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The
Valley Fuel Company coal-bunker was situated in the
ravine with a spur off the streetcar tracks on Rainier
Avenue which allowed coal cars to be pushed over the
top of the bunkers. Then gravity could feed the coal
into the bunkers and into the wagons and trucks on the
lower level.
This
photo shows the Valley Fuel C.o. coal bunkers being
raised to a higher level to match the tracks after a
Rainier Avenue regrade. As the demand for the coal diminished
the bunkers were adapted to handling sand, gravel and
other building materials.
The
ravine where the bunker had been located was used as
a garbage fill starting in the 40's When that was filled
the city continued the garbage fill east from the play
field up to 47th Avenue and north across Genesee to
the lake where Sayres Hydroplane Pits and the Rowing
Center are located today.
This
area was known as Wetmore Slough and also included the
area north along Rainier as far north as the junction
with Empire Way, now Martin Luther King Way. When Lake
Washington was lowered nine feet to build the locks
at Ballard in 1917 the Slough dried up. The smell from
the garbage fill permeated the neighbor and made living
nearby almost unbearable on warm summer evenings. They
weren't as quick to cover it with dirt as they do today.
The fill was completed in 1964 and is now Genesee Park.
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