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became the Dakota Hotel for a short period and in 1904
another floor was added and the building expanded to the
south, doubling its size. It was then renamed the Columbia
Hotel. In 1906 the building’s brick face was covered with
stucco.
Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Purkeypile are the couple standing in
the center under the gas lamps hanging from the ceiling.
Mrs. Purkeypile, a motherly lady, was the manager of
the hotel and Jack was a motorman for the "Seattle,
Renton & Southern Ry.", one of the five different names
used by the Rainier Valley street car line during its
47 years of service to the valley.
The
hotel kept its own pigs in a pen at the rear of the
building. To feed their pigs the Purkeypiles had to
go to the Renton saloons for the swill they used for
feed. Since this was long before prohibition the saloons
were running full blast in Renton while at the same
time no saloons were allowed in Columbia. This was a
result of the first Columbia town council, in one of
their first resolutions, had banned all saloons within
the city limits. The Purkeypiles had an arrangement
with the "Seattle Renton & Southern Ry." crews, on a
regular basis, to pick up half barrels of swill at the
Renton taverns, and put them on the streetcar’s platforms.
Women
boarding cars with the floor sweeping skirts of that
day would gingerly pull them up as they would regally
sweep past into the car. When the car reached Columbia,
passengers would cool their heals while Jack Purkeypile
and the hotel roustabout would slop the pigs. All this
on a nickel fare. Then the car would charge off to downtown
Seattle at what was termed breakneck speed in that era.
According
to the hotel’s desk register that we have in our files,
many of the "guest" names in the book were the local
residents, probably just there for Sunday dinner. There
were many guests however that stayed at the hotel and
their home addresses were from cities and towns all
over the United States, some even visiting from overseas.
One
has to wonder what enticed them to visit the town of
Columbia between 1910 and 1920? Maybe they were visiting
friends or relatives? Were they salesmen there on business?
Or maybe they were prospective land buyers looking at
the cheap lots that had been advertised in downtown
Seattle newspapers. One of the guests who signed in
at the hotel was Buffalo Bill Cody.
A
sign in the dining room proclaimed "If you leave this
table and hungry be, the fault is in you and not in
me."
In
later years the dining room became Nobel’s Drug Store,
followed by Jamieson Drug Store and then Nash Pharmacy
in the 1920s. The south portion of the main floor, at
4902 Rainier, was occupied by the "Columbian", a neighborhood
dry goods store. This was an early day venture of Marshall
Fields in his attempt to operate like J.C. Penny did
originally, as neighborhood and small town units.
Several
years later the Bright Spot Tavern occupied the corner
site. (Seattle had annexed Columbia in 1907 and the
ban on saloons had been lifted) It became a trouble
spot in the community and a hangout for all the bad
guys. Then things only got worse when it changed ownership
and became Slim’s Restaurant and Lounge. A major fire
occurred at Slim’s on October 1st, 1981 and this was
construed by the neighboring businesses as a major improvement
in town as it forced the closure of the establishment.
After
standing empty for a while the building was renovated
and restored as a historic building and is now listed
on the National Register of Historic Buildings. It is
currently home of Lottie Mott’s Coffee Shop and the
local office for Sound Transit’s Light Rail Project
scheduled to come through Rainier Valley in about five
years, or is it now ten years.
Buzz
Anderson, President of the Rainier Valley Historical
Society
If
you are not a member of the Rainier Valley Historical
Society, we invite you to join. The dues are only $15.00
per year and include our quarterly newsletter, the "Rainier
Valley Heritage News." Come visit us any Wednesday morning
between 10 and 1 o’clock to see our displays and browse
through our photos and files of Rainier Valley’s unique
history. We are located in the Rainier Valley Cultural
Center, 3515 S Alaska Street. We are constantly on the
lookout for old photos, printed material and artifacts
pertaining to Rainier Valley. If you have any questions,
call us at 206 722 2838.
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