HomeMy WebLinkAbout08122021 Historic Preservation Mtg. Laydown - Benoit - Walking Tour Map' SECOND AVE
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1 — 300 First Ave Jan van Emple House, 1925
2 — 335 First Ave, Brownell House, 1904
} 3 — 235/239 Second Ave, St Peter's Episcopal Church/Rectory, 1906
4 — 315 Second Ave, Captains Oldow, 1918
5 — 318 Second Ave, Manthey House, 1920
6 1111 Second Ave, Stucco Johnson Historic Homesite, 1916
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7 — 125 Third Ave, Mary Lowell Homestead/The Line/AK Transfer Co.
8 — 319 Third Ave, Wayne Blue House, 1920
9 — 235 Third Ave, The Tides Inn, 1941
10 — 417 Third Ave, Holland House, 1905
11 — 420 Third Ave, Norway Maple, 1943
12 — 429 Third Ave, Hale House, 1905
13 — Third Ave and Dairy Hill Lane, Benny Benson Memonal Park
14 — 209 Fourth Ave, Brown & Hawkins, 1904
15 — 218 Fourth Ave, Urbach's Clothiers, 1942
16 — 219 Fourth Ave, Orlan der Building, 1916
17 — 222 Fourth Ave, McMullen Building, 1930
18 — 225 Fourth Ave, Seward Commercial Company, 1908
■ 19 — 227 Fourth Ave, Generations/Sexton House, 1911
20 — 237 Fourth Ave, Kawabe Park/Fourth Ave Business District
21 — 1200 Fourth Ave, Seward Manners' Memorial
22 — 212 Fifth Ave, Heritage Sitka Spruce
23 2 7/221 Fifth Ave, Hotel Seward,
24 — 232 Fifth Ave, Mt. Marathon Apartmants, ll0 circa 906
25 — 327 Fifth Ave, Swetmann House, 1916
. Q ■ m. U. C. 26 — Fifth
219
27 — 219 House,
Ave, Private Residence, Sixth Ave, Government Cable House, 1905
28 — 239 Sixth Ave, Seward Community Library & Museum, 2011
29 — 313 Sixth Ave, Malloy House, 1928
■ ■ 30 — 308 Sixth Ave, Dryden House, 1920
31—400/408 Sixth Ave, WWII Quonset Huts, circa 1941
32 — 308 Adams St, Van Gilder Hotel, 1916
33 — 410 Adams St, 1867 AK Purchase Centennial Year Sitka Spruce
34 — 500 Adams St, The L.V. Ray Building, 1916
35 — 504 Adams St, IOOF Hall, 1918
36 — 611 Adams St, Stand Oil Manager's House, 1928
37 — 302 Church St, Resu mect Art Coffee House, 1917
38 — 208 Brownell St, Home Brew Alley, 1932
39 — Jefferson St and Ballains Blvd- Sign. 1940 Lowell Creek Diversion Dam
40-401 Railway Ave, Hoban Park, 1923
41 —501 Railway Ave, Seward Railroad Depot, 1917
42 — 613 Railway Ave, Founders Site & Fourth Ave Wharf
•' 43-411 Washington St, Old Solly's, 1916
44 — Lowell Canyon Road, Mount Marathon Race, 1915
45 —Salmon Creek Road & Moat Way, Woodlawn Cemetery, 1916
46 —Aspen Lane & Coolidge Drive, Seward Cemeteries, 1927
...but wait, there's more! Ad
#300 • Jan van Em paI's House, 1925
OVan Emple, 1880-194Q was a famous Dutch/American
artist from the early 20th century. He traveled to
Seward in 1924. He lived here for two years while he
painted his first sacred picture, "The Resurrection" for
the back wall of Saint Peter's Episcopal Church. He
used Seward residents and himself as models.
#315 • Captains Oldov{ 1918
Notable residents include Captain Don Oldow, captain
ofthe Alaska Ferry's Tustemena, and his wife, Captain
Pam. The two of them pioneered excursions to the
Kenai Fjords National Park starting in 1980.
#125 • The Mary Lowell Homestead, The Line, and
Alaska Transfer Company
OThis corner was once a bustling center of activity. It
originally was the site ofthe Mary Lowell homestead.
Frank Bellaire had a house built for her here. Later the
house was the home of Lydia and Al Peel and known
as the Peel House. He was a manager ofthe Alaska
Transfer Company, located where the parking lot is
now. His wife was associated with Seward's notorious
red-light district known as The Line, where the line
of cottonwoods now stands. Behind the cottonwoods
there once were 21 little houses owned and operated
by local businesswomen. The Line closed down in the
mid-1950s.
#319 • Wayne Blue House, 1920
WAlh Wayne Blue purchased this lot in 1916 and the house
as built around 1920. Wayne Blue was a manager at
the Alaska Transfer Company, an agent forthe Seward
Water and Power Company, and a business manager
for the Seward Gateway paper.
#420 • Norway Maple, 1943
01 Beautiful old Norway Maple (Acerplatanoides). Mrs.
Amend bought this beautiful tree through the Sears
catalog in the late 1930s and planted it as a sapling. It
may be the largest Norway Maple tree in Alaska.
#218 • Urbach's Clothiers, 1942
OUrbach's has been in business since 1915 when Leon
Urbach founded it in a different location. In 1921, he
opened his new store where it is today. When a fire
destroyed the original building in 1941, Leon wasted
no time and rebuilt it in 1942. Leon had the only radio
receiver strong enough to get the national news and
would write up bulletins and post them on the window
of his house to keep Seward up to date. The Urbach
home was the meeting place for statesmen and Leon
was one of Alaska's unofficial leaders. When Leon
retired, his son, Larry, and his wife Dorothy, took over
running Urbach's. Dorothy Urbach continued the family
tradition of leadership. In 2020 received an award from
the mayor for her 30 years of leading the Friends of the
Library and her many years of service to the Seward
community.
#1200 • Seward Mariners' Memorial
WmThis lighthouse memorial honors the names of
anners lost at sea or who have passed on after a
lifetime of love for the ocean.
#212 • Heritage Sitka Spruce
ONote the huge, beautiful open -grown Sitka Spruce tree.
Likely over 70 years old, it is the most outstanding tree
in Seward for its history, exemplary shape, beauty, and
size. Note the sidewalk curves around it.
#217 and 221 • Hotel Seward, originally 1905
William McNeiley built the Hotel Seward around 1905.
In 1909 the hotel was advertised as a first-class hotel
with rates of $1 and up. The hotel burned down in 1941
and then was rebuilt in 1944. Different wings have
been built overtime. Come in and walk through its
history.
#338. 1930
AeftThis 405 square -foot cabin was a typical size for many
homes in the 1930s.
#500 • The L.V. Ray Building, 1916
0Built by the Harriman Bank of New York, it served
as a bank until 1922, then as the local high school
from 1925-28. L.V. Ray, a prominent pioneer
attorney, bought the building and had offices there
until his death in 1946. His wife, Hazel, converted
it into apartments.
#504 • International Order of Odd Fellows Hall, 1918
®The IOOF hall was completed and opened to the
public with a dance and basket social in 1918. It
was one ofthe favorite dancing and grand ball
locations in Seward through the 1940's, and
served as a community center for many years.
Woodlawn Cemetery
Salmon Creek Road and Moat Way, 1916
In the early days, the dead were buried in
numerous places around Seward as there was no
official cemetery. In 1916, the city purchased this
land for the Woodlawn Cemetery. For $30 each,
remains were dug up, transported, and reburied
here. When Salmon Creek changed course in the
1920s, the water table rose too high to continue
using the land as a cemetery. It was abandoned
around 1926. Many of the remains were exhumed
and relocated to the current cemetery. Some of
Seward's easiest residents, including Mary Lowell,
are bused here.
Seward Cemeteries
Aspen Lane and Coolidge Drive, 1933
QIn 1933 the City acquired a 40-acre Cemetery
Reserve and deeded land to the organizations that
had initiated the idea of creating this cemetery.
Many graves were relocated from Woodlawn
Cemetery. To this day, the American Legion,
Masons, and Pioneers of Alaska maintain their
cemeteries. The City also maintains the Oddfellow,
and Jesse Lee Home Cemeteries located in the
NW corner ofthe city parcel. View the Memorial
Garden created by the Seward Rotary Club near
the Aspen Lane entrance, and the Jesse Lee
Home Cemetery interpretive sign nearby.