If we're going to consider naming Seattle's unnamed features, from alleys to bike paths, or open the can of worms of changing the city street names and numbers, you offer a few ideas. So I queried a number of friends, authors, historians and others who tossed names into the mix. It's instantly apparent that there is a huge untapped heritage resource out there. What is offered here is just the tip of the iceberg.
Among those I consulted were historian Paul Dorpat, Starbucks co-founder and professional namer Gordon Bowker, longtime Seattleite Kenan Block, Museum of History and Industry historian Lorraine McConaghy, historian Mildred Andrews, Crosscut's David Brewster, bookseller Taylor Bowie, architect and preservationist Larry Johnson, UW architectural historian Jeffrey Oschner, preservationist-developer Kevin Daniels, artist Patricia Fels, writer Peter Jackson, Washington Trust for Historic Preservation's Chris Moore, and authors Bruce Barcott and Roger Sale. A much wider net should be cast (yes, please weigh in Crosscut readers), but these folks have given us a start. I learned a lot about Seattle just tracking down the links.
So here, in no particular order, is a selective, preliminary list of names of the living and dead who we might consider weaving into the odonymic fabric of Seattle:
Arts booster Betty Bowen, downtown couturier John Doyle Bishop, author and enviro activist Harvey Manning, restaurateur Victor Rosellini, historian Walt Crowley, UW professor Giovanni Costigan, architect Ibsen Nelsen, artist Helmi Juvonen.
Longtime city councilman Sam Smith, artist James Washington, Jr., Indian activist Bernie Whitebear, pioneering cartooning weatherman Bob Hale, popular Seattle historian Bill Speidel, Northwest "mystic" artist Morris Graves, Filipinio author Carlos Bulosan, Scandinavian accordionist and comic kid's show host Stan Boreson, poet Denise Levertov.
Singer Ernestine Anderson, Washington Post editor Meg Greenfield, artist Guy Anderson, "Joe Hill" composer Earl Robinson, architect and Pike Place market preservationist Victor Steinbrueck, architect Lionel Pries, dancehall singer Ron Holden, Boeing test pilot Tex Johnston, civic leader and United airlines CEO Eddie Carlson, columnist and Lesser Seattle guru Emmett Watson, art school founder Nellie Cornish.
Aircraft company founder Bill Boeing, Seattle's first woman mayor Bertha Knight Landes, broadcast exec, developer, author and "man of parts" Stimson Bullitt, kiddie TV idol Sheriff Tex, killer whale Namu, beloved gorilla Bobo, country singer Bonnie Guitar, Seattle mayor, editorialist and People's Ticket candidate Beriah Brown, music industry giant Quincy Jones, singer Ray Charles, railroad and roads baron Sam Hill.
Bandleader/politician Vic Meyers, restaurateur Peter Canlis, poet Gary Snyder, characters George and Pansy, musician Guitar Shorty, Seattle Times's Col. Alden J. Blethen, engineer and city-shaper R.H. Thomson, author Mary McCarthy, Dune novelist Frank Herbert, fruit-of-the-month founders Harry and David, salty frontier madame Mother Damnable, iconic DJ Pat O'Day.
Hydroplane pioneer Stan Sayres, hydro driving legends Bill Muncey and Mira Slovak, Black Ball's Captain Alexander Peabody, skyjacker D.B. Cooper, baseball star Fred Hutchinson, winning Husky coach Don James, oil entrepreneur and hydro sponsor Ole Bardahl, rock record producer Jerry Dennon, half-blind star Husky quarterback Bob Schloredt, Seattle's "Mr. Baseball" Leo Lassen, basketball player Elgin Baylor, sports twins Johnny and Eddie O'Brien, Husky basketballer Bob Houbregs, hockeyplayer Golden Guyle Fielder.
KING broadcasting legend Dorothy Bullitt, artist Kenneth Callahan, Seattle mayor Wes Uhlman, newspaper answerman Mike Mailway, baseball player Jungle Jim Rivera, martial arts star Bruce Lee, climbers Jim and Lou Whittaker, Klondike hustler Erastus Brainerd, brewer and baseball team owner Emil Sick, high-class brothel owner Madame Lou Graham, early Pioneer Square jazz club owner Pete Barbas, progressive clergyman Reverend Mark Matthews, street performer Artis the Spoonman.
Actress Frances Farmer, punk rocker Mia Zapata, mayor Allan Pomeroy, bandleader Jackie Souders, Egg and I author Betty MacDonald, U.S. senator and Rep. Hugh B. Mitchell, labor leader and anti-sweat-shop advocate Alice Lord, Washington's first woman governor Dr. Dixy Lee Ray, funder of the Burke Museum Caroline McGilvra Burke, reformer and orphan advocate Ollie Ryther, tug boaters Andrew and Thea Foss, radical activist Anna Louise Strong, former Seattle newspaper columnist and New Yorker essayist E.B. White, poet Richard Hugo.
Rock musician Kurt Cobain, civil rights leader Rev. Samuel McKinney, artist Jacob Lawrence, Tugboat Annie writer Norman Riley Raine, Captain Puget Don McCune, civic leader David "Ned" Skinner, dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham, composer John Cage, photographer Imogen Cunningham.
Poet Theodore Roethke, philanthropist Patsy Bullitt Collins, science fiction author Octavia Butler, boat designer Ted Geary, artist Mark Tobey, modern dancer and choreographer Mark Morris, kid show storyteller Wunda Wunda, pioneering woman architect Elizabeth Ayer , Teamster boss Dave Beck, author and foodie Angelo Pellegrini, and architect Carl F. Gould.
Again, please send or post your own suggestions.
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Comments:
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 6:06 a.m. Inappropriate
I like where your going, but you missed two obvious heavy-weights in the arts. Zoe Dusanne, owner of Seattle's first modern art gallery and Ambrose Patterson, the NW's first real modernist artist and inspiration to many of the other artists on your list.
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 8:48 a.m. Inappropriate
Not to split hairs, but I would suggest that Viola Patterson, wife of Ambrose, was more of a modernist than he! And certainly painter Walter Isaacs, who built the art department at the U of W in the 20s and 30s, would also deserve some consideration for this list.
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 9:38 a.m. Inappropriate
Couple more who resonate in town for me:
Ed McMichael, Tuba Man
Frank Cunningham, rowing coach at Lakeside, Lake Washington Rowing Club, and founder of the juniors program at Green Lake.
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 10:09 a.m. Inappropriate
Ivar Haglund; Roy Olmstead, if we are including nefarious characters such as DB Cooper; John Pinnell (going with Lou Graham) to name a few. Interesting brainstorm...
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 11:02 a.m. Inappropriate
Angelo Pelligrini.
Posted Tue, Mar 16, 12:40 p.m. Inappropriate
Harry Bridges. Jimi Hendrix.
Posted Wed, Mar 17, 12:45 p.m. Inappropriate
Additional ideas:
August Wilson
Charles Royer
Bill Boeing
Bill Gates
Starbucks
Gary Locke
Scoop Jackson
Slade Gorton
Peter Donnelly
Patsy Collins
Fred Couples
James Donaldson
Tom Douglas
Eddie Vedder
Presidents of the United State
Nirvana
Norm Rice
Denis Hayes
Paul Allen
David Guterson
Tim Egan
Mark O'Connor
Norm Langill
Norm Durkee
Dale Chilhuly
Mario Batali
Jim Whittaker
Jennifer Dunn
Frances Farmer
Cameron Crowe
Ichiro Suzuki
Posted Wed, Mar 17, 2:45 p.m. Inappropriate
Ed Hume, for teaching us to garden!! Tom Robbins, for the grins.
Posted Wed, Mar 17, 4:43 p.m. Inappropriate
Maybe a (Fred) Anhalt alley somewhere on Capital Hill.
Posted Wed, Mar 17, 9:25 p.m. Inappropriate
Great suggestions, people, keep them coming. I'll be talking about naming alleys on KUOW's Weekday with Steve Scher, 3/18 at 9am, along with some real experts on the subject of making better urban spaces. Tune in or check their online archive.
Posted Thu, Mar 18, 9:52 a.m. Inappropriate
Chinook Jargon, all the way. The Jargon represents the undercurrent of everything that is Seattle; as do alleys, in a general sense.
http://www.native-languages.org/cjargon.htm
Posted Sat, Apr 3, 10:49 p.m. Inappropriate
August Wilson
Jimmy Hendrix
Posted Tue, Apr 6, 12:34 p.m. Inappropriate
Wally Nelskog
Buck Ritchie
Bonnie Guitar
Bob Blackburn
Doug Welch
Jack Jarvis
Bob Summerise
Posted Tue, Apr 6, 5:32 p.m. Inappropriate
Charles Odegaard
Crick-Watson
Charles Darwin
As MLK Way demonstrates, surname only is preferable.