Fort Lawton was a United States Armypost located in the Magnolia neighborhood of Seattle, Washington overlooking Puget Sound. In 1973 a large majority of the property, 534 acres of Fort Lawton, was given to the city of Seattle and dedicated as Discovery Park. Both the fort and the nearby residential neighborhood of Lawton Wood are named after Major General Henry Ware Lawton.
While Fort Lawton was a quiet outpost prior to World War II, it became the second largest port of embarkation of soldiers and materiel to the Pacific Theater during the war. The fort was included in the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure list. Fort Lawton officially closed on September 14, 2011.
In 1896, the Secretary of War selected what would later be Fort Lawton for construction of an artillery battery intended to defend Seattle and the south Puget Sound from naval attack. Local citizens and governments donated 703 acres (2.84 km2) land to the United States Army for the installation the next year.
The military encampment was redesigned in 1902 for infantry use. In 1910, a design overhaul, to include housing for officers and enlisted men, was prepared by landscape architect John C. Olmsted. In 1938 during the Great Depression, the Army offered to sell Fort Lawton back to the city of Seattle for one dollar, but the city declined, citing maintenance concerns.
Boxer Rebellion
Fort Lawton was used as a marshaling camp for soldiers preparing to travel to China to deal with the Boxer Rebellion. Seattle photographer Theodore E. Peiser photographed horse corrals, soldiers, and United States Army Transport ships that departed Seattle for Nome, Alaska, on their way to China.
On October 5, 1909, the United States Army's 25th Infantry Regiment which primarily consisted of African American soldiers transferred from the Philippines to Fort Lawton. These men are known as the Buffalo Soldiers. The initial 900 men stationed at the fort and their families accounted for about a third of Seattle's African American population.[2]
World War II
During World War II, at least 20,000 troops at a time were stationed at Fort Lawton, with more than 1 million troops passing through both before and after the war. It was the second-largest port of embarkation for US forces and material to the Pacific Theater during the war.[citation needed]
The post was also used as a prisoner-of-war camp, with more than 1,000 Germans imprisoned there. Approximately 5,000 Italians were passed through en route to Hawaii for imprisonment. On August 15, 1944 an Italian POW, Guglielmo Olivotto, was found murdered at Fort Lawton after a night of rioting between Italian POWs and American soldiers. Twenty-eight African-American soldiers were later court-martialed, convicted of the crime, and sent to prison. They and their families challenged the convictions; after an investigation, the convictions were set aside in 2007. A formal army apology ceremony was held on July 26, 2008; officials also presented the relatives of former US soldiers and the two remaining survivors with years of back pay, following the overturn of their dishonorable discharges.[3][4]
On Memorial Day 1951, a grove of trees and monument honoring the war dead was dedicated near the post chapel. The Korean War brought a flurry of activity as troops headed to or returned from Korea were processed through Fort Lawton. In February 1953, the Fort Lawton Processing Center transferred half of its functions, the outbound tasks, to Fort Lewis (now called Joint Base Lewis McChord). Returnees continued to process through Fort Lawton.
In 1960, the Air Force established a radar station at Fort Lawton. Additionally, Nike anti-aircraft missiles and Air Force radars were in use at Fort Lawton, but in 1968 the site was rejected for proposed defense upgrades.[citation needed]
Native American occupation
In 1970, the fort was occupied for three weeks[citation needed] in March by a group of Native Americans, led by Bernie Whitebear, Ella Aquino, and Ramona Bennett, asserting that the Native Americans had claim to the land that was surplus to requirements.[5][6] The Native Americans succeeded in garnering 40 acres of land and the establishment of the Daybreak Star Cultural Center, but 534 acres (2.16 km2) of the land was declared surplus by the Army in 1971. The property was transferred back to the city in 1972, and dedicated as Discovery Park in 1973.[7]
Closure
In 2005, the fort was included in the Base Realignment and Closure list for that year. Fort Lawton's family housing, consisting of the non-commissioned officer housing below and officer housing on the crown of the hill, has been used by the U.S. Navy for Navy and Coast Guard personnel for almost 40 years. They were purchased by a private developer, remodeled, and now in private ownership. The Capehart Housing in the center of the park was vacated by December 2009 and demolished during the summer of 2010; the land has become part of Discovery Park.
Fort Lawton officially closed on September 14, 2011, and the 364th Expeditionary Sustainment Command, the last U.S. Army Reserve tenant on the post, moved to its new facility in Marysville, Washington. A closing ceremony took place on February 25, 2012.[8] The remainder of the fort property (with the exception of the military cemetery[9] on site) was transferred to the City of Seattle in 2012. As of 2018, there are plans to convert the property into low-income housing.[10] On 10 June 2019 the Seattle City Council voted to build 200-plus low-income and homeless housing units on part of the property but local residents sued to block such development.[citation needed]
Historic district
The Fort Lawton Historic District (FLHD) in the heart of Discovery Park contains numerous historic buildings and structures that were once in, and part of, Fort Lawton. The following list includes only buildings and structures that survived at least into the 1980s.
Official structure number
Structure
Constructed
Comments
Image
417
Administration Building
1902
640
Double Officers Quarters
1904
642
Double Officers Quarters
1904
644
Double Officers Quarters
1904
653
Air Defense Operations Building
1960
torn down 2008
654
FAA Radar Building
c. 1959
torn down 2008
Radar buildings
Building 672 and 670 can also be seen at left, and 640–644 at right.
655
FAA Radar Antenna Dome
c. 1959
670
Single Officers Quarters
1904
Post commander's quarters
670-area housing
672
Double Officers Quarters
1899
676
Double Officers Quarters
1899
679
Double Officers Quarters
1899
681
Reviewing Stand
1900
Concrete foundation still extant
730
Double Barracks
1904
Destroyed by fire February 13, 1983
731
Double Barracks
1899
No longer exists
S-732
Post Gymnasium
1942
733
Post Exchange and Gymnasium
1905
734
Band Barracks
1904
735
Bakehouse
1902
Bakery until c. 1938, offices until c. 1960, no longer exists
754
Quartermaster Shops
1905
no longer exists
755
Civilian Employees Quarters
1908
T-756
Commissary Warehouse
1939
no longer exists
757
Quartermaster Storehouse
1899
no longer exists
759
Guard House
1902
T-760
Storehouse
1938
Used at some point as a garage for a fire truck, no longer exists
T-761
Bus Stop
1949
Scenes from movie Expiration Date (released 2006), filmed at this location
901
Double NCO Quarters
1933
900-area housing
902
Double NCO Quarters
1933
903
Double NCO Quarters
1904
904
Single Family NCO Quarters
1930s
Burned down approximately 2000
905
Double NCO Quarters
1899
906
Single NCO Quarters
1902
Former hospital steward's quarters; previously adjacent to post hospital, north east of administration building, moved to present location around WWII
907
Double NCO Quarters
1899
909
Double NCO Quarters
1904
915
Quartermaster Storehouse
1905
no longer exists
915A
Addition to Quartermaster Storehouse
1939
no longer exists
915B
Bulk Storage Warehouse
1938
no longer exists
916
Quartermaster Stables
1908
Building 916
917
Quartermaster Stables
1902
S-918
Post Engineer Facility and Vehicle Storage Building
1904
Later turned into a groundskeeper's building, no longer exists
Source for buildings, construction dates, comments:[11]
The Chapel
Chapel-on-the-Hill,[12] outside the Historic District, has the status of a city landmark.[13]
In July 2008, the City Council passed an ordinance that changed the boundary of the Fort Lawton Landmark District to include the Chapel and the Chapel Grounds.[14]
^Steve Wilke and Karen James, An Archeological Evaluation of the Fort Lawton Historical District, Seattle, Geo-Recon International (Seattle), July 1984. A report submitted to the City of Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation. p 43–47.
^Marriage Certificate between Walter J. Monkerud and Eva Lee Start performed by army chaplin, on June 14, 1943, (# 91322) uses the name "Chapel-on-the-Hill, Ft. Lawton