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
Frank Ross Saw Tacoma's Destiny in World Commerce
The Tacoma News Tribune
May 5, 1994
P. FP12

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Copyright, 1994, Murray Morgan
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Frank Ross Saw Tacoma's Destiny in World Commerce

spacerFrank C. Ross was 21 years old and broke when he arrived in Tacoma (Pop. 700, but growing) on December 23, 1879. He worked a few days as a waiter for his board at Halstead House, a few weeks shoveling gravel into the mud holes on unpaved Pacific Avenue, a few months at the Hatch and Forbes sawmill and then in the Northern Pacific railway shops.
spacer When his brother Charles arrived from Pittsfield, Ill., they teamed up to make a quick $321 selling cigars, confectionary, California fruit and imported newspapers at a fair in Chehalis. With the proceeds he bought the southeast corner of 11th and Pacific, where Peoples Store was later built, and opened a real estate office.
spacerIn an autobiographical sketch he wrote for Herbert Hunt's "History of Tacoma," Ross tells of sawing logs on South Ninth from St. Helens Avenue to E Street (now Fawcett) so as to be able to run a wheelbarrow up the hill to lots 3, 4 and 5 in block 9, which he purchased for $225 and sold weeks later for $1,000.
spacerFrom then on his passions were real estate development and transportation that would speed up development. He helped organize and finance the Tacoma & Lake City Railroad that built a line from Union Avenue to Lake City on the north side of American Lake. The right-of-way later passed into the hands of the Union Pacific. He was later involved in the ill-fated attempt to run rails along the eastern shore of the Olympic Peninsula to Port Townsend, a plan that got nowhere.
spacerThe tideflats fascinated him. He bought acreage wherever it became available, platted it and named Lincoln Avenue and many of the streets on the land east of the river. When the law regarding Indian reservation land was changed to permit individual Indians to sell or lease their share of reservation property, he contracted to buy some 1,500 acres of marshland, a sale never consummated because of government objections.
spacerIn 1892 Ross, together with Peter Stanup, one of the leaders of the Puyallups, organized a coalition of Indian owners whose land stretched across Browns Point. They started to lay track for rails, the plan being to establish a connection with the Great Northern which was approaching Seattle from the north.
spacerThe Indian agent on the Puyallup reservation called up federal troops from Fort Vancouver to block construction. Ross went to federal court in Seattle and secured an injunction forbidding the United States from invading the Puyallup Nation. But the Circuit Court in San Francisco lifted the injunction. Ross lost that battle but henceforth styled himself "Colonel" Ross in honor of his part in the Indian War of Browns Point.
spacerIn 1913 Ross again made front page headlines. At a banquet in Moose Hall, he addressed a group of 156 Japanese immigrants who had booked round-trip passage on the Chicago Maru for a four-month visit to their homeland. He presented the delegation with 200 boxes of cigars, which he said cost him $500. Each box had on its lid pictures of Mount Rainier and the Olympics. He asked that at least one box be given to every member of the Japanese parliament "so that every time they open the box to take a smoke, they'll look at the wonders of Tacoma."
spacerHe felt that Japan and Tacoma were inexorably linked, which was greatly to Tacoma's benefit since Japan was destined to control the commerce of the sea.

"All nations overestimate the business to be generated by the completion of the Panama Canal. Too many steamers are being constructed. Your nation will be able to step in and buy them at half the cost of construction, and with those you already have you will very nearly control world commerce."

spacerRoss urged that:

the United States and Japanese governments join to establish schools and employ teachers to educate your very young girls with our very young boys. By this method the children would become attached to each other and the sequel would be early marriage.

If it is impossible for our governments to unite in this great cause, then it might be that our states could bring this problem to a wonderful termination. I am very anxious to see a school of this kind established. I have a beautiful location and would gladly give the site for that purpose. I would not only donate the site but I would give money towards building the school and employing teachers. Then I would give money for building a home for the children. There would be no trouble in getting orphans to attend in case the parents of other children objected to sending their little ones here.

spacerRoss' speech received a standing three banzais from the audience. It was not widely praised when published. Indeed there was indignation.
spacerThe ladies of the Aloha Club passed a resolution protesting the proposal for government-sponsored miscegenation.
spacerRoss, who always boasted that he belonged to no church, no lodge or secret society, no political party, was amused by the uproar. "They would have ridden me out of town on a rail," he observed, "but they couldn't find a rail rough enough for their purpose."
spacerHe remained in Tacoma until his death on Jan. 10, 1947, still independent as a hog on ice, still prophesying the city's future in world commerce.

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