As published
in the Queen Anne Cobblestone, November 2006
Home
is Where the Heart Is
By Kim Turner, QAHS board member, and Research Chair
Who let the rain out? It was barely a month ago that we were
sitting in shirtsleeves, watching the finest of sunsets which
Puget Sound has to offer.
This has been a Queen Anne year for your faithful columnist:
my own high school class reunion (45th); the Queen Anne High
School Alumni Association's 25th anniversary; the transfer
of the building and grounds to the new owner of the former
school, and the ensuing condominium open house August 12th;
and working on the "Topping Queen Anne" walking tour,
a major undertaking which was really two tours in one, insofar
as time is concerned.
Interspersed with all the above were visits to the Dead Sea
Scrolls Exhibit at the Seattle Center, the Seattle Antiquarian
Book Fair, with guest author Nicholas Basbanes, author of "A
Gentle Madness" and other books about book collectors.
Also, the annual Washington State Writer's Awards, held at
the new downtown library, brought several local authors.
I have been thinking about my own past, partly as a result
of the above events, and partly because my last surviving aunt
is nearing the end of her life. She and I were talking on the
phone on our regular Saturday-night chat, and reminiscing about
the house at the foot of the stairs, 910 Third Ave. N., which
was my first truly-remembered home. The house is still there,
and from the outside shows little change from the way it looked
when we moved away from it in February 1952. From the downhill
side it is a three-story structure, in the Craftsman style,
and has been modified from a single-family residence to a duplex.
We lost our breakfast nook on the main floor when Mother had
the house remodeled. The dining room, next to the living room,
was a good size—it still held the dining room set with
the buffet and table and six chairs. It is a Danish modern
set which was my parents penultimate wedding anniversary gift
to each other. I still have it, although the chairs need new
slipcovers again. The bathroom was next to the kitchen, and
was big (to me). It is still larger than the one I currently
have in my triplex unit on Phinney Ridge.
We lived there through the 1949 earthquake and death of my
father. My aunt brought her daughters down from Fairbanks,
Alaska (which she really enjoyed leaving) and moved in the
upstairs of our house. This situation allowed my mother to
go back to work to keep the roof over our heads. That house
was the most solidly built of any of the homes in which I have
lived. It was built around 1910, and looks lovely from every
angle. I realize that living in a house for a mere 7 years
doesn't necessarily leave a marked memory on the surrounding
community, but the memories we each take with us do. That is
why it is so very satisfying to learn more about each home
we visit on our tours.
May you each have something or someone for whom you can be
thankful on Thanksgiving Day. Happy and healthy holidays!
Kim R. Turner, Research Chair
More Kim's Musings

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