HomeMy WebLinkAbout1916-07 - Black River Disappeared in July 1916 for Lake Washington Ship Canal ConstructionHistory
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Black River disappears in July 1916.
From July to October 1916, the lowering of Seattle's Lake Washington during the construction of
the Lake Washington Ship Canal drains the Black River and causes it to dry up.
The Black River ran out of the southern end of Lake Washington. It flowed south through
Renton, and then veered west and merged with the Green River to form the Duwamish River.
The point where the Black River merged with the Duwamish was in Tukwila just north of
present-day Southcenter Mall, near the site of Fort Dent Park.
Until 1912, the Cedar River emptied into the Black River and became part of the Black River,
which then emptied into the Duwamish. In 1911, the Cedar River flooded Renton. The following
year the town dug a 2000-foot-long, 80-foot-wide canal to reroute the course of the Cedar to the
north so that it flowed directly into Lake Washington, in the hope of avoiding floods in the
future.
From July to October 1916, to construct the Lake Washington Ship Canal, Lake Washington was
lowered 8.8 feet. By October the water level had sunk to the same level as Lake Union. In the
process, the Black River dried up, and the outfall from Lake Washington became the ship canal.
This no doubt severely damaged if not destroyed the salmon run that year.
A Pretty River
Clarence Dullahaut, who moved to Renton in 1903, described the Black River in an interview:
"It was a pretty river, meandering along. People used to come up the Duwamish from the Sound
up the Black to Lake Washington in launches" (Sato, 56). He went on to state that when the Lake
was lowered, salmon in the Black River were trapped by the hundreds in pools left in the drying
river bed.
The Duwamish tribe had a village located along the Black River for at least 1,400 years and
perhaps for thousands of years. The Duwamish were still there in 1916.
The Canoes Stood Dry
Duwamish Indian Joseph Moses stated in an interview with David Buerge, "That was quite a day
for the white people at least. The waters just went down, down, until our landing and canoes
stood dry and there was no Black River at all. There were pools, of course, and the struggling
fish trapped in them. People came from miles around, laughing and hollering and stuffing fish
into gunny sacks" (Sato, 57).
Sources:
Mike Sato, The Price of Taming a River: The Decline of Puget Sound's Duwamish/Green
Waterway (Seattle: The Mountaineers, 1997), 51-57; Suzanne Larson, History of the Lake
Washington Ship Canal (Seattle: King County Arts Commission, 1975), Introduction, 23. By
Greg Lange, August 25, 2000
Black River, 1900s
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Indians camping near the Black River, ca. 1893
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Captain R. Burrows' Lake Washington farm at the mouth of the Black River, ca. 1900
Courtesy Homer Venishnick
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Black River after Lake Washington was lowered 8.8 feet, 1916
Courtesy Renton Historical Society
Related Topics:
• Environment
• Vanished
• American Indians
• Rivers in Time
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Posted 10/01/2012
HistoryLink.org Essay 686
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Construction
Seattle, 1912
Photo by A. Curtis, Courtesy UW Special Collections
(25121)
Construction
of Lake Washington Ship Canal,
of locks,
Canal, Seattle, 1916
Photo by Asahel Curtis,
Collections (CUR1331)
canal at Ballard, would
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a ors.
Beginning on August 28, 1916, Lake Washington is
lowered 9 feet, due to construction of the Lake
Washington Ship Canal, and the Black River disappears.
The ship canal is being built between Lake Washington
and Puget Sound. Because of the different water levels in
Lake Washington, Lake Union, Salmon Bay, and
Shilshole Bay, the federal government builds a double
lock at Ballard and lowers Lake Washington to the same
height as Lake Union, from about 29 feet above mean
lower low water (the average of each day's lowest low
tide) on Shilshole Bay to 20 feet. The level of Salmon Bay
is raised to 20 feet behind the locks and dam at its
mouth. The lowering of Lake Washington and raising of
Salmon Bay causes a number of changes to the
watershed, most dramatically the drying up of the Black
River, which had been Lake Washington's outlet, when
the lake's water level drops below that of the river -
channel entrance at its south end. As a result, the way
water moves through the watershed changes drastically,
with environmental and human consequences.
Reshaping the Watershed
Work on the Lake Washington Ship Canal began in 1909
with the digging of the Montlake Cut. It was the last of
several attempts to build a transportation route around
the hills between Lake Washington and Seattle to
promote trade and development. Two land barriers and
an elevation differential of about 30 feet blocked the
water route between Lake Washington via Lake Union to
Puget Sound. Major Hiram M. Chittenden (1858-1917) of
the Corps finalized a plan to build a canal between
Shilshole Bay, on Puget Sound, and Lake Washington,
passing through Salmon Bay to Lake Union, then on to
Lake Washington. A double lock, at the west end of the
help boats negotiate the drop in elevation between Salmon Bay -- which would be
Lake
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Washington Ship
Courtesy
UW Special
raised behind the locks to the level of Lake Union -- and Puget Sound. Instead of a lock between Lake
Washington and Lake Union, as some had proposed, the Corps planned to cut a canal and drain Lake
Washington down to the same level as Lake Union, 9 feet lower than its average level.
After the Montlake Cut was opened, it would take about three months for Lake Washington to drain down,
resulting in radical changes in the hydrological systems of the Green-Duwamish River watershed. As a
result of the lowering of the lake, a new watershed formed, a saltwater inlet became become a
freshwater bay, and the way water moved through the lakes and rivers was significantly different.
The Environment Before
Before the construction of the ship canal, the drainage of Lake Sammamish, the Sammamish River, Lake
Washington, and the Black River were part of the Green-Duwamish River watershed. Lake Sammamish
was fed by a number of streams that drained the surrounding land. Its outlet, the Sammamish Slough
(also known as the Sammamish River), was the main source of water into Lake Washington, though that
lake was also fed by creeks and springs along its perimeter. The Black River, on the lake's south end, at
Renton, drained Lake Washington. The Black River was joined by the Cedar River just a half mile
downstream from the lake. The Black River joined with the Green River at what is now Tukwila to form the
Duwamish River. Before 1906, the White River also drained into the Duwamish, but its channel shifted
during a flood so that it flowed southward to become a tributary of the Puyallup River, which drained into
Commencement Bay at Tacoma.
The whole Lake Sammamish, Lake Washington, and Black River system moved relatively slowly. Coastal
geologist Michael Chrzastowski estimated that water stayed in Lake Washington for about five years
before entering the Black River and continuing on to the sea. The slough between the two lakes was
marshy, with a broad, meandering channel. The Black River crossed the slowly, but continually, rising
Cedar River alluvial fan. As the fan built up over several thousand years, the level of Lake Washington also
rose.
By the 1900s, the lake was about 30 feet above mean lower low water on Puget Sound at Shilshole Bay.
This was its average level; seasonal changes in precipitation could cause the shoreline of the lake to vary
by as much as seven feet. During exceptionally rainy periods the Black River flowed in two directions:
downstream to the Duwamish and upstream, back into the lake. These fluctuating water levels created
many marshy areas along the lakeshore.
When American settlers began establishing farms along the Duwamish and Black rivers, they were
plagued by floods. Though the rivers' height only varied by three to four feet, it still hindered settlement
and development. In an attempt to get the river moving more quickly and draining the lake more
effectively, the settlers tried some dredging and debris clearing. It did speed up the river and reduce
backflow from the Black back into the lake, but did not solve the problem.
The rest of the ship canal route was separate from the Green-Duwamish basin. Lake Union was fed by
streams and springs along its shores and drained through a small creek known by several names -- Ross
Creek, Shilshole Creek, the Outlet -- to Salmon Bay. The lake level was 20 feet above the mean lower low
water at the bay. It fluctuated very little because the area of land that drained into the lake was relatively
small.
Before the closing of the locks at Ballard in July 1916, Salmon Bay was a saltwater inlet of Shilshole Bay
on Puget Sound. It fluctuated with the tides each day. At low tide it was a very shallow channel, about
three feet deep. At the highest tides, it reached a depth of about 15 feet.
Building the Ship Canal
Work on the locks began in 1911 and by July 1916 the gates at the western end of Salmon Bay were ready
to be closed. After the locks were closed, Salmon Bay slowly rose to the level of Lake Union. Saltwater
was kept, as much as possible, on the west side (the Puget Sound side) of the locks. Lake Union
continued to drain along the same route, but the creek was replaced with a canal cut through the
surrounding land.
Work proceeded on the strip of land, then called Montlake Portage, that separated Lake Washington and
Lake Union. A canal, to be called Montlake Cut, was dug through this land. On August 25, 1916, the
cofferdam holding Lake Union back from the canal was opened and water gushed into it. (This was the
third cofferdam that had had to be built. Previous attempts to complete Montlake Cut had failed because
of slumping on its side, which had forced workers to build new cofferdams, drain the water out of the cut,
and use concrete to build revetments within the cut. Not until the third time did crews build up the
revetment enough to stop slumping.) Three days later, gates on the east (Lake Washington) end of the cut
were opened and Lake Washington joined with Lake Union. Over the next three months, the level of Lake
Washington dropped 9 feet. Wetlands along the shore drained and the lake dropped below the level of
the Black River channel. The Lake Washington Ship Canal became the new outlet for Lake Washington.
In 1912, Renton residents had diverted the Cedar River from its channel through town, which repeatedly
and destructively flooded, to a new channel that led directly to Lake Washington. According to Morda C.
Slauson, a Renton historian, this meant that after the lake was lowered, the Black -Cedar salmon run
arrived just in time to be trapped by the receding waters. The rivers' salmon runs ended, although some of
the fish may have found their way into the lake via the canal and, in the 1930s, new salmon stock would
be introduced that would spawn in the rerouted Cedar River.
A New Watershed
Water moved differently through the new watershed. It passed through Lake Washington much more
quickly, in about two years. The steeper gradient created by the lowered lake level on Lake Washington
caused the Sammamish Slough current to move more quickly, increasing the channelization of the
waterway (making a deeper channel).
At the same time, the changes drastically reduced the volume of water flowing through the Duwamish
River. It reduced --but did not eliminate --flooding, and allowed farmers to drain and cultivate more land.
Before long, much of the lower Duwamish would be straightened and dredged into a waterway to
facilitate economic development. This, along with filling on the Seattle tidelands, led to a dramatic loss of
the Duwamish estuary. Much of the industrial area of Seattle is built on top of the filled Duwamish
estuary.
Benefits and Losses
Though the ship canal would bring many economic and social benefits to Seattle, its construction did
have some detrimental effects. In the simplest sense, the city lost something beautiful. Clarence
Dullahaut, who moved to Renton in 1903, described the Black River in an interview: "It was a pretty river,
meandering along. People used to come up the Duwamish from the Sound up the Black to Lake
Washington in launches" (Sato, 56).
The Duwamish tribe had a village located along the Black River for at least 1,400 years and perhaps for
thousands of years and members of the tribe lived along the river. Members of area Native tribes who had
long gathered resources from those wetland areas and who relied on salmon as a foundation of their diet
and as an integral part of their spiritual beliefs, lost access to those resources on Lake Washington and
along the Black River. The right to fish and gather plant materials had been retained in the treaties the
tribes signed with the United States, but it became difficult to exercise those rights in the much reduced
environment that resulted from the hydrological changes.
There was also an emotional loss for the Duwamish. Tribal member Joseph Moses stated in an interview
with David Buerge, "That was quite a day for the white people at least. The waters just went down, down,
until our landing and canoes stood dry and there was no Black River at all. There were pools, of course,
and the struggling fish trapped in them. People came from miles around, laughing and hollering and
stuffing fish into gunny sacks" (Sato, 57). Henry Moses (1900-1969) "dragged his canoe out of the mud
and said he never wanted to paddle it again" (Slauson, 5).
Like many large civil engineering projects in Seattle, the Lake Washington Ship Canal wrought enormous
change to the landscape and to the lives of people who lived on the waterways affected by the project. It
brought many benefits to the city, but exacted a large environmental and social price.
This essay made possible by:
Port of Seattle
Seattle Office of Arts & Culture
King County
Sources:
Michael J. Chrzastowski, M. Historical Changes to Lake Washington and Route of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, King
County, WA, U.S. (Reston, Va.: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1983); Mike Sato, The Price of Taming a River: The
Decline of Puget Sound's Duwamish/Green Waterway (Seattle: The Mountaineers, 1997), 51-57; Morda C. Slauson, "'Where
the Black River Flowed," April 1967, typescript manuscript, Renton Historical Society; "Wedding of Lake Union and Lake
Washington Celebrated by Crowd,' The Seattle Times, August 26, 1916, p. 12.
Note: This essay was corrected and revised on August 9 and December 28, 2016, and on April 19, 2018.
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