Seattle Now & Then: Rolland Denny’s mansion: Loch Kelden, 1926

(Click and click again to enlarge photos)

THEN1: The stucco walls of Loch Kelden are covered with ornamental ivy in this 1926 photo, the only extant view from its early decades. Its three stories and 7,700 square feet stood on a 50-acre waterfront estate, encircled on three sides by virgin timber. “It boggles my mind,” says Eugenia Woo of Historic Seattle, “that anyone would acquire the historic Rolland Denny mansion property as a multi-million-dollar teardown.” (Courtesy Museum of History & Industry)
NOW: With her great-great uncle’s mansion gleaming at upper right, Maria Denny stands on the bow of Howard Lev’s cabin cruiser. Only a few hundred yards south of Magnuson Park, the structure can be spotted from across the lake, from Kirkland to the 520 bridge. (Jean Sherrard)

Published in The Seattle Times online on March 14, 2024
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on March 17, 2024

A Seattle treasure soon to be demolished — but not forgotten
By Jean Sherrard

Our mission, should we choose to accept it: Find a rare image of a soon-to-be razed mansion and repeat it on location. Surely not impossible, right?

Fortunately, the Museum of History & Industry supplied the only extant “Then” photo of what director Leonard Garfield calls “one of the great private estates from one of Seattle’s golden eras.”

But capturing the “Now” photo proved a greater challenge.

“This is a caper,” MOHAI board member Maria Denny said as we glided through Montlake Cut in a battered cabin cruiser, turning north into Lake Washington on a balmy winter’s afternoon.

THEN3: Rolland Herschel Denny, son of Arthur and Mary Ann Denny, joined Dexter Horton’s bank, eventually serving as its director. He and wife Alice lived in Loch Kelden till their deaths in 1939. (Courtesy Museum of History & Industry)

Maria’s great-great uncle Rolland Denny (1851-1939) commissioned noted Seattle architectural firm Bebb & Mendel to design a three-story Spanish Mission Revival mansion. Completed in 1907, it was christened Loch Kelden — a fusion of wife Alice Kellogg’s name and Denny’s own. Overlooking “Loch” Washington, the then-50-acre estate was a wilderness retreat accessible only by boat from Madison Park.

THEN2: A 1913 photo of Loch Kelden’s interior. The living room furniture and wall decorations are typical of their era. (Courtesy Museum of History & Industry, PEMCO Webster & Stevens Collection)

In 1974, the Unification Church acquired the mansion and its remaining 1.7 acres, using it as a domicile and hosting dignitaries, including founder Sun Myung Moon and his wife.

On the market since 2022, Loch Kelden recently was sold to developers for what real-estate sites say is $5.999 million, “pending feasibility.” Preservationists could not nominate it as a city landmark because the state Supreme Court has exempted religious entities from landmark designation unless such owners support or seek it. Thus, demolition appears imminent.

In February, Scott Dolfay, the church’s retired property manager and caretaker for more than two decades, graciously offered a farewell tour to a group of historians. Two days before our visit, however, the invite was rescinded due to a strict nondisclosure provision of the sale agreement. Access to the grounds to take our repeat photo also was denied.

So we opted for a boat’s-eye view. Putt-putting past expansive waterfront homes, we spotted the cream-colored mansion on Windermere bluff. “Spectacular!” said Maria Denny. “I’d forgotten how lovely it is.”

THEN5: Nine-year-old Brewster Denny (1924-2013) with the family dog. (Courtesy Maria Denny)

It stirred a raft of family memories as well. Her father, the late Brewster Denny, often visited Loch Kelden, fondly recalling his 11th birthday party, thrown there by his “Great Uncle Roll,” notably the youngest member of the well-known Nov. 13, 1851, Alki landing party.

Two months old and near starvation, Rolland was not expected to live. But Duwamish tribal members supplied the infant with life-saving clam nectar.

In the end, why does this lovely place matter? For Maria Denny, the answer is simple: “Holding onto pieces of history means that we continue remembering them.”

An improbable and uphill mission, perhaps not yet impossible.

THEN4: At a 1913 picnic, Denny family members and friends enjoy a day of fun and frolic. Today’s estate no longer has waterfront access. (Courtesy Maria Denny)
More Denny friends and family pose for a photo at the picnic (Courtesy Maria Denny)
Fun and games on the dock (Courtesy Maria Denny)

WEB EXTRAS

Thanks to Elke Hautala, Cari Simson, Scott Dolfay , Leonard Garfield, Eugenia Woo and Maria Denny  and Howard Lev for their invaluable help with this installment!

To see Jean Sherrard’s 360-degree video of the “Now” prospect and compare it with the “Then” photos, and to hear this column read aloud by Jean, check out our Seattle Now & Then 360 version of the column. Also, below you will find a video interview of Maria Denny by Clay Eals.

See below for 5 more photos from fall 2023 by David Williams.

And further below, see 8 photos from Magnolia resident Tab Melton, in the 1950s before he was born and when his family lived at Loch Kelden.

(David Williams)
(David Williams)
(David Williams)
(David Williams)
(David Williams)

Here are the 1950s photos provided by Tab Melton, when his family lived in a log cabin on the Loch Kelden estate. The photos show Tab’s three older siblings. Tab recalls that when his father, George Melton, lived in the mansion, the two watched the Nov. 25, 1963, funeral of slain President John F. Kennedy on a portable TV in the mansion’s parlor, where the copper fireplace was festooned with tapestries.

With the mansion in the background, Laura and Linda Melton ride a Palomino horse named Donna Boy in the 1950s. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Tom Melton as a ship captain, flanked by gypsies Laura Melton (now Giles and Linda Melton celebrate a 1950s Halloween in the orchard of the state, then owned by Kenneth and Gwendolyn Jerauld. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Laura Melton stands in the early 1950s. The estate’s barn, in the background. burned about 20 years ago. It had an apartment for the live-in horse trainer, Lee Butler, who managed the Jeraulds’ show horses and sulky racing. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Laura Melton helps her father, George Melton, till his garden at the estate in the 1950s. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Linda Melton on Donna Boy in about 1952. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Linda Melton walks through a garden with the estate barn in the background in the 1950s. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Laura and Linda Melton ride the Jeraulds’ one-horse open sleigh in the 1950s, as driver Millicent Childers, Mrs. Jerauld’s niece, holds the horse’s bridle. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)
Laura Melton (now Giles) (left) and Linda Melton stand on the porch of the estate’s log cabin in the 1950s. (Courtesy Tab Melton and Linda Melton)

7 thoughts on “Seattle Now & Then: Rolland Denny’s mansion: Loch Kelden, 1926”

  1. Such a shame to see the distruction of this beautiful historic landmark. What a phenomenal mansion of the past.

    1. Hi Denny! This is Katy Mann, married for 57 years to Bob Mann, your old school friend from Santa Barbara! We ran into you in the 80’s when we were staying at the Miramar in Montecito for a wedding. Somehow I never realized that you were a “Denny” Denny, until my brother sent me this video about what we called the “Jerauld”mansion, when it was to be demo’d. .
      We lived half a block up the street from 1953 until my mother sold the house in 1975, when my dad died. Windermere was brand-new, and a wonderful neighborhood.
      We were fascinated by the “mansion”. We enjoyed seeing the horses in their pasture right on Windermere road. We used to sneak into the barn and play with the barn kittens! My best friend lived right across the street from the log cabin and they were really nice to us when we were kids.
      I really enjoyed this video and the photos of a wonderful by-gone era!
      Hope all is well with you and your family!
      Katy Mann

  2. The photo of the mansion is not “the only extant view for its earlier decades.” The UW has a photo of this mansion from those days without the ivy. The Seattle Times featured a photo of the mansion on April 25, 1909, and a photo of the mansion and some of the other structures on the property were featured in the Town Crier on December 10, 1927

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