Fort Lawton

Fort Lawton is established on February 9, 1900.
On February 9, 1900, the U.S. Army designates the military installation on Magnolia Bluff, on the present-day (1999) site of Seattle's Discovery Park, as Fort Lawton. It becomes part of the system of defenses protecting Puget Sound from naval attack. The fort is named after Major General Henry Ware Lawton (1843-1899), a veteran of the Civil War and of the Indian Wars, who was killed in action in the Philippines.

The site of Fort Lawton remained in military hands until 1970, when it was turned over to the City of Seattle and became Discovery Park.

In 1891, U.S. Senator John B. Allen (1845-1903) won a fight with Congressional representatives from California and Oregon to establish a Navy yard on Puget Sound. Port Orchard Bay was selected for what would become the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard at Bremerton. Military planners considered defense of the area a high priority for the reasons that:

    * enemy vessels might easily harbor in Puget Sound;
    * the growing commercial centers of Seattle, Everett, and Tacoma could become targets;
    * plans were in place to build a ship canal from Shilshole Bay to Lake Union large enough to accommodate warships. 

By 1894, 11 sites for fortifications were identified, including Magnolia Bluff which offered a good defensive position and close proximity to land and sea transportation. In 1895, U.S. Senator Watson C. Squire (1838-1926) coordinated an appropriation to build a regimental post there, but Secretary of War Lamont included the provision that the property be acquired without cost to the U.S. Government. The Seattle Chamber of Commerce launched a canvass of donations of land and cash and in February 1898, turned over to the U.S. Army title to 703 acres. Construction of buildings and roads began in June 1898. The first soldiers arrived in December 1899.

Originally planned as a fortification, the first Coast Artillery unit did not arrive at Fort Lawton until July 1901, and guns were installed only temporarily. Fort Worden and Fort Flagler near Port Townsend on the Olympic Peninsula and Fort Casey on Whidbey Island were built for heavy guns as the first and second lines of defense, and Fort Lawton would be the third line of defense. In May 1902, the Fort became an Infantry post and although it was designed to accommodate a full regiment (approximately 3,500 men), it rarely saw more than a headquarters and one battalion. In 1927, the fort was converted to a Corps of Engineers installation.

Fort Lawton never assumed the size and economic importance expected by boosters in Seattle. Pierce County received the benefits of the much larger Camp Lewis, built just before World War I. In 1938, the Army offered the entire property of Fort Lawton to the City of Seattle as a park for the cost of one dollar. The City Council declined because it was unsure whether the City could bear the cost of maintenance.

On the eve of World War II, Fort Lawton became part of the Port of Embarkation, San Francisco, supporting the movement of troops overseas through Seattle. As many as 20,000 troops were staged there at a time and a total of 1.1 million troops passed through the installation during and after the war. Some 1,150 German prisoners of war were housed there (some are buried in the cemetery), and 5,000 Italian prisoners of war passed through on their way to confinement in Hawaii. After World War II, Fort Lawton was used as an Air Force radar site, a surface-to-air Nike missile site, and a training center. Today (1999), a portion of the property is still used for reserve units and for military-dependent housing, while the majority is part of Seattle's Discovery Park.
 

Fort Lawton Cemetery

Old Fort Lawton (which is now in Discovery Park) is located in Seattle, Washington. The original buildings at Fort Lawton  were constructed between 1898 and 1904.   The buildings are handsome examples of Greek Revival architecture.  They are constructed with Chuckanut sandstone foundations, lapped cedar siding, Philadelphia slate roofing, hardwood floors and pressed metal ceilings.

Military personnel, their families, and civilian employees of the Army lie at rest in the four-sectioned Fort Lawton Cemetery.  Representatives of American military history from the Spanish-American War forward are present.  The first grave was dug in 1902.  The Fort Lawton Cemetery is a "federal" not a "national" cemetery.   It has a planned maximum of 912 sites (some of these sites have multiple family occupants),  the only sites remaining have been reserved.

In addition to the above there are 2 Prisoners of World War II buried in the 912 sites.  One German and one Italian. They are in a small  number 5 section.

Brigadier General Federick D. Atkinson, Post Commander at Fort Lawton from 1 March 1949 to 7 October 1949 is one of two post commanders buried there.  General Atkinson died  18 October 1971.  The second is Colonel John Barber who was Post Commander in the mid sixties.  Colonel Barber died 16 February 1977.

The cemetery also holds the body of W.W. Robinson, Sr. the father of the man who built Fort Lawton.  As a Captain  and United States Quartermaster, W.W. Robinson, Jr., came to Seattle in 1896.  When he left in 1901, Fort Lawton was well established.  Upon retirement in 1911,  Robinson, by then a Brigadier General, returned to Seattle with his wife.   He died in 1917, in Seattle and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington D.C.

Native American tribes asserted treaty rights to the original land but settled with the city for a portion as the site for Daybreak Star Center (completed in 1977). In 1973, Senator Jackson dedicated the tract as Discovery Park in honor of the British sloop HMS Discovery commanded by Captain George Vancouver during the first European exploration of Puget Sound in 1792.

The city decided to preserve most of the park as open space and nature reserves in 1974, and the appropriate intensity of public use remains a subject of debate. The best preserved collection of early Fort Lawton buildings was declared a landmark district in 1988.