Josie
Razore, a founder of a great and once local solid waste company, Rabanco, told me one time that the main reason he and three other young men got the first solid waste
disposal contract let by the City of Bellingham in 1928 was not the price. Rather, it was their firm commitment that
the bodies of dead horses picked up by their company and disposed of at sea
would not wash up on the city’s beaches.
The bloated, decomposing and shark savaged bodies were seen as an
overall negative on Bellingham’s beautiful and largely peaceful shoreline.
We have
always been closer to our garbage than we think. We park our cars on it, build our houses on
it, construct public works on it, play golf on it. While today’s practices, considered modern,
keep much of our solid waste distant and largely invisible, most of the city’s
population stands just a few inches above 100 years of primitive garbage disposal
where garbage dumps and their lingering fires were next door to everyone.
Seattle Municipal Archives |
The Seattle
Times reported in 1908 on a stabbing of a young collector by an irate property
owner who came upon his vacant lot to see the young boy unloading the contents
of his wagon on it. The boy lived and no
charges were filed.
In
Bellingham, the old fire horses in use for pulling garbage wagons would bolt
for the firehouse when the alarm rang, making a long day of missed accounts for the collector.
Columbia City Dump, now the library |
Seattle Municipal Archives |
The Seattle
Municipal League did not like contemporary garbage management and pushed for a
city takeover of collection and an investment in garbage incinerators, then
called garbage destructors, to get rid of the waste. The Muni League, as well as Mayor Hiram Gill,
thought that pick-up and delivery should be free, something the small army of
collectors and dumpers and their less than desireable disposal practices couldn’t keep pace with.
This set up
a great bureaucratic struggle within the city.
The Municipal League favored the Seattle Health Department as the manager of
solid waste because better management reduced the health risk of Typhoid Fever
among other potent diseases associated with living too close to waste. The health department took over management of the collection
program and, in 1910, the program received approval for the sale of $400,000 in
bonds to start a comprehensive capital and operating program in January of
1911. But the capital side of the
program was under the jurisdiction of the great city engineer, Reginald Heber
Thomson, the man who oversaw the construction of nearly every utility Seattle uses today. The progressives thought him
arrogant and controlling, not necessarily inaccurate, and they questioned some
of the decisions he had made that led to the removal of hills and other
geographic features of the old city. Thomson loved a
straight line.
The struggle would go on with Thomson and without him until the engineering department finally wrested control of garbage from the health department at the end of the thirties.
The struggle would go on with Thomson and without him until the engineering department finally wrested control of garbage from the health department at the end of the thirties.
At the time
Mayor Gill announced the new garbage program, the city had finished building
a garbage destructor around today’s South Lake Union Park. It was said, in 1908, that it would handle a
third of the city’s garbage.
However,
between 1905 and 1910, the city tripled in size from about 80,000 people to
nearly 250,000 through annexations of towns like Ballard, Columbia City, South
Park and West Seattle in addition to its own organic population growth. While it was a source of great pride to be
among the largest cities in the country, it was a huge job to provide sewer,
water, electricity and now garbage to such a large population. Also, that first incinerator was not really working
up to snuff. It consumed just 35% of the
mass fed into it, the remainder requiring disposal elsewhere, usually in the
tide flat dump, where cinders from incinerator waste likely started the year long fire
in 1909.
Thomson,
who had selected the burning technology after a fact finding trip to Europe,
then started building a garbage burner at 8th Avenue South and South
Holgate, a handful of blocks from Safeco Field and very near today’s Metro Bus
Base. In his state of the city address
in 1911, the mayor also announced two more garbage burners, one that would be
built at North Lake Union at the foot of Wallingford and another in Ballard, at
43rd and 9th Avenue, near today’s Fred Meyer store.
The
progressives had further reason for outrage at the North Lake Union plant. Constructed at the same time as the destructor was a group of bunkers that Thomson said would help manage the flow of garbage in the north end. When storage ran out, the collection
companies were allowed to unload garbage directly into the lake. Neighbors, and those living above Lake Union
in some of Seattle’s most expensive houses, complained and the city promised to
stop. It did not. When the garbage piled up too high, or one of
the troublesome garbage destructors went on the fritz, collectors would dump their garbage into the lake as the health department and Thomson looked the other way.
The Seattle
Times, no friend of Thomson, hated his garbage strategy and many other things he was behind at the
City of Seattle, sent out a photographer to document this outrage. The Times cameraman was setting up as
the garbage wagons drove their load onto a trestle positioned over the lake,
and shoveled the contents into the water.
But before he could make an exposure, site manager William T. McKenna made his way to the camera’s position
and put his bowler hat over the lens.
A confrontation ensued. McKenna and the photographer proceeded to take off their jackets in anticipation of
things getting really physical when McKenna noticed that the collectors had finished
up and were leaving the trestle. He
changed tactics and invited the Times crew into his office and adopted a tone
of contrition and cooperation, pulling up chairs for them and calling his boss,
the head of collection and destruction, who promised to scoot right over to
North Lake Union and talk with them. In
the meantime, seagulls swarmed over the water where the dumping had taken place
and tin cans bobbed about, though McKenna asserted it was merely ashes that had
been put in the water.
In the
1920s, the city’s growth and the continued under performance of the garbage
destructors dictated a change of strategy in which the city added two large
waste dumps to the south and east sides of the city. They complemented the Interbay site between Queen Anne and Magnolia which had operated since 1911.
Community pressure was also shutting down some of the smaller sites like
Greenlake, Madison Park and several others.
In 1927 there were 16 garbage dumps in the city. In 1931, there were six.
Southern Edge of Interbay Landfill. Community Garden to the right. Presence of Cattails along base of landfill suggests high groundwater level |
Over the
years Interbay garbage has produced considerable methane. In the early 60s, there was an explosion and
fire at the south end of the landfill.
The land is used today as a golf course, play fields and a community garden.
There are
numerous stories about Interbay. A
favorite of mine goes back to Dave Beck, the former President of the
International Teamsters Union in the 1950s.
Beck’s personal use of Teamster funds had long made him a target of the
Internal Revenue Service. After agents
had requested certain Teamster documents, Beck’s staff collected them and put
them in a storage area in the Western Conference of Teamsters building just off
Denny Way. The janitor was then told to
“clean out the storage room.” The man
loaded his truck with the boxes of records, drove out to Interbay and burned
them, all the while watched by men in two cars who supervised the operation,
stirred the ashes when the fire went down and left with the janitor.
Interbay Hooverville Seattle Municipal Archives |
It was a tough place. A man named Robinson, taken to municipal court on a disorderly conduct charge in Pioneer Square, explained why he was carrying a long knife when arrested.
Seattle Municipal Archives |
Donald
Francis Roy, a graduate student at the University of Washington, studied the
Hoovervilles of Seattle, documenting construction techniques, town layout, ages
of the residents and how they found their way through a world where people
expected their share and were willing to have a big knife at their side to
get it.
Montlake Dump, after World War II The landfill is at center right and would grow to cover the entire wetland University of Washington Collections |
Now
play fields and parking lots, the old Montlake Dump, often called the Ravenna
Dump, is probably the best monitored of the former garbage sites. A University of Washington Committee Landfill
Oversight Committee monitors the landfill and tracks its methane production,
settlement and other issues.
Montlake in the mid to late 50s Husky Stadium is in the background. Seattle Municipal Archives |
Most of the
many Seattle landfills started life as a burn site where the garbage was set
afire every day, the ashes spread around and what was left of the garbage was
covered over by the next day’s garbage.
In 1911, the British conceived of an idea they called “controlled
tipping.” This meant that the day’s garbage
was spread around, compacted by a piece of heavy machinery and covered over at
the end of the day by a foot or so of dirt.
The next day, a new layer of garbage was placed on yesterday’s soil,
then compacted and covered. It was made to
fit into local contours, like a ravine or ditch and closed when a ravine or
other feature was filled up. They called
the result a cell. A sanitary landfill
was a collection of these cells. Later
innovations included digging trenches in which garbage was dumped, then compacted
and covered. In the seventies and
eighties, landfill regulations required layers of clay and impervious
geotextile fabrics to act as liners between the garbage and groundwater.
Seattle was
an early adopter of the better practices in the 1940s though not as early as the
city of Fresno, California. Its landfill,
the first sanitary landfill in the United States, is now listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. Of the
3,000 or so such designations, it is the only one that is also listed as a
Superfund site.
A 1984 City
of Seattle study listed several landfills around the city whose locations are
often surprising. Genessee Park, also
known as the Rainier Valley Dump, operated from 1942-1968 though there is
evidence that it has been used as a dump since the 1890s with up to 50 feet of
garbage underfoot. South Park, a place
where you would think dumping would be going on, was in use from 1945-1966. No one knows for sure what is there because of the
non-existent record keeping, it is perhaps most prone to toxic and hazardous
wastes, according to that 1984 study. The
Green Lake play field was a burn dump from 1900-1933 covering more than 100 acres.
Except for
Montlake, we know very little about all this garbage at our feet. We do know, however, where most of it
is, about 50 sites in all over the last 100 years. The City of Seattle critical areas
ordinance maps old landfills and does not allow development within 1,000 feet
for fear of methane migration that could concentrate explosive levels in buildings. While not common, these types of explosions are not exactly rare. The University of Washington requires
non-sparking construction techniques and no smoking while working on what was the
Montlake Landfill.
In addition
to our old dumps, new ones are being created all the time. Illegal dumping is a significant problem,
especially for expensive to dispose products like tires and treated pilings. I’ve seen figures that as much of five percent
of the waste stream is dumped outside of permitted systems. The environmental agency in Oklahoma reports
that there are 2,500 illegal dumps in that state and estimates clean up at
$4,000,000.
It’s hard
to remember what these facilities looked like at the time and how they overcame
a person’s visual expectations for a beautiful city. The Seattle World’s Fair, the city’s
celebration of its space age future, used the Interbay Dump as overflow parking,
a preposterous idea. But I also know
that I walked along the eastern edge of the University of Washington campus
on a lovely day in the early sixties. Looking out over
the Montlake Dump, I somehow registered only Mount Rainier. I have no visual image of the Montlake Dump that is my own.
Researchers
assessing people’s reaction to airplane noise in neighborhoods have found that
about half the people in a community are affected greatly by airplane noise while the other half
hardly notices. I wonder if that might
true of the landfills we lived next to for so long in this lovely city. Did half of us really just drive by, the
smoke from burning garbage rising past the rolled up window? Could we have remembered the shape of a man
scrambling down a pile of garbage with a sack of bottles over his shoulder
or were we focused on a grocery list or an overdue book at the library?
Now that
those places are gone, topped by the Japanese Garden, Green Lake on a
splendid day, the pleasant visual clatter of the gardens on top of the 100 year old
Interbay Dump, could it be that our punishment for not remembering is to notice today only the garbage
buried underneath?
Seattle's Hoovervilles
Seattle's Hoovervilles
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