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Cover Story Plant Life Taste On Fitness Now & Then

NOW & THEN
WRITTEN BY PAUL DORPAT
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Muddy Business


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COURTESY OF MICHAEL CIRELLI
For most of its first century, the Virginia Inn was a beer parlor for the First Avenue neighborhood of mostly single male itinerants working and moving along the waterfront. The present owners, Patrice Demombynes and Jim Fotherlingham, have turned it into one of Seattle's earliest "art bars," featuring exotic brews, exhibits on the walls and a cool juke box. They also established a compassionate policy of no beer inflation for the neighborhood habitués who used the bar when they took over in 1981. Those regulars who survive still pay $1.25 a schooner. You and I pay more.

 
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PAUL DORPAT
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JUDGING FROM their general sobriety, these posers seem intent on supporting Virginia Inn owners William Herdman and John McNamara in this protest. If the appropriately attired fisherman in the boat leaves any doubt, this street theater is explained with an array of signs.

On the power pole at the corner one reads, "This ferry runs all night to the Virginia Bar." Signs attached to boxes on the bar side of the mud read: "Sure Cure for Rheumatism: Mud Baths" and "Take the Ferry for the Virginia Bar, a paradise for Hunters, Herdman and McNamara."

The Virginia Inn cannot be very old in this view. While the inn's present owners, Patrice Demombynes and Jim Fotherlingham, were researching the history of the Livingston-Baker Building for their own 20th anniversary on this corner, they discovered that permission to build was given in 1901. This exhibition was likely staged sometime between 1903 and 1906, when the nearly new ridge on the east side of First Avenue north of Pike Street left by its 1899 regrade was washed away during the Second Avenue Regrade.

Herdman and McNamara were adding to a pioneer tradition of covering our unpaved streets with muddled hyperboles. On his Underground Seattle Tour, historian-showman Bill Speidel routinely described the death by street mud of one poor local who left only his hat wallowing on the surface of Jackson Street.

Speidel's story may be a variation on a tale dated to 1871, when pedestrians noted a hat in the muddy middle of the street. As J. Willis Sayer describes it in "This City Seattle," "Many stopped to look at the hat, but no one cared to recover the body supposed to be underneath it. So they started a checkup of the town to see who was missing."

Paul Dorpat specializes in historical photography and has published several books on early Seattle.


Cover Story Plant Life Taste On Fitness Now & Then

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