HomeMy WebLinkAbout1906 - Green-Duwamish River Flowed Through the Old White River ChannelWhite River Valley King County) — Thumbnail History
By Alan J. Stein
Posted 9/23/2001
HistoryLink.org Essay 3583
Floodwaters, O'Brien, north of Kent, ca. 1906
Courtesy MOHAI (SHS934)
Flood in Kent Valley, 1930s
Men building dike along Green River, mid -April
1938
Courtesy MOHAI
Green River, Kent, 2001
Photo by Alan Stein
Since the mid -nineteenth-century arrival of non -Indian
settlers in the White River Valley (also known as the
Green River Valley), the White and Green rivers have
undergone many changes. Annual floods motivated
farmers to destroy the White River channel, and a major
flood in 1906 changed the river's northwestern flow to
Elliott Bay to a westward flow to Commencement Bay.
The Green River, which used to merge with the White,
now flows toward Elliott Bay in the old White River
channel. The completion of Mud Mountain Dam in 1948
and Howard A. Hanson Dam in 1962 have eliminated all
major flooding in the valley, and have changed the
course of development therein.
Years before settlers arrived along the White River in the
1850s, the White, Stuck, and Green rivers ran their
natural course. The White River ran westward along the
southern border of what would become King County.
Near what would become Auburn, it merged with the
Green River, which flowed roughly parallel to the White
River through the mountains, but much farther north.
The Stuck River separated from the White River a few
miles south of the confluence with the Green River.
Muckleshoot Indians remembered when the Stuck was
just a brook that could be stepped over during low water.
The tiny Stuck River closely followed the path of the
White for two miles, before flowing west down the
Puyallup Valley towards Commencement Bay. In some
locations the two rivers were separated by only a few
hundred feet.
For centuries, Native Americans lived seasonally in the
river valleys, and used the surrounding territory for
fishing, hunting, and gathering plants they cultivated.
The first non -Indian settlers came to the valleys to farm.
The soil was rich and the crops abundant, but farmers
were soon plagued with annual floods that sent water
spilling in every direction.
Wanton Destruction
King County farmers would prevent floods on their land
by dynamiting logjams and bluffs, diverting the White
River into the Stuck. This flooded Pierce county farms.
Pierce County farmers would then dynamite other
logjams and bluffs, which would send the White River
north, flooding King County farms. It went on like this for
years, widening the Stuck River.
Green River Flood on Seattle -Tacoma Interurban,
1906
Courtesy Lawton Gowey
Flooding in Kent, ca. 1915
Photograph by Webster & Stevens, courtesy MOHAI
(1983.10.6479.4)
Flood in downtown Kent, ca. 1933
Courtesy UWSpecial Collections and White River
Valley Museum Photograph Collection (287)
Flood prevention work probably on the Green
River near Kent, February 11, 1935
Courtesy UW Special Collections (FER0163)
In 1898, a group of farmers blew up a bluff with more
dynamite than they realized. Logs were blown high into
the air, and a landslide diverted much of the White River
into the Stuck River. King County farmers were jubilant,
Pierce County farmers were not. King County farmers
immediately began building an embankment to protect
their land.
By this time, the original water courses were totally
obliterated. Lawsuits were brought forth by Pierce
County farmers to determine the "natural" flow of the
rivers, but the State Supreme Court sided with King
County. In effect, they ruled that White River runoff into
the Stuck was legal. Nevertheless, some King County
farmers continued to patrol the bluffs and logjams with
rifles.
The Great Flood of 1906
On November 14, 1906, it all became moot. Heavy rains
and a warm Chinook wind from the north began melting
glaciers and snowbanks near Mount Rainier. Flood
waters in the valley rose at the rate of two inches an hour,
and within hours, everything south of Kent was deluged.
Some buildings were almost completely submerged.
A few days later, water began receding at a rapid rate. In
some places it dropped more than four feet an hour. A
massive logjam of trees and debris had pushed the
White River so forcefully into the Stuck River that it broke
through the narrow spot and completely diverted the
water towards Commencement Bay. The White River
took over the channel of the Stuck River, and the Stuck
River ceased to exist.
No longer did the White River merge with the Green River.
Now a dry riverbed appeared in what would become the
downtown area of present-day Auburn. Farmers to the
north were delighted, whereas farmers to the south were
disconsolate. King County posted more guards to assure
that dynamite blasts would not divert the White back into
its old channel, the new break being only one mile north
of the county line.
Fighting the Elements
Pierce County sued to restore the White River to its
former course. Meetings were held, and district Army
engineer Hiram A. Chittenden (1858-1917) was called in
for assistance. Chittenden noted that the original
channel of the White River flowed north to the Duwamish
valley, but that its new course to Puget Sound was half as
long. "Nature has transferred the course and it will be
simpler to perpetuate it than to change it again," he
concluded.
The suit went on for years with no decision. By 1913,
both counties came to an agreement -- Pierce County
would keep the White River, but King County had to pay
Mud Mountain Dam, September, 2001
Photo by Alan Stein
Howard A. Hanson dam, 1990s
Courtesy U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Green River, September 2001
Photo by Priscilla Long
Mud Mountain Dam, May 16, 2006
60 percent of flood control. Within a year, construction
began on a diversion dam and drift barrier a few miles
southwest of Auburn. Later, levees were built and the
channel was dredged.
Little good it did. After spending more than $3 million on
river modifications, another large flood inundated the
valleys in 1933. Realizing that attempts to tame the river
were too much for the combined efforts of two county
governments, the War Department was called to the
rescue.
Muddy Waters
Early studies indicated that the best solution would be a
dam located on the White River 7 miles southeast of
Enumclaw. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers analyzed
several types of dams and decided on an earthfill dam
made of rock, sand, and gravel.
Work began in 1939, after the land had been cleared for
roads and a work camp. More than 500 men worked
three shifts at the damsite, but two years later, work was
halted by World War II. Construction resumed in 1947,
and Mud Mountain Dam was completed in 1948. At the
time, it was the highest rock and earth -filled dam in the
world.
The dam is 432 feet high and 1,600 feet thick at the base.
Its storage reservoir is 5.5 miles long, and can store
106,000 acre-feet of water. The core of the dam is sand
and gravel, and the entire structure is covered with a 3-
foot layer of quarry rock to protect against rain wash.
Once the dam was in operation, Puyallup Valley farmers
in Pierce County never had to worry about massive flood
damage again. Modifications have been made to the
dam to improve safety and to protect salmon runs. As of
the year 2000, it is estimated that the dam has prevented
more than $300 million in flood damages.
From White to Green
After the White River was diverted towards
Commencement Bay in 1906, the Green River flowed
through the old White River channel unimpeded. Near
Tukwila, it merged with the Black River to form the
Duwamish River, but the lowering of Lake Washington in
1916 caused the Black River to disappear. Today there is
no distinction between the Green and Duwamish rivers
other than by name.
Around the same time that the U. S. Army Corps of
Engineers were looking at methods of damming the
White River, they also set their sights on the Green River,
which still flooded annually even without the added
water from the White. In 1948, they recommended
construction of a storage dam at Eagle Gorge, far to the
east into the Cascade Mountains. Congress adopted the
Eagle Gorge Dam as a federal project in 1950, and
Photograph by Steven Pavlov, courtesy Wikimedia
Commons under the Creative Commons Attribution -
Share Alike 4.0 International license
Footbridge on the Green River, Kent, Washington,
April 15, 2009
Photograph by Joe Mabel, courtesy Wikimedia
Commons under GNU Free Documentation License
Looking downriver from under the bridge on the
Kent -Des Moines Rd, just off of the Green River
Trail, Kent, Washington, April 15, 2009
Photograph by Joe Mabel, courtesy Wikimedia
Commons under GNU Free Documentation License
Howard Hanson Dam on the Green River,
Washington
Courtesy US Army Corps of Engineers under public
domain
advanced planning continued throughout most of the
decade.
An early campaigner for flood control in the valley was
Howard A. Hanson, a Seattle attorney and state
legislator. Hanson turned the project in a regional
undertaking, rather than a localized one, by pointing out
the positive effects a storage dam on the Green River
would have on the local economy.
Hanson passed away in 1957, and the dam was named
in his honor. When completed in 1962, the total cost of
the dam came out to $40.5 million, of which $38.5
million was federal investment. At the time of dedication,
estimated annual benefits from the dam were $2 million
(in 1962 dollars). As of October 1996, Howard A. Hanson
Dam had prevented flood damages amounting to more
than $694 million.
Current Developments
After the completion of both the Mud Mountain and
Howard A. Hanson Dams, farming flourished in the
valley, now that floods were no longer an issue. Then,
things began to change. Developers, who had previously
shunned the waterlogged valley, now saw miles of flat,
open land. What was meant to be a boon for farmers,
turned out to be just the opposite.
Farmland acreage began to decrease, as industry moved
in. In 1964, the Boeing Company built a vast aerospace
plant a few miles north of downtown Kent, and other
companies began building warehouses up and down the
valley. More jobs were created in the valley, and
apartment houses and condominiums began sprouting
up over the next few decades, as well as shopping
centers, strip malls, and auto dealerships.
Today many maps still show the Stuck River, even though
it doesn't truly exist. It is only a short channel of the
White River, which flows into Puget Sound at
Commencement Bay near Tacoma. Maps also show the
Green River flowing into the Duwamish River, even
though the actual demarcation point between the two is
vague at best. And the terms "White River Valley" and
"Green River Valley" are used almost interchangeably,
when referring to the area between Tukwila and Auburn.
The twentieth century brought sweeping changes to the flow of these rivers, which in turn changed the
flow of development. The rivers may have been "tamed,' but the fertile farmland they once nourished now
lies beneath a sprawling network of homes, businesses, industries, roads, and people.
This essay made possible by:
Rivers In Time Project:
King County Landmarks & Heritage Commission
Sources:
"High Water in the Stuck," White RiverJournal,June 25,1898, p. 1;"WiLLing to Compromise; White River Farmers
Propose Terms of Peace — May Be Settled," White RiverJournal, September 22, 1900, p. 1; "Valley Suffers by
Disastrous Flood," White RiverJournal, November 16,1906, p. 1; "The Flood Meeting; A Large Turnout and a most
Harmonious One," TheAuburn Argus, January 5,1907, p. 1; "White River Dam Contract is Let," TheAuburn Globe,
April 11'1914'p.1;"The River Nobody VVmntod'"The Seattle Times, January 37.1967'magazine, p.2;"Howard A.
Hanson Dam, End toFlood Threats; Provides Other Benefits toVaiie},'Kent /Vewm-/ouona/'May 9.1862.pp. B-G'7;
"Flood Control has Long, Long History in Auburn -Kent Areas," Auburn Citizen, September 16,1964, p. 2; U.S. Army
Corps ofEngineers, White R/vorf7oodControl Project, Mud Mountain Dam (Somttie'183S);Kow^yodA.Hanson
Dam, Eagle Gorge, Green River, King County,Washington (Soattio'18G3);Additional information provided bythe
White RiverVaUeyMuseum.
Related Topics
Environment Government & PoUltics Infrastructure Rivers
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