成人X站

MYNORTHWEST HISTORY

All Over The Map: The story of William Grose, one of Seattle’s earliest black entrepreneurs

Jun 19, 2020, 11:23 AM | Updated: 11:23 am

William Grose is a 19th century wealthy Seattleite and community leader who isn鈥檛 as well-known as he should be in his adopted hometown. But that might be changing.

is located at East Howell Street and 30th Avenue East. The half-acre park is several blocks south of Madison Street, and a few blocks east of Martin Luther King Jr. Way. There are mature cedar trees and a Seattle 鈥渞ainbow sign鈥 announcing the name on the west side of the park; a winding paved path leads through a hilly meadow and past a few picnic tables over to the next block east.

The land was purchased by the City of Seattle in 1970 and was known as the generic 鈥30th Avenue Mini Park鈥 until 1983. An effort by and a group called Madison Valley Concerned Citizens resulted in the park being renamed for Grose, and a plaque was dedicated there in his honor on September 24, 1983.

William Grose鈥檚 relative anonymity in a city where early history is dominated by people with names like Denny and Yesler is probably because he was one of the first black people to call Seattle home. Grose, whose name was sometimes spelled 鈥淕ross,鈥 was born in 1835 in Washington, D.C., and seems to have been something of a larger-than-life character.

In addition to measuring 6-feet-2-inches in height, Grose is said to have weighed more than 400 pounds. At age 15, he joined the U.S. Navy and traveled extensively around the world, and was later in California during the later years of the Gold Rush there.

From California, Grose traveled to Panama to help free enslaved people, and headed to Canada during the Fraser Valley Gold Rush in the late 1850s. After working aboard a boat on Puget Sound and encountering Washington Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens, Grose settled in Seattle sometime around 1860.

When he first arrived in Seattle, Grose worked as a cook, but eventually opened up a restaurant of his own called 鈥淥ur House鈥 on the south side of Mill Street 鈥 now Yesler Way 鈥 at Commercial Street, or what鈥檚 First Avenue. A few years later, he built a three-story hotel, also called 鈥淥ur House,鈥 on Yesler鈥檚 Wharf a block or so away.

Grose famously fed future shipyard owner and future mayor Robert Moran for free when Moran first arrived in town, penniless and hungry; it鈥檚 likely Grose fed countless others this way who remained less well-known.

Business was good at the hotel and restaurant, and Grose became a wealthy man. One estimate from 1891 says that he had assets of more than a quarter-million dollars, and a newspaper account from around the same time describes him as one of the city鈥檚 most 鈥渆xtensive taxpayers.鈥

A decade before that, Grose purchased 12 acres of land in the Madison Valley from Henry Yesler and built a house (not too far from the future park) on 24th Avenue that still stands. Historians consider that property purchase as the nucleus of the black community which grew in that area beginning in the 19th century.

At least one source, a 1944 book written by Calvin Schmid and published by the University of Washington called 鈥淪ocial Trends in Seattle,鈥 describes the arrival of William Grose as a watershed for what could be considered a kind of 19th century “white flight.鈥

Schmid writes, 鈥淭he settlement of Negroes in the Madison hill district was in a real sense an historical accident related almost wholly to a unique character, William Gross … With the removal of Mr. Gross and his family to the hill [in the Madison neighborhood], the invasion of Negroes began. There was much opposition to the migration on the part of the white residents of the Madison area. Finally they decided to sell, but not to rent, to the newcomers.鈥

William Grose died in his 24th Avenue house in July 1898 of what was described as 鈥渄ropsy,鈥 which is the old term for edema or swelling (that was likely caused by some other underlying condition). He鈥檚 buried not far away at Lake View Cemetery.

William Grose Park is just one of the many places highlighted in a jewel of a book from 1997 called 鈥淭ribute: Seattle Public Places Named for Black People.鈥 It was written by Mary Henry, one of the founders of the Black Heritage Society of Washington, and is available from many online booksellers.

With a major recent development, William Grose may yet become better known in the city where he was once one of its wealthiest residents.

Earlier this week, that the City of Seattle will transfer at 23rd and Yesler to nonprofit .聽In the historic Art Deco structure, the group plans to create the William Grose Center for Enterprise and Cultural Innovation, which has been described as 鈥渁 long-planned incubator for Black-owned businesses.鈥

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

MyNorthwest History

Mount St.聽Helens...

成人X站 Newsradio staff

Landscape still bears the scars of Mount St. Helens eruption 45 years later

Sunday marks 45 years since Mount St. Helens erupted, killing 57 people and reshaping the landscape of southwest Washington, which still bears the scars of that devastating event.

5 days ago

The 鈥淥ld Faithful Avalanche Zone鈥 on Highway 2 over Stevens Pass, circa 1978. (Courtesy Rich Ma...

Ted Buehner

How 11 feet of snow led to America鈥檚 deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass in 1910

Discover how 11 feet of snow caused America's deadliest avalanche near Stevens Pass.

3 months ago

Image: This is a photo of the DC-7C airliner that took off from McChord Air Force Base on June 3, 1...

MyNorthwest Staff

Feliks Banel’s Flight 293 podcast ‘Unsolved Histories’ inspires Congress to take action

Feliks Banel's "What Happened to Flight 293" podcast has inspired the creation of bipartisan bills in the U.S. House and Senate.

4 months ago

Martin Luther King Jr. Day...

Terry Tang, The Associated Press

The long struggle to establish Martin Luther King Jr. Day

On the third Monday of January, federal, state and local governments recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

4 months ago

Image: Customers lined up outside the Skakey's in Renton on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. They were lookin...

Steve Coogan

Lines bust out the door as last Western Washington Shakey’s is set to close

The last Shakey's Pizza Parlor in Western Washington announced this week it will permanently close Monday.

4 months ago

Image: The exterior of the original Burgermaster in Seattle can be seen from the parking lot on Tue...

Steve Coogan

Burgermaster to close its original location in Seattle after 73 years

Burgermaster announced Wednesday it will close its original location in Seattle's University District at the end of February.

4 months ago

All Over The Map: The story of William Grose, one of Seattle’s earliest black entrepreneurs