Capitol Hill, Seattle
Capitol Hill | ||
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ZIP code 98102, 98112, 98122 |
Capitol Hill is a densely populated residential district in Seattle, Washington, United States. One of the city's most popular nightlife and entertainment districts, it is home to a historic gay village and vibrant counterculture community.
History
In the early 1900s Capitol Hill was known as 'Broadway Hill' after the neighborhood's main thoroughfare.
Capitol Hill is home to some of Seattle's wealthiest neighborhoods, including "Millionaire's Row" along 14th Avenue E. south of Volunteer Park (family residences on tree-lined streets) and the
During the
Geography
Capitol Hill is situated on a steep hill just east of the city's downtown central business district. It is bounded by
Capitol Hill's main thoroughfare is Broadway, the commercial heart of the district. Other major streets in the area are 10th, 12th, 15th, and 19th Avenues, all running north–south, and E. Pine, E. Pike, E. John, E. Thomas, and E. Aloha Streets and E. Olive Way, running east–west. Of these streets, large portions of E. Pike Street, E. Pine Street, Broadway, 15th Avenue, and E. Olive Way are lined almost continuously with street-level retail. The Pike-Pine corridor (the area between Pike and Pine streets) from Boren Avenue through 15th Street is another main thoroughfare in Capitol Hill, full of coffee shops, bars, restaurants, and other food and music businesses. The neighborhood is largely characterized by mid-rise buildings occupied by an eclectic mix of businesses.
The highest point on Capitol Hill, at 444.5 feet (135.5 m) above sea level, is in Volunteer Park, adjacent to the water tower. Capitol Hill is also the location of half of Seattle's 12 steepest street grades: 21% on E. Roy Street between 25th and 26th Avenues E. (eastern slope), 19% on E. Boston Street between Harvard Avenue E. and Broadway E. (western slope) and on E. Ward Street between 25th and 26th Avenues E. (eastern slope), and 18% on E. Highland Drive between 24th and 25th Avenues E. (eastern slope), on E. Lee Street between 24th and 25th Avenues E. (eastern slope), and on E. Roy Street between Melrose and Bellevue Avenues E. (western slope).
Transportation
The
The First Hill Streetcar line, which opened in January 2016, terminates in the neighborhood on Broadway at Denny Way, just south of the Link light rail station. Capitol Hill was previously served by city-run streetcars until 1940.[11]
Bus transit service to and within Capitol Hill is provided by King County Metro, including routes 10, 12, 43 and 49 of the Seattle trolleybus system. The City of Seattle and King County Metro are under construction on the Rapid Ride G bus line along Madison Street, connecting from downtown Seattle, through First Hill, then Capitol Hill, and beyond to Madison Valley and Madison Park. The bus line will include 6-minute headways during peak times, and center-boarding stations between 9th and 13th avenues.[12]
Culture
Arts and entertainment
Capitol Hill has a reputation as a bastion of musical culture in Seattle and is the neighborhood most closely associated with the grunge scene from the early 1990s, although most of the best-known music venues of that era were actually located slightly outside the neighborhood. The music scene has transformed since those days and now a variety of genres (electronica, rock, punk, folk, salsa, hip hop and trance) are represented.
The neighborhood figures prominently in nightlife and entertainment, with many bars hosting live music and with numerous fringe theatres. Most of the Hill's major thoroughfares are dotted with coffeehouses, taverns and bars, and residences cover the gamut from modest motel-like studio apartment buildings to some of the city's most historic mansions, with the two types sometimes shoulder-to-shoulder.
Capitol Hill is also home to two of the city's best-known movie theaters, both of which are part of the
Since 1997, Capitol Hill has hosted the Capitol Hill Block Party annually in late July, an outdoor music festival that occurs on Pike Street between Broadway and 12th Ave and Union and Pine Street.
Coffeehouses
Besides the large Seattle-based chains—Starbucks, Seattle's Best Coffee (now owned by Starbucks), and Tully's Coffee—Capitol Hill has been home to some of the city's most prominent locally owned coffeehouses. David Schomer's Espresso Vivace on Broadway is credited as the birthplace of artisanal coffee culture and latte art in Seattle and the United States as a whole.[14] The neighborhood is also considered a test market for coffeehouses by Starbucks Corporation, which placed two stealth Starbucks stores on Capitol Hill in 2009 and 2011 that were later closed by 2019.[15]
LGBTQ community
This section's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (July 2020) |
A bourgeoning counterculture community on Capitol Hill in the mid-20th century became a magnet for LGBTQ people seeking community acceptance at a time when the city's earlier gay capital in Downtown Seattle's (notoriously rowdy) Pioneer Square was in decline.[16] As a result, large-scale gay residential settlement of Capitol Hill began in the early 1960s, and the district continues to be home to a sizable number of LGBTQ people, making Capitol Hill Seattle's "gayborhood".[17]
The roots of the LGBTQ community on Capitol Hill can be traced to a change in the demographics and culture of the city as a whole in the 1950s and 1960s. LGBTQ Seattleites had long congregated in Pioneer Square, often interchangeably termed "Skid Road," and had built up a community in establishments such as the Double Header, the Casino, and the Garden of Allah (just north of the neighborhood). When the neighborhood, which houses many notable works of Victorian and Edwardian architecture, was targeted for urban renewal (and perhaps even prior), the Seattle Police Department engaged in extortion, allowing illegal homosexual practices and cross-dressing to continue only in bars which paid them off. The payoffs did not always guarantee security, and in 1966, citing alarm over the city's widespread image as a bastion of gay culture and tolerance, SPD planned a major house-cleaning of the gay bars in Pioneer Square. The gay community then began to migrate out of Downtown Seattle.[18][19]
The rise of American counterculture on the west coast took place during the same period. Although the
After the Elite Tavern, the first gay bar on Broadway, opened in the 1950s, the LGBTQ community on the Hill began to grow parallel to its decline in Pioneer Square. By the late 1960s, Capitol Hill was primed to become the local home base of the gay liberation movement and community throughout the decade following the Stonewall riots of 1969 in New York City.[18]
Capitol Hill was the birthplace of many notable LGBTQ organizations during the first 25 years of the gay rights movement. In July 1969, only a few days after the Stonewall riots, the Dorian Society opened Dorian House in Capitol Hill's Hilltop neighborhood, a locale which soon became an important hub of LGBTQ youth outreach. Now called Seattle Counseling Service, it was the first mental health organization in the United States specializing in affirming treatment of ostracized LGBTQ youth. In 1974, the Gay Community Center opened in the Hilltop area. In 1991, Lambert House LGBTQ youth community center, also in the Hilltop, opened its doors and became a model organization for queer youth outreach. After moving from Downtown in 1982, Seattle's official gay pride parades took place on Capitol Hill for several decades, and the annual festival continues to hold block parties on the Hill.[20] In the 1980s, the Northwest AIDS Foundation, the Chicken Soup Brigade, and the Evergreen Health Advocates formed to combat the growing HIV/AIDS epidemic, and eventually merged to become the Lifelong AIDS Alliance.[21][non-primary source needed]
The gay and bisexual male community on Capitol Hill was the epicenter of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the region.[17] In addition to the organizations that would become Lifelong, more services were created to serve the growing health needs of the gay community in the 1990s, including Pike-Pine's Gay City Health Project, formed in 1995.[22][non-primary source needed] Among the deceased in 1995 was Washington's first openly-gay legislator, Cal Anderson, who was the state legislative representative for Capitol Hill and the University District. In remembrance of Anderson's legacy, Lincoln Reservoir Park, the main Olmstedian centerpiece to the urban landscape of the Broadway, Pike-Pine, and Hilltop neighborhoods which form the core of Capitol Hill's LGBTQ community, was renamed in his honor.[20] In 2020, the plaza atop Capitol Hill light rail station adjacent to Cal Anderson Park became home to the AIDS Memorial Pathway, a permanent outdoor public art gallery commemorating victims of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.[23] In 2019, the block of E Denny Way at the light rail station that connects Broadway to Cal Anderson Park was renamed E Barbara Bailey Way, after a notable small business owner and LGBTQ rights activist.[24]
During Pride week of 2015, eleven permanent rainbow crosswalks were painted in the Capitol Hill portion of the Pike-Pine corridor.[25]
In 1993, the oldest gay bar on Broadway, the Elite Tavern, was bombed by neo-Nazis.[20] Capitol Hill has become the target of an increasing number of anti-LGBTQ hate crimes in the early 21st century.[26]
Landmarks and institutions
In addition to Volunteer Park, parks on Capitol Hill include Cal Anderson Park, Louisa Boren Park, Interlaken Park, Roanoke Park, Pendleton Miller Park, and Thomas Street Park. Lake View Cemetery, containing the graves of Bruce Lee and his son Brandon Lee, lies directly north of Volunteer Park, and the Grand Army of the Republic Cemetery is further north.
Also on the Hill are
The oldest
The First Methodist Protestant Church of Seattle, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was remodeled and is now[when?] occupied by a design and marketing firm.
There is one Jewish synagogue near Capitol Hill. Temple De Hirsch Sinai, whose Alhadeff Sanctuary was designed by B. Marcus Priteca, among others, is just south of Madison Street, placing it technically in the Central District.[28]
In 2021, St Patrick's church on East Edgar Street was named as one of three Catholic churches facing closure in a reorganization plan by the
References
- ^ "Seattle Annexation Map". Archived from the original on June 14, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Based on King County Census Tracts 64, 65, 74.01, 74.02, 75, 76, and 84" (PDF).
- ^ "Seattle Neighborhoods: Capitol Hill, Part 2 -- Thumbnail History". www.historylink.org. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
- ^ Dorpat, Paul (May 7, 2001). "Seattle Neighborhoods: Capitol Hill, Part 1 — Thumbnail History". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ISBN 978-0-295-98298-4.
- ^ Victor Steinbrueck, Seattle Cityscape, University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1962, p. 73.
- ^ "Protesters Establish Autonomous Zone Around Seattle PD Building as Police Retreat". Democracy Now!. June 9, 2020. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
- ^ Staff, MyNorthWest (June 9, 2020). "Live updates: Protesters establish 'Free Capitol Hill' near East Precinct". MyNorthwest. KIRO-FM. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Lee, Jessica (March 18, 2017). "Light-rail ridership soars in year after UW, Capitol Hill stations open". The Seattle Times. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
- ^ Lindblom, Mike (March 14, 2016). "Take a look inside Capitol Hill's long-awaited light-rail station". The Seattle Times. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
- ^ Deshais, Nicholas (September 25, 2019). "After a 76-year absence, streetcars return to Seattle's First Hill on January 23, 2016". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
- ^ "Madison - RapidRide G Line: Downtown Seattle to First Hill to Madison Valley". Seattle Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
- Seattle Met. Archivedfrom the original on October 10, 2023.
- ^ Romano, Tricia (October 22, 2015). "Vivace's David Schomer — not Starbucks — 'made coffee huge in Seattle'". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Millman, Zosha (February 18, 2019). "Starbucks closes final Capitol Hill non-Starbucks coffee house". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ McKenna, Kevin; Aguirre, Michael. "A Brief History of LGBTQ Activism in Seattle". Retrieved July 4, 2020.
- ^ a b Hill, Chrystie (November 28, 2003). "Queer History in Seattle, Part 2: After Stonewall". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ a b Hill, Chrystie (April 12, 2003). "Queer History in Seattle, Part 1: to 1967". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Crowley, Walt (June 20, 2001). "Seattle Neighborhoods: Pioneer Square — Thumbnail History". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ a b c d Caldbick, John (June 3, 2011). "Seattle Neighborhoods: Capitol Hill, Part 2 — Thumbnail History". HistoryLink. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ "About". Lifelong AIDS Alliance. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ "About Gay City". Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Doughton, Sandi (December 20, 2019). "The AIDS Memorial Pathway is getting closer to reality". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Takahama, Elise (June 26, 2019). "Capitol Hill street may be named in honor of LGBTQ+ rights champion Barbara Bailey". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Raghavendran, Beena (June 23, 2015). "Colorful crosswalks celebrate gay pride in Seattle". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ "Inside Seattle's continued rise in hate crime reports, Capitol Hill and borders of 'racially diverse' neighborhoods are hot spots". Capitol Hill Seattle Blog. May 13, 2019. Retrieved July 5, 2020.
- ^ Henry, Mary T. (December 31, 1998). "First African Methodist Episcopal Church (Seattle)". HistoryLink. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
- ^ Temple De Hirsch Sinai
- ^ "Seattle Archdiocese plan to close churches stirs sadness, anger and resistance". Seattle Times. August 7, 2021. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
- Kathryn McGrath, "Clubless in Seattle", University of Washington Daily Online, October 3, 1996: on the Teen Dance Ordinance.
External links
- Capitol Hill, Seattle, Washington is at coordinates 47°37′23″N 122°18′59″W / 47.622942°N 122.316456°W
- Heather MacIntosh, Preservation in Capitol Hill, Preservation Seattle (online publication of Historic Seattle), February 2004
- The Seattle Photograph Collection, Capitol Hill - University of Washington Digital Collection