Stimson-Griffiths House
Frederick Spencer
Stimson was the manager of the Stimson Mill in Ballard and
with his brother C.D. Stimson prospered in the
lumber
business. Fred bought this
property on West Highland Drive with a dramatic view of the
harbor and began planning an equally substantial
house for his family. He liked the English style, as
did his neighbors A.S. Kerry, Harry
W. Treat and C.
H. Black.
All these men went shopping for an architect and chose Charles
Bebb, who designed
this three-storey house with stucco and half-timbered upper
floors rising above a fortress-like stone ground floor punctuated
by
shingled bays on the south side. The cross-gabled roof with overhanging
eaves terminate in decorative truss verge-boards. Notice the
second floor sleeping balcony in the old photo which was popular
and considered healthy at
the
time. Besides the impressive oak entrance foyer
and drawing room there are a ballroom, billiard room and a sunroom.
Grand as this home was it did not fit the lifestyle the Stimsons
were ultimately to choose. By 1910 they moved into a second,
country home, a Craftsman-style house on their new farm in
Woodinville.
That house became the showplace of their Hollywood Farms and
is still standing today. Frederick was raising Holstein cattle
and improving the breed. On Thanksgiving Day 1921 Mr. Stimson
was
dressing in his Queen Anne home to go out to Hollywood
when he collapsed and died.
You know Hollywood Farms today as Chateau Ste. Michelle Winery.
Capt.
James Griffiths (1861-1943) came to Washington in 1885, first
forming James Griffiths & Sons, ship brokers, then moving
on to create several important steamship, barge, stevedoring
and
shipbuilding companies in the Puget Sound area. In 1896, building
on his success of securing the first transpacific steamship
service with Nippon Yusen Kaisha (NYK), he was selected by
James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railway,
to operate
as his representative
in negotiations
with officials of NYK. Traveling to Tokyo, he
persuaded the steamship line
to connect with the Great Northern in Seattle, providing a
direct link for travelers heading on to the Orient from eastern
U.S. cities.
The Highland Drive residence was purchased by Capt. Griffiths
in 1928, and during his residency, his home was opened to many
social
events
and
benefits, including a ball for English music hall star, Gracie
Fields. He operated as host for multiple benefits for the Children's
Orthopedic Hospital.
Sources:
Nomination Form, WA State Register; and Queen Anne
Historical Society Archive
|

405
W. Highland Dr.
Photo by Bruce Jones 
1905 photo 405 W. Highland Dr.
The house next door belonged
to the Kerrys.
Queen Anne Historical Society Archive

Front
Entry Interior (date unknown)
photo from State Register
Application
|