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WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday
Armed man shot by deputies in Arlington
Police ID make of vehicle in fatal hit-and-run
Boeing's 6-month tally: 1 net order
Thursday


One fire rips through $2 million home, another ...
Swine flu claims 2nd victim in Snohomish County
Jetty Island firefight continues; hot weather ...
Wednesday


Fire District 1 negotiates to take over service...
Snohomish County population rising fast since 2...
Honey's owners indicted by feds
Tuesday


Mobile home tenants along Snohomish River told ...
Lincoln to leave Everett in 2013
Put on your sailor's cap and explore Naval Stat...
Monday


Disabled people will be left without a ride
You'll soon have 4,500 reasons to trade in that...
Pay hike deserved, Monroe chief says
Sunday


1,670 local students in county are without homes
Monroe's business gets done in secret
$9 million to be sought for U.S. 2 in federal t...
Saturday


Use of local parks spikes
Gay-friendly shift at 2 churches
Racist graffiti scrawled on cars in Everett nei...
 

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CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Monday, February 4, 2008

Historic preservationists push for new Everett park

EVERETT -- On the surface, the trash-strewn foot of Hewitt Avenue near Port Gardner is too humdrum these days to attract much attention.

Yet if the red brick road there could talk, passersby would learn the area holds a special place in Everett's history.

It's where countless immigrants arrived in town at the Great Northern Railway depot and where at least seven men at the city docks were gunned down in the 1916 Everett Massacre -- one of the Pacific Northwest's bloodiest labor disputes.

Now some in town have taken it upon themselves to turn the strip of land beneath a railroad trestle into a historic park.

In 2006, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway filed plans with the city to tear down the steel bridge and to replace it with a 12-foot high dirt berm.

Several concerned residents filed appeals against the railroad's plans with the city, arguing the application was incomplete and that it failed to recognize the historic significance of the property.

BNSF made no mention of the Everett Massacre, which took place a few hundred feet away, or that the site is possibly where Dennis Brigham, the first non-native settler to arrive in Everett, built a cabin where he lived in 1861.

It's also believed that American Indians spent summers at the site where fresh water flowed from nearby Forgotten Creek.

BNSF has since withdrawn its application and residents have talked with the city parks department and office of neighborhoods about gaining support for a historic park.

Nothing is official yet.

Still, residents aren't waiting.

During the summer, a few dozen people spent a Saturday morning mowing grass and hauling away more than 20 trash bags of brush and debris from the fenced-off property.

Another work party is planned for this Saturday.

Eventually, Everett's history buffs envision a parklike setting with historic markers educating people about the Milltown site where rail met sail.

Reporter David Chircop: 425-339-3429 or dchircop@heraldnet.com.





Pitch in

Advocates for a historic park at the west end of Hewitt Avenue will hold a work party Feb. 9 at 10 a.m. at the corner of Hewitt Avenue and Bond Street.

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