Produced by Pacific Northwest writer, photographer and composer, Jerry Mader, Carnation Verbatim--A Celebration of Elders, is a documentary containing oral histories and photographs of elder citizens native to the Snoqualmie Valley and the community of Tolt/Carnation (est. 1912). Mader began the project in 2005. Over the next two years he photographed 28 elders, octogenarian and nonagenarian, and recorded 25 life histories. Mader also assembled excerpts from 22 of the audio recordings of life Continue reading
Fourth of July Memories by Jerry Fay
Boom! I sat bolt upright in bed. My entire body tingled with excitement. If it hadn’t been six in the morning, I would have yelled at the top of my lungs. That single firework salute by American Legion Post 199 was the official beginning of the highlight of my year, Carnation’s Fourth of July celebration. I had turned thirteen in June and this was the third “Fourth” I had celebrated in Carnation. Carnation in the 1950s may have been only thirty miles from the metropolis of Seattle, but Continue reading
Snoqualmie Tribe
For perhaps 10,000 years the Tolt River country was known by the Snoqualmie Indians by the name Tolthue, which means river of swift waters. When the white man came to the lower valley, the name was shortened to Tolt. Chief Patkanim was head signer of the Point Elliott Treaty of 1855, which ceded Snoqualmie Indian land to the United States in exchange for a reservation, which was granted in 2000. The first record of Tolt appeared on the Survey General’s Map of Washington Territory in 1857 Continue reading
First Settler, James Entwistle
James Entwistle, Tolt’s first settler, arrived in 1858 and claimed a homestead of 169 acres. He permanently settled and improved the homestead in 1866. His first wife, Mary, was an Indian woman, they had three children. Mary drowned in a canoe accident. He married Sarah Kelly and had four more children. The industries of logging, raising hops and hay provided a living for his family. He died in 1902. He and his children are buried in the Carnation Cemetery. Robert G. Entwistle gives Continue reading
Before 1900
The homes of the valley were either log or slab built with square nails or wooden pegs. The barns or outbuildings were constructed mostly of cedar. The barns were for oxen or cows. The first barns were usually built on the river bank on the highest point of land. The barns were built close to the river because the farmers shipped their milk by boat. The farms, large and small, were limited in tillable ground as the valley had a very dense undergrowth of vine maple, alder, wild cherry, Continue reading
Hops
Between 1879 and 1893 the first cash crop in the valley was hops. Hops were used in beer and as a tonic. Western Washington became one of the major hop producers in the world. The hops were shipped to Seattle and on to England. Native Americans provided much of the labor to pick the hops. Hop picking also brought the Davis brothers to Tolt as well as other families. In 1889 the first hops aphid appeared and by 1891 there was a complete crop failure. James Entwistle was a prosperous hop Continue reading
After 1900
The Lord family came to Tolt in 1889 and purchased the general store and hotel. Three years later the hotel was moved from the banks of the river to the side of the main highway which led through town. As more settlers came into the valley the trails and roads became of greater importance. Tolt continued to grow and prosper in the 1900s. Local dairymen established the Tolt Cooperative Creamery. The first plat of the Town of Tolt was filed by William J. and Eugenie Lord, May 16, 1902. Their Continue reading
Naming The town: Tolt or Carnation?
For perhaps 10,000 years the Tolt River country was known by the Snoqualmie Indians by the name Tolthue, which means river of swift waters. When the white man came to the lower valley, the name was shortened to Tolt. The town was officially given the name Tolt in 1912, incorporated December 31, 1912. Tolt’s name was changed to Carnation in 1917 to allow the town to gain prestige by being associated with the fame of the nearby Carnation Milk Farm, but it upset many long-time residents. A Continue reading
Prosperity 1912-1930
Carnation’s greatest extended phase of prosperity was from the time on incorporation in 1912 to the Great Depression of the 1930s. The Great Depression slowed the local economy, but area property owners held onto their land and the local bank did not fail. This was the time period of greatest dairying and logging activities because technology improved the harvesting, shipping and milling processes. Water, electricity and telephone services arrived in Tolt in 1913. Tolt had a population of Continue reading
Stone Markers
In a burst of local pride in 1938, and to reinforce the argument that his town should not be named Carnation, David Entwistle (1879-1960), son of original pioneer James Entwistle, constructed four stone markers to bear the town’s name at entry points along Tolt Avenue. The markers were refurbished in 1992 by the Tolt Historical Society and two can still be seen, one on Blanche Street and one on Bagwell Street along Tolt Avenue. Next Story >> Carnation Farm Continue reading
Carnation Farm
In 1910, Carnation Company founder E.A. Stuart developed 350 acres northwest of Tolt to breed Holstein-Friesian dairy cattle. Next Story >> River Travel Continue reading