What Happened to Seattle's Millionaire's Row?

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This House

This House

Жыл бұрын

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Before Starbucks and Amazon, Seattle boasted the homes of some of the nation’s first Millionaires.
Location: Seattle, Washington
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Photos from: B Caslon
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Пікірлер: 258
@johnhaxby306
@johnhaxby306 Жыл бұрын
walking 14th street (millionaires row) is one of my favorite things to do around Halloween, the fallings leaves, the stately homes, it just feels nice. Most of these houses have been up for sale over the past 2 years and fetch anywhere between $5 million and $8 million. The Shaffer-Baillie house is a B and B and you can stay there, totally worth it because the rooms are huge and you get the run of the house (the owners live on the top floor) so you can go downstairs in one of the great rooms and sit and feel the house in all its grandeur.
@NelsonClick
@NelsonClick Жыл бұрын
Seattle is a gorgeous city. It's not just pretty but there is a "vibe" there. I can't explain it fully but fully felt it when I was there in 1983. You can sense the "eternal" there and I think this is what residents live with everyday.
@Anonymouse428
@Anonymouse428 Жыл бұрын
I grew up on Capital Hill in Seattle, on 18th and Aloha, so about 6 or so blocks from Millionaires Row. It’s crazy seeing these old pictures of the street without any huge trees! It’s a genuinely beautiful area, and I was incredibly lucky (and spoiled!) to have grow up in that area. Volunteer Park is just a wonderful park, and the houses around there are just amazing to look at. Makes me homesick!
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Жыл бұрын
When did you live there? I was at 23rd and Aloha in the 50’s. GREAT place and time to be a kid!
@matthewkyle205
@matthewkyle205 5 ай бұрын
lived ot the corner of 15th & aloha , nice neighborhood
@rebeccablakey2637
@rebeccablakey2637 Жыл бұрын
Seattle is such a beautiful city. So many amazing historical buildings there. So many people that built amazing homes. They are definitely beautiful.
@ryandonahue8932
@ryandonahue8932 Жыл бұрын
lol you haven’t been there lately
@mikeabel7577
@mikeabel7577 Жыл бұрын
@@ryandonahue8932 I'm not sure that you've been there lately. Sure, parts of the city have been ruined by the homeless encampment bullsh*t but the vast majority of the city is still beautiful. Especially the neighborhood featured in this video. Most of the violence and grime is centralized in small pockets of downtown. The greater Seattle area are some of the best suburbs in the United States.
@grumpyoldlady_rants
@grumpyoldlady_rants Жыл бұрын
@@mikeabel7577 - Homeless encampment bullsh*t? I think you mean the “greedy investors making housing unaffordable in the region”.
@RetneEname
@RetneEname Жыл бұрын
@@mikeabel7577 ya it's the entire city now, it's what you get for voting for liberals. They've ruined an entire city.
@ryandonahue8932
@ryandonahue8932 Жыл бұрын
@@mikeabel7577 I work in Seattle and live very close. Downtown is nasty. Ballard is nasty. Sodo is nasty. Most of capital hill is gross. There was a shooting in west Seattle barely two weeks ago. Last time I went to pike place my completely empty car had its window busted out.
@claudiamann7111
@claudiamann7111 Жыл бұрын
So glad that so many of these houses still survive. Amazing how fast that city grew.
@dylangraver3516
@dylangraver3516 Жыл бұрын
The neighborhood is, if anything, more beautiful today than it was then.
@dennys726
@dennys726 Жыл бұрын
@@dylangraver3516 What the heck is your idea of beauty?
@sandystarfish7645
@sandystarfish7645 Жыл бұрын
My family had moved to Seattle back in 1967 from No. Dakota, we ended up living in a beautiful home on 15 and Aloha...it was an incredibly beautiful neighborhood, lawns and shrubs well manicured and only 3 blocks from Volunteer Park, it was a family park then and an artists landscape...that was many years ago...although the homes remain, the beauty of it has been taken away..so sad. Thank you for posting this video, people can't understand how beautiful it once was.
@roryteal5940
@roryteal5940 Жыл бұрын
Shout Out to a fellow Capital Hill kid. 18th Aloha. Of course dined out and shopped on 15th Ave as well as going to my friends house on 15th. It was a great place to be a kid. Do not like what Seattle has Become. Too crowded, violent and expensive.
@duffysullivan2794
@duffysullivan2794 Жыл бұрын
15th and Aloha! I lived on that corner too, for a year or two. It was the late 1970s. House is still there, on the southeast corner.
@lindseylover8059
@lindseylover8059 Жыл бұрын
Seattle is looking down
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Жыл бұрын
Last time I drove through there was about 20 years ago. Has it been ruined? It was so lovely there when I was a kid. So sad that it’s not been protected.
@dennys726
@dennys726 Жыл бұрын
It just makes me want to puke. Obviously you haven't been to 15th and Aloha in a very long time if at all. That corner and the entire stretch of 15th on up past Louisa Boren Lookout and Lakeview Cemetery is still beautiful, Breathtaking views, beautiful trees that line and shadow the road. I get so sick and tired of people who either just move to Seattle or haven't been here in a long while put it down.
@Gizathecat2
@Gizathecat2 Жыл бұрын
A bit to the west of the grand houses around Volunteer Park, overlooking Lake Union and the Olympics in the distance is the Sam Hill mansion. Hill was a railroad baron who built the Maryhill Museum of Art overlooking the Columbia River and the nearby Stonehenge replica.
@IamSquirrel
@IamSquirrel Жыл бұрын
I also like the Tea Cup gas station and The American Hop Museum. Both are in the same area of Washington.
@AndreA-dl5po
@AndreA-dl5po Жыл бұрын
North Capitol Hill is like a vast treasure trove of late 19th century/early twentieth century styles. Queen Anne, Gothic, Tudor, Craftsmans. Just hundreds and hundreds of intact stately homes on streets with mature trees. Very much worth visiting. Seattle did not experience urban renewal butchery to any extent as much as other cities and freeway revolts in the 60s and 70s were largely successful. For street after street of Tudor revivals head a few miles north to the Ravenna area (A designated historic district) and to Wallingford for Craftsman overload land. They're trying to designate about 25% of Wallingford as a historic district. Thats a long ongoing controversial story that probably justifies its own separate video. All of those areas are basically current millionaire's rows since there are no houses on sale for less than a million dollars.
@pavelow235
@pavelow235 Жыл бұрын
No widespread urban renewal in Seattle???? Does the Alaskan Way Viaduct ring a bell?
@AndreA-dl5po
@AndreA-dl5po Жыл бұрын
@@pavelow235 The Alaskan Way viaduct interestingly enough unlike I-5 construction (Which was a classic plow through hundreds of buildings willy nilly freeway) did not displace very many buildings at all. It was in the late 1940s, a completely working waterfront and the viaduct right of way was mainly used as rail lines and other miscellaneous industrial stuff. It was not a residential or office area at all. It was quite narrow in fact and the part of it near downtown was only about a mile to a mile and half long. It's not that Seattle had zero urban renewal, there was just much less of it than places like Boston, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Detroit where entire large neighborhoods were erased.
@GuantanamoBayBarbie2
@GuantanamoBayBarbie2 Жыл бұрын
Mount Baker neighborhood has some beautiful homes too; many craftsman.
@AndreA-dl5po
@AndreA-dl5po Жыл бұрын
@@GuantanamoBayBarbie2 And is also a designated historic district. For those unfamiliar with the area, achieving historic district designation is a long micro-detailed grueling process usually taking years. For volunteers and historians to make it happen is no small achievement.
@eliasross4576
@eliasross4576 Жыл бұрын
Wallingford has a lot of very cheap and poorly made houses. A lot of them were renovated out of their charm. I'm sure there are a few worth saving but I'm not sure we need to save 25% of them.
@nikolec.2608
@nikolec.2608 Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Seattle and never heard of Millionaires Row, but it makes sense. I went to St. Joseph’s on 18th & Aloha in the 80’s and often went to my classmates homes in the area after school (I grew up in Madison Valley, a couple of miles east of Millionaires Row). None of them lived on Millionaires Row, but still lived in the many gorgeous homes in the area. I’m always in awe of the beautiful homes in that area even to this day.
@kagame6524
@kagame6524 Жыл бұрын
“The hedges of these houses have trust funds” said a friend as we strolled by lol
@megansfo
@megansfo Жыл бұрын
I used to live on Queen Anne hill in a beautiful old 1910 house. Although they regraded (flattened) hills closer to downtown, Queen Anne was left alone, so some of the houses on top have fabulous views. I wish I still owned that house!
@helenvanbockern5843
@helenvanbockern5843 Жыл бұрын
I love driving thru queen Anne I had a friend living there and would visit that area a couple times a yr
@awesomeferret
@awesomeferret 3 ай бұрын
I did too! Mine was a 1909. I was on Nob Hill. Where were you?
@AZGriffins2U
@AZGriffins2U 6 күн бұрын
My wife grew up on Queen Anne. 1916 Dutch Colonial style home. 811 W Bothwell.
@Yankee_Doodle_Dandy
@Yankee_Doodle_Dandy Жыл бұрын
Great to know that so many survived
@devoncantrell3311
@devoncantrell3311 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been in that second house for a wedding. It’s absolutely gorgeous, it’s a complete maze inside with large staircases. I remember feeling almost lost. It’s gorgeous and has an almost night club like room in the basement.
@zackhartmann
@zackhartmann Жыл бұрын
seattle has a really fascinating history - definitely would like more videos!!
@jgrahamiii7749
@jgrahamiii7749 Жыл бұрын
if you can find a copy, The Sons of the Profits is a fun read about Seattle's early days. It will tell you exactly why the railroad baron Charles Wright placed the terminus of the UP railroad in Tacoma but later effectively moved it to Seattle
@kickinghorse2405
@kickinghorse2405 Жыл бұрын
Yes! Maybe a bit about the Denny regarde. It's a fascinating steam punk mega-project.. They actually moved massive! homes further up on Capitol Hill to make way for the project.
@nitrobiz
@nitrobiz Жыл бұрын
I grew up right across the street from Volunteer Park where most of these homes are still standing. Thank goodness they haven’t been torn down unlike other cities.
@Kristenhas3cats
@Kristenhas3cats Жыл бұрын
My sister lives in Seattle and I showed her this video. Now I'm going to visit and get to see the houses myself!
@bscottb8
@bscottb8 Жыл бұрын
3:04 This is a master class in good residential design, the homes honoring a harmonious set-back and scale, yet each distinct for neighborhood liveliness.
@Ap_twsh
@Ap_twsh Жыл бұрын
I agree, they aren't cookie cutter homes and are each unique.
@karenokeane6461
@karenokeane6461 Жыл бұрын
I grew up there, and attended University on Capitol Hill.....it's still a lovely neighborhood. Thank you for posting.
@anteeker
@anteeker Жыл бұрын
It`s so refreshing to see a city that actually kept some of it`s beautiful old homes and modernized them to meet present day needs instead of pulling them down and replacing them with ugly modern structures. A pity more cities didn`t see the value of this type of repurposing.
@danielkoher1944
@danielkoher1944 Жыл бұрын
That’s my biggest gripe. You tear down a magnificent no longer available piece of architectural marvels. Replace it with a 10-15 year pole building maximum. When the devastating loss costs more than gutting and bringing a wonder back to it’s former glory.
@matthuhigginz
@matthuhigginz Жыл бұрын
Upzone that home to a quadraplex.
@elisebuiefamilylaw
@elisebuiefamilylaw Жыл бұрын
Yes, a part of Seattle's unique beauty is the refurbished older homes.
@devoncantrell3311
@devoncantrell3311 Жыл бұрын
Some of these homes have been on market recently. They go for 10-20million nowadays.
@ambert.3792
@ambert.3792 Жыл бұрын
oh dont worry, theyre doing PLENTY of that too. its sad, but i love this neighborhood and that it is still intact and walkable to this day.
@matt007
@matt007 Жыл бұрын
I used to live on Capitol Hill and enjoyed walks around Volunteer Park, looking at all the gorgeous homes. And of course there is Madison Park too!
@catzenhouse
@catzenhouse Жыл бұрын
The Parker-Fersen house, which is the house in the lower left of the intro page, is one of my favorite houses on Capitol Hill. Many, many years ago I did a watercolor of it when I was in university. The house recently was resold again - for megabucks, naturally.
@randykreifels6171
@randykreifels6171 Жыл бұрын
You channel is always improving. I am amazed that you put this information together so quickly. Yes Seattle has alot of old original homes, great neighborhoods .
@helenvanbockern5843
@helenvanbockern5843 Жыл бұрын
O love driving throughout Seattle neighborhoods from the mansion to the smaller homes in west Seattle so fun to see them all
@GuantanamoBayBarbie2
@GuantanamoBayBarbie2 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering this! I had passed those homes so many times on my way to & from Volunteer Park when I lived in the C.D. on 15th & Spring. I always admired them, but I didn't know the history of the neighborhood. Great video! :^)
@stevenkaskus6173
@stevenkaskus6173 Жыл бұрын
Very beautiful houses, all of them and the community plan was brilliant and beautiful, I'd want to own one of these beautiful Homes in this beautiful community.
@willcwhite
@willcwhite Жыл бұрын
This explains a lot about contemporary Seattle. The NIMBYism is a century old.
@Jacob_Dwyer
@Jacob_Dwyer Жыл бұрын
The Parker-Fersen house (14th and Prospect, just South of Volunteer Park) that you began with was built with a spare no expense mentality. Inside it has parquet floors mirrored in faceted ceilings, beautiful exotic wood moldings everywhere, a grand staircase, and hidden rooms. In one of the pictures shown, there is a coach house that stands today, with a residence above the garage. The owners who were there from the mid-90's until about 3 years ago did a great job of bringing things back to the way they were, when it was built in 1909.
@ellisowers6157
@ellisowers6157 Жыл бұрын
As Someone who grew up in and around Seattle it is a beautiful city…to visit. You could not pay me enough money to actually live in the city of Seattle
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588
@w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents moved to Seattle in the 1920’s and lived in a home on Aloha…close to Holy Names’ Academy. My mom went to St Nick’s back in the 1930’s. After her divorce in the 50’s, we moved in with my grandparents….and I went to Steven’s Elementary……on 19th I think. Went to Saturday matinees at a little theater on Aloha and 19th…and to a little library there where I learned about dinosaurs. Many many happy hours riding my bike with friends all over North Capitol Hill…..St. Joseph’s…and Volunteer Park…..climbing to the top of the tower in the park. Couldn’t have asked for a better place for kids to roam back in the day. Still my favorite part of the city.
@Meta.Empress
@Meta.Empress Жыл бұрын
Pretty much every house in Seattle is worth at least a million now
@annettebrunette1402
@annettebrunette1402 Жыл бұрын
In 1973 I moved away from home and I lived at 615 14th Ave E in a 1920’s apartment house ... it’s the first apartment house on the street going south from Volunteer Park. The house next door I’d heard was owned by one of the Denny family members ... I never knew this street was labeled “Millionaires Row” ... but I thought the street and area so glorious, especially because I valued old stately homes. I talked with the person who lived in the Moore mansion and learned there had been a major fire in the house and they were just getting it back together ... someone told me Tolstoy’s daughter lived in the corner house across 14th Ave and the Parker mansion ... back in the 7O’s so many of the houses were so cheap b3cause of the cost to heat them ... that was the time too buy ... these old mansions are so fascinating...
@hellagood30
@hellagood30 Жыл бұрын
Some of those have not changed since the day they were built. Took my mom there for a picnic. Very nice and peaceful.
@conservativehippie9736
@conservativehippie9736 Жыл бұрын
I am addicted to your channel! I hope someday you do Grandview drive and Moss Avenue in Peoria Illinois. I'd love to learn the history of those homes.
@Gizathecat2
@Gizathecat2 Жыл бұрын
Great idea! Back in 1985 I attended my father’s funeral in Peoria. My uncle took me for a drive on Moss Avenue and Grandview Drive. Moss Avenue was a living museum of every architectural style of the 19th century on one street. Some of the houses were “tired” looking. Have the houses been fixed up and restored to their former glory?
@conservativehippie9736
@conservativehippie9736 Жыл бұрын
@@Gizathecat2 absolutely...they ALL seem to have life again. A lot of the younger generations has shown their appreciation fs. In 85 I was 17. Use to cruise both streets dreaming of living in 1 some day.
@christopherkraft1327
@christopherkraft1327 Жыл бұрын
These stately homes are simply beautiful!!! 👍👍🙂
@JennyChen-ph8gk
@JennyChen-ph8gk Жыл бұрын
Yes, very nice house
@JennyChen-ph8gk
@JennyChen-ph8gk Жыл бұрын
Living in Seattle is also a good choice
@KTownPaintBaller
@KTownPaintBaller Жыл бұрын
James A Moore is my great great great Grandfather. My Dad always mentions his Travesty with his Ferry business.
@Rix317
@Rix317 Жыл бұрын
I'll share this with my Facebook group they love this stuff!
@shirkophobe
@shirkophobe Жыл бұрын
I passed these houses a few times a week when I would walk from school at St. Joseph’s on 18th to my grandmothers apartment on Harvard. Many are still there, but you’ll need several million dollars to buy one!
@scottwatson804
@scottwatson804 Жыл бұрын
I love all you content. Times gone by. I'm from Maine and during the Gilded Age and before, Bar Harbor Maine was where the Wealthy not so welcome in Newport Built Palatial Summer "Cottages". Theres a Book Called the Lost Bar Harbor. It All came to a Stop in the Fire of 47. which Burst 63 of the "Cottages" and most of Bar Harbor. I would love to see something about this. Thank for all your Great Work.
@venividivicichannel
@venividivicichannel Жыл бұрын
This country is so fascinating, seeing pictures of these cities back then, it's amazing. I wish I could time travel to be there at that time
@FritsAbell
@FritsAbell Жыл бұрын
I love this series. Please come chronicle Buffalo's Millionaires' Row, a good amount of which is still intact.
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 Жыл бұрын
My ex husband’s ex wife lived in the Parker mansion. I used to love to hike to that neighborhood to appreciate the fabulous architecture and landscaping, and to walk in Volunteer Park. I lived in Mt. Baker, a grand old neighborhood on the shores of Lake Washington, in a Colonial Revival home built in 1925. The original plaster walls and grand millwork were in pristine condition, having been lovingly cared for through the years by every owner. There was an original Batchelder tile fireplace. I also enjoyed hiking to Queen Anne. That’s what my friend and I called our long walks, urban hiking. I don’t know if there is any other city in the country with so many grand old homes as there are in Seattle. There are hundreds.
@kellyhawkins9626
@kellyhawkins9626 Жыл бұрын
You learn something new every day. I’m from Seattle and knew about this stretch of houses but not the history of the planning and big ideas of the builders. Sustainability back then wasn’t exactly the power word it is today. One thing I didn’t hear in the video is that while the area was a suburb back when it was built, it’s in the Seattle city limits now. I have to say, though, that most of Seattle east and north of downtown is a gigantic millionaire’s row. It’s very hard to find a house under the 750,000-1,000,000 range. Thanks for an interesting and informative video.
@TheRKae
@TheRKae Жыл бұрын
Tacoma's historic homes district is still utterly beautiful. It's just up the hill from the long waterfront walkway.
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
I live within walking distance of these lovely homes... a friend visiting town in 2020 stayed in the Shafer-Baillie house (now a B&B)... since it was summer of 2020, they were the only guests. I went to hang out with them and we had free run of the beautiful house. Nicely preserved!
@ericthomsen9644
@ericthomsen9644 Жыл бұрын
Some good friends of my folks inherited one of those houses, just down the street north of that big white one in your opening shots. I remember it well from my visits as a kid. The furnishings were fantastic and the place had servant's quarters on the second floor near the top of servant's staircase leading down to the kitchen. The "garage" was the old carriage house which had a high enough ceiling that we could play basketball inside during winter months. A grand entrance to the place with a great staircase and a large walnut dinner table in a formal dining room with the button underneath the table for summoning servants. It had a office-library with glass bookcases. Just a spectacular place that is etched in my memory.
@kameemw
@kameemw Жыл бұрын
You must be talking about the Cobb house 🏡
@maxx1000
@maxx1000 Жыл бұрын
It's a treasure to walk through the neighborhood. A bit overgrown in parts but charmingly warm.
@mstsp9546
@mstsp9546 Жыл бұрын
I would like to see more of these, that area is interesting, the houses that you showed seem subdued in comparison to the ones in the East, or Midwest.
@MrLawnGuy91
@MrLawnGuy91 Жыл бұрын
You should look into Bessemer Alabama. So many amazing historical houses both restord and abandoned.
@rj6404
@rj6404 Жыл бұрын
Nice , millionaires row , lots of nostalgia , beautiful buildings frozen in time .
@israelglymph211
@israelglymph211 Жыл бұрын
I've lived in Seattle my entire life, born and raised and never knew about any of this. Crazy but so interesting
@deepvibez
@deepvibez Жыл бұрын
Queen Anne hill. I love it here.
@ladyoftheflowers44
@ladyoftheflowers44 Жыл бұрын
My friend used to live in a house on this street. It was a huge mansion that he shared with 7 people, of all races, ages and genders It had a crazy underground tunnels underneath it and portraits of the former owner at the top of the (velvet covered) stairs
@LJB103
@LJB103 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I was in Seattle only once but did not see these homes. How about something a bit different like Commonwealth Ave. in Boston where the millionaires built "row houses?" Also how about Summit Ave in St. Paul, MN or Portland and Westmoreland Places in St. Louis?
@veronicamonell7263
@veronicamonell7263 Жыл бұрын
In my opinion millionaires row today is on Highland Drive in Seattle. Insane rich!!
@Gizathecat2
@Gizathecat2 Жыл бұрын
My husband is a wood refinisher and just completed a job a bit east of Volunteer Park! He refinished all the cabinetry in the house! Parts of Volunteer Park are a bit sketchy these day as are most Seattle Parks.😢
@gregfromguam
@gregfromguam Жыл бұрын
Interesting. Been living in Seattle since 1988. Never heard of Millionaire Row but will have to check it out. Queen Anne is somewhat the same. Glad to hear some parts of Seattle retained their history. Much of it hasn't unfortunately. Central District even lost its community due to gentrification. But, yes, some of the old homes are still there. I remember that white mansion on Queen Anne that looks like something from another time and place. That's still there.
@danielkoher1944
@danielkoher1944 Жыл бұрын
Seattle is so Amazing I was so impressed by the Downtown being so well kept. Utilized businesses in former businesses so European than so many blight, decayed Downtown, USA 🇺🇸 cities.
@wutafungi
@wutafungi Жыл бұрын
You haven't seen downtown in a few years it would seem...
@mariel7964
@mariel7964 Жыл бұрын
Loved Seattle and living about 30 minutes from it, I enjoyed visiting it...until homeless agenda took over. Didn't visited until recently and some parts are just a sad sight. Hate to be negative, but the liberal agenda ruined a beautiful place.
@eugenefisher2566
@eugenefisher2566 Жыл бұрын
I hope renovate a house on Capital Hill, they added a underground section to the home that was quite large.
@davidward805
@davidward805 Жыл бұрын
Lovely video!
@minnesotamonk
@minnesotamonk Жыл бұрын
It would be fun to do one of these for the Twin Cities in Minnesota - Summit Avenue or Mount Curve Drive...
@namelessone3339
@namelessone3339 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to know more about the Loring Heights area where I-94 curves around downtown Minneapolis Duluth, Minn. has an amazing history of wealth and fine homes financed by the iron mines.
@DorothyAnstett-ip8xw
@DorothyAnstett-ip8xw Жыл бұрын
Very interesting history and video. (Just a note that Olmsted Brothers is not spelled Olmstead)....My grandparents owned one of those homes, and it has been lovingly restored by the current owners with lots of historic references throughout the house. They were gracious to host an open house for our family to view the restoration. At the top of the Volunteer Park water tower there is an interesting and detailed history of the Olmsted contributions to Seattle.
@larspardo4309
@larspardo4309 Жыл бұрын
the area between NE65 & Ravenna Park has got my vote...so much so it's federally registered as an 'historic district'
@stevevice9863
@stevevice9863 Жыл бұрын
Glad these houses were saved. A suggestion for a future video would be St. James Court and Belgravia Court in Louisville, KY. Still intact with a great collection of homes and a beautiful fountain from the turn of the century.
@angelafields3740
@angelafields3740 Жыл бұрын
Makes me gonna go visit Seattle to go see those houses
@dawgsview9276
@dawgsview9276 Жыл бұрын
Best Halloween destination. Raised our daughter there trick to treating
@RedMountainChaser
@RedMountainChaser Жыл бұрын
Between the developers and the homeless,, Seattle is a fraction of what it once was. So sad to walk down streets where historic buildings once were and now there luxury apartments and dirty needles.
@skleedleplotchnu3713
@skleedleplotchnu3713 Жыл бұрын
There are a few tiny parks in Boulder CO designed by F L Olmstead, very nice indeed
@janethill4365
@janethill4365 Жыл бұрын
So odd that the Seattle residents allowed this city to turn into a cesspool. I can't understand this
@StLouis-yu9iz
@StLouis-yu9iz Жыл бұрын
Hope you make more StL videos soon! ❤
@kaseys4145
@kaseys4145 Жыл бұрын
I love the Parker house!
@malkalopez1641
@malkalopez1641 Жыл бұрын
Wow! All of those are pretty much still there. That area is still one of the most expensive and elite places to live in Seattle. Interesting to hear that it’s one of the country’s only surviving rows.
@chansaechao79
@chansaechao79 Жыл бұрын
In my early teens, a group of men dressed in all white with pointed tip hats chased us away from Volunteer park. We hid in the nearby bushes until they stopped looking. It was not Halloween and they were not friendly.
@malkalopez1641
@malkalopez1641 Жыл бұрын
@@chansaechao79 I’m sorry that happened to you. I think I remember this!! I was young too. Terrifying! As a Jewish person it was particularly frightening.
@kissingcandy1
@kissingcandy1 Жыл бұрын
I would love to visit.
@Zippezip
@Zippezip Жыл бұрын
Dude you should check out Rochester, NY and its millionaire's row.
@janedee6488
@janedee6488 Жыл бұрын
Glad they survived 😊
@paulprovino1843
@paulprovino1843 Жыл бұрын
How about a this house Buffalo NY millionaire row? I don’t know if you researched about Buffalo who had many great architects working here around the turn of the century and a great housing stock?
@65stang98
@65stang98 Жыл бұрын
I live in southern ohio close to wv and kentucky and theres a lot of homes like this that have survived in the smaller cities and towns esp the ones with mining money the company owners and execs lived in.
@loraldinp2624
@loraldinp2624 Жыл бұрын
I live in New England and most of our small/ large cities are loaded with antique homes. Very historic and beautiful!
@JTSunriseMusic
@JTSunriseMusic Жыл бұрын
Lived here since 1992, grunge city, cheap rent, few corporate businesses, few homeless, plenty of small businesses and jobs and fun bars and music clubs. 20 years later all the old apartment blocks bulldozed for condo scrapers and fancy expensive corporate crap, $3000 rent and homeless tent towns disparity everywhere. Capitalism killed Seattle
@susanholbrook4185
@susanholbrook4185 Жыл бұрын
Capitalism also built it and very rich people from Europe etc. People made their fortunes in America and elsewhere.
@dickfalkenbury1106
@dickfalkenbury1106 Жыл бұрын
Seattle's history is unique among America's cities. The only decent history is 'Seattle, Past and Present'. What I find interesting is, among the millionaire row, there are many different styles of architecture. There are no two houses alike. And this is true throughout the city (until recently). The reason, I believe, is that little of the city homes were built by one developer (one exception is the Wedgwood neighborhood). There was much infilling; homes would be built, then someone would come in, decades later and build new homes in-between the existing homes, in a new style. Another thing that makes Seattle different is its geography. There are 123 miles of shoreline, and six hills over 500 ft tall: the rich used to live on top of the hill, the poor lower, and the very rich along the shoreline. The very rich lived within blocks of the poor.
@janicecopeland9083
@janicecopeland9083 Жыл бұрын
Seattle now home to poo and syringes on the sidewalks!
@debbiesueillinois
@debbiesueillinois Жыл бұрын
Are any of these places that you show, open to the public for tours, I would like to put them on my travel list to visit when on vacation in these areas
@nickeltek
@nickeltek Жыл бұрын
All the homes shown here are still private residences, with the exception of Shaffer Bailey mansion, which is a nice bed and breakfast. You can book a night there!
@markmark6216
@markmark6216 Жыл бұрын
I enjoy your look at Millionair Rows of the past . May I suggest Rochester,NY for you next subject. East Avenue has not only the George Eastmans home but Watson/Sibley founder of Western Union. The homes of Basuch and Lomb of the optical giant, early Buggy whip founders. We were know for business in both flour and flowers( raising flowers for seeds/ plants for sale) . There are many more stories in the Pioneer s of science. George Eastman, unlike today inventers and business pioneers, had to go hat in hand, to these successful men to fund his ideas for photographic film and cameras. Check it out!
@ShouldHaveKnownYT
@ShouldHaveKnownYT Жыл бұрын
Could you do Walter Chrysler’s mansion on Long Island? It’s now the administration building for the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and a well preserved incredible house.
@teraarmstrong6488
@teraarmstrong6488 Жыл бұрын
Just because it's Seattle. Grew up with AIC, Soundgarden, Mother Love Bone. Can't imagine not being there during those times.
@Fourestgump
@Fourestgump Жыл бұрын
Seattle politicians now make money with homelessness
@CowboyTroy67
@CowboyTroy67 Жыл бұрын
Proud to have lived in Villa Costella on Olympic, the S. Slope of Queen Anne, albeit briefly.
@carsonbennitt5065
@carsonbennitt5065 Жыл бұрын
Please do Los Angeles’ lost Bunker Hill. Crocker mansion and Bradbury mansion
@ShirleeKnott
@ShirleeKnott Жыл бұрын
this comment for feeding the ever hungry algorithm it's favorites are comments, replies and likes to them
@HORSEYANIME2024
@HORSEYANIME2024 Жыл бұрын
Pls do historical mansions of Milwaukee Wisconsin
@djijspeakerguy4628
@djijspeakerguy4628 Жыл бұрын
I think I’ve seen the house in the thumbnail, off interstate 5 if I’m correct. It’s in extremely rough shape, those front columns and fences seem rotted out. It looks like someone was working on it, then abandoned it.
@kickinghorse2405
@kickinghorse2405 Жыл бұрын
Such a chipper retrospective.
@billbored8277
@billbored8277 Жыл бұрын
We used to love walking around Capitol Hill, looking at all the amazing mansions. Too bad what’s happened to that city, you couldn’t pay me to live there now…. But living on Capital Hill in the 90’s was a lot of fun!
@EricaGamet
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
It's still a lot of fun here!
@billbored8277
@billbored8277 Жыл бұрын
@@EricaGamet No one saying fun can’t be had there still, but it’s no where near the 90’s. Plus there wasn’t the current crime, homelessness, tents, garbage, and open drug use all over. I spent 37 years there, living and exploring every corner of that city. Road a bus downtown for work almost every day. I watched it slide into the current shithole.
@loraldinp2624
@loraldinp2624 Жыл бұрын
@@billbored8277It probably has to do with your attitude as to why you’re so miserable in life. Richest country in the world and we worship billionaires while not raising minimum wage in over a decade, or providing healthcare to all. But go on and demonize the homeless. The wealth gap is becoming more and more horrifying by the year. It makes sense when politicians work for corporations (USA is an oligarchy), and not we the people.
@billbored8277
@billbored8277 Жыл бұрын
@@loraldinp2624 I love the deep dive into my ‘attitude’ and ‘life’… 🤣 You put all that together from a couple sentences? Amazing. Sorry, Seattle is a soggy grey depressing dirty drug infested dystopian hell hole. Truth hurts. 🤷‍♂️ PS I just saw your other post, you live in New England? But lectured me on my experiences of living and working in Seattle for 37 years? LOL 😂 🤣 OMG 😆
@AnDrEwScOtTWiLLiAm
@AnDrEwScOtTWiLLiAm Жыл бұрын
The first priority when starting a new utopia is to figure out ways to 'keep the riff-raff out' !
@14sasst
@14sasst Жыл бұрын
What street is that now ? I don’t recognize it.
@StamperWendy
@StamperWendy Жыл бұрын
If I was rich, I might not mind living in millionaire's row, to blend in, but I'd hate it if it meant that I had to keep up with my neighbors, that's so not me! If they had pools, I'd want stables!
@craiggillett5985
@craiggillett5985 Жыл бұрын
What a beautiful neighbourhood. You can’t beat flawless design.
@scottthomas5819
@scottthomas5819 Жыл бұрын
Yess
@kevinwood9130
@kevinwood9130 Жыл бұрын
Could you do a video on Paterson nj?
@susan7775
@susan7775 Жыл бұрын
We live about ten miles south of downtown Seattle. We paid $22,000.00 for our house, we could sell it for half a million today. It’s not a very big house, about 1700 sq ft. But we do live on half an acre and have a two car detached garage with a small workshop and a room above it. We don’t go to Seattle much, traffic is horrible for one thing. Graffiti, trash, tents everywhere. It looks like a civilization on the edge of destruction
@purplebutterfly7257
@purplebutterfly7257 Жыл бұрын
I really like the Parker mansion and the beautifully designed streets to keep the riffraff out.
@Kylesellsitall
@Kylesellsitall Жыл бұрын
Please do Historic OLD LOUISVILLE in louisville Kentucky, I am a realtor there and it would make a fabulous video!!
@Kylesellsitall
@Kylesellsitall Жыл бұрын
And talk about the PINK PALACE!!
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