Introduction

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
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Seattle is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Washington and the chief financial and commercial center of the Pacific Northwest. It is also one of the largest and most affluent urban centers in the United States. A major port of entry and an air and sea gateway to Asia and Alaska, Seattle lies alongside Puget Sound, a deep inland arm of the northern Pacific Ocean. The city is surrounded by areas of great natural beauty, including the densely forested Olympic Peninsula to the west and the lofty Cascade Range to the east.

The city owes its name to the Native American leader Seattle, chief of the Duwamish and other Puget Sound tribes who befriended early white settlers of the region in the 1850s. After becoming known for its logging and sawmill operations, the town of Seattle was incorporated as a city in 1869. It became the main supply depot for the Yukon and Alaskan gold rushes in the 1890s. World War II later brought a great boom to the city, with shipyards and the aircraft industry playing important roles. Seattle continued to grow rapidly in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, aided by the arrival of many highly skilled workers from around the world. Today, the city is one of the world’s leading centers for high-technology businesses and Internet-based commerce.

Despite Seattle’s enormous growth, it still maintains a high level of social and public services and excellent schools. Its abundant parks and greenbelts have earned it the nickname “the Emerald City.” Seattle is consistently rated one of North America’s most livable cities.

Cityscape

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Bodies of water surround Seattle and punctuate its landscape. The central portion of the city faces Elliott Bay, the aquatic lawn of the city’s downtown. Elliott Bay is itself a part of Puget Sound, a 100-mile- (160-kilometer-) long inlet that stretches northward to Juan de Fuca Strait. Until the railroads reached Seattle in the late 19th century, this waterway provided the primary means of access to the city. To the east of Seattle lies serene Lake Washington. It is about 22 miles (35 kilometers) long and is fed by numerous streams, rivulets, and brooks flowing from the Cascade Range. Between Puget Sound and Lake Washington lie Salmon Bay, Lake Union, Portage Bay, and Union Bay, which are connected to their neighbors by the Lake Washington Ship Canal. Green Lake, a large urban body of water, is a summertime attraction for residents who live in the city’s northern sectors.

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Although Seattle lies at sea level, it is far from flat. It is a city of hills, and many of its neighborhoods take their names from the topography. Among these are First Hill and Capitol Hill northeast of downtown and Beacon Hill to the south. In addition, Seattle is graced with a necklace of urban parks and boulevards. These were planned between 1900 and 1910 by a firm run by sons of landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who planned New York City’s Central Park. The Olmsteds’ plan continues to emphasize the closeness of human beings to nature. Seattle is also cradled between the Olympic and Cascade mountain ranges. The most famous peak of the Cascade Range, Mount Rainier, majestically stands to the southeast of the city. On a clear day these mountains provide spectacular vistas from all parts of town.

Seattle has grown from its historic center of Pioneer Square, the city’s oldest neighborhood and a federally designated historic district. The area’s redbrick townhouses, once residential, now house art galleries, restaurants, bookshops, and small businesses of many kinds. The square is also the site of the 42-story Smith Tower, which upon its completion in 1914 was the largest building west of the Mississippi River. For 50 years it remained Seattle’s tallest structure. Then in 1964 the Seattle-First National Bank Building was built, and for a decade it dominated the cityscape. In the 1970s office towers sprouted. The Financial Center was erected in 1972, and the Federal Building in 1974. Rainier Tower, the work of the noted architect Minoru Yamasaki, was built in 1977. In 1984, with the construction of the 76-story Columbia Center, Seattle once again claimed the tallest building in the western United States. However, the Columbia Center has since been surpassed in height by several buildings in California.

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To the south of Pioneer Square stand T-Mobile Park (formerly Safeco Field) and CenturyLink Field, two sports stadiums built in the late 1990s and early 2000s. They are the home fields of, respectively, the Seattle Mariners (baseball) and the Seattle Seahawks (gridiron football). Just to the north of the square lies the downtown district, Seattle’s commercial heart. Of particular interest to visitors is the Pike Place Market, a sheltered area of fresh fish and produce shops, other retail stores, and restaurants.

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North of Pioneer Square, downtown, and the popular neighborhood of Belltown stands Seattle Center, the 74-acre (30-hectare) site of the 1962 World’s Fair. The center contains the 605-foot- (184-meter-) high Space Needle, Seattle’s best-known landmark. Also in Seattle Center are McCaw Hall (home of the Seattle Opera), Key Arena, the Children’s Museum, and other public buildings.

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The University of Washington campus lies near Lake Washington, at the eastern end of the ship canal. The campus is surrounded by a vibrant community filled with shops, bars, and restaurants called the University (or “U”) District. The western shore of Lake Washington—where now are the fashionable communities of Washington Park, Madison Park, and Madrona—was the fair-weather getaway for residents of the early city. They were transported to the beaches by a trolley line. The line ran the length of Madison Street, which is still the only avenue that runs uninterrupted from Elliott Bay to Lake Washington.

Seattle’s climate is surprisingly temperate for a city that lies so far north and so close to the ocean. The Olympic Mountains to the west provide protection from the heavy rains that frequently inundate the Pacific coast of Washington. Seattle’s average annual precipitation—about 37 inches (94 centimeters)—is less than that of any major city on the East Coast. A difference, however, is that Seattle receives very little precipitation in the form of snow or in thunderstorms. Seattle’s rain is light and constant, and most of it occurs in the winter. Like many other port towns, Seattle is notable for its often overcast skies, though the summer sky is usually at least partly clear. The tall Cascades to the east also shield the city from midcontinental extremes of heat and cold. Average high temperatures in July seldom exceed the mid-70s F (about 24 °C). Average highs in January are in the upper 40s F (about 8 °C).

People

Since Seattle’s settlement by Americans of European birth or descent in the mid-19th century, that population has remained in the majority. In the early 21st century they made up slightly more than two-thirds of the city’s population. Even so, Seattle is a mix of peoples, cultures, and religions. It has a higher level of ethnic diversity than is to be found elsewhere in the Pacific Northwest.

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc./Kenny Chmielewski
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Seattle is a city with little ethnic strife, though this was not always the case. In the wake of the Indian wars of the 1850s and ’60s, some of the area’s Native Americans were removed from traditional territories to inland reservations. Native Americans were discouraged from living among the settlers throughout the 19th century. Even today, the Native American population is small, representing just a fraction of the city’s total population. Similarly, Seattle’s African American population was small until World War II, when a growing number of African Americans began to migrate to the city as a result of an abundance of jobs in the defense and transport industries. However, African Americans faced a pattern of discrimination that included segregation in housing and public services. In the early 21st century, African Americans made up a little under one-tenth of Seattle’s population.

Asian Americans now account for about 15 percent of the city’s total population. The Chinese first arrived in appreciable numbers in the 1870s to work in service jobs and in the lumber industry. During an economic downturn in the mid-1880s, Chinese immigrants were accused of taking jobs away from the majority population, The immigrants were driven out of the city through a series of violent anti-Chinese riots. Today, Seattle’s Asian population is concentrated in the downtown International District, but it extends throughout the metropolitan area. The majority are of Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, and Filipino origin, though virtually all Asian countries are represented in Seattle. Hispanics account for a smaller proportion of the city’s population, although their number has been growing.

Many Seattleites adhere to Protestant denominations. The city’s Roman Catholic population is also large. Owing to a well-established eastern European immigrant community, the Orthodox church has many adherents as well. Seattle also has a relatively large Jewish community. A significant proportion of Seattleites, however, profess no religion.

Culture

Seattle offers a wide variety of performing and fine arts. The Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra presents well-attended concert series. The Seattle Repertory Theatre, Pacific Northwest Ballet, and the Seattle Symphony have drawn national attention for their productions. The symphony has issued many recordings of live and studio performances. It often performs in association with the Seattle Opera.

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There are more than two dozen museums in Seattle. The Seattle Art Museum has an enviable collection of such Northwest artists as Mark Tobey, Kenneth Callahan, and Morris Graves. The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, on the University of Washington campus, has extensive collections relating to the native peoples of the Pacific Northwest. Among other museums are the Pacific Science Center and the Museum of History and Industry, both of which offer educational programs. Located in the International District, the Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience commemorates the contributions of Chinese, Japanese, and other Asian peoples to the region.

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Pictorial Press/Alamy

Seattle has also made many contributions to popular culture. It was the birthplace and childhood home of the legendary rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix. The city also gave rise to the grunge rock movement of the early 1990s, exemplified by such bands as Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Soundgarden. The legacy of these performers and other artists is celebrated in the city’s Museum of Pop Culture, located near the Space Needle on the grounds of Seattle Center.

Through its culture, arts, and parks committee, Seattle’s city council administers a network of more than 70 public parks. The largest is the 530-acre (214-hectare) Discovery Park, situated on a broad bluff overlooking Puget Sound. Other popular parks include Gas Works Park, on the grounds of a former coal-gas conversion plant overlooking Lake Union, and Green Lake Park in north Seattle. Another amenity is the Woodland Park Zoological Gardens, which is regarded nationally as a model for the naturalistic habitats provided for its animals.

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Tourism abounds in Seattle throughout the year. Apart from having its own attractions, including the Space Needle and the Seattle Aquarium, the city serves as a gateway to Mount Rainier National Park, North Cascades National Park, and Olympic National Park. The city is also close to several state parks and national wildlife refuges. Given the ubiquitous presence of water, it is not surprising that boating and fishing are highly popular activities in and around the city. From the start of boating season in the spring until the fall, Lake Washington, Lake Union, and Puget Sound are alive with sailboats, speedboats, and yachts large and small. A park that has facilities for whale-watching excursions (tracking killer whales in particular) is located to the north in the San Juan Islands. It is accessible from Seattle by ferry boat.

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Seattle also boasts several major professional sports teams. The Seattle Seahawks, a franchise of the National Football League, have played in the city since 1976. The Seattle Mariners, a baseball team in the American League, have played in the city since 1977. These teams, along with the Seattle Storm, the city’s professional women’s basketball team, enjoy a large and devoted public following. The Seattle Sounders, a Major League Soccer team, also draw many fans to their matches. Seattle was the home of the SuperSonics (better known as the Sonics) of the National Basketball Association from 1967 to 2008, when the franchise was relocated to Oklahoma City.

Calvin Marquess
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Chief among Seattle’s educational institutions is the University of Washington, the largest school in the state-supported system. It was founded in 1861 as the territorial university and was housed in a single building in what is now the downtown area. The school moved in 1895 to a site near Lake Washington, where enormous growth of the university and its campus has taken place. The city is also the seat of Seattle University (founded 1891), Seattle Pacific University (1891), Cornish College of the Arts (1914), the Art Institute of Seattle (1946), and several community colleges.

Economy

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Seattle’s economy was originally based on lumbering. In the 20th century it diversified with the development of food processing, banking, insurance, and manufacturing, especially the production of aircraft and heavy machinery. The Boeing Company, which William Boeing founded in Seattle in 1916, for many years dominated the local economy. The company’s military aircraft played key roles in the Allied war effort during World War II. After the war the company grew to become the world’s largest manufacturer of commercial aircraft as well as a leading producer of space vehicles. Although Boeing relocated its headquarters to Chicago, Illinois, in 2001, much of the company’s airplane production is still based in the Seattle area.

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Electronics-based industries, notably those connected with software development and manufacturing, became significant in the 1980s. They are now the most productive component of the city’s economy. Headquartered in suburban Redmond, the Microsoft Corporation is one of the world’s leading developers of personal-computer software systems and applications. The company’s presence has attracted many other software firms to the Seattle area. It has also spurred much infrastructure development, including the construction of reliable broadband fiber-optic networks.

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Starbucks

Seattle flourishes as a center of service industries. It is the financial center for much of the Pacific Northwest. It is also home to major retail companies, most notably the online retailer Amazon.com, a vast Internet-based enterprise that sells books, music, movies, housewares, electronics, and many other goods. Starbucks, the largest coffeehouse chain in the world, was founded in Seattle in 1971. Seattleites’ love of specialty coffee has also enabled hundreds of independent coffee shops to thrive in the city.

Seattle has always been attractive to tourists. The sector received a boost in the late 1990s with the Port of Seattle’s decision to expand its cruise-ship activity. This led to an enormous increase in the number of passengers passing through the city in the early 21st century. At the same time, Seattle tourism in general continued to grow, with millions of American and foreign tourists visiting the city annually and generating billions of dollars in revenue.

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Seattle’s transportation system is well developed. An extensive network of interstate, federal, and state highways and local roads serve the city. The Port of Seattle is one of the largest container-cargo ports in the world. It encompasses some 570 acres (230 hectares) of container-handling facilities along the waterfront south of downtown. Ferries serve several nearby islands and other points along Puget Sound. Seattle-Tacoma International Airport is a major gateway connecting Asia, Europe, and North America. Other modes of transport include bus lines and a light rail system. The city’s 1-mile (1.6-kilometer) monorail was introduced at the World’s Fair in 1962. Now a popular tourist attraction, it provides fast transportation between Seattle Center and the downtown shopping area.

History

Edward S. Curtis Collection/Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (reproduction no. LC-USZ62-105858)

The Puget Sound region has been inhabited by humans for at least 12,000 years. By the time of the European arrival in North America, it was home to many distinct cultures. When Europeans first explored the area of what is now Seattle, they encountered members of the Nuu-chah-nulth, Coast Salish (including the Suquamish and Duwamish), Makah, Quinault, and Chinook peoples. All of these groups occasionally warred among themselves, but they were generally peaceful toward the newcomers. (See also Northwest Coast Indians.)

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Seattle was founded in 1851, when the crew of the schooner Exact, making their way from Portland in the Oregon Territory, stopped at Alki Point in what is now West Seattle. The party was led by Arthur Denny, a 29-year-old pioneer from Illinois. Denny and his entourage built the first permanent non–Native American settlement in the area that would become Seattle. The group later moved their encampment to what is now downtown Seattle. Their settlement was briefly called Duwamps, after a neighboring Duwamish village. In the summer of 1852 the settlement’s name was changed to Seattle, in honor of the Indian leader who had befriended the settlers.

Among the most successful pioneers was Henry Yesler, a businessman who arrived from Ohio in 1852. He built the city’s first steam-powered sawmill. The site of the mill was Skid Road (now called Yesler Way). It lent its name, corrupted to Skid Row, to any street inhabited by the rough and tumble. After being cut into timber at the mill, the logs were placed on ships and taken south to San Francisco.

In 1855–58 there was a violent Indian uprising in the Seattle area, and this proved to be a powerful deterrent to potential settlers. The American Civil War, which absorbed the energies of much of the country, also slowed the city’s growth for a time. Seattle was incorporated as a city in 1869. By then it could boast among its assets Yesler’s sawmill, the territorial university, a hospital, a school, two churches, a bank, a newspaper, a telegraph service, a few businesses, and some houses. Significant growth came with the arrival of the railroads and with the crucial decision that named Seattle—not Tacoma or Portland—the western terminus of the transcontinental rail system. As if to certify the city’s importance, the Klondike gold rush of 1897 made it the port of entry for prospectors heading to find their fortunes in Alaska. The city soon emerged as one of North America’s preeminent seaports.

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Another major period of growth began with the outbreak of World War II. Seattle became a center for the production of war matériel, including ships, land vehicles, and aircraft. The city’s labor force greatly expanded, with many workers migrating from other parts of the country. By 1960 Seattle’s population exceeded 500,000. The World’s Fair of 1962 brought international attention to the city and underscored its developing economy. In the late 1960s a program to construct skyscrapers was begun in the downtown area. Amid further development in later decades, outlying cities grew quickly as commuter suburbs. At the same time, neighborhood coalitions and the Seattle city government initiated a program of historic preservation. They also launched efforts that brought new, mostly small, businesses into downtown.

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The rapid growth of high-technology industries in the 1980s and ’90s encouraged immigration into the city from all parts of the world. That growth brought much prosperity to the city. In the early 21st century, Seattle remained a bustling, prosperous international center of commerce, industry, and culture. Population (2020) 737,015; metropolitan area (2017) 3,867,046.