- Hillyard, Spokane, Washington
Hillyard, Washington was a town in
Spokane County, Washington which existed as a separate town between 1892 and 1924.The town came about due to the Great Northern Railway and was named for
James J. Hill , then-head of the railroad. Between 1904 and 1912, many of the town's houses were built, to house railroad workers working in the local yard. Hillyard was the home of the Great Northern's famed shops wherelocomotive s were manufactured, repaired, and refurbished. At the time, the Hillyard shop was the largest in the nation.In 1924, Hillyard was officially annexed by neighboring Spokane.
Due to its historical roots as a town housing railroad workers, Hillyard acquired a rather rough reputation, which lasted well into recent decades. (As recently as 1979, Daniel Leen described the Hillyard train yards in his book "The Freighthoppers Manual for North America" as having "the feel of warmed-over death.") After the Great Northern underwent a series of mergers, becoming the
Burlington Northern Railroad and eventually theBNSF Railway , the Hillyard yard and shops were closed in the early 1980s with BN's main yard operations in Spokane moving to Yardley. Only the decaying structures of the old shops remain today. Hillyard suffers some of the worst poverty in Spokane, per capita it is the poorest neighborhood in the state of Washington.Hillyard continues as a neighborhood of Spokane in which residents take pride. A Hillyard Festival is held every year in August, and the preservation of historic buildings is a local concern. Murals and a small railroad museum celebrate the town's history. Many of the neighborhood's residents are descended from the railroad workers who started the town, but Hillyard is recently becoming a popular home for immigrants of
Russia n,Micronesia n,andSoutheast Asia n descent. The downtown Hillyard business district, located on Market Street, has become Spokane's first neighborhood to be listed in theNational Register of Historic Places . According to Teresa Brum, Spokane's Historic Preservation Officer in charge of the project to have Hillyard listed on the National Register: "This is the most architecturally intact neighborhood left in Spokane. Most of it looks as it did 90 years ago." Hillyard neighborhood is still there and is still supporting the lower to lower middle class of Spokane [http://www.spokesmanreview.com/news-story.asp?date=092001&ID=s1026394&cat=section.regional] [http://www.historic-hillyard.com/history.htm]
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