Fauntleroy, Seattle

Seattle Neighborhood in King, Washington, United States
47°31′29″N 122°23′06″W / 47.52472°N 122.38500°W / 47.52472; -122.38500CountryUnited StatesStateWashingtonCountyKingCitySeattleTime zoneUTC−8 (PST) • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (PDT)Zip Code
98136
Area code206
Aerial view of Fauntleroy, looking east towards Lake Washington. The forested point in the foreground is Lincoln Park. Fauntleroy Park can be seen slightly above that and to the right
The former Fauntleroy Public School (2008)
Fauntleroy Ferry Terminal as seen from Fauntleroy Way SW

Fauntleroy is a neighborhood in the southwest corner of Seattle, Washington. Part of West Seattle and situated on Puget Sound's Fauntleroy Cove (into which Fauntleroy Creek flows from its source in Fauntleroy Park), it faces Vashon Island, Blake Island, and the Kitsap Peninsula to the west. On sunny days, many locations in the neighborhood offer views of the Olympic Mountains, which are about 40 miles (64 km) to the west. The neighborhood adjoins Lincoln Park to the north, Fauntlee Hills to the east, and Arbor Heights to the south. Within Fauntleroy is an area known as Endolyne (the "end of the line" of the Fauntleroy Park streetcar route in the early 1900s). Fauntleroy is home to an eponymous Washington State Ferries terminal, providing service to Vashon Island and Southworth.

Fauntleroy Way runs into the West Seattle Bridge, which runs across the Duwamish Waterway (Duwamish River).

History

The neighborhood, creek, and park all take their name from the cove, itself named by one Lt. George Davidson of the U. S. Coast Survey in 1857 in honor of the family of his fiancée, Ellinor Fauntleroy of Indiana.[1] The development of Fauntleroy began in 1905.

Fauntleroy's history was chronicled by Roy Morse and Richard Brown in Fauntleroy Legacy (1989) and by Clay Eals in West Side Story (West Seattle Herald, 1987).

Community

Central to the Fauntleroy neighborhood are Fauntleroy Church (United Church of Christ), Fauntleroy YMCA, and The Hall at Fauntleroy (the closed Fauntleroy School), which now houses Fauntleroy Children's Center (childcare); a caterer, rental auditorium and meeting rooms; and several other business tenants.

An all-volunteer, Community organization (Fauntleroy Community Association) founded in the early 1980s brings neighbors together to address local issues such as Environmental quality, Traffic and Parking.

References

  1. ^ Richardson, Ron Historylink.org Seattle Neighborhoods: Fauntleroy -- Thumbnail History 2002-04-22 retrieved 2007-12-28

External links

  • Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood Map Atlas — Fauntleroy
  • Fauntleroy Community Association
  • Neighborhood Groups: Fauntleroy (West Seattle Herald)[permanent dead link]
  • Thompson, Nile; Marr, Carolyn J. (2002). "Fauntleroy School". Building for Learning: Seattle Public School Histories, 1862-2000. Seattle Public Schools. OCLC 54019052. Republished online by HistoryLink by permission of the Seattle Public School District: "Seattle Public Schools, 1862-2000: Fauntleroy School", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, 2013-09-06
  • v
  • t
  • e
  • v
  • t
  • e
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ships of the Mosquito Fleet
Propellers
Wood
  • Albion
  • Alice (1897)
  • Alice Gertrude
  • Annie M. Pence
  • Aquilo (steamship)
  • Aquilo (yacht)
  • Arcadia
  • Atlanta
  • Audrey
  • Bay Island
  • Bellingham
  • Burton
  • C.C. Calkins
  • C.C. Cherry
  • Calista
  • Camano
  • Clallam
  • Commander
  • Concordia
  • Crest
  • Crystal
  • Daring
  • Dart
  • Dauntless
  • Defiance
  • Dix
  • Dode
  • Dove
  • Eagle
  • Elfin
  • Elk
  • El Primero
  • Elsinore
  • Fleetwood
  • Florence K
  • Fortuna
  • Flyer
  • General Miles
  • Hattie Hansen
  • Hector
  • Hyak
  • Ilwaco
  • Inland Flyer
  • Iola
  • Island Princess
  • Islander
  • Katherine
  • L.T. Haas
  • Lady of the Lake
  • Magnolia
  • Mizpah
  • Monticello 2
  • Otter
  • Quickstep
  • Rosalie
  • Sentinel
  • Triton
  • Urania
  • Vashon
  • Verona
  • Victor
  • Virginia V
  • Willapa
Steel
Sternwheelers
  • Bailey Gatzert
  • Capital City
  • Chehalis
  • City of Shelton
  • Clara Brown
  • Comet
  • Daisy
  • Elwood
  • Enterprise (1855)
  • Emma Hayward
  • Fairhaven
  • Fidalgo
  • Greyhound
  • Hassalo (1880)
  • Henry Bailey
  • Irene
  • Messenger
  • Monte Cristo
  • Multnomah
  • Northern Light
  • Old Settler
  • Olympian
  • Otter
  • S.G. Simpson
  • Teaser
  • Telegraph
  • Triumph
  • Wenat
  • WT Preston
  • Zephyr
Sidewheelers
  • Alaskan
  • Beaver
  • Cyrus Walker
  • Eliza Anderson
  • Fairy
  • George E. Starr
  • Idaho
  • King County
  • Kirkland
  • Leschi
  • North Pacific
  • Ocean Wave
  • Olympia
  • Olympian
  • T.J. Potter
  • Wilson G. Hunt
  • West Seattle
  • Yosemite
Steam tugs
  • Alice (1897)
  • C.C. Cherry
  • Cyrus Walker
  • Duwamish
  • Echo
  • Elk
  • Goliah (1849)
  • Goliah (1907)
  • Hector
  • Rabboni
  • Portland (1875)
  • Richard Holyoke
  • Ruth
  • Wallowa
Steam ferries
Converted
  • Bailey Gatzert
  • City of Sacramento
  • Beeline
  • Fortuna
  • Sioux
Purpose-built
  • City of Clinton
  • City of Mukilteo
  • City of Seattle
  • Issaquah
  • King County
  • Leschi
  • West Seattle
Motor vessels
  • Alverene
  • Bainbridge
  • Carlisle II
  • Coho
  • Falcon
  • Lotus
  • Speeder
  • Suquamish
  • v
  • t
  • e
Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet companies, shipyards, and personnel
Companies
Passenger
and freight
Towing
Ferry
Shipyards
Personnel
  • v
  • t
  • e
Steamboats in other areas
Articles by area
Washington
Oregon
British Columbia
Alaska and Yukon
Other
Navboxes
  • Columbia River
  • British Columbia
  • California
Lists of vessels
frontpage hit counter