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All Over The Map: Searching for the ‘Devil鈥檚 Elbow’ east of Renton

May 8, 2020, 9:11 AM | Updated: 9:11 am

With the pandemic keeping many people closer to home for a longer period than just about anyone can remember, it鈥檚 been noted here before that a lot of us are exploring the areas around where we live with new and deeper curiosity.

A Facebook friend posted a video the other day of a bike ride down in Renton east of Kennydale. The trail follows an old roadbed in a ravine along May Creek. This is in the area where the old Columbia & Puget Sound Railroad ran between Renton and Newcastle from the 1880s to 1930s.

In the post, he said this route was called the Devil鈥檚 Elbow, and that teenagers used to race up and down it back in the old days. A close look at the trail shows a fairly sharp and dangerous curve about midway down, and then a really sharp curve 鈥 almost a 鈥淭鈥 鈥 down near the bottom (which is just east of the Kennydale Memorial Hall).

Google Maps, not surprisingly, shows the route, but says nothing about the origins of the satanic name.

And I confess, I鈥檇 never heard of a Devil鈥檚 Elbow on the Eastside. I grew up several miles north of there on Rose Hill in Kirkland, and we had to settle for the non-demonic but still spooky 鈥淒eadman鈥檚 Curve鈥 on the Old Redmond Road.

Elizabeth Stewart, director of , shared some old maps of the area and excerpts from oral histories that reference Devil鈥檚 Elbow as a dangerous place to drive, and a place possibly associated with moonshine during Prohibition.

It appears that 鈥淒evil鈥檚 Elbow鈥 was the name that locals gave the roadway because of its treacherousness, but when that name was first applied remains unclear.

Perhaps this was sometime in the late 19th century as more settlers were arriving, and volume and frequency of travel on the old roadway 鈥 and maybe accidents at the sharp curve — were increasing. It鈥檚 also unclear what year it was first paved.

And those settlers may have been inspired by earlier place-namers elsewhere. The name 鈥淒evil鈥檚 Elbow鈥 can be found in other English-speaking parts of the world 鈥 Scotland, , , 聽鈥 and it was also applied to a few other Washington state locales.

There鈥檚 a Devil鈥檚 Elbow on the road (now Highway 2) to Steven鈥檚 Pass between Index and Gold Bar; the name was in use there more than a hundred years ago, and was the site of at least one fatal car accident. There鈥檚 also rock formation along the Skagit River called Devil鈥檚 Elbow, and that name might date back as early as the 1880s.

In the Renton area, the ravine along May Creek became a King County Park around 1970. There was a gravel pit in operation nearby for years, and the ravine was used as an illegal dump by residents.

In August 1970, a child died in an accident at the gravel pit when a sandy hillside collapsed, and the gravel pit was ordered closed soon after. discarded the body of a victim in the ravine around the same time.

Before the Devil鈥檚 Elbow was closed to vehicles in the mid 1980s, the official (and much less colorful) name of the road was SE 95th Way.颅颅 In the area east of Honey Dew Creek Trail, the remaining roadway is now called 95th Way SE.

About a mile north, a nearby stretch of roadway that remains open to traffic and that has its own treacherous curve is SE May Creek Park Drive.

If you know of other unofficial (and hopefully more colorful) names for roads, curves or other geographic places like neighborhoods and parks around Washington, please reach out using my contact information below.

You can hear Feliks every Wednesday and Friday morning on Seattle鈥檚 Morning News and read more from him聽here. If you have a story idea, please email Feliks聽here.

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All Over The Map: Searching for the ‘Devil鈥檚 Elbow’ east of Renton