A century has passed since the Snohomish County courthouse burned down

EVERETT — A spark floated from across the street and ignited the Snohomish County Courthouse roof.

Flames quickly engulfed the French chateau-style building and burned it to the ground. Buildings around town soon erupted in flames, and everyone in Everett worried their homes could be next.

On Sunday, historians and politicians plan to mark the 100th anniversary of that tremendous fire, which destroyed the original courthouse and traumatized the young port city.

“It was a scary time,” said David Dilgard, a historian with Everett Public Library’s Northwest Room. Nearly everybody in the mill town was living in a house that could burn down.

Sunday’s events start with a courthouse tour at 10 a.m. and conclude with a 2 p.m. talk by Dilgard. Relatives of August Franklin Heide, the architect who designed the 1897 courthouse that burned down and the Spanish Mission-style building that rose in its place, planned to travel from out of state to attend.

The Everett Fire Department dedicated a chapter to the courthouse fire in its 1992 book “The Fire Boys: 100 years of Everett Firefighter History.” The department had never seen so many fires burning at once, nor has it since, said Everett fire Capt. Kenneth Dammand, the book’s managing editor.

At the time, The Everett Herald reported flames roaring down from the courthouse roof through the floors, one by one, fanned by a strong northwest wind.

“There was little hose and little water to combat the blaze,” the paper wrote. “County officials and clerks scrambled like mad men endeavoring to rescue valuable county books.”

In the end, a dozen buildings were destroyed and three others were damaged. Losses were estimated at $150,000. No one was killed.

The fire started at J.K. Healy’s blacksmith shop about 3 p.m. A spark fell through the floor and ignited a pile of hay. The wooden building at 3014 Wetmore Ave. was quickly consumed. Embers that the wind carried across Wetmore set the moss on the courthouse roof ablaze.

Once county workers realized there was no saving the building, they removed furniture from the lower floors. Court records made it through because they were kept in fireproof vaults.

Firefighters came from Snohomish, Seattle and Marysville to help but arrived too late to do much good, according to reports. Without more equipment, firefighters were unable to spray water beyond the second floor of the four-story building.

The blaze spread to a fire station on Wetmore Avenue, but fire crews were able to save most of the building and kept flames from spreading to the business district.

Other structures weren’t as fortunate. A barn near Hoyt and Hewitt avenues caught fire. More buildings followed.

Everett fire chiefs had been asking for more equipment and more men. The 16-man department had three fire wagons, one ladder truck and one pumper, a 1906 Ahrens-Continental Steamer. The pumper that was used to help put out the courthouse fire is still on display at the Station 5 at Madison Street and Beverly Boulevard.

Noah Haglund: 425-339-3465, nhaglund@heraldnet.com. Diana Hefley: 425-339-3463, hefley@heraldnet.com.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Snohomish residents Barbara Bailey, right, and Beth Jarvis sit on a gate atop a levee on Bailey’s property on Monday, May 13, 2024, at Bailey Farm in Snohomish, Washington. Bailey is concerned the expansion of nearby Harvey Field Airport will lead to levee failures during future flood events due to a reduction of space for floodwater to safely go. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Harvey Field seeks to reroute runway in floodplain, faces new pushback

Snohomish farmers and neighbors worry the project will be disruptive and worsen flooding. Ownership advised people to “read the science.”

IAM District 751 machinists join the picket line to support Boeing firefighters during their lockout from the company on Thursday, May 16, 2024, in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Amid lockout, Boeing, union firefighters return to bargaining table

The firefighters and the planemaker held limited negotiations this week: They plan to meet again Monday, but a lockout continues.

Bothell
2 injured in Bothell Everett Highway crash

The highway was briefly reduced to one northbound lane while police investigated the three-car crash Saturday afternoon.

Heavy traffic northbound on 1-5 in Everett, Washington on August 31, 2022.  (Kevin Clark / The Herald)
On I-5 in Everett, traffic nightmare is reminder we’re ‘very vulnerable’

After a police shooting shut down the freeway, commutes turned into all-night affairs. It was just a hint of what could be in a widespread disaster.

Anthony Brock performs at Artisans PNW during the first day of the Fisherman’s Village Music Fest on Thursday, May 16, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
At downtown Everett musical festival: ‘Be weird and dance with us’

In its first night, Fisherman’s Village brought together people who “might not normally be in the same room together” — with big acts still to come.

Two troopers place a photo of slain Washington State Patrol trooper Chris Gadd outside District 7 Headquarters about twelve hours after Gadd was struck and killed on southbound I-5 about a mile from the headquarters on Saturday, March 2, 2024, in Marysville, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Judge reduces bail for driver accused of killing Marysville trooper

After hearing from Raul Benitez Santana’s family, a judge decreased bail to $100,000. A deputy prosecutor said he was “very disappointed.”

Pet detective Jim Branson stops to poke through some fur that Raphael the dog found while searching on Saturday, March 2, 2024, in Everett, Washington. Branson determined the fur in question was likely from a rabbit, and not a missing cat.(Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Lost a pet? Pet detective James Branson and his dogs may be able to help

James Branson, founder of Three Retrievers Lost Pet Rescue, helps people in the Seattle area find their missing pets for $350.

Community Transit leaders, from left, Chief Communications Officer Geoff Patrick, Zero-Emissions Program Manager Jay Heim, PIO Monica Spain, Director of Maintenance Mike Swehla and CEO Ric Ilgenfritz stand in front of Community Transit’s hydrogen-powered bus on Monday, May 13, 2024, at the Community Transit Operations Base in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
New hydrogen, electric buses get trial run in Snohomish County

As part of a zero-emission pilot program from Community Transit, the hydrogen bus will be the first in the Puget Sound area.

Two people fight on the side of I-5 neat Marysville. (Photo provided by WSDOT)
Video: Man charged at trooper, shouting ‘Who’s the boss?’ before shooting

The deadly shooting shut down northbound I-5 near Everett for hours. Neither the trooper nor the deceased had been identified as of Friday.

Two people fight on the side of I-5 neat Marysville. (Photo provided by WSDOT)
Road rage, fatal police shooting along I-5 blocks traffic near Everett

An attack on road workers preceded a report of shots fired Thursday, snarling freeway traffic in the region for hours.

The Port of Everett and Everett Marina on Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2023 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Is Port of Everett’s proposed expansion a ‘stealth tax?’ Judge says no

A Snohomish resident lost a battle in court this week protesting what he believes is a misleading measure from the Port of Everett.

Pablo Garduno and the team at Barbacoa Judith’s churn out pit-roasted lamb tacos by the dozen at the Hidden Gems Weekend Market on Sunday, April 28, 2024, at Boom City in Tulalip, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Eating our way through Tulalip’s Hidden Gems weekend market

Don’t miss the pupusas, pit-roasted lamb tacos, elotes and even produce for your next meal.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.