Queen Anne Club - 1530 Queen Anne Ave N

Queen Anne Club, 1927

The Queen Anne Club located on the southeast corner of Queen Anne Avenue and Garfield (1530 Queen Anne Ave. N.) is among few neighborhood buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It has been listed since 1983 and remains architecturally and historically an exceptional Queen Anne building. Better than just about any other building on the hill, it hides its original purpose behind a neo-classical façade and a clever adaptation to a steep hillside site.

Although honored by the listing on the National Register, Queen Anne residents recognize that it offers no protection, should the building’s owner want to alter it or tear it down. Only last year, members of the Queen Anne Historical Society’s Landmark Preservation Committee worried that major changes were in the works for the clubhouse and talked with building managers about not altering fenestration and other exterior features.

Sadly, the law cannot stop an owner from modifying or demolishing a building listed on the National Register, for only when federal dollars are to fund changes, does it offer modest protection that may slow the work down. Since designation as a City of Seattle landmark offers the only reliable protection, we should be moderately alarmed that the clubhouse is not designated.

Queen Anne Club, ca. 2010

Ever since the Olmsted Brothers omitted Queen Anne from their 1903 plan for Seattle parks and boulevards, people on the hill have had to badger city hall to address community needs. In those days, paving streets was, for example, a major issue and so was the location of the public library. The Queen Anne Club was formed to sustain the work of those community organizations that defended neighborhood infrastructure and the quality of life on the hill. Even today that need remains.

A recent advocate, Picture Perfect Queen Anne has successfully enhanced Queen Anne Avenue with flowers and gardens. In the past year, a new generation of concerned citizens has formed I (Heart) Queen Anne to encourage community engagement and local businesses. And while our farmers market touts itself as the only independent one in the city, its independence may be another subtle sign of Queen Anne’s never ending neglect by the rest of Seattle. As a result, this is a good time to think about the history of the Queen Anne Club and its place hill history.

A Community Project

The Queen Anne Club formed in 1922 with the intent of having more neighborhood influence with the City of Seattle government. Streets, sidewalks, street lights, and parks were all big issues in the 1920’s. After four years of lobbying, the city’s $42,500 purchase of the first part of the West Queen Anne Playfield (Big Howe, bounded by 2nd Ave. West, Blaine, 1st Ave. West, and Howe Sts.) was one of the first successful improvements to happen with club backing. This block included the former stables of the Queen Anne Riding Club, where businessman and Highland Drive resident H. W. Treat had previously kept his horses.

Newspaper articles spoke of coming to Club meetings to listen to the radio about the results of the Presidential election of 1924 (Republican Calvin Coolidge won with 54 percent of the popular vote). The Club also sponsored an annual Community Christmas Tree Celebration, where hundreds of children were provided stockings filled with candy, while groups of carol singers sang throughout the neighborhood. At one celebration, a Mr. P.J. Emt used his ten-ton truck to “bring back the largest tree he could find … that [took] up the entire stage of the High School.” In this time of multiple neighborhood social events, the idea was created to have a club facility where people could meet, dance, play bridge, have tea, and hold other social gatherings.

Feeling proud of their accomplishments and aware that their increasingly active club calendar – full of business meetings, dances, teas, card parties, bazaars, fairs, seasonal events – required a suitable gathering place, members determined that the club needed a permanent home. While many community groups met in school buildings, church basements or other public places, some had built clubhouses to serve their specific needs. Typically, these were wood-frame buildings of residential scale that served as meeting places. The oldest existing examples in the city date from around 1910.

By the end of 1924, the club had bought land from the city, drawn up plans and begun to raise the $40,000 it expected the building to cost. The first pledge drive of $15,000 was easily oversubscribed. Subsequent events such as dances, golf tournaments, and fairs were used to raise more funds.

Multiple articles intoning residents to “do your bit in making the admirable project a brilliant success” were present quite often throughout the Queen Anne News editions, portending potential concern about funding. One headline in September 1927 states “Join Queen Anne Community Club Today!!! It is a duty you owe to the Hill.”  Read an article (see below) from the Queen Anne News, 1927, asking for donations. A $25 pledged got you a Life Membership with no annual dues.  H.F. Alexander, President of the Pacific Steamship Company, and owner of the C. H. Black House at the time, donated $1,000 to the cause. By November, 1927, 800 of the 4,000 families of the Hill had joined, and club leaders still hoped to have the building completed without having to procure a mortgage.

Queen Anne Club Pediment, ca. 2010

Construction began on Sept. 12, 1927. About 1,000 people attended the cornerstone-laying ceremony on Oct. 30 that featured a speech by Mayor Bertha K. Landes.

A campaign drive began in April, 1928 to raise the final $15,000. The building opened on May 11, 1928 with great fanfare. Gov. Roland Hartley spoke, as did Mayor Landes and Mayor-elect Frank Edwards. The dedication included “sleight-of-hand” as presented by Mr. Raywood Frazier, a local banker, as well as vocal solos by Mrs. Adam Beeler and Miss Margaret Grinstein. More than 2,000 people attended the dedication, which was followed by a ball the following night. Pledges for this last drive came in around $11,000, with $1,800 in actual cash provided by the building inauguration date.

The Queen Anne Club was proud of its achievement and called it “the biggest community project ever attempted in Seattle.”

An Inside Look

Otis Hancock is recorded as the builder. Although there is some press associating John Graham Sr. with the building’s design, it is not listed among his work. But there is little doubt that Hancock was its architect  Hancock moved to Seattle from Duluth, Wis., in 1907, after attending the Carnegie Institute of Technology. Following Naval service during World War I, he entered architectural practice in Seattle, working with Arthur Loveless, B. Marcus Priteca and Frank Fowler. This building was designed during his 1925-1933 partnership with Frederick V. Lockman. Hancock maintained an individual practice from 1933 until his retirement in 1971.

The Queen Anne Club built an impressively large brick building, extending 110 feet along Queen Anne Avenue North. The plan is irregular, though basically rectangular. The clubhouse is two stories high, of wooden construction and faced with red, pressed brick laid in common bond. The north and south gable ends each have a single round window under a boxed cornice and frieze with returns. The west façade has a classical portico at the main entry. Four cast-stone pilasters carry a handsomely detailed entablature, which once proudly displayed the club name. Cast-stone columns support an ornamented pediment. A larger pediment above the boxed cornice crowns the central composition. Rectangular window openings — with six-over-one, double-hung sash — have cast stone sills and are crowned by flat arches of brick with cast-stone keys. The east façade digs into the hill and is almost impossible to see from the street.

Originally, interior spaces served the functions of a community, social, and cultural center. The ground floor consisted of a lobby, men’s lounge, men’s cloak room, trustees’ room, a banquet room with a capacity of 400, a custodian’s apartment, and mechanical rooms. The upper floor contained the auditorium, with a seating capacity of 716, a ladies’ parlor and tearoom, ladies’ check room, and restroom and kitchen.

On the exterior, a deck has been added on the southwest corner of the second floor, while the paneled entry doors and leaded sidelights have been replaced. Although the exterior remains largely intact, the interior has been dismantled.

Queen Anne Club, 1982

Changing Hands, Uses

James M. Bailey, a city attorney, was president during the five years it took to construct the clubhouse, from idea to building. With the new facility, membership grew to 2,000 families, but the club’s poorly defined mission left it somewhere in the middle between being a community and entertainment center and community-improvement association.

During the Depression, the club struggled. It held on to the building until 1942, when the Federal Old Line Insurance Co. bought it and converted it to office use.

In 1952, the clubhouse accommodated the studios of the Queen City Broadcasting Co. KIRO-TV made further modifications in 1957 and built its television tower at the south edge of the property.

In 1969, ownership transferred to Community Services for the Blind.

Since 1982, it has had various commercial and office uses. In 1985, ProRobics, now known as Seattle Gym, moved in downstairs, while Pasta Bella, an Italian restaurant, took over the upper level in 1994. Since 2012, Seattle Gym has used the entire building.

Queen Anne Club Ad, 1927

From an article in the Queen Anne News – 1927

ESSENTIAL INFORMATION

PROPERTY: Four and two-thirds lots owned by Queen Anne Club and located on southeast corner of Queen Anne Avenue and Garfield Street.

BUILDING: To be 110 feet by 72 feet and of masonry construction. To face on Queen Anne Avenue with second entrance on Garfield Street.

PLANS: Include auditorium 48 feet by 90 feet and capable of seating between 750 and 800 people, tea room (women's lounge room for use for small parties), men's lounge room, committee rooms, caretaker's apartment, office and basement recreation room 32 feet by 90 feet where handball and other light exercise may be enjoyed. Billiard tables to be installed here also.

USES: As a community social and cultural center. Established at a centrally located place on Queen Anne Hill where the young folks may congregate and hold their parties.

ESTIMATED COST $40,000. of which more than $22,000 has been raised already. Balance to be raised through contributions and sale of life memberships. Building to be turned over to the club free and clear.  Conservatively estimated income more than sufficient to cover all overhead, including janitor service, supervision, taxes, maintenance, etc.

MANAGEMENT: By the Board of Trustees of the Club through a Trustee House Committee governed by a set of rules and regulations prepared by the trustees.

NO PROFITS: The building committee, headed by A. A. Paysse, has adopted an ironclad policy of “no profits” to go to anyone in the construction of this club house. A saving of over $2,000 on the excavation work and on architect's fees show how they are working.

ARCHITECTS: Hancock & Lockman, architects who are drawing plans and supervising work, have donated 4% of their fee to the club house.

You cannot afford to reject this opportunity to serve yourself and your community in a permanent and substantial way.

Source: Queen Anne News: May 13, 1927.  From clippings file of James M. Bailey, President, Queen Anne Club

Additional Resources

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 27, 1983. Read its nomination for historical designation, which include details about its history and architecture. View photos submitted with the nomination.

Read more about this structure at Seattle.gov Historical Sites.

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Elfrieda Apartments – 1932 Queen Anne Ave N