July
4, 1907: The Day the World Came to Queen Anne  For one summer
day in 1907, Queen Anne Hill was the center of attention
not just of Seattle, but of two continents. With a spectacle
the likes of which has not been seen before or since,
Seattle's Japanese community hosted the city's Independence
Day festivities at just west of what is
now Kerry Park on West Highland Drive. The P-I reported
that "ten thousand citizens of Seattle" packed
the hill's sidewalks, porches and rooftops to watch the
exotic Oriental fireworks
brought by a visiting Japanese sea captain. A military band from Fort Lawton blew march music, then colorful bombs in
outlandish shapes burst against Seattle's skyline, from the newly erected
spires of St.
James Cathedral to the half-moon shoreline of Elliott Bay. Straw hats, parasols
and fancy dresses filled the streets. Children scrambled to capture prize-laden
balloons as they landed. Prominent Seattle preachers, judges, politicians and a future U.S. secretary
of the interior -- stood side-by-side on a podium with sailors from the Shinano
Maru, in port down at Smith Cove, and local Japanese American leaders. Waving
overhead were the Stars and Stripes and Rising Sun.
UW law graduate Takuji Yamashita - an immigrant who recently had been denied
U.S. citizenship and a license to practice law - gave the keynote address
with a bold declaration that Japanese immigrants had a stake in American
success
and could help Seattle thrive if given an opportunity."We hope to see this country prosper," Yamashita told the crowd, in
a speech later praised by the P-I as "an answer to the agitators who perpetually
preach the dangers of a Japanese peril."
Below, in Smith Cove, floated the Shinano Maru. She was part of an N.Y.K. fleet
that in only a decade of calling in Seattle had helped spur the city's boom,
the spoils of trade that built fortunes that built comfortable homes on Queen
Anne. Two years earlier, the same Shinano Maru had starred in a legendary
battle in Japan's victory over Russia, a victory that fed unease that Japan's
next
big military showdown might be against America.
Japanese immigrants were Seattle's largest minority group in 1907, numbering
about 10,000 and boasting their own two daily newspapers and three banks.
Most lived in the fledgling Japantown developing around Sixth and Main. But
dozens
of Japanese immigrants lived on Highland Drive - most were live-in cooks,
housekeepers and gardeners. There may be no one alive who witnessed that
Fourth of July 98 years ago. But Yamashita's biographer, Steven Goldsmith,
recently approached
the Queen Anne
Historical Society for help. How did Louella McClellan and her family --
who had lived at 311 W. Highland Drive for less than 10 years -- come to
host this
unusual event on their grounds?
There are doubtless programs, ribbons, prizes and speeches in somebody's
shoebox that would shed light on this remarkable event in the history of
Queen Anne.
If you know anything, please contact us.
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