| As
published in the Queen Anne News, June 13, 2001
Why Is Our Community Named Queen
Anne?
By John Hennes, QAHS board
member, and a 1951 graduate of Queen Anne High School.
Our Society is frequently asked, “why is our community
called Queen Anne?” It does seem strange for a pioneer
western city to name its most prominent geographical feature
after a relatively obscure 18th century British monarch. The
short answer is that we are not named after the Queen, but
are in fact named for the architectural style of the first
houses built up the south slope of our hill. The longer answer
shows how centennials can shape our view of the world.
In the 1870s, in England, architect
Richard Norman Shaw introduced the Queen Anne or Free Classic residential design.
It was intended to evoke domestic
architecture of some 200 years earlier. The British public loved it, perhaps
tiring of the demands of empire and nostalgic for a simpler past.
In America, our own
first centennial was then approaching and at the huge Philadelphia
Centennial Exhibit in 1876 two model houses were built in the
Queen Anne style. Americans, experiencing a wave of centennial-induced
nostalgia for their own colonial past, immediately took to
the style. Henry Hobson Richardson, an American architect,
began shaping the Queen Anne to American uses. Half-timbered
and tiled exterior features were replaced by textured and shaped
shingles, so abundant in our west. Building magazines, like
American Builder, reproduced Queen Anne designs and spread
them across the country. In pioneer Seattle
the city was moving north. The large area north of Seattle’s
city limits was known as North Seattle. It stretched from Howell
Street, just south of Denny, to Salmon Bay and included the
large, unnamed hill we live on. Thomas Mercer platted the southeast
slopes in the 1870s and called it Eden Addition. Jacob Gaylor
later built on top of the hill and there were references to “Galer’s
Hill”. In 1883 North Seattle, north to McGraw Street,
was annexed into Seattle and the population surged. The population
of 3,533 in 1880 rose to 15,727 in 1889 and to 42,837 in 1890.
Yearly counts were made as part of the push to have Washington
made a state in the union, and not just a territory. The new middle class
citizens who built in North Seattle wanted to be in the mode
and built their homes in the newly arrived Queen Anne style.
Thus, coincidentally, the English Queen Anne style, caught
up in the American centennial fever, arrived in Seattle just
in time to spring up on the slopes of our hill.
Edmund S. Meany,
in his 1923 book Origin of Washington Geographic Names, describes
how, “about 1880, such citizens as Clarence Bagley, F.H.
Osgood (and others) built homes in the then prevailing Queen
Anne style of architecture. Rev. Daniel Bagley jokingly asked
folks if they were not ‘going out to Queen Anne Town’?
The name has persisted as to the hill, causing wonderment to
newcomers.” The name Queen Anne
Town appeared around 1885, mainly in real estate promotions.
The first regular school on the hill was named Queen Anne School
in 1890 (today’s West Queen Anne). By 1900 the “town” had
been dropped and the area was simply called Queen Anne Hill.
Most
of the houses built in the Queen Anne style have long since
been replaced by larger and more modern houses or by apartment
buildings. There are a handful left, such as 520 W. Kinnear
Place, the Ankeny house on Second Avenue W. and the Riddle
house on Highland Drive. The Queen Anne architectural
style lasted only two or three decades, being replaced by
Colonial
Revival and other styles in the 1900s.
Queen Anne houses
have steeply pitched roofs of irregular shape and often hipped,
usually with a front-facing gable; patterned shingles and other
devices to avoid a smooth-walled appearance; asymmetrical facades,
usually with large partial or full-width porches; and frequent
use of round towers. They can be half-timbered or partially
brick or stone, but in Seattle are usually all wood. There
will be considerable decorative touches such as porch columns
and spindlework borders with textured or patterned shingles
above windows and doors. If the Queen Anne
style was devised in the 1870s, what about the real Queen Anne?
Queen Anne reigned from 1702 to 1714. She was the last of the
Stuarts. None of her 17 children survived her and, upon her
death at age 49, Parliament was forced to turn to the Hannoverian
side of the royal family and George I. This is the ancestor
of today’s Queen Elizabeth. To see a true Queen Anne
house you could visit Mompesson House in Salisbury, England.
Built in 1701 and maintained by the National Trust, it is a
true house of Queen Anne’s period. The only common feature
seems to be the hipped roof. Photos
courtesy of the Author
|
Homes on Queen Anne Hill
in the Queen Anne Style

Ankeny-Gowey
House
an example on 2nd Ave. West

another example, this time on Kinnear Place

The Riddle House, ca. 2002

The Riddle House, ca. 1900
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