Seward Park is a neighborhood in southeast Seattle, Washington just west of the park of the same name. The park itself occupies all of Bailey Peninsula, a prominent, forested peninsula that juts into Lake Washington. The attached map is accurate, broadly speaking, in capturing "Greater Seward Park," though real estate sites, such as Zillow, will refer to the part of the neighborhood north of Orcas Street as Lakewood, which is reasonable, since that neighborhood is the historic home of a "community club" (which owns its own house and land) once know as the Lakewood Community Club (built on or around the 1920s), and now known as the Lakewoond-Seward Community Club.
The neighborhood is bounded on the east by the lake, on the north by S Genesee Street, on the south by S Kenyon Street, and on the west by the eastern boundaries of Columbia City, one of Seattle's oldest and proudest neighborhood. Because, as the city of Seattle proudly notes, Seattle does not believe in wards, wishing to avoid the "ward politics of 'back'" (that would Chicago and eastward), Seattle has no legally defined neighborhoods. However, the City does respond to popular definitions, as does Zillow, and the city's website (http://clerk.ci.seattle.wa.us/~public/nmaps/south.htm) indicates how complex the west border of the Seward Park (or Lakewood-Seward Park) neighborhood is. Please consult that map for the current "consensus" as to where Columbia City/Genessee (if you are on Zillow) ends and Seward Park begins.
The 300 acres (121 ha) of Seward Park has about a 120 acre (48.6 ha) surviving remnant of old growth forest, providing a glimpse of what some of the lake shore looked like before the city of Seattle. With trees older than 250 years and many less than 200, the Seward Park forest is relatively young (the forests of Seattle before the city were fully mature, up through 1,000–2,000 years old).[1][2]. Still, there is no other forest within the city limits like Seward Park's. You can wander trails where all you can see are towering softwoods, mostly Douglas Firs, but with other species present as well, including Western Hemlock and Alaskan Cedar. The Park offers at least five distinct experiences, which are further described under the entry for the park itself.
One of the earliest White settlers, E. A. Clark, was influential in the life of Cheshiahud, a young man at the time, the mid 1850s.[3]
Seward Park, which was first settled by Whites in great numbers in the 1880s, is built on what may be one of the highest residential hill in Seattle (the aforementioned "Graham Hill"). In a series of annexations, the neighborhood joined the town of Southeast Seattle, which then joined the City of Seattle in 1907.[4]
Around a quarter of the residents are African American, and another quarter Asian American, most of the remainder being White. The neighborhood has been a hub of Orthodox Jewish life for nearly 40 years. The oldest synagogue in Washington state, Bikur Cholim Machzikay Hadath, is located there, as are Sephardic Congregation Ezra Bessaroth and Sephardic Bikur Holim Congregation. 90% of Orthodox Jews in Seattle are said to live within a mile of one of the synagogues, though more recent arrivals have been settling north of the Lake Washington Ship Canal in View Ridge, Wedgwood, Hawthorne Hills, and Ravenna and in nearby communities such as Mercer Island.
Seward Park is home to Whitworth and Graham Hill elementary schools.
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