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Architect's Drawing of Port Townsend's City Hall.
Notes about Port Townsend City Hall
The use of red brick, carved sandstone, decorative sheet metal
and a multi-faceted roof gave Port Townsend's City Hall a sense of permanence.
The building made the statement that Port Townsend was no longer a lawless
cluster of rotting wharves, but a thriving municipality. At the City Hall was
built, Port
Townsend was one of the foremost seaports on the West Coast, booming as the
surrounding forests and fisheries fueled the westward expansion of the
continent.
City Hall during a
festival prior to 1947.
The building is visual evidence of the
optimism and energy of a nation that tamed a wilderness. These people’s
accomplishments seem far-fetched when we take into account the tools at their
disposal and the distances they traveled to reach such a remote outpost. With a
mix of zeal and desperation individuals from diverse backgrounds somehow worked
together to build a city on a sand spit. The City Hall building sat like a
crown at the top of a wharf-studded street of impressive and imposing brick,
stone and wood frame buildings along the shore of Port Townsend
Bay.
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The
citizens of Port Townsend continued to build large buildings, elaborate homes,
wharves, streetcars, and a never-to-be railroad right up until the nationwide
economic depression of 1893. In the following years, investors left the
once bustling, boisterous, booming seaport in such economic decline that it was
unprofitable to replace the old Victorian buildings and homes. The population
steadily dwindled and the city sat frozen in time. As a result, the City
Hall building is largely original, with one very sad exception—the roof was
removed in the late
1940's after decades of deferred maintenance.
City Hall is a pivotal structure in the Port Townsend National
Historic Landmark District. Its Council Chamber has served as the setting for
democratic discourse for 115 years. As the fire and police departments, police
court, and City offices moved on to more modern facilities over the years, the
Jefferson County Historical Society has operated a museum in the spaces left
behind.
In November of 2006, an
extensive restoration of the building was completed by the City of Port Townsend
in partnership with the Jefferson County Historical Society. The re-installed
Museum will open March 1, 2007. City Council meetings have resumed in the
2nd floor Council Chambers, where they have been held since 1892.

Restored stairway and new carpeting.
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