Queen Anne is a neighborhood and geographic feature in
Seattle, Washington, United States, located northwest of
downtown
''Downtown'' is a term primarily used in North America by English speakers to refer to a city's sometimes commercial, cultural and often the historical, political and geographic heart. It is often synonymous with its central business distric ...
. The affluent neighborhood sits on the eponymous hill, whose maximum elevation is , making it Seattle's highest named hill. Queen Anne covers an area of , and has a population of about 28,000. It is bordered by
Belltown to the south,
Lake Union
Lake Union is a freshwater lake located entirely within the city limits of Seattle, Washington, United States. It is a major part of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, which carries fresh water from the much larger Lake Washington on the east to ...
to the east, the
Lake Washington Ship Canal
The Lake Washington Ship Canal, which runs through the city of Seattle, connects the fresh water body of Lake Washington with the salt water inland sea of Puget Sound. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks accommodate the approximately difference in w ...
to the north and
Interbay to the west.
The hill became a popular spot for the city's early economic and cultural elite to build their mansions. Its name is derived from the
architectural style in which many of the early homes were built.
Geography and history
Location and borders
Queen Anne is bounded on the north by the
Fremont Cut of the
Lake Washington Ship Canal
The Lake Washington Ship Canal, which runs through the city of Seattle, connects the fresh water body of Lake Washington with the salt water inland sea of Puget Sound. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks accommodate the approximately difference in w ...
, beyond which is
Fremont; on the west by 15th and Elliott Avenues West, beyond which is
Interbay,
Magnolia, and
Elliott Bay; on the east by
Lake Union
Lake Union is a freshwater lake located entirely within the city limits of Seattle, Washington, United States. It is a major part of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, which carries fresh water from the much larger Lake Washington on the east to ...
and
Aurora Avenue North, beyond which is
Westlake
Westlake may refer to:
Places
Australia
* Westlake, Canberra, a ghost town suburb of Canberra
* Westlake, Queensland, a suburb of Brisbane
New Zealand
* Westlake, New Zealand, a suburb of Auckland
** Westlake Girls High School
** Westlake Boys ...
. As a neighborhood
toponym, ''Queen Anne'' may include
Lower Queen Anne
Lower Queen Anne (officially known since 2021 as Uptown) is a neighborhood in Seattle, Washington (state), Washington, at the base of Queen Anne, Seattle, Queen Anne Hill. While its boundaries are not precise, the toponym usually refers to the sho ...
, also known as ''Uptown'', the area at the southern base of the hill, just north and west of
Seattle Center. Whether or not Lower Queen Anne is considered a separate neighborhood matters in setting Queen Anne's southern boundary, which is either West Mercer Street or Denny Way.
Queen Anne can be reached from
Interstate 5 via the Mercer Street Exit (Exit 167). The neighborhood's main thoroughfares are Gilman Drive West, 3rd Avenue West, Queen Anne Avenue North, Boston Street, and a set of streets, collectively known as
Queen Anne Boulevard
Queen Anne Boulevard is a loop atop Seattle, Washington's Queen Anne Hill. It is a City of Seattle landmark. Authorized in 1907 and built from 1911 to 1916, it incorporates parts of 5th, 7th, 8th and 10th Avenues West; Bigelow Avenue North; West ...
, that loop around the crown of the hill and reflect a comprehensive boulevard design in the style of the
Olmsted Brothers architectural firm. The design was never fully executed, but it remains part of the Seattle Parks System.
While Queen Anne stands out in Seattle geography due to its proximity to downtown and three television broadcast towers, the highest point in the city, above sea level, is in
West Seattle. Queen Anne slopes are home to seven of the twenty steepest streets in the city and 120 pedestrian staircases.
Demographics
Including the sub-neighborhoods of ''North Queen Anne'', ''West Queen Anne'', ''East Queen Anne'' and ''Lower Queen Anne'' (or ''Uptown''), Queen Anne has approximately 19,000 households and a total population of about 36,000. Queen Anne is disproportionately populated by unmarried, white, young adults. The population is more racially homogeneous than Seattle as a whole.
Significant events
The Vashon
Glacier carved Queen Anne Hill's
topography more than 13,000 years ago, and human habitation in the area began some 3000 years ago. When white settlers arrived in the mid-19th century, the
Duwamish tribe maintained a seasonal presence in and around Queen Anne.
White settlement of Queen Anne stemmed from the arrival of the
Denny Party at
West Seattle's Alki Point
Alki Point is a point jutting into Puget Sound, the westernmost landform in the West Seattle district of Seattle, Washington. Alki is the peninsular neighborhood on Alki Point. Alki was the original settlement in what was to become the city of S ...
in November 1851. In 1853,
David Denny staked a claim to of land the Duwamish called ''baba'kwoh'', prairies, known today as Lower Queen Anne, and bounded by Elliott Bay to the west, Lake Union to the east, Mercer Street to the north, and Denny Way to the south. Denny called the area "Potlach Meadows". Development of the hill, called at various times North Seattle, Galer Hill, and Eden Hill, was slow. Then an 1875 windstorm flattened thousands of trees on Queen Anne, making the previously dense forest more appealing for settlement. The hill began to be called "Queen Anne" by 1885, after the
Queen Anne style houses that dominated the area. The arrival of the
Northern Pacific Railway
The Northern Pacific Railway was a transcontinental railroad that operated across the northern tier of the western United States, from Minnesota to the Pacific Northwest. It was approved by Congress in 1864 and given nearly of land grants, whic ...
(1883) and the
Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway (1887), the
Great Seattle Fire of 1889, and the opening of three
cable car Cable car most commonly refers to the following cable transportation systems:
* Aerial lift, such as aerial tramways and gondola lifts, in which the vehicle is suspended in the air from a cable
** Aerial tramway
** Chairlift
** Gondola lift
*** Bi ...
lines to the top of the hill starting in 1890, including the
Queen Anne Counterbalance
The Queen Anne Counterbalance was a funicular streetcar line operated by the Seattle Electric Company, serving the steep slope along its namesake street on Queen Anne Hill in Seattle, Washington, from 1901 to 1940. It replaced an earlier cable ca ...
, further encouraged residential and business development.
The 1917 opening of the
Lake Washington Ship Canal
The Lake Washington Ship Canal, which runs through the city of Seattle, connects the fresh water body of Lake Washington with the salt water inland sea of Puget Sound. The Hiram M. Chittenden Locks accommodate the approximately difference in w ...
, and the
Fremont and
Ballard Bridges over it, made the area more appealing for maritime and timber industries, and connected Queen Anne with communities to the north. On the south side of the hill, the 1927 completion of a Civic Center (with auditorium, ice arena and football field) on David Denny's Potlach Meadows land brought residents from all over the city to Queen Anne for concerts and sporting events.
The first
television broadcast in the
Pacific Northwest originated from the hill in November 1948, when KRSC-TV (now
KING-TV
KING-TV (channel 5) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Everett-licensed independent station KONG (channel 16). Both stations share studios at the Home Plate ...
) signed-on from its transmitting tower at Third Avenue North and Galer Street.
KOMO-TV installed its own tower nearby, on Galer Street and Orange Place North, and began operations from there in December 1953, and
KIRO-TV
KIRO-TV (channel 7) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with CBS and Telemundo. Owned by Cox Media Group, the station maintains studios on Third Avenue in the Belltown section of Downtown Seattle, and its ...
went on the air in February 1958 from a tower adjacent to its original studios on Queen Anne Avenue.
"The 1962 Seattle
World's Fair was perhaps the most transformational single event in the history of Queen Anne", according to historians Florence K. Lentz and Mimi Sheridan. Named the
Century 21 Exposition, the fair expanded on existing Civic Center infrastructure on the old ''baba'kwoh'' swale. After the fair, the grounds became the
Seattle Center, home to the
Space Needle,
Pacific Science Center,
Experience Music Project,
Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame, the north terminal of the
Seattle monorail and
KeyArena.
The
Seattle SuperSonics began playing at the then-
Seattle Center Coliseum
Climate Pledge Arena is a multi-purpose indoor arena in Seattle, Washington, United States. It is located north of Downtown Seattle in the entertainment complex known as Seattle Center, the site of the 1962 World's Fair, for which it was or ...
in 1967. The
Seattle Thunderbirds hockey team began play next door at the Mercer Street Arena in 1977. The
Seattle Storm
The Seattle Storm are an American professional basketball team based in Seattle. The Storm competes in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) as a member club of the league's Western Conference. The team was founded by Ginger Ackerl ...
basketball team began play at KeyArena in 2000.
As late as 1964, the area had a large enough population of families with children to motivate opening McClure Middle School, but by 1981 a decline in such families led the school system to close Queen Anne High School, North Queen Anne Elementary School, and West Queen Anne Elementary School.
Assistant
United States Attorney Thomas C. Wales was shot in his home in the Queen Anne neighborhood on October 11, 2001, dying the next day of his wounds. The murder remains unsolved.
Landmarks
Queen Anne is home to 29
official Seattle landmarks, including 12 historic houses. A group of
residences on 14th Avenue West, built between 1890 and 1910, include one of the few remaining
Queen Anne style houses on the hill. The
North Queen Anne Drive Bridge, built in 1936 across Wolf Creek, is a
parabolic steel arch bridge, declared a historic landmark for its unique engineering style. One of the oldest wooden-hulled
tugboats still afloat, the ''
Arthur Foss'', is moored near the base of Queen Anne.
Queen Anne Boulevard
Queen Anne Boulevard is a loop atop Seattle, Washington's Queen Anne Hill. It is a City of Seattle landmark. Authorized in 1907 and built from 1911 to 1916, it incorporates parts of 5th, 7th, 8th and 10th Avenues West; Bigelow Avenue North; West ...
, which circles the crown of the hill, and some of the original
retaining walls complete with decorative
brickwork,
balustrade
A baluster is an upright support, often a vertical moulded shaft, square, or lathe-turned form found in stairways, parapets, and other architectural features. In furniture construction it is known as a spindle. Common materials used in its con ...
s, and
street light
A street light, light pole, lamp pole, lamppost, street lamp, light standard, or lamp standard is a raised source of light on the edge of a road or path. Similar lights may be found on a railway platform. When urban electric power distribution ...
s, are also designated landmarks. Although not located at Queen Anne and no longer located west of present-day
Seattle Center, the Denny Cabin was built by
David Denny in 1889 as a real-estate office and was made from trees cut down on Queen Anne Hill.
Community services
Businesses
An stretch of Queen Anne Avenue North between West McGraw and West Galer Streets serves as the spine of the
central business district
A central business district (CBD) is the commercial and business centre of a city. It contains commercial space and offices, and in larger cities will often be described as a financial district. Geographically, it often coincides with the "city ...
. The Greater Queen Anne
Chamber of Commerce
A chamber of commerce, or board of trade, is a form of business network. For example, a local organization of businesses whose goal is to further the interests of businesses. Business owners in towns and cities form these local societies to ad ...
is an association of neighborhood business leaders. Queen Anne hosts a weekly
farmers' market between June and October.
News and information
The ''Queen Anne News'' is a weekly
community newspaper founded in 1919 and published by the
Pacific Publishing Company. The ''Queen Anne View'' is a neighborhood news
blog.
Schools
Within the
Seattle Public Schools district, Queen Anne is home to six public schools.
* Cascade Parent Partnership
* Frantz Coe Elementary
* John Hay Elementary (which has had three different buildings, all on Queen Anne Hill)
* Queen Anne Elementary
* McClure Middle School
*
The Center School
Two former schools,
Queen Anne High School and
West Queen Anne School
The West Queen Anne School was a Seattle public elementary school located in the Queen Anne, Seattle neighborhood from 1896 to 1981 and is now high-end condominiums. The School was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 as Que ...
, are on the
National Register of Historic Places. Both are now condominium apartment buildings.
Queen Anne has five
private schools.
* Queen Anne Community School
* St. Anne School
*
Seattle Country Day School
*
Seattle Waldorf High School
* The Downtown School, A Lakeside School
Seattle Pacific University, a private
university founded in 1891 by the
Free Methodist Church of North America, has 4000 undergraduate and graduate students on a campus on the north slope of Queen Anne.
Library
The Queen Anne branch of the
Seattle Public Library is housed in a 1914 building funded by
Andrew Carnegie and built in late
Tudor Revival architecture style. The structure, renovated in 2007, is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places and has been named a landmark by Seattle's Landmarks Preservation Board.
Parks and cemeteries
The
Seattle Parks and Recreation department maintains 24 parks on Queen Anne.
Kerry Park
Kerry Park is a small public park and viewpoint on the south slope of Queen Anne Hill in Seattle, Washington, United States. It overlooks Downtown Seattle and is located along West Highland Drive between 2nd Avenue West and 3rd Avenue West. Th ...
, located on Highland Drive, covers a mere , but boasts one of the most attractive views of the city, with downtown at the center of focus along with the Space Needle, and on clear days,
Mount Rainier
Mount Rainier (), indigenously known as Tahoma, Tacoma, Tacobet, or təqʷubəʔ, is a large active stratovolcano in the Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest, located in Mount Rainier National Park about south-southeast of Seattle. With a s ...
in the background. From this point there are also views of
Elliott Bay and
West Seattle.
Kinnear Park
Kinnear Park is a park on the southwest slope of Queen Anne Hill in Seattle, Washington, United States located between W. Olympic Place on the northeast, W. Mercer Place and Elliott Avenue W. on the southwest, the 9th Avenue W. right of way on t ...
, with of
woodland and grass, is Queen Anne's largest park, offering views of the
grain elevator
A grain elevator is a facility designed to stockpile or store grain. In the grain trade, the term "grain elevator" also describes a tower containing a bucket elevator or a pneumatic conveyor, which scoops up grain from a lower level and deposits ...
at
Pier 86. Rachel's Park, formerly Soundview Terrace, is a play area on the west slope of the hill named after Rachel Pearson, a 6-year-old girl who died on
Alaska Airlines Flight 261 in 2000. Queen Anne Bowl, adjacent to the 9.2 David Rodgers Park on the north slope of Queen Anne, has a dirt
running track and synthetic surface
soccer pitch. Bhy Kracke Park in East Queen Anne, features "one of the best views in the city," a playground, picnic shelter, several small grassy areas, and a paved walking path connecting the different levels of the park. West Queen Anne Playfield includes a community center, indoor
swimming pool
A swimming pool, swimming bath, wading pool, paddling pool, or simply pool, is a structure designed to hold water to enable Human swimming, swimming or other leisure activities. Pools can be built into the ground (in-ground pools) or built ...
, and
baseball and
softball fields.
Queen Anne has two
cemeteries
A cemetery, burial ground, gravesite or graveyard is a place where the remains of dead people are buried or otherwise interred. The word ''cemetery'' (from Greek , "sleeping place") implies that the land is specifically designated as a buri ...
. Mount Pleasant Cemetery contains the remains of the unknown dead of the 1906 disaster, as well as many early Seattle pioneers, and Filipino-American author and activist
Carlos Bulosan. A memorial to the dead of the 1916
Everett Massacre is located in the northeast section of the cemetery. During World War II, the cemetery served as a site for
anti-aircraft defenses.
[Wilma, David]
Seattle Neighborhoods: Queen Anne Hill -- Thumbnail History
HistoryLink. Retrieved March 5, 2011. Hills of Eternity Cemetery, owned and operated by
Temple De Hirsch Sinai
Temple De Hirsch Sinai is a Reform Jewish congregation with campuses in Seattle and nearby Bellevue, Washington, USA. It was formed as a 1971 merger between the earlier Temple De Hirsch (Seattle, founded 1899) and Temple Sinai (Bellevue, founded 1 ...
, is adjacent to Mount Pleasant.
Government and infrastructure
Queen Anne Hill is part of
Washington's 7th congressional district and 36th legislative district. Queen Anne residents are represented by
Pramila Jayapal in the
United States House of Representatives,
Jeanne Kohl-Welles
Jeanne Elizabeth Pearl Kohl-Welles (née Jean Elizabeth Pearl Kohl; October 19, 1942) is an American politician and academic. Since January 2016 she has served as a member of the King County Council from the 4th district. She previously served as ...
in the
Washington State Senate,
Reuven Carlyle
Reuven Michael Carlyle (born August 10, 1965) is an entrepreneur and American politician who served as a Democratic member of the Washington legislature representing the Washington's 36th legislative district in the state house between 2009 and ...
and
Mary Lou Dickerson
Mary Lou Dickerson (born September 3, 1946) is an American politician who served as a Democratic member of the Washington House of Representatives, representing the 36th district from 1995 until 2013.
Early life and education
Dickerson was born ...
in the
Washington House of Representatives, and
Larry Phillips on the Metropolitan
King County Council.
Queen Anne has two
ZIP codes: 98109 and 98119. The
United States Postal Service operates the Queen Anne Post Office at 415 1st Avenue North.
The
Seattle Fire Department maintains two
stations
Station may refer to:
Agriculture
* Station (Australian agriculture), a large Australian landholding used for livestock production
* Station (New Zealand agriculture), a large New Zealand farm used for grazing by sheep and cattle
** Cattle statio ...
on Queen Anne.
Notable people
Past and present residents include:
*
Alden J. Blethen (1845–1915), newspaper publisher.
*
Betty Bowen
Betty Bowen (born Betty Cornelius) (1918–1977), was an American journalist and art promoter. She was born in Kent, Washington, and earned an English degree from the University of Washington. She worked briefly as a reporter for ''The Seattle Time ...
(1918–1977), journalist and art promoter; named "First Citizen of Seattle" two days before her death.
*
Arthur C. Brooks (1964–), social scientist and president of the American Enterprise Institute.
*
Jack Clay (1926–2019), acting teacher, director and actor.
*
George F. Cotterill
George Fletcher Cotterill (18 November 1865 – 13 October 1958), born in Oxford, England, was an American civil servant and politician. His public career in Seattle and the state of Washington lasted over 40 years; Cotterill was a Georgist pro ...
(1865–1958), city engineer, state senator and mayor.
*
David Denny (1832–1903), Seattle co-founder.
*
Robert E. Galer
Brigadier General Robert Edward Galer (24 October 1913 – 27 June 2005) was a naval aviator in the United States Marine Corps who received the Medal of Honor for heroism in aerial combat during the Battle of Guadalcanal in World War II. He went ...
(1913–2005), marine corps aviator and medal of honor winner.
[
* Hank Ketcham (1920–2001), cartoonist who created ''Dennis the Menace''.
* ]George Kinnear
George Kinnear (January 30, 1836 – July 21, 1912) was an early Seattle real estate developer, responsible for some of the early residential development of Queen Anne Hill. He also had a brief military career.Bagley 1916
He was born in Pickawa ...
(1836–1912), real estate developer.
* Lawrence Denny Lindsley (1879–1974), photographer, miner, hunter and guide.
* Gary Locke
Gary Faye Locke (born January 21, 1950) is an American politician and diplomat serving as the interim president of Bellevue College, the largest of the institutions that make up the Washington Community and Technical Colleges system. Locke serv ...
(1950–), governor and cabinet secretary and former Ambassador to China.
* Rick Parashar (1963–2014), record producer.
* Reginald Parsons
Reginald Hascall Parsons (October 3, 1873 - June 9, 1955) was a Seattle businessman and philanthropist during the first half of the twentieth century. He was born on Long Island, New York and came west to Seattle with his family in 1904 to manage ...
(1873–1955), businessman and philanthropist.
* Jonathan Raban (1942–), British travel writer and novelist.
* Gerard Schwarz (1947–), composer and conductor.
* Edo Vanni
Edo Joe Vanni (April 2, 1918 – April 30, 2007) was an American player, coach, manager and front office executive in minor league baseball. A lifelong resident of the Seattle area, he was called "the face of Seattle baseball" upon his death, ...
(1918–2007), baseball player and manager.
* Thomas C. Wales (1952–2001), federal prosecutor and gun control advocate gunned down in his Queen Anne Hill home.
* Mike Webb (1955–2007), radio talk show host and activist.
* Rick White (1953–), member of U.S. House of Representatives.
* Jake Lamb
Jacob Ryan Lamb (born October 9, 1990) is an American professional baseball infielder in the Los Angeles Angels organization. He made his MLB debut with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2014, and was an All-Star in 2017. He has also played in MLB fo ...
(1990–), baseball player.
* Love Family
The Love Family, or the Church of Jesus Christ at Armageddon, was a U.S. communal religious movement formed in 1968 and led by Paul Erdmann, who renamed himself Love Israel.
After a fractious conflict in 1984, the community was reduced to a s ...
(1940–), urban commune.
* Carlos Bulosan (1913–1956), Filipino-American novelist and poet.
* Sue Bird
Suzanne Brigit Bird (born October 16, 1980) is an American former professional basketball player who played her entire career with the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association ( WNBA) Bird was drafted by the Storm first over ...
(1980–), basketball player for the Seattle Storm, 4-time WNBA champion, 4-time Olympic Gold Medalist. [Voepel, Michelle]
"Ready To Let You In"
'' ESPN''. July 20, 2017.
References
External links
Queen Anne Community Council
Queen Anne Helpline
Seattle Photograph Collection, Queen Anne
– University of Washington Digital Collection
*
{{Seattle neighborhoods
Populated places established in 1852
1852 establishments in Oregon Territory