Photographs of Hotel Washington During the Denny Regrade, circa 1907-1908
Table of Contents
- Overview of the Collection
- Historical Background
- Content Description
- Use of the Collection
- Administrative Information
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Detailed Description of the Collection
- Hotel Washington seen from Stewart Street, showing a trestle over the street with the cable car providing transport to the hotel, a bill board advertizing the play "My Wife's Family," and a steamshovel working on the regrade, 1906
- Hotel Washington looking northeast from 2nd Avenue and Stewart Street, with the side of the hotel partially demolished, 1906
- Hotel Washington looking northeast from 2nd Avenue and Stewart Street,with the entire side of the hotel demolished and rooms exposed, 1906
- Hotel Washington Annex under construction on the southeast corner of 2nd Avenue and Stewart Street, with the Hotel Washington in the background in the midst of being demolished and a sign half shown indicating the future home of the Standard Furniture Company, 1906
- Center structure of Hotel Washington seen from 2nd Avenue with some of the hotel still standing, between 1906-1907
- Front of Hotel Washington seen from the southwest corner of 2nd Avenue and Stewart Street with only the southeast corner of the hotel standing, between 1906-1907
- Steamshovel piling debris into a horse-drawn cart from the Denny Regrade, with a sign on the side of it indicating H.W. Hawley Contractor, between 1906-1907
- Names and Subjects
Overview of the Collection
- Title
- Photographs of Hotel Washington During the Denny Regrade
- Dates
- circa 1907-1908 (inclusive)19071908
- Quantity
- 7 photographs (1 folder)
- Collection Number
- PH1505
- Summary
- Photographs of Hotel Washington being torn down during the Denny Regrade
- Repository
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University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu - Access Restrictions
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Entire collection can be viewed on the Libraries' Digital Collections website. Permission of Visual Materials curator required to view originals. Contact Special Collections for more information.
- Languages
- English
Historical Background
After a tumultuous past, the Hotel Washington (also known as the Washington Hotel), advertised as “The Scenic Hotel of the West,” opened in May 1903, only to be demolished in 1907, with the carving away of the south summit of Denny Hill, part of the famous Denny Regrade.
In 1889, building a hotel atop of Denny Hill, 200 feet above street level, was conceived by a group of developers including Seattle founding father Arthur Denny (1822-1899), and the structure was named the Denny Hotel after him. The Victorian Gothic styled hotel straddled 3rd Ave between Virginia Street and Stewart Street, on the south summit of Denny Hill, with the front door facing Stewart Street.
Soon after construction began in 1890, squabbling among the developers, coupled with the economic crash of 1893 halted the project, leaving the hotel empty and the interiors incomplete. For the next decade, the turreted shell hung over Seattle from atop Denny Hill.
In May, 1903, renamed the Hotel Washington, the old empty structure was finally opened to the fanfare of Teddy Roosevelt as the first guest, after being purchased and finished by developer James A. Moore (1861-1929). Once the Denny Regrade began, no streets led up to the hotel, but the shortest counterbalanced cable car line in the world carried the guests and luggage up 200 feet to the grand entrance. The hotel was six stories high with 100 rooms, decorated with massive furniture, oriental rugs, ornate square pillars and detailed wood paneling.
The Hotel Washington flourished for the next three years. Then, thanks to the Denny Regrade, the classy closing party for the elegant hotel was held on May 7, 1906. By 1907 the hotel was gone, with the western part of Denny Hill leveled by the massive regrading project. Although Moore resisted the regrade, in the end, he agreed to cooperate and on the new leveled land, he built his namesake Moore Theater at 2nd Avenue and Virginia Street.
During the demolishing of the Hotel Washington, the Washington Hotel Annex was being built by G. Henry Whitcomb and opened in 1907, even before work on the New Hotel Washington had started. In 1908, the replacement New Washington Hotel was built by real estate investors James Crawford Marmaduke and J.E. Chilberg (1867-1954), with several stockholders. At the corner of 2nd Ave and Stewart, standing 13 stories high and featuring 275 guest rooms, it was built at a cost of more than $1.8 million for both the real estate and furnishings and still stands today.
Content Description
Photographs of the Hotel Washington being torn down during the Denny Regrade
Use of the Collection
Alternative Forms Available
View the digital version of the collection
Restrictions on Use
Status of creator's copyrights is unknown; restrictions may exist on copying, quotation, or publication. Users are responsible for researching copyright status before use.
Administrative Information
Return to TopDetailed Description of the Collection
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Dates: 1906Container: Folder 1, Item 1
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Dates: 1906Container: Folder 1, Item 2
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Dates: 1906Container: Folder 1, Item 3
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Dates: 1906Container: Folder 1, Item 4
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Description: Center structure of Hotel Washington seen from 2nd Avenue with some of the hotel still standingDates: between 1906-1907Container: Folder 1, Item 5
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Dates: between 1906-1907Container: Folder 1, Item 6
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Dates: between 1906-1907Container: Folder 1, Item 7
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
