In August of 2001, I drove from my Californian home up to Seattle to see the ever-magnificent Sleater-Kinney open for Patti Smith at the Summer Nights At The Pier Concert Series. While there, I decided it was as good a time as any to visit historic Pioneer Square and take The Underground Tour. Being one of those strange people who adore old urban ruins, I’d be waiting for years to go on this tour – which takes you past some of the original 1890’s-era storefronts that now rest well under Seattle’s street level. You see, back in the 1800’s, Seattle had horrible plumbing problems caused by the high water table and a poorly designed septic system. The pipes emptied into the ocean, and the fluctuation of the water level when the tide would come in made flushing a decidedly dangerous prospect. You see, if someone didn’t pay attention to the tide schedule and flushed during high tide, the toilet would flush in the opposite way that it was intended. Can you say, “Ewwwwwwwwwwwww!!!!”?
Then, on June 6, 1889, a furniture maker left a pot of glue unattended on a stove, which ignited a conflagration which burned wooden downtown Seattle to the ground in a matter of hours. It was a tragedy… but one which actually turned out to be beneficial to the city, because a group of majestic brick and masonry buildings began to be raised in place of the rickety wooden structures that had burned. Then, the citizens decided to try to fix the plumbing while they were at it by raising the ground level up a story, thus allowing room for gravity to work wonders on the pipelines and fix the tide-induced flushing problems. This decision was made after the buildings were already completed – or nearing completion – so the streets were raised up above the ground floor – so that when you wander around Pioneer Square today, you’re actually entering the buildings through the second floor. In order to access the first floor stores, there was a group of subterranean walkways – and these remained open to the public until 1906, when access was closed off… only to be reopened by Bill Speidel for his Underground Tour years later. A great deal of this network of subterranean walkways was destroyed when the Seattle Kingdome was built, unfortunately, but there’s still enough preserved to provide a fascinating view of Underground Seattle.
But enough with my yapping – here are some images I took during the stroll beneath Seattle:
Because the conditions for photography on this day weren’t ideal, I decided to purchase a collection of Pioneer Square prints that provide a much more attractive overview of the area:

This is the entrance to the Underground Tour in Pioneer Square. Bill Speidel felt the Underground Tour would save Pioneer Square and it worked. In 1970, Pioneer Square became Seattle’s first historic district.
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The tour begins at Doc Maynard’s historic bar. The bar you see in this picture was manufactured over a hundred years ago in Chicago and travelled here by ship around Cape Horn to Seattle.
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A picturesque dusty corner of the old Moses Korn Mercantile Emporium, one of the subterranean stops on the Underground Tour.
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A better-lighted shot of the old toilet.
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Undergound windows peering out to underground sidewalks. These windows brought in daylight until the streets of Seattle were raised making the ground floor the underground floor, and the second floor became ground level.
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Looking up at the original skylights in the sidewalk…
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The subterranean passageways of Seattle’s Underground became a haven for bootleggers, smugglers and tourists – not to mention a few rats, of course.
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One of the saddest stories I heard was regarding this beautiful old Pergola that stood in Pioneer Square from 1909 until 2001 – when an idiotic semi-truck driver misjudged his turn and took down the entire structure.
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The Pergola is being rebuilt – and hopefully a great deal of the original structure can be used to raise it again to its former beauty – as seen above.
UPDATE: Wayne from Seattle has informed me that the Pergola is “back in all its glory”! Hurray!
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Here’s the Tlinget totem pole – another historic Seattle structure – with the top of the Smith Tower behind it.
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I also took a shot of the totem pole while I was there. In true Seattle style, the pole wasn’t given to the city – it was stolen from a Tlinget camp by city representatives on a goodwill trip to Alaska. Seattle was a town founded by scoundrels, and you hear lots of stories about them during the tour. Very entertaining, indeed! Here’s another shot of Smith Tower – the building you see poking above Pioneer Square in the postcard images above. Pioneer Square is an extremely lovely area of the city and one that I really need to go back to again. There just wasn’t enough time on this trip to do all the exploring I desired… |