Maple Leaf is a mostly
residential neighborhood in Seattle
, originally
a rural suburb (subdivided c. 1894) named Maple Leaf
Addition to the Green Lake Tract or Green Lake Circle.
The name may have come
from the Maple Saw Mill that operated to the east on Lake Washington
or from maple trees that once
grew in the area,(1) Wilma. (Also name as "Green Lake
Tract".)
(2) "Green Lake Circle", Lange though a popular story is that in
the early days of Seattle's settlement the neighborhood was "so far
north, it might as well have been Canada", and was named "Maple
Leaf" as an inside joke.
The original plat is located between what would later be named NE
85th and 105th Streets and 5th and 25th Avenues NE. It was annexed
to Seattle in the early 1950s.. Although Seattle neighborhood
boundaries are unofficial, the current approximate neighborhood
boundaries are, starting from the south and working clockwise, NE
75th Street west to Banner Way NE, north on Banner Way to
Interstate 5, then north along the edge of I-5 up to NE 103rd. Then
east along NE 103rd to 5th Avenue NE, north to Northgate Way, then
east to Roosevelt Way NE. South along Roosevelt to Thornton Creek
and then east along the creek bed to Lake City Way NE (roughly at
NE 98th). Then south along Lake City Way NE to 75th Ave NE
map.
Maple Leaf
is bordered on the south by the Roosevelt neighborhood; to
the north by Pinehurst
and Victory Heights
neighborhoods of the Northgate district; to the
east by the Lake City
and Wedgewood neighborhoods; and
to the west the North College Park or Licton
Springs
, map. (Seattle neighborhoods boundaries
are informal).(1) Wilma. (1.1) With respect to historical
documentation [Wilma], the
Seattle City Clerk's Neighborhood
Map Atlas has a discrepancy regarding the south boundary with
Roosevelt and the northern boundary.
(2)
Maps "NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17 June 2002.
(3)
See heading, "Note about limitations of these data".
Maple Leaf is home to approximately 20,000 residents, mostly
residing in "classic Seattle
boxes",
(so initially a pejorative, wryly belied today by their high
quality and prices), known locally as Seattle bungalows and
Tudoresque style houses. Since 2000 the Maple Leaf area has been
undergoing considerable renovation as smaller, older homes sitting
on 1/8 acre lots are being bulldozed to make room for new high-end
"Craftsman"-style homes and, especially along Roosevelt Way NE from
Snappy Dragon to Walgreens, townhomes.
Besides
Northgate
Mall
(1950), most of the businesses within Maple Leaf
line Roosevelt Way NE from NE 75th to 100th Streets and 5th Avenue
NE from NE 85th to 90th Streets. Notable neighborhood
meeting spots on Roosevelt include Cloud City Coffee at 88th,
family-owned Maple Leaf Ace Hardware at 91st, Judy Fu's Snappy
Dragon at 90th, The Roosevelt Alehouse at 89th, the Reservoir Bar
at 85th, and the Maple Leaf Grill at 92nd, while neighborhood
meeting spots on 5th Avenue NE include Cafe Javasti and the San
Marco Grocery at 84th. Cabinetworks on Roosevelt is
long-established and one of the few woodworking manufacturers
remaining in Seattle.
Distinctive features of the neighborhood include the
water tower and
reservoir located at 85th and Roosevelt,
plus historic Waldo Hospital at 85th NE and NE 15th. The water
tower is painted with a distinctive coupling of
maple leaves viewable from Interstate 5. Across
Roosevelt Way from the water tower and reservoir is Saint
Catherine's School and Church. Just south is The Fairview Church
and The Fairview School, one of the largest private primary schools
in the city. Waldo Hospital was previously occupied by Camp Fire
Boys and Girls. The property is currently under contract to a
developer, who plans to demolish the structure and 72 of the
documents 108 trees on the site.
Maple Leaf is one of two homes for a flock of feral
conures (parrots) descended from escaped pets. They
fly between Maple Leaf and
Seward
Park.
The highest point in Maple Leaf, located on 91st Street between
Roosevelt Way and 5th Avenue, is over 500 feet (150 m) in
elevation, one of the highest points in the city. (High Point in
West Seattle is higher.)
References
See heading, "Note about limitations of these data".
Lange referenced Guy Reed Ramsey, Postmarked Washington,
1850-1960, microfilm (Olympia: Washington State Library,
February, 1966), p.
622.
Maps "NN-1030S", "NN-1040S".jpg dated 17
June 2002.
Note caveat in footer.
No sources listed on web page, so .
Maple
Leaf Community Council, PO Box 75595, Seattle, WA
98175-0595.
Note caveat in footer.
Original lyrics.
Copyright
info
Wilma referenced Mimi Sheridan and Carol Tobin, Licton Springs
History, (Seattle: Licton Springs Community Council, 2001),
8;
Don Sherwood, "Sacajawea P.F.", in "Interpretive Essays of the
Histories of Seattle's Parks and Playfields", handwritten bound
manuscript dated 1977, Seattle Room, Seattle Public Library.
Note esp. the 75th Street border.
Notes