Seattle Now & Then: Ebey’s Landing, early 1900s

(click to enlarge photos)

THEN: Isaac Ebey’s original homestead, destroyed after he was killed in 1857, stood just below the line of forest at the far upper left. Captured by Asahel Curtis in the early 1900s, this photo shows Ebey’s Landing with remains of the original dock extending into Admiralty Inlet.
NOW: Today, Ebey’s Landing is the only designated national historical reserve in the United States. The park provides access to miles of picturesque beach as well as a cliffside trail above. After Isaac Ebey’s death, his house was demolished. Its wood was repurposed to build the nearby Ferry House, a hotel, tavern and trading post.

Published in The Seattle Times online on Aug. 21, 2025
and in PacificNW Magazine of the printed Times on August 24, 2025

‘Almost a Paradise’ for settlers was
a paradise lost for Coast Salish
By Jean Sherrard

In times of anti-immigrant fervor, a gentle reminder seems pertinent that most of us are descended from recent arrivers.

Isaac Neff Ebey (1818-1857) circa 1850s. For more, please visit HistoryLink.org.

Col. Isaac N. Ebey, of Missouri, landed in the Pacific Northwest via San Francisco, seeking a home for his extended family. In the spring of 1850, he hired canoes to explore today’s Puget Sound — a reconnaissance that preceded Seattle’s Alki Landing Party by more than a year. Letters home describe a land of exceptional beauty, suitable for colonization.

Finally, Ebey chose to settle on Whidbey Island, taking full advantage of the Oregon (Territory) Donation Land Law, which granted married couples 320 acres each if they committed to working the land for four years.

Their square mile, Ebey wrote his brother Winfield,

A view of Ebey’s Prairie from the bluff. Coast Salish people
harvested camas bulbs here for thousands of years before Isaac Ebey planted wheat, potatoes and onions on his Donation Land Claim.

was “almost a Paradise of Nature,” and he encouraged his extended family to follow him and his close friend Samuel Crockett to the island prairie. By 1854, they were joined by nearly 30 Ebeys and Crocketts, lured from across the United States.

While these pioneers quickly established profitable farms, the original Coast Salish inhabitants, living here for millennia, were displaced without compensation — a toxic model being repeated throughout the territory.

Isaac’s 61-year-old father, Jacob Ebey, took up

Jacob and Sarah Ebey’s farmhouse stood on the bluff directly above their son’s holdings. Following Isaac’s death, sons Ellison and Eason were brought up here by their grandfather. Their stepmother, Emily, fled Whidbey Island, never to return.

residence on his own 320-acre spread atop a bluff overlooking his son’s land. Soon, Jacob built an 18-by-40-foot, 1½ story home for eight family members and found success planting wheat, oats and potatoes while raising livestock, including a small herd of dairy cows.

Isaac’s fortunes also rose. Besides farming his land, he worked as a lawyer and customs official and served as a territorial legislator. Sadly, wife Rebecca Davis Ebey, who had joined him with their two sons in 1851, died in 1853 after a difficult childbirth. Ebey subsequently married young widow Emily Sconce.

In 1855, Territorial Gov. Isaac Stevens toured the region, insisting that tribes sign federal treaties to formalize the vast transfer of land from Indigenous to white hands.

Bitter disputes raged as Native populations already diminished by disease and displacement were corralled into reservations.

With tensions rising, the settlers built blockhouses — the mid-19th century equivalent of “safe rooms” — to protect themselves.

The Jacob Ebey-built structures remain on the bluff, now a museum operated by the National Park Service

Jacob Ebey erected a thick-timbered blockhouse a stone’s throw from his farmhouse, anticipating confrontation with local tribes. On Aug. 11, 1857, however, the family’s security measures were breached.

In retaliation for the killing of 28 tribal members by the U.S. warship Massachusetts, a raiding party, likely from the Kake nation of Tlingit from southeastern Alaska, killed and beheaded newcomer Isaac Ebey at his home, just above the beachfront landing that still bears his name.

WEB EXTRAS

More scenes from the bluff below Jacob Ebey’s cabin.

3 thoughts on “Seattle Now & Then: Ebey’s Landing, early 1900s”

  1. Great images, old and new. A new story to me so very interesting. Kinda cheers to the Native Peoples for taking revenge. Thanks for this.

  2. Great post! There was a reconciliation meeting in August 2014 of Kake tribal representatives led by elder and culture bearer Ruth Demmert. In 1856, 27 members of the Kake Tribe were killed in the USS Massachusetts shelling at Port Gamble. In 1857, a Kake raiding party killed Colonel Ebey as a tit-for-tat act of revenge. A decade later, the Navy bombed the Kake village in Southeast Alaska in 1869. Last October, the Navy formally apologized for that attack.

    Read all bout it in the Whidbey News-Times (August 19, 2014: https://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/news/kake-tribal-members-visit-ebey-157-years-after-death-that-shook-region/) and The Juneau Empire (September 24, 2024: https://www.juneauempire.com/news/a-long-time-coming-u-s-navy-apologizes-for-destroying-alaska-native-village-of-kake-in-1869/).

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