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Hillman City Heritage Bell Project

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Explore Hillman City's rich history and cultural diversity through the transformation of a 120-Year-Old Bell.

The Hillman City Heritage Bell project has been nearly five years in the making, tracing back to 2019 when real estate broker and RVHS supporter Ray Akers orchestrated the donation of a 120-year-old cast iron bell. This historic bell was generously given by RVHS Lifetime Members Pete and Helen Sikov, setting the wheels in motion for what would become a significant landmark in Hillman City.

Crafted around 1907, this bell once rang out from a church steeple at the corner of Rainier Ave S and S Lucile St, summoning worshippers from various congregations, including the Hillman Methodist Episcopal Church, Pentecostals, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, United Baptist, and Damascus Baptist. Although the exact date of its removal from the tower is unknown, the bell remained on the property as it transitioned to the Dayspring & Fitch Funeral Home, where it continued its presence for three decades until the building was demolished in 2020.

Recognizing the bell's historical value, the Rainier Valley Historical Society (RVHS) embarked on a mission to preserve and reintroduce it as a new landmark for Hillman City. In 2021, the restoration began with sandblasting, stabilization, and priming. A "Call for Artists" was issued, leading to the selection of Cathy Fields, a local mural artist and 50-year Hillman City resident, to paint a mural on the bell. Cathy's work tells a captivating visual story, celebrating the cultural diversity of Rainier Valley. Completed in 2022, her mural honors Indigenous Peoples, early pioneers, and notable community members, reflecting Hillman City’s history as a welcoming home for immigrant populations. (Read her full Artist Statement below)

By July 2024, RVHS, with the help of community volunteers and Kohl Construction, developed a stand for the bell at the corner of Rainier Ave S and S Findlay St. The chosen installation site, currently home to "The Flour Box," has a rich history of its own, once being a Shell station turned service station operated by Rudy Hanson from the mid-1960s until his passing in 2008. The Hanson family, who still owns the property, graciously allowed the bell to be installed here, just across from its original home.

The project culminated in a grand dedication event on August 10, 2024, during the Hillman City Neighborhood Association Block Party. This significant moment marked the bell’s new role as a symbol of local heritage and community spirit, celebrating the rich history and cultural diversity of Hillman City.

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Project Timeline 

2019: The Hillman City Heritage Bell was donated to RVHS by Lifetime members Pete and Helen Sikov, after the demolition of the Dayspring & Fitch Funeral Home. RVHS begins fundraising efforts at the Annual Founder's Dinner

2021: RVHS initiated the restoration of the bell, with sandblasting, stabilization, and priming, preparing it for a new chapter as a public art piece. A "Call for Artists" was issued, and Cathy Fields was selected to create a mural celebrating the area's diverse history.

2022: Cathy Fields completed the mural, depicting significant moments and figures in Hillman City’s history, from Indigenous Peoples to early settlers and local business owners. The bell was then clear-coated for protection.

July 2024: The bell was installed on a custom stand at the corner of Rainier Ave S and S Findlay St, across from its original home. 

August 10, 2024: The bell was officially unveiled during the Hillman City Neighborhood Association Block Party, marking its new role as a symbol of community and heritage.

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Meet the Artist

Cathy Fields, a mural artist and lifelong resident of Seattle's Hillman City, masterfully blends the real and the imagined in her visual storytelling.

 

Selected by the Rainier Valley Historical Society during their 2020 “Call for Artists,” Cathy’s work intertwines echoes of the past with the blur of contemporary times, resonating deeply with the community she has called home for 50 years.

The following is a narrative that goes with the stories circling the bell, beginning with the vignette of native people gathering food and moving to the right around the bell:

 

As the ice age ended, humankind arrived along the Pacific coast. The indigenous people who inhabited what was to become the Seattle area were here for over 10,000 years before the Euro-Americans arrived. The Coast Salish people were made up of various tribes that shared a common language. The scene depicted is of summer time when local tribes come to Lake Washington’s coastlines to harvest food to preserve for the winter. The men would fish and hunt, and women would gather various herbs, berries, fresh water mussels, or, as in this picture, dig camas roots, and much more.

Moving right around the bell, the depicted one-room cabin became a neighborhood store in 1901 when Rhineholt and Louise Hausler moved to the area and purchased the property from Clarence D. Hillman. They quickly opened for business on Rainier Avenue at Graham Street. The Hausler store supplied Hillman City residents with a variety of household necessities and kitchen staples. The electric railway stopped a few feet from their porch delivering much of the goods that stocked their store. The Hauslers eventually build a bigger store further south on Rainier Ave. and moved there in 1921.

The woman to the right of the store is Mrs. Fumiko M. Noji who, with her husband and family, ran the enterprising Columbia Greenhouse and Nursery between South Orcas and Juneau Streets and what is now Martin Luther King Jr. Way from 1918-1996. They had a reputation for their wonderful tomatoes. Her father-in-law, Isao Noji, was one of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce men who brought the cherry trees from Japan to Seward Park. When the family was interned during World War ll, a good friend who managed the grounds of Sick’s Stadium moved into their home and cared for the property until their return. Eventually a fourth generation family member moved the greenhouses to Kent and the award winning Noji Gardens affordable housing community was planned and built on the property by HomeSight.

Also shown in this vignette is the Seattle Renton & Southern Railway that enabled valley farmers to transport their produce into town, make trips to visit friends and family, and encouraged development and new businesses. Sadly funding, safety, and reliability were problematic leading to a loss of licensing. The rails were torn up in 1937 to make way for more buses, trucks and cars.

The church building in the distance hosted a number of different faiths over the years. Before it was torn down, the bell was donated to the Rainier Valley Historical Society and is now the “canvas” for this painting.

The original Fire Station 28 was built in 1910, three years after Hillman City was annexed into Seattle. It was located at 4525 S. Orcas Street, just east of Rainier Ave. They used horses to pull the hose wagons until they became motorized in 1924. In 1955 the old station was closed and moved to a newly built station at its current location on Rainier Avenue.

Rainier Valley wouldn’t be complete without Mt. Rainier. On a clear day it may loom large and appear deceptively near from Seward Park or when driving south on Rainier Ave. Here it is a backdrop for the title section, Looking Back. This Vignette speaks to the valley’s history as a destination for many different immigrant populations over the decades, enriching the area with cultural diversity, perhaps one of our greatest assets.

Acknowledgements

This project was made possible through the generous support of King County 4Culture, the Seattle Department of Neighborhoods' Small Sparks Fund, the Hillman City Neighborhood Association, Khol Construction, Flamespray NW, Puget Sound Coatings, the Sikov family, and the Hanson family. Special thanks go to the RVHS board members, members, and volunteers, whose time, talents, and dedication were instrumental in bringing this project to life.

The Hillman City Heritage Bell now stands as a beacon of our shared history and a reminder of the vibrant community spirit that defines Hillman City. We invite you to visit and reflect on the stories it tells, connecting our past to our present and future.

Gallery

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