Threatened landmark with powerful connections

An obscure 92-year-old Bainbridge Island school building, facing demolition, has ties to the birth of Bill Gates' alma mater.

This old Moran School building on Bainbridge Island is slated for demolition.

By Tristan Baurick/courtesy of Kitsap Sun

This old Moran School building on Bainbridge Island is slated for demolition.

Is a building a landmark if no one can see it?

I got to thinking about that when I read about plans to demolish a nearly century-old, unique structure on Bainbridge Island, a four-story building on Manitou Park Boulevard on the island's north end, not far from Rolling Bay, a community that features a post office and Bainbridge's iconic Bay Hay & Feed nursery.

The building was constructed in 1918 for the Moran School, Bainbridge's first private school founded by Frank Moran. It was part of the school's expansion on a 40-acre parcel and it contained dormitories, a library, science labs, and a theater. There are few structures like it on the once rural, now suburban island. I'd never heard of it nor seen it, even though my parents lived nearby for some 35 years. It's located on a dead-end lane that is marked as having no turn around in a quiet, affluent waterfront neighborhood. You would never know about it unless you had reason to go there, and you have to travel a bit of a maze to get there.

But the empty building, in visibly deteriorated condition and fenced off by a chain-link fence, does have a fascinating background. Will Shopes, chair of Bainbridge's Historic Preservation Commission, told the Kitsap Sun that it was a "terribly significant" part of the island's history. The building is currently owned by Soundcare, which runs the Messenger House nursing home nearby. They've applied for a demo permit, and preservationists are mobilizing to find other alternatives.

The building's background is quite interesting. The Moran School was founded in 1914 as a prep school for wealthy Seattle sons. An island, presumably, was a place you could stick a boy and get his attention in an isolated environment designed to educate his mind and develop his character. (Mossback's own parents once considered exiling their son in this way, but he promised to mend his ways. A stint at an educational Alcatraz has a way of focussing the mind.)

The school was situated on Skiff Point which, like nearby Manitou Beach, has a grand view of Seattle to the east and Mount Rainier to the south. According to a directory of America's private schools published in the 1920s, the Moran School was noted for being "modern in its tendencies, not because of adherence to any theory, but because of its interest in the boy as the unit. Administrative and executive capacity is developed in the boys by giving them responsible work to do in connection with the administration of the school and the school plant."

When the Moran school later closed, it became a military-style school for young men who wanted to attend Annapolis or become Coast Guard Officers, called the Puget Sound Naval Academy. According to the Kitsap Sun, the building was later a movie theater, and has sat empty for most of the last two decades since a film was shot there, Farewell to Harry.

But here's another interesting connection. The school's founder, Frank Moran, founded another school in Seattle to become a feeder for his Bainbridge school. It was launched in 1919 in Denny-Blaine and named the Moran-Lakeside School. Yes, that's the school that eventually became the famous Lakeside School, Seattle's premier prep academy and alma mater of billionaires, including Bill Gates and Paul Allen of Microsoft fame. So, if it weren't for Frank Moran and Bainbridge's Moran School, there would have been no Lakeside, and who knows, maybe no Microsoft.

It is tough for communities to hang onto their history even if their landmarks are well known, harder if they're somewhat obscure and off the tourist track. But perhaps the Lakeside connection might give ideas to those who seek to preserve it: perhaps support could be found for saving it beyond the island, which some say treasures its "ruins", especially among people who value how an obscure structure that few know about has ties to some of the beneficiaries of the kind of independent "modern" private education the building embodies.


About the Author

Knute Berger is Mossback, Crosscut's chief Northwest native. He also writes the monthly Grey Matters column for Seattle magazine and is a weekly Friday guest on Weekday on KUOW-FM (94.9). His newest book is Pugetopolis: A Mossback Takes On Growth Addicts, Weather Wimps, and the Myth of Seattle Nice, published by Sasquatch Books. In 2011, he was named Writer-in-Residence at the Space Needle and is author of Space Needle, The Spirit of Seattle (2012), the official 50th anniversary history of the tower. You can e-mail him at mossback@crosscut.com.

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Comments:

Posted Mon, Mar 8, 8:12 a.m. Inappropriate

Knute,

This story speaks to the lack of attention we all give to the importance of History education and specifically, local history.
Without a populus that appreciates it's own history, how can we expect our children,or newcomers, to get excited about the rapidly disappearing landmarks of their community.
Why not put in place a local system of historic appreciation sessions. Public & Private classes provided by the Landmark Commission, Boy & girl Scouts, Religious groups,and others who can make a difference in how their communities sensitively grow.

When will we learn how to get out in front of these kind of concerns? The losses are irriplaceable!

Art

Art

Posted Mon, Mar 8, 11:24 a.m. Inappropriate

Well said, Art. And someone needs to do a little research. A quick check on the internet came up with students Walter Brattain (co-inventor of the transistor) and John Yeon (a respected if not a tad obscure Portland architect).

Bob

weevz2001

Posted Tue, Mar 9, 7:42 a.m. Inappropriate

After the original building was destroyed by a fire in 1916 the new main building was designed in 1917 by well known Seattle architect Harlan Thomas whose son Donald Thomas attended the school. The building in the photo appears the building added to the school in 1923 in a style to match the 1917 building.

Jeff

jeffarch

Posted Tue, Mar 9, 11 a.m. Inappropriate

Thanks for pointing out the relevance of this building but reading the Kitsap Sun blogs shows the other side of the argument, too. Its been abandoned for over 20 years and falling apart. Vandals and transients seem to have done their damage to the building and it is a general liability to the owner and neighborhood. The current owner has decided restoring the building is too expensive.

Hopefully with the information from your story the Bainbridge commission and the owners could solicit funding from the moneyed alumni of its sister school to restore and reuse this piece of history.

fred117

Posted Wed, Mar 10, 5:06 p.m. Inappropriate

Having spent summers playing Truth or Dare around the building, daring each other to go up to door on the balcony, hiding in and out and around what sure seemed like an abandoned building (with wheelchairs inside)-- it was used for storage I believe and for who knows how many years before that. Those summers spent playing were about 4O years ago.... so if the building is 90 something it has not been really used in a significant way for nearly half its life. That being said it provided countless hours of joy and fright for those of us growing up around it (to say nothing of the remains/foundation of the Chemistry lab down below the main campus that was reported to have been blown up).....

And as my favorite Uncle used to ask us back then, "why did they paint the Messenger House yellow?" "so you can see the GHOSTS at night".

KtG

Posted Sat, Dec 18, 10:44 a.m. Inappropriate

I have to admit, this place is creepy!!! A friend of mine took me up there one night many many years ago.... At night.... He said it was an old insaine asylum. Who was I to argue? Just being outside, looking in through the window, I got that creepy feeling that we wern't alone. I have spent all morning trying to find this historic landmark online to find it wasn't a asylum but a school. And as "haunted" as it looks, I can't find any record of anyone dying there. As old as the building is, and the history it has with in it, I find that hard to beleive. Does anyone know if there have been deaths on the property? It's a beautiful place, and I'm actually thrilled to know I can look this place up over 10 years later and find that it's still there. For a building I only saw once in my life, and thought about it many times over the years... It just has this ability to not be forgotten. I would love to see some better pics of the inside. There is just something about old buildings.

skarekr0w

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