Murray's People: A collection of essays about fthe fascinating people who settled and developed the Pacific Northwest

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Murray C. Morgan
Old Bill Fife played song of success in early Tacoma
The Tacoma News Tribune
May 6, 1993 , P. 10

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Copyright, 1993, Murray Morgan
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Old Bill Fife Played Song of Success in Early Tacoma

spacerI was doing some library work the other day when someone asked how it happened that Tacoma named a street after a musical instrument.
spacerTurned out he meant Fife Street, which like the city of Fife was named for an early settler, not a high-pitched flute.
spacerWilliam H. Fife certainly deserved to have things named for him. He was one of the area's most enterprising characters. A Canadian, born in Ontario to Scottish immigrants, he was apprenticed at 17 to work in a general goods store for $5 a month.
spacerHe owned his own store by the time he was 20. At 30 he took time off from store-keeping to join the rush to Caribou gold fields in British Columbia. Coming back three years later with a modest fortune, he moved his family to Michigan, then to Iowa, where he built a store at a river crossing east of Sioux City and watched the town of Cherokee grow up around it.
spacerThe idea of having the first store in a growing town appealed to him. In 1873, when Fife was 40, the Northern Pacific Railroad was about to decide where its western terminus would be on Puget Sound.
spacerFife visited the area and happened to be on Commencement Bay when the N.P. announced that New Tacoma was its choice. He hurried home, sold off his Cherokee holdings, and headed west with his wife, their five children and two servants. They arrived at the Tacoma station on the wharf on the evening of April 14, 1874 - the day before the Tacoma Land Company officially put downtown lots on sale.
spacerAfter spending the night in the Blackwell Hotel, Fife sloshed up the dirt path to Pacific Avenue, climbed the hill to C street (now Broadway), and went to the headquarters of the Tacoma Land Company, a one-room shack in a patch of skunk cabbage at the southwest corner of Ninth and C. There, on the city plan sketched by William Isaac Smith, he selected the northwest corner of Ninth and Pacific Avenue as his first investment.

"We arrived on a Saturday," he recalled years later, "and on Tuesday we took dinner in our own house. You would hardly call it a house now, but it was somewhat of a mansion in those days, a shanty 18 by 24 feet. Nine of us sheltered beneath its roof until I could put up a large house, which I began without delay, a two-story frame directly in front of the shack. This I used as a store and dwelling combined. It was the first general merchandise store in Tacoma."

spacerTwo months after coming to town, Fife was appointed Tacoma's postmaster by President Grant. When the first sack of mail, containing six letters, arrived at New Tacoma, 17-year-old Billy Fife volunteered to hand deliver them, a service he performed intermittently until he went to California to attend the Oakland Military School in 1877.
spacerYoung Billy (as he was called to differentiate him from his father, Old Bill) also found time to play in Tacoma's first baseball game, an inter-squad match between members of the Tacoma Invincibles. It ended 28 to 29, both sides claiming victory.)
spacerAnyone wanting stamps or other postal service had to call at the Fife store. Old Bill thoughtfully put the counter in a far corner so patrons had to thread their way past tempting barrels of molasses, pickles, flour, sauerkraut and fish. This encouraged conversation as well as sales. Fife became the best-informed man in town about business opportunities. He invested in timberland, mineral claims and nearby farmland, one section of which is now the city of Fife.
spacerIn an early venture, Fife bought a corner at Ninth and Market, where there was a free-running stream. (The whole Tacoma hill was so water-soaked that an Oregon editor joshed about the N.P. trying to build a city in the shallowest lake or steepest swamp known to man.) Fife built tanks, captured the spring water, piped it down Ninth in bored-out logs, and provided Pacific Avenue with its first tap water and a modicum of fire protection.
spacerIn the boom that followed the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1883, Fife prospered. His two-story frame was replaced by a five-story masonry business block and hotel. He became vice president of the Tacoma Coal Co. He organized the Puget Sound Dry Dock Co. that brought a huge floating dry dock to Quartermaster Harbor. He was a director in the Crescent Creamery, the Tacoma Exposition Co. and the Tacoma Opera Theatre Company; and a trustee of the Chamber of Commerce and the Methodist church. Newspaper estimates in 1890 put his wealth at $1 million or $2 million. He was said to pay more taxes than anyone in the county.
spacerThe Panic of '93 hit Tacoma harder than any other city in the country. Population fell from its estimated 53,000 in 1893 to a census confirmed 37,714 in 1900. Wealth fled too.
spacerOld Bill lost almost everything. In '93 he was living in style in a hotel he had named for himself. In 1896 he was in a boarding house a block away and his old hotel was called The Donnelly.
spacerFriends marveled at his good humor and optimism. When word came of the gold strike in the Yukon, Old Bill rushed north. He got no farther than Skagway and returned as broke as when he left. He went to live with a daughter in California who had married a congressman, but at 70 he bolted to Nevada on news of another gold discovery.
spacerThat didn't pan out for him either. He returned to his daughter's home in Alameda just before his grandson was born in 1904. The child was named for him. William Fife Knowland was to become publisher of the Oakland Tribune and a United States senator.
spacerOld Bill died in January of 1905.

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