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House History: 1109 North 47th Street

This house was built in 1909 for an estimated construction cost of $1,350, according to the building permit. The builder was Albert J. Carr, a contractor who lived in Wallingford. He was known for building houses throughout the University District, Wallingford and Fremont neighborhoods.

The house is a “plan book” design in Craftsman Bungalow style. The plan-book house could be built by a contractor without the use of an architect, and the construction was done by skilled craftsmen such as carpenters, masons and woodworkers.

Craftsman-style design elements of this house include the low-pitched roof with multiple roof brackets and with barge boards on the eaves. The gable ends of this house are clad with stucco and with faux half-timbers, a decorative treatment. The diamond-pattern sash window on the main gable end adds another decorative touch. The prominent projecting entry porch with its gable roof is a characteristic Craftsman house design feature.

The first owner of the house was Mary Hagerty, a 53-year-old widow with her seven children, ranging in age from 16 to 29. Nowadays it is hard to imagine how this many people could live in a two-bedroom, one-bathroom house, but it is apparent that the Hagerty family members were all “pulling together” to make a living. The children of Mary Hagerty all had jobs, including the four daughters who were all schoolteachers.

The Hagerty family had only recently come to live in Seattle. We don’t know why they chose to live in this location in the Fremont neighborhood, but it may have had to do with convenience for traveling to work. One of the daughters was specifically mentioned on the census of 1910 as a teacher at Green Lake Elementary School, and that would have been accessible via streetcar from the Hagerty house in Fremont. The eldest Hagerty son, John, was a railroad worker and perhaps it was with this employment that the whole family decided to move to Seattle from Nebraska.

Mary Hagerty, born in Ireland in 1856, had immigrated to the USA at age fourteen in 1870. In 1879 in Nebraska, she married Patrick Hagerty who was also an immigrant from Ireland. He was twelve years older than Mary and had fought in the American Civil War in a cavalry unit from Minnesota. After the war Patrick Hagerty received a veteran’s land grant in O’Neill, Holt County, Nebraska.

All of the Hagerty children were born in Nebraska, the last in 1894 which was the year that Patrick Hagerty died at age 50. Mary Hagerty applied for her husband’s Civil War pension. After about twelve more years, we presume that Mary must have sold the 320 acres of land they owned in Nebraska, in order to move her family to Seattle and buy the house at 1109 North 47th Street.

The Hagertys only lived at this house a short time, which is understandable since her children were adults and were beginning to make their own way. By 1915 Mary Hagerty was living at 5115 Wallingford Avenue, with just three of her children: one daughter who was a schoolteacher, and Mary’s two youngest sons Paul & Eugene.

By 1930 Mary’s eldest daughter, Nellie, age 49, was living in Wrangell, Alaska, where she was principal of a public school. In April 1930 Mary’s youngest child, Eugene, age 36, was married in Seattle. Mary died in December 1930 at age 74.

Sources:

Bureau of Land Management-homestead land claims of Patrick Hagerty, Nebraska.

City of Seattle Historic Resources Inventory.

City of Seattle building permit #71790.

Genealogical records including census, city directories, Civil War pension records and Find A Grave. Patrick Hagerty’s Find A Grave record ID #169992361.

House History: 617 North 47th Street

This house is an outstanding and well-preserved early example of a Craftsman Bungalow cottage constructed by Jud Yoho. It was built in 1910 as the home of Fred J. Kerr, a real estate developer, who had his office at 4228 Fremont Avenue.

Known as “The Bungalow Craftsman” Jud Yoho (b.1882) is considered to have been Seattle’s most active and market-oriented bungalow entrepreneur. He was the owner of the Craftsman Bungalow Company and the Take-Down Manufacturing Company, as well as president of Bungalow Magazine.

After 1912, Yoho published eight editions of Craftsman Bungalows, the Craftsman Bungalow Company catalog of house plans. The Craftsman Bungalow Company primarily built and sold bungalow-style homes on installment purchase plans between 1911 and 1918. The short-lived Take-Down Manufacturing Company specialized in small “portable” or manufactured buildings, especially prefabricated garages.

Bungalow Magazine was published in Seattle from 1912 to 1918; it was modeled on Gustav Stickley’s The Craftsman and on an earlier Los Angeles publication with a similar title. This widely circulated publication featured many Seattle bungalows along with notable examples from southern California.
The magazine served to promote The Craftsman Bungalow Company and the sale of Craftsman Bungalows catalogs, as well as the sale of stock house plans for residential designs credited to Yoho and others, including his close associate Edward L. Merritt (b.1881).

Jud Yoho and the Craftsman Bungalow Company are known to have developed two small clusters of bungalow style residences in Fremont in the 600 block of North 47th Street and the 4400 block of Greenwood Avenue North, in the spring and summer of 1910. This house at 617 North 47th Street is part of the cluster on North 47th Street and is the most distinctive and best-preserved example of Jud Yoho work in Fremont.

A very similar (possibly using the exact same floor plan) cottage constructed in 1911 is located at 500 North 43rd Street; it has been altered by cladding changes but retains a cobblestone porch and fireplace. King County property tax records indicate that the interior was remodeled prior to 1937 and again prior to 1972.

Information regarding Jud Yoho and other Fremont houses associated with him was obtained from: Doherty, Erin M. “Jud Yoho and The Craftsman Bungalow Company: Assessing the Value of the Common House” – M.A. Architecture Thesis, University of Washington 1997. 

Located mid-block on the south side of North 47th Street with front elevation oriented to the north. Very well-preserved, one story, wood-frame, single-family residence constructed in 1910. Exhibits highly distinctive Craftsman Bungalow style design elements/features. Front gable building form with prominent cutaway porch at east side of facade. There may be a small habitable attic area (shed dormer at east elevation). Measures approx. 26’ x 40’ with concrete foundation and basement level. Prominent 12’ x 12’ cutaway porch with cobblestone wing walls, tapered column and stair cheeks.

Craftsman style design elements/features include: low pitched roof forms; cobblestone porch features; cedar shingle cladding; multiple knee braces; wide barge boards and roof overhangs. Distinctive original wooden windows including diamond pattern upper sash cottage and accent windows (including long narrow set of windows at gable end). Corner bay window at west side of façade. Bay window at east elevation. Original multi-pane Craftsman style door remains in place.
Major Bibliographic References:
King County Property Record Card (c. 1938), Washington State Archives.
Polk’s Seattle Directories, 1890-1996.
City of Seattle, Department of Planning and Development, Microfilm Records.