane to the outside world.  Spokane’s population jumped from about 300 in 1880 to over 19,000 in 1890.  By 1891 the city limits stretched south to 29th avenue.  (As may be recalled, when Cook bought over 600 acres on the Manito Plateau, most of it was outside the city limits, which then extended only to 14th.)  The 1915 federal census (as published in the Polk Directory) placed the population figure at 139,323.  With such rapid expansion, the community faced the problem of where to bury its dead.  This was of some consequence to the early land developers.  Typically, cemeteries are established during the early stages of settlement.  They are usually situated in some of the most prime locations in a community. Often becoming coveted building sites as view and other choice property becomes scarce.   Such was the fate affecting two of Spokane’s first cemeteries, which were in the path of residential expansion.  There are many conflicting stories regarding these burial grounds, some of which may be clarified by the following quote from the May 26, 1897 Spokesman Review.   It provides excellent descriptions for both these cemeteries:

THE OLD CEMETERY

MOVEMENT TO REMOVE ONE OF SPOKANE’S LANDMARKS

PIONEERS ARE BURIED IN IT

Oldest Settlers Do Not Remember When It Was Started

Bodies to Be Exhumed

 

A movement is on foot to remove one of the most important historical landmarks in Spokane.  Last week a petition prepared by J. W. Witherop and signed by W.J.C. Wakefield, John Finch, J.J. Browne, Dr. W.W. Potter and other residents of Browne’s Addition, was presented to the city council, asking that 17 bodies buried in the old cemetery near the end of the boulevard and Pacific Avenue [Browne’s Addition] be exhumed and reinterred in one of the modern cemeteries – either Greenwood or Fairmont.  The petition stated the matter briefly, pointing out that the west end is rapidly becoming the most beautiful residence portion of the city, that remains of most of those buried in the cemetery had been removed some time ago, and it would add to the attractiveness of the neighborhood if the remainder were removed.

This was Spokane’s first cemetery.  Here it was that many of the sturdy pioneers who came over the trail from Oregon, or from the far east, years before the Northern Pacific railroad was dreamed of, were buried, as were their wives, and in many instances their children.  How the location was selected as a cemetery no one remembers.  It was certainly a sublime spot, however, situated on the abutting point of land, wrapt [sic] in the dense solitude of the primeval forest, commanding one grand, sublime view of rugged cliff and… the valleys of Hangman creek and the Spokane.

The exact date of the cemetery’s first burial is unknown, as were also the burials of later times.  No tombstone was ever erected in the plot; only some plain wooden slabs, lettered by the hands of some loving father, husband or brother, told for a few brief months the name of the departed.

In speaking of the old grave yard yesterday, James N. Glover, Spokane’s oldest pioneer, said:  “Yes, I understand the old cemetery is to be removed.  This was Spokane’s first cemetery.  I do not know how old it is; It was there when I first came, and used for many years afterward.  About 12 years ago most of the remains were removed.  I thought all, but it seems not.  No, I do not know the names of those buried out there, for I do not know how many were removed.” J.J. Browne, on whose land the cemetery was located, was more familiar with the later history of the cemetery than Mr. Glover.

“This,” said Mr.  Browne, “was Spokane’s first burying ground.  How it came to be selected I do not know; it was already located when I arrived.  That was before it came to be surveyed and was sold as government land.  When I got the land from the government, the cemetery was included in my purchase, and people continued to use it for many years afterward.  That was probably 18 years ago.  The cemetery was used until about 12 years ago, when most of the bodies were exhumed by friends and taken to Spokane’s second cemetery, the old burying ground in what is now known as Cannon’s Addition, probably a half mile south of the Irving school.  This latter cemetery was not used but a few years, the town growing so rapidly that the cemetery was abandoned and the bodies again exhumed, most of them taken to Greenwood or Fairmont.  I believe the number of bodies named in the petition as being still buried in the old cemetery is erroneous.  The petition say 17, but I believe there are no more than six or seven.  Do I know the names of those buried?  No; or at least not many of them.  I remember attending a number of funerals, however, the first funeral I attended in the city was that of Mr. Lowry, a young man, 21 years of age, who worked in one of the mills, if I remember rightly.  The parents of the young man later moved to Montana, and the remains were not exhumed.  Another funeral I attended was that of Mrs. Evans.  Shortly after her death her husband also removed to Montana, and was lost track of.  She remains buried in the cemetery.  Another, and the only remaining case that I know of is that of a Mr. Evans, who lost his life in a log jam up the river.  He was buried there, and only last week his wife came to see me to learn if the remains could not be removed to Greenwood or Fairmont.  I thought the proposal impossible, but she felt sure that she could identify the remains if they were exhumed.  She said that Mr. Evans lost his life up the river and that his skull was fractured in such a way that she would never forget it, or fail to identify the remains.  The fracture was on the side of the head, and she still remembered how it looked.  I also remember the burial of a number of men killed in a wreck on the Northern Pacific trestle, just north of the city, when that road was being built through the city.  If I remember rightly, though, these men were buried by the various trainmen’s societies.  A number of the Havermale children were also buried there.  The first that I knew of the movement being on foot to remove the remains was when the petition was presented to me last week.”

 

Next week , we’ll learn more about the various cemeteries in Spokane, how they were formed and where they were located.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The Cannon Addition is formed…..


Simultaneous with the development of the Manito and Cliff Park Additions was the growth and expansion of the Cannon Hill neighborhood.  This area encompassed the southwest corridor to Cook’s hill.  It encompassed the region from the freeway south to 29th Avenue, and from Bernard west to the bluff overlooking Hangman Creek.  Although commonly known as Cannon Hill, it includes numerous additions, including Cannon’s Addition and Cannon Hill Addition.  The following is the sample real estate advertisement that appeared in the March 8, 1888 Spokane Daily Chronicle:

Arlington Heights

Of

Cannon’s Addition

In the most beautiful location for fine residences in Spokane Falls.  It is now for the first time on the market though parties desiring beautiful homesites have been trying to buy lots in it for years.  It consists of 25 blocks finely located on an elevation which commands a view of the entire city and a prospect of the mountains and surrounding country which can not be excelled.  It is but three-fourths of a mile from the postoffice [sic].  We will take pleasure in showing the property to those who may desire to examine it.  The terms will be easy and price low.  Sale will begin on Wednesday the 7th , and those who apply first will secure first choice.

Clough and Graves

And

H. Bolster & Co.

Sole Agents

 

Anthony M. Cannon, the developer of Cannon’s Addition, arrived in Spokane in 1878.  With his business partner, J.J. Browne, they purchased half of the original townsite from James Glover.  Among other enterprises, Cannon started Spokane’s first grocery store and later built its first bank.  In the early 1880s, he acquired 160 acres adjacent to the townsite through government land grant.  A condition for obtaining title to such land was the grantee reside on the site.  Cannon was not adhering to this requirement and almost lost it to a squatter.  However, a group of unidentified men influenced the squatter to vacate by firing numerous volleys of gunfire into his cabin.  It was later suspected the assailants came from a party Cannon was holding the evening of the attack.  Many articles written about Cannon, both in early newspapers and books, portray him as a great achiever and also somewhat of a hothead.   Cannon at one time among Spokane’s wealthiest men, amassed most of his fortune from real estate development, especially during the rebuilding of Spokane following the Great Fire of 1889.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Where is “Cliff Park”?


Closely related both in time and geography to the new Manito Park project was the development of Cliff Park (located directly above “The Hill”).  An October 17, 1903 Spokesman Review article stated:

Spokane is likely to have one of the finest scenic driveways in the country in the near future.  Negotiations are now pending for the vacation of a boulevard site on the edge of the great cliff which overhangs the southern part of the city.  The boulevard idea has been formulated in connection with the big park project developed recently for the picturesque area on top of the bluff.

For a half mile the edge of the cliff is nearly level, providing a site upon which a driveway could be graded without great expense.  Rugged formations of basaltic rock, the beauty of which can only be appreciated from close at hand, are piled fantastically, forming the precipitous cliff.

Scores of people visit the cliff daily in good weather, owing to the natural beauty of the immediate surrou9ndings and the wonderful view of the city, the valley and the mountains beyond.  With a fine driveway itself would make Spokane famous, as it would be ranked with the most picturesque in the world.

UNITE TWO PARKS

Manito and Cliff Park would be united by the proposed boulevard.  Manito Park is the 95 acres just donated to the city by the interest which are developing three new additions on the top of the cliff and adjacent to the new Graves street railway line.  There are 52 acres donated by the Spokane-Washington Improvement Company on behalf of Manito Park addition, 36 acres by the Washington Water Power company on behalf of the South Side Cable addition and seven acres by Frank Hogan on behalf of his own tract, contiguous to the other two.

The proposed cliff boulevard would pass through the big new park, and connect with Manito boulevard, the 175 foot driveway which has been laid out through Manito Park addition to the south.  The park itself, as well as the resident sections, always will be exceeding picturesque, owing to the rock formations, the pines and the verdure.

Cliff park is in the center of the old Cliff park addition, the property of the Northwest Improvement company, a subsidiary corporation of the Northern Pacific railway.  Cliff park has been platted around a huge rock that is the monarch of all the cliff region, towering from 75 to 100 feet above the uplands.  The great rock is nearly an acre in size and except to the most expert is now accessible only at one place.  Its precipitous sides in some places have the same fluted formation as the giant’s causeway on the coast of Ireland, while in others the crumbling black basalt has been interwoven with vines and covered with clinging moss.  The park which has been dedicated to the city consists of about seven acres, including the great rock.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Spokane Discovers - "Free" Parks Are Expensive


Last week, in our continuing series on the founding of Manito Park, we learned of the gift of the 400 acre park to the city of Spokane and the conditions connected therewith from the donors.  Today, we continue the story and learn about the plans the city put in place to meet their obligations of the gift with respect to the water they were to provide for the park and the surrounding neighborhood. 

According to the book “Manito Park:  A Reflection of Spokane’s Past”, by Tony Bamonte and Suzanne Schaeffer Bamonte of www.tornadocreekpublications.com:

A 50,000 gallon water tower was constructed at 14th and Grand, but it soon became evident that a larger capacity tower was needed.  In 1908 the first tower was replaced with the existing 200,000 gallon tower.  The streets were a more challenging matter.  In 1907 newspaper headlines read, “GREAT PARK IS IN DANGER, City’s Title to Beautiful Tract at Manito Has Not Been Protected – Much Money Spent – Conditions Not Fulfilled” and “CITY DID NOT KEEP PLEDGE – Will Donors Ask Forfeiture of Park?...”  The reality of what eh conditions were costing the city was now apparent.  Eventually waivers were filed in 1911 by the original donors relieving the city of the obligation to build 50-foot wide streets around the park. 

The following year, J. P. Graves offered another sizeable donation of land for a park, this time in Spokane’s north end.  It was also accompanied by a list of conditions.  On July 11, 1912, the park board politely declined Graves’s offer unless he would remove the contingencies.  Four days later, Graves withdrew his offer.  In spite of the related costs, Spokane is fortunate to have had individuals with the foresight and means to donate private land for its beautiful parks.   Aubrey L. White (discussed later) had a vision of a park within walking distance of every neighborhood and was instrumental in securing the land for many of Spokane’s parks.  In 1918 a Spokesman Review article boasted that Spokane “leads all other large cities in the United States in park acreage per each thousand population.”    However, one can conclude that in many cases, the donation of park land was not totally altruistic acts by the donors, who wished to enhance the value of their vast tracts of real estate.

Click over next week and we’ll hear about another of Spokane’s parks, Cliff Park.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

How Manito Park Got Its Name


For weeks now, we have been posting excerpts from the book “Manito Park:  A Reflection of Spokane’s Past”, by Tony Bamonte and Suzanne Schaeffer Bamonte of www.tornadocreekpublications.com.  We have explored several of Spokane’s founding fathers who were instrumental in building the Spokane metropolis as well as getting many of the public areas donated and set up – ala Manito Park.  If you would like to read some of the back chapters, click over to www.ManitoPark.org or to www.manitoparkorg.blogspot.com and get caught up.

Today, we will explore how Manito Park actually got its name, and learn of a few more fun facts about the park itself.  Be sure to check out the progress we make each week on one of the links above.

Although the Panic of 1893, and the depression that followed, had temporarily halted further development of Montrose/Manito Park until the early 1900s, with the renewed effort to create a park for the city, the naming of Manito Park was reported on July 31, 1903.  The headline in the Spokane Daily Chronicle” read:

IT IS NAMED MANITA PARK

Large New Addition on the Southern Hill

BOUNDS CHOSEN

 

The plat for the big addition which is to be put on the market by the Spokane-Washington Improvement company has been completed.  The addition, which is half a mile wide by a mile and a quarter long, has been named Manita [the spelling used in this article appears to have been a misprint and an isolated incident] Park, referring to its elevation, which affords a fine view of the city.  It is composed of 56 blocks of land…The addition is on the route of the line of the Spokane Traction company, the new street car system being installed by Jay P. Graves.  In fact the car line will run through nearly the entire center of the tract.  It is bounded on the north by Fourteenth avenue, on the south by Thirty-third avenue, on the east by Hatch street and on the west by Division street.  In all it contains 400 acres of land, 320 of which is in the city limits.  The remaining 80 acres is south of the city limits… The two drives through the addition will be Grand street and the boulevard [refers to Manito Boulevard], running parallel with each other north and south, or lengthwise through the tract.  Grand street is being graded 75 feet in width and will have a double car track for the new Graves system.  The boulevard will be 175 feet in width, with a 77 foot parking strip in the center, while on either side will be parking strips.

 

 

During the spring of 1904, Manito Park was officially deeded to the city by the Spokane-Washington Improvement Company and Spokane & Montrose Motor Railroad Co (Jay Graves’s companies), Washington Water Power, the Northwestern and Pacific Hypotheekbank, and Frank Hogan.  This gift came with specific conditions, which were outlined in the deeds.  They are condensed as follows:

1.       The donated park property must be used forever for the sole purpose of a public park.

2.       The donation is made subject to the city paying the 1903 taxes.

3.       The city shall construct a first class driveway, of not less than 50 feet in width.  This drive will service the entire area in the vicinity of the park and is to be completed by January 1, 1905.  The city is required to forever maintain this roadway.

4.       The city shall lay a ten-inch water main to the junction of Division Street and Fourteenth Avenue prior to November 1, 1905.  They must forever keep this water main filled with water.

5.       The city shall extend an eight-inch feeder line from the ten-inch main to other sections of the Manito Addition.  They must forever keep this line filled with water.

6.       Since the city will need a water reservoir to fulfill the conditions of providing water for the building sites around the park, the grantors also provide permission for the city to locate, construct and maintain a water reservoir on this newly-gifted park property.

7.       If the city fails to meet these conditions, the property will revert back to the granters.

An interesting point – considering the costs involved in the installation of roads, water sources and sewer lines – was the lack of publicity regarding the city’s future financial obligation in the acceptance of this land.  A number of private-interest groups, such as these Manito Park benefactors, had great influence on the local politicians and media, a practice common throughout Spokane involving many of the early parks.  Today, this conflict of interest would likely receive much public criticism and challenge.  However, at the time, it was key to the development of the parks and their surrounding neighborhoods.