Some interesting facts about the city of Seattle. (Well, I think they're interesting.)
Alki Beach, across the bay from the city, got its name when one of the early settlers, in a fit of optimism, decided the city was going to be built there and that it was going to be called New York Alki - Alki being the Chinook jargon word for 'by and by'. (They ended up moving across the bay because the water wasn't deep enough for shipping at the original site.)
The original Indian name for the current site of Seattle was Dzidzelálitch, which means 'place of the little crossing'. The city was later renamed after a local Indian chief who befriended Dr. David Maynard, one of the founders. His name was actually closer to Si'alh - the final consonant (which in the original, involves pronouncing 'L' while pressing your tongue against the roof of your mouth and forcing air out of both sides - try it) was deemed unpronounceable.
The downtown streets are, in order, heading north: Jefferson, James, Cherry, Columbia, Marion, Madison, Spring, Seneca, University, Union, Pike, Pine. The accepted mnemonic for these is Jesus Christ Made Seattle Under Protest.
After the Great Fire of 1889, the present Pioneer Square district was rebuilt and, due to flooding from poor drainage, it was decided to regrade the streets a couple of storeys higher. For a while, people had to climb ladders to get from the sidewalks up to street level. Eventually, the now underground parts fell into disuse, but parts of them have been reopened and can be toured.
The term 'Skid Row' - formerly 'Skid Road' - originally meant a downhill slide along which logs were transported. It was originally applied to the area around Yesler Way in Seattle (although the hill probably wasn't used for that purpose) and then spread to refer to generally impoverished areas in other American cities.
The Seattle school system was largely set up on the back of a bequest from one Lou Graham, who died in 1903. She was the city's most notorious and wealthiest brothel owner.
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"Grunge? Isn't that some gross shade of greenish orange?"